The Cyrus IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol) server provides access to
personal mail and system-wide bulletin boards through the IMAP protocol.
The Cyrus IMAP server is a scaleable enterprise mail system designed for use
from small to large enterprise environments using standards-based
technologies.
A full Cyrus IMAP implementation allows a seamless mail and bulletin board
environment to be set up across multiple servers. It differs from other
IMAP server implementations in that it is run on "sealed" servers, where
users are not normally permitted to log in. The mailbox database is stored
in parts of the filesystem that are private to the Cyrus IMAP system. All
user access to mail is through software using the IMAP, POP3, or KPOP
protocols.
The private mailbox database design gives the server large advantages in
efficiency, scalability, and administratability. Multiple concurrent
read/write connections to the same mailbox are permitted. The server
supports access control lists on mailboxes and storage quotas on mailbox
hierarchies.
The Cyrus IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol) server provides access to
personal mail and system-wide bulletin boards through the IMAP protocol.
The Cyrus IMAP server is a scaleable enterprise mail system designed for use
from small to large enterprise environments using standards-based
technologies.
A full Cyrus IMAP implementation allows a seamless mail and bulletin board
environment to be set up across multiple servers. It differs from other
IMAP server implementations in that it is run on "sealed" servers, where
users are not normally permitted to log in. The mailbox database is stored
in parts of the filesystem that are private to the Cyrus IMAP system. All
user access to mail is through software using the IMAP, POP3, or KPOP
protocols.
The private mailbox database design gives the server large advantages in
efficiency, scalability, and administratability. Multiple concurrent
read/write connections to the same mailbox are permitted. The server
supports access control lists on mailboxes and storage quotas on mailbox
hierarchies.
msmtp -- An SMTP client
msmtp is an SMTP client that can be used as an "SMTP plugin" for Mutt and
probably other MUAs (mail user agents). It forwards mails to an SMTP server
(for example at a free mail provider) which does the delivery.
To use this program, create a configuration file with your mail account(s) and
tell your MUA to call msmtp instead of /usr/sbin/sendmail.
Features include:
* SMTP AUTH methods PLAIN, LOGIN and CRAM-MD5
(and DIGEST-MD5 and NTLM when compiled with GSASL support)
* TLS encrypted connections
(including server certificate verification and the possibility to send
a client certificate)
* DSN (Delivery Status Notification) support
* IPv6 support (on systems that support it)
* support for multiple accounts
* sendmail compatible exit codes (which most MUAs understand).
Note: you may want to install mail/msmtpqueue - queuing support for msmtp.
The Cyrus IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol) server provides access to
personal mail and system-wide bulletin boards through the IMAP protocol.
The Cyrus IMAP server is a scaleable enterprise mail system designed for use
from small to large enterprise environments using standards-based
technologies.
A full Cyrus IMAP implementation allows a seamless mail and bulletin board
environment to be set up across multiple servers. It differs from other
IMAP server implementations in that it is run on "sealed" servers, where
users are not normally permitted to log in. The mailbox database is stored
in parts of the filesystem that are private to the Cyrus IMAP system. All
user access to mail is through software using the IMAP, POP3, or KPOP
protocols.
The private mailbox database design gives the server large advantages in
efficiency, scalability, and administratability. Multiple concurrent
read/write connections to the same mailbox are permitted. The server
supports access control lists on mailboxes and storage quotas on mailbox
hierarchies.
Gmerlin_avdecoder is a general purpose media decoding library. It
was written as a support library for gmerlin, but it can also be
used by other applications. You don't even need gmerlin installed,
only gavl. Most of it was written completely from scratch, but the
sourcetrees of some other great software packages were used as
reference documentation. Credits go to the authors of Xine, MPlayer,
quicktime4linux and ffmpeg.
Gmerlin_avdecoder is one of the most complete general purpose media
decoding libraries. The supported formats and codecs span a wide
range of applications from consumer level (mp3, divx etc.) to high
end production formats like 32 bit PCM and some professional
uncompressed video codecs.
