C++ Qt based Twitter library
IO::Socket::IP provides a protocol-independent way to use IPv4 and IPv6 sockets,
as a drop-in replacement for IO::Socket::INET. Most constructor arguments and
methods are provided in a backward-compatible way. For a list of known
differences, see the IO::Socket::INET INCOMPATIBILITES section below.
It uses the getaddrinfo(3) function to convert hostnames and service names or
port numbers into sets of possible addresses to connect to or listen on. This
allows it to work for IPv6 where the system supports it, while still falling
back to IPv4-only on systems which don't.
former QueSO home page <URL:http://www.apostols.org/projectz/queso/>:
How we can determine the remote OS using simple TCP packets? Well,
it's easy, they're packets that don't make any sense, so the RFCs
don't clearly state what to answer in these kind of situations.
Facing this ambiguous, each TCP/IP stack takes a different approach
to the problem, and this way, we get a different response. In some
cases (like Linux, to name one) some programming mistakes make the OS
detectable.
QueSO sends:
0 SYN * THIS IS VALID, used to verify LISTEN
1 SYN+ACK
2 FIN
3 FIN+ACK
4 SYN+FIN
5 PSH
6 SYN+XXX+YYY * XXX & YYY are unused TCP flags
All packets have a random seq_num and a 0x0 ack_num.
QuiteRSS is a open-source cross-platform RSS/Atom news feeds reader.
Radiator is a highly configurable and flexible Radius server that supports
authentication by a huge range of authentication methods such as Flat files,
DBM files, Unix password files, SQL databases, remote Radius servers
(proxying), external programs, NT User Manager, Active Directory, LDAP, PAM,
iPASS, GRIC, NIS+, Tacacs+, a wide range of ISP billing packages such as
Emerald, Platypus, Rodopi, Hawk-i, Interbiller98, Freeside etc, your legacy
user database etc, etc.
Radiator now supports more 802.1x secure wireless and LAN authentication
methods than any other Radius server giving a wide choice of 802.1x network
clients.
Radiator also includes many features not found in other Radius servers such
as double-login prevention, username rewriting, full vendor-specific
attributes, time-of-day blocking and a GUI for running user tests. Full list
of technical features.
Runs on all Unix, Linux, Windows 95, 98, NT, 2000, Mac OS-9 and Mac OS-X, VMS.
Due to license restrictions, this package must be purchased and manually
downloaded from the Open System Consultants web site.
This is the Cistron RADIUS daemon. Radiusd is a daemon that handles
remote authentication requests and accounting for RADIUS clients. The
clients may be terminal servers, Network Access Servers or other
RADIUS servers.
Radreport is a perl script for parsing radius logs.
While distributed by Lucent RABU, it is contributed software. Radreport has
no active maintainer and is truly open source software: if you need an extra
feature, hack it in yourself.
radvd implements IPv6 router advertisements for Linux and FreeBSD
as specified in RFC 2461. Support for Mobile IPv6 as well as 6to4
is included.
Raggle is a console RSS aggregator, written in Ruby. Features include
customizable keybindings, basic HTML rendering, HTTP proxy support, OPML
import/export, themes, support for various versions of RSS, Screen support,
browser auto-detection, and more. Raggle has been tested under Linux and
OpenBSD, and should work properly under other Unix variants as well.
rdapper is a command-line client for the Registration Data Access
Protocol (RDAP), as described in the RDAP RFCs (7480 - 7485).
This tool will send an RDAP query to an RDAP server over HTTP or
HTTPS, parse the JSON response, and display it in human-readable
form.