C-client is a common API for accessing mailboxes. It is used internally by
the popular PINE mail reader as well as the University of Washington's IMAP
server.
For more information, please see the UW IMAP homepage:
slapd-cyrus is a slapd perl backend, used to translate LDAP DIT into
Cyrus IMAP-server configuration. It can manage user folders, shared
folders and ACLs of shared folders.
A web based easy to use interface for creating Sieve scripts on an Cyrus
IMAP mail server as well as allowing users to set access controls, create
new mailboxes and view their mail quota. Also give administrators full
administrative capabilities.
The Host sFlow agent exports physical and virtual server performance
metrics using the sFlow protocol. The agent provides scalable,
multi-vendor, multi-OS performance monitoring with minimal impact on
the systems being monitored.
LibCMIS is a C++ client library for the CMIS interface. This allows C++
applications to connect to any ECM behaving as a CMIS server like Alfresco,
Nuxeo for the open source ones.
YAZ is a compact toolkit that provides access to the Z39.50/SR
protocol, as well as a set of higher-level tools for implementing the
server and client roles, respectively.
tinyldap is an attempt to write a very small and very fast LDAP server.
openldap is the reference when it comes to LDAP servers, and it performs
very poorly despite using techniques such as thread pools.
LICENSE: GPL2
YAZ++ is a C++ programmer's toolkit supporting the development of Z39.50v3
clients and servers. It includes an implementation of the ZOOM C++ binding,
a generic YAZ++ client/server API and a powerful Z39.50 proxy.
c-icap server modules:
virus_scan:
This is an antivirus service which uses the open source
clamav antivirus.
srv_url_check:
This is an URL blacklist/whitelist icap service
Flash Remoting is a way for Flash movies running in a web browser to
request structured data from the web server. The following data types
are supported - strings, numbers, dates, arrays, dictionaries/hashes,
objects, recordsets. Flash clients talk with the server using the AMF
protocol, which is proprietary to Macromedia. However, it's not that
hard to decode.
Using Flash::FLAP it is possible to send arbitrary data between client
and server using very few lines of code. There is no need to pack
complicated data structures into CGI form parameteres or XML strings.
The coding time can be spent on better things - data preparation and
graphical presentation, not data delivery.