Tools for Meinberg GPS and PTP cards including a loadable kernel
driver.
Magic Rescue scans a block device for file types it knows how to recover and
calls an external program to extract them. It looks at "magic bytes" in file
contents, so it can be used both as an undelete utility and for recovering a
corrupted drive or partition. As long as the file data is there, it will
find it.
It works on any file system, but on very fragmented file systems it can only
recover the first chunk of each file. Practical experience shows, however, that
chunks of 30-50MB are not uncommon.
The mcron program represents a complete re-think of the cron concept originally
found in the Berkeley and AT&T unices, and subsequently rationalized by Paul
Vixie. The original idea was to have a daemon that wakes up every minute, scans
a set of files under a special directory, and determines from those files if
any shell commands should be executed in this minute.
The new idea is to read the required command instructions, work out which
command needs to be executed next, and then sleep until the inferred time has
arrived. On waking the commands are run, and the time of the next command is
computed. Furthermore, the specifications are written in scheme, allowing at
the same time simple command execution instructions and very much more flexible
ones to be composed than the original Vixie format. This has several useful
advantages over the original idea.
This program dumps system memory to the standard output stream, skipping
over holes in memory maps. By default, the program dumps the contents of
physical memory.
Note: consider using Brian Carrier's Sleuthkit, available as `sysutils/
sleuthkit' port. It is the official successor, based on parts from TCT.
Development of the Coroner's Toolkit was stopped years ago. It is only
updated for bugfixes, which are very rare.
Securely, and quickly copy data from Source to Target over
IPv4 and IPv6 networks.
Nagios-statd is an addon to the Nagios (formerly netsaint) program.
It is a Python daemon and scripts that plug-in to Nagios
and allow you to check remote host information
(such as load, users, filesystems, etc.)
Released under the BSD license.
The Autopsy Forensic Browser is a graphical interface to the command line
digital investigation analysis tools in The Sleuth Kit. Together, they can
analyze Windows and UNIX disks and file systems (NTFS, FAT, UFS1/2, Ext2/3).
As Autopsy is HTML-based, you can connect to the Autopsy server from any
platform using an HTML browser. Autopsy provides a "File Manager"-like
interface and shows details about deleted data and file system structures.
WARNING: The cross-platform version of Autopsy is no longer actively
developed. This port is retained mainly to allow users with
saved data to migrate to another forensic tool.
Mpiexec is a replacement program for the script mpirun, which is part of the
MPICH package. It is used to initialize a parallel job from within a PBS
batch or interactive environment. Mpiexec uses the task manager library of
PBS to spawn copies of the executable on the nodes in a PBS allocation.
Tool to view space usage in your terminal.
Pipe Viewer (pv) is a terminal-based tool for monitoring the
progress of data through a pipeline. It can be inserted into
any normal pipeline between two processes to give a visual
indication of how quickly data is passing through, how long
it has taken, how near to completion it is, and an estimate
of how long it will be until completion.