Using gmerlin_avdecoder in your playback for transcoding application
means rock solid media format support with an ever growing list of
supported codecs and formats.
bgpq3 is a lightweight access-list/prefix-list/as-path access-list generator
for Cisco and Juniper routers.
This program is a mostly complete re-implementation of bgpq (net-mgmt/bgpq),
with next major advantages:
- much faster, especially for large as-sets.
- supports ipv6 both at transport level and in prefix/access-lists generation.
- supports asn32 in both asdot and asplain notation, also supports
"transition" as23456 generation instead of asn32.
However, bgpq3 can not be used as a full replacement of bgpq, because:
- "more specific" prefix filtering is not implemented (and not planned).
- GateD prefix-filters generation is not implemented (and not planned).
- Cisco standard access-lists generation is not implemented (and not planned).
- formatted output is not supported (yet?).
twister is an experimental decentralized P2P microblogging platform leveraging
from the free software implementations of Bitcoin and BitTorrent protocols.
User registration and authentication is provided by a bitcoin-like network, so
it is completely distributed (does not depend on any central authority).
Post distribution uses kademlia DHT network and bittorrent-like swarms, both are
provided by libtorrent.
Both Bitcoin and libtorrent versions included here are highly patched and do not
interoperate with existing networks (on purpose).
Warning! This is alpha software! In other words: this software is probably
difficult to compile, it is not feature-complete, it can be unstable, and it may
crash causing data loss. You have been warned.
If you choose to continue you probably must fall into one of the following
categories:
You are a developer.
You are an early adopter (who wants to reserve your nickname).
You are a masochist.
freevrrpd is a VRRP (Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol) implementation
daemon under FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD.
This daemon has been rewritten from scratch and is not based on
existing projects. In this second public release, you can find:
* A daemon RFC 2338 Compliant adapted on FreeBSD systems
* Implementation of Virtual Adresses
* Support for multiples VRID
* Master announce state by sending multicast packets via BPF
* Changing routes and IP in 3 seconds
* Doing gratuitous ARP requests to clean the cache of all hosts
* Election between different slave servers
* Same host can be Slave and Master at the same time
* Automatic Downgrade to Slave if a Master is up again
* Anti-Address Conflict system
* Multi-threaded vrrp daemon
* Plain text password authentication
* Using now only one BPF device for all VRID
* Support netmask for Virtual IP addresses
* Support for monitored circuit and dependances between VRIDs
* Support for VLAN pseudo devices under *BSD
The Enhanced TightVNC Viewer package started as a project to add some patches
to the long neglected Unix TightVNC Viewer. However, now the front-end GUI and
wrapper scripts features dwarf the Unix TightVNC Viewer patches (see the lists
below).
It adds a GUI for Windows, Mac OS X, and Unix that automatically starts up
STUNNEL SSL tunnel for SSL or SSH connections to x11vnc, and then launches the
TightVNC Viewer to use the tunnel. It also enables SSL encrypted VNC
connections to any other VNC Server running an SSL tunnel, such as STUNNEL, at
their end. It can be used to perform SSH tunnelled connections to any VNC
Server as well. The tool has many additional features (see below for a list).
The short name for this project is "ssvnc" for SSL/SSH VNC Viewer.
Net::Random - get random data from online sources
This module gets truly random data from online sources. Or at least,
they claim to be truly random.
The two sources of randomness above correspond to
http://www.fourmilab.ch/cgi-bin/uncgi/Hotbits?nbytes=1024&fmt=hex and
http://random.org/cgi-bin/randbyte?nbytes=1024&format=hex.
We always get chunks of 1024 bytes at a time, storing it in a pool
which is used up as and when needed. The pool is shared between all
objects using the same randomness source. When we run out of randomness
we go back to the source for more juicy random goodness.
The maintainers of both randomness sources claim that their data
is *truly* random. A some simple tests show that they are certainly
more random than the rand() function on this 'ere machine.