GOsa is a combination of system-administrator and end-user web
interface, designed to handle LDAP based setups. Provided is access
to posix, shadow, samba, proxy, fax, and kerberos accounts. It is able
to manage the postfix/cyrus server combination and can write user
adapted sieve scripts.
The PCI Utilities package contains various utilities dealing
with the PCI bus, and also a library for portable access to
PCI configuration registers. It includes `lspci' for listing
all PCI devices (very useful for debugging of both kernel and
device drivers) and `setpci' for manual configuration of PCI
devices.
This package provides a Virtual File System API, with backends for:
* SQL
* FTP
* Local filesystems
* Hybrid SQL and filesystem
* Samba
* SSH2/SFTP
* IMAP (Kolab)
Reading, writing and listing of files are all supported, and there are both
object-based and array-based interfaces to directory listings.
rclean provides a command-line tool to order and clean content of
rc.conf, using option order from /etc/defaults/rc.conf and printing only
choices that were different by the default value in /etc/rc.conf.
Output is customizable from "only used values" to "full listing".
rdate(8) sets the clock of the local host to the time of another host.
OpenBSD's rdate is a much improved version of the original rdate(8)
by Christos Zoulas. This version not only supports RFC 868,
but also RFC 5905 (NTP, SNTP), which is now used by default.
Both IPv4 and IPv6 are supported.
pipemeter - measure speed of data going through a pipe/redirection
Features:
- Shows speed of data moving from input to output
- Shows percentage complete if regular file specified
- Allows tuning of block size and display interval
- Support for dd style block size specification
Rtty is "remote tty" (not radioteletype). You run a server per port
and then connect to that server from any number of "tip"/"cu"-like
clients. I wrote it for our console concentrator, but there's no
reason other than performance why you couldn't use it to drive modems,
printers, prom programmers, and so on.
Puppet-lint checks your Puppet manifests against the Puppet Labs style
guide and alerts you to any discrepancies.
You can test a single manifest file by running:
puppet-lint <path to file>
If you want to test your entire Puppet manifest directory, you can add
require 'puppet-lint/tasks/puppet-lint' to your Rakefile and then run:
rake lint
Puppet lets you centrally manage every important aspect of your system using
a cross-platform specification language that manages all the separate
elements normally aggregated in different files, like users, cron jobs, and
hosts, along with obviously discrete elements like packages, services, and
files.
Puppet lets you centrally manage every important aspect of your system using
a cross-platform specification language that manages all the separate
elements normally aggregated in different files, like users, cron jobs, and
hosts, along with obviously discrete elements like packages, services, and
files.