This is CFS, Matt Blaze's Cryptographic File System. It provides
transparent encryption and decryption of selected directory trees.
It is implemented as a user-level NFS server and thus does not
require any kernel modifications.
For an overview of how to use it, read "${PREFIX}/share/doc/cfs/notes.ms"
and the manual pages. There is a paper describing CFS at:
http://www.crypto.com/papers/cfs.pdf
fprint_demo is a simple GTK+ application to demonstrate and
test libfprint's capabilities. It can be used to enroll new finger prints
as well as verify and delete existing data sets.
Fwipe is a secure file erasing program. fwipe0, which actually erases
your files, is immune to filenames containing spaces, carriage returns,
dashes, or any other special characters. You can use it in place of rm
in cron jobs, together with "find ... -print0". The output of fwipe0 is
specially designed to be parsed easily by machine, so it can be embedded
in other applications which need secure file erasure.
OpenSAML 2, a re-rewrite of OpenSAML 1, supports SAML 1.0, 1.1, 2.0 but is
not backwards compatible with OpenSAML 1.
Medusa is intended to be a speedy, massively parallel, modular, login
brute-forcer. The goal is to support as many services which allow remote
authentication as possible.
ssh-askpass is a small applet intended for use in conjunction with
OpenSSH. It pops up a window and requests the user input their SSH
passphrase. It is not designed to be executed directly, but to be called
by OpenSSH's ssh-add(1) utility. If no controlling terminal is found (e.g.
ssh-add is called from the .xinitrc as part of the X login process), and
DISPLAY is set, ssh-add will spawn ssh-askpass to request the password.
Authentication via DBM files.
Authentication Passwd authentication.
Authentication via RADIUS.