Net::OAuth2 provides OAuth 2.0 for Perl.
This package provides a class object which can be used for creating,
manipulating and sending a raw IP packets with optional feature for
manipulating ethernet headers.
SOAP/Perl is a collection of Perl modules which provides a simple
and consistent application programming interface (API) to the
Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP).
This module is a unified framework to craft, send and receive packets at
layers 2, 3, 4 and 7.
Basically, you forge each layer of a frame (Net::Packet::IPv4 for layer 3,
Net::Packet::TCP for layer 4 ; for example), and pack all of this into a
Net::Packet::Frame object. Then, you can send the frame to the network, and
receive it easily, since the response is automatically searched for and
matched against the request.
This module uses a Patricia Trie data structure to quickly perform
IP address prefix matching for applications such as IP subnet,
network or routing table lookups. The data structure is based on
a radix tree using a radix of two, so sometimes you see patricia
implementations called "radix" as well. The term "Trie" is derived
from the word "retrieval" but is pronounced like "try". Patricia
stands for "Practical Algorithm to Retrieve Information Coded as
Alphanumeric", and was first suggested for routing table lookups
by Van Jacobsen. Patricia Trie performance characteristics are
well-known as it has been employed for routing table lookups within
the BSD kernel since the 4.3 Reno release.
The BSD radix code is thoroughly described in "TCP/IP Illustrated,
Volume 2" by Wright and Stevens and in the paper ``A Tree-Based
Packet Routing Table for Berkeley Unix'' by Keith Sklower.
Interface to pcap(3) LBL packet capture library
Net::PcapUtils is a module to sit in front of Net::Pcap in order to hide
some of the pcap(3) initialisation by providing sensible defaults. This
enables a programmer to easily write small, specific scripts for a
particular purpose without having to worry about too many details.
The Net::RTP module subclasses IO::Socket::Multicast6 to enable you to
manipulate multicast groups. The multicast additions are optional, so you
may also send and recieve unicast packets.
This module implements a client interface to the SNPP protocol,
enabling a perl5 application to talk to SNPP servers. The SNPP
protocol is described in RFC1861.
Net::RabbitFoot is an AMQP(Advanced Message Queuing Protocol) client library,
that is intended to allow you to interact with AMQP-compliant message
brokers/servers such as RabbitMQ in an asynchronous fashion.
You can use Net::RabbitFoot to -
* Declare and delete exchanges
* Declare, delete, bind and unbind queues
* Set QoS
* Publish, consume, get, ack, recover and reject messages
* Select, commit and rollback transactions
Net::RabbitFoot is known to work with RabbitMQ versions 2.4.0 and version 0-8
of the AMQP specification.