This is libbgpdump - a C library designed to help with analyzing dump
files produced by Zebra/Quagga or MRT.
File formats:
- MRT RIB dump
- Zebra/Quagga format
- These may be gzipped and/or passed in through stdin
Entry formats:
- MRT routing table dump entries
- Zebra/Quagga BGP records:
- BGP messages (OPEN, UPDATE, NOTIFY, KEEPALIVE)
- BGP state changes
See also:
https://bitbucket.org/ripencc/bgpdump/
Libdmapsharing is a library you may use to access, share and control the
playback of media content using DMAP (DAAP, DPAP & DACP). Libdmapsharing
also detects audio AirPlay services; coupled with the AirPlay support
in PulseAudio or GStreamer, this can allow an application to stream audio
to an AirPlay device. The library presently supports Linux and other
POSIX-based systems.
Libopennet allows you to open_net() remote files as easily as you open()
local files.
oSIP is an implementation of SIP.
SIP stands for the Session Initiation Protocol and is described by the
rfc2543 (soon to be deprecated by latest revisions). This library aims
to provide multimedia and telecom software developers an easy and powerful
interface to initiate and control SIP based sessions in their applications.
SIP is a open standard replacement from IETF for H323.
This is a PXE daemon, which you can use to set up a networked boot menu for
netbooting client machines (FreeBSD, Linux, Windows, etc.) that support &
utilize Intel's Preboot eXecution Environment (PXE).
GNU MAC Changer is an utility that makes the maniputation of MAC addresses of
network interfaces easier.
Like inetd, this program listens on the net for requests and spawns a
server to handle them. However, it only handles one port and one
program. Other limitations:
* only 'stream' socket type
* only 'nowait'
* doesn't switch user-ids
Microproxy is a very small Unix-based HTTP/HTTPS proxy. It runs from inetd,
which means its performance is poor. But for low-traffic sites, it's quite
adequate.
It implements all the basic features of an HTTP/HTTPS proxy, including IPv6
forwarding, in only 320 lines of code.
Mpd is a netgraph(4) based implementation of the multi-link PPP
protocol for FreeBSD. It is designed to be both fast and flexible.
It handles configuration and negotiation in user land, while routing
all data packets strictly in the kernel. It supports several of
the numerous PPP sub-protocols and extensions, such as:
Multi-link PPP capability
PAP, CHAP, MS-CHAP and EAP authentication
PPP compression and encryption
IPCP and IPV6CP parameter negotiation
Mpd have support for many link types:
Serial port modem
Point-to-Point Tunnelling Protocol (PPTP)
Layer Two Tunnelling Protocol (L2TP)
PPP over Ethernet (PPPoE)
PPP over TCP
PPP over UDP
PPP over specified netgraph(4) node
Mpd also includes many additional features:
IPv4 and IPv6 support
RADIUS authentication and accounting
NetFlow traffic accounting
Network address translation (NAT)
Dial-on-demand with idle timeout
Multiple active connections running simultaneously
Dynamic demand based link management (also known as ``rubber bandwidth'')
Powerful chat scripting language for asynchronous serial ports
Pre-tested chat scripts for several common modems and ISDN TAs
Clean device-type independent design
Comprehensive logging
Telnet and HTTP control interfaces.
Netwib is a network library providing :
- network features :
+ address conversion
+ UDP/TCP clients/servers
+ packet encoding/decoding/displaying
+ spoofing
+ sniffing
+ etc.
- and general features :
+ data conversion
+ linked list, hash
+ portable threads
+ etc.
Using all these functions, a network program can be quickly created.