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irc/thales-1.0 (Score: 0.0038809602)
GNU Thales -- An IRC to MySQL gateway
Thales is an IRC to MySQL Gateway. It connects to your IRC network as a service, and converts messages it receives to SQL queries to update the database. It collects data about users, channels and servers. It does not build stats itself, but gives you the database, it's your role to write third-party applications or scripts, for example in PHP, to extract data from it. Some example applications are provided. Supported DBMS and IRCDs: * Currently runs with MySQL * Currently supports Unreal (3.1 or later) * Support for Bahamut (1.4.27 or later), Hybrid 7 and Ultimate (2.8 or later, 3.0.0 or later) is still included, but is not maintained
japanese/esecanna-1.0.1 (Score: 0.0038809602)
Pseudo cannaserver which wraps some other input engines
Esecanna pretends to be a cannaserver and listens to canna clients. It interprets to one of the VJE 3.0/2.5 or Wnn6 servers what they say, then passes through to them what it results. You'll have to install one of the esecanna modules to run it. With this, you can use VJE 3.0/2.5 or Wnn6's smart input engine also from the console applications. [ canna clients ] (mule, jvim, etc.) || /\ \/ || [ esecanna ] (esecannaserver + {vje30,wnn6} module) || /\ \/ || [ input engine ] (vjed or jserver) Further information is found on the following web site:
mail/libmapi-2.3 (Score: 0.0038809602)
Open Source implementation of Microsoft Exchange protocols
The OpenChange MAPI library aims to provide interoperability with an Open Source implementation of Microsoft Exchange protocols under UNIX/Linux. The current implementation offers a client-side library which can be used in existing messaging clients and offer native compatibility with Exchange Servers up to 2007. MAPI stands for Messaging Application Programming Interface and is used in the Microsoft Exchange Server groupware server. This solution works with Outlook and provides collaborative features such as a messaging server, shared calendars, contact databases, public folders and tasks.
mail/smfsav-1.4.0 (Score: 0.0038809602)
Sendmail Sender Address Validator
It's a lightweight, fast and reliable Sendmail milter that implements a real-time Sender e-Mail Address Verification technology. This technology can stop some kinds of SPAM with a spoofed sender's e-Mail address. Also it implements a real-time Recipient e-Mail Address Verification technology. It can be useful if your machine is a backup MX for the recipient's domains or if your machine forwards all e-Mail messages as a relay host for your domains to another internal or external e-Mail servers. It's a lite alternative for the spamilter, milter-sender and milter-ahead milters.
mail/rftp-1.2 (Score: 0.0038809602)
Automatically reconstruct ftpmail- or bitftp-retrieved files
This program is for any user who retrieves ftp files via ftpmail or bitftp servers. It runs quietly in the background and watches the user's mail directory. When the mail- retrieved file has arrived in full, rftp puts the pieces together in order and stores the tarball in a directory. I wrote this several years ago when my only link to the Arpanet was a uucp link. These days, most FreeBSD users have a direct link to the net. For the dozens or hundreds who don't this should be of use.
mail/spampd-2.42 (Score: 0.0038809602)
Spamassassin SMTP Proxy
spampd is a program used within an e-mail delivery system to scan messages for possible Unsolicited Commercial E-mail (UCE, aka spam) content. It uses an excellent program called SpamAssassin (SA) to do the actual message scanning. spampd acts as a transparent SMTP/LMTP proxy between two mail servers, and during the transaction it passes the mail through SA. If SA decides the mail could be spam, then spampd will ask SA to add some headers and a report to the message indicating it's spam and why. spampd is written in Perl and should theoretically run on any platform supported by Perl and SpamAssassin.
net-mgmt/nagstamon-1.0 (Score: 0.0038809602)
Nagios status monitor for your desktop
Nagstamon is a Nagios status monitor for the desktop. It connects to multiple Nagios, Icinga, Opsview, Centreon, Op5 Monitor/Ninja and Check