OpenNebula is an open-source project delivering a simple but feature-rich and
flexible solution to build and manage enterprise clouds and virtualized data
centers. This gem provides libraries needed to talk to OpenNebula.
PacketFu is a mid-level packet manipulation library for Ruby. With it, users
can read, parse, and write network packets with the level of ease and fun they
expect from Ruby.
This goal of this project is to provide a consistent interface to LBL's libpcap
packet capture library. This does not provide packet processing functionality,
it simply provides the interface for capturing packets, and passing yielding
those packets.
RbVmomi is a Ruby interface to the vSphere API. Like the Perl and Java SDKs, you
can use it to manage ESX and VirtualCenter servers. The current release supports
the vSphere 5.0 API.
t is a command-line power tool for Twitter. The CLI takes syntactic cues from
the Twitter SMS commands, but it offers vastly more commands and capabilities
than are available via SMS.
The BIRD project aims to develop a fully functional dynamic IP routing daemon.
- Both IPv4 and IPv6
- Multiple routing tables
- BGP
- RIP
- OSPF
- Static routes
- Inter-table protocol
- Command-line interface
- Soft reconfiguration
- Powerful language for route filtering
A version of 'traceroute' that shows the AS network number of each hop.
NOTE: The ASN lookup feature currently only works on RIPE registered ASNs.
Chris Dabrowski
chris@vader.org
chrisd@demon.net
Sipsak is a small command line tool for developers and administrators of
Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) applications.
It can be used for some simple tests on SIP applications and services.
Splat is a set of utilities designed to help keep information
in an LDAP directory in sync with information outside of an
LDAP directory. This information can be any set of attributes on
any object in the LDAP directory.
The STUN (Simple Traversal of UDP through NATs (Network Address Translation))
server is an implementation of the STUN protocol that enables STUN
functionality in SIP-based systems. The STUN server tar ball also include a
client API to enable STUN functionality in SIP endpoints. In addition there
is a command line UNIX client and a graphical Windows client that check what
type of NAT the user is using.
STUN is an application-layer protocol that can determine the public IP and
nature of a NAT device that sits between the STUN client and STUN server.
The current version of the code supports most of RFC 3489 except the ability
to get OTPs from the server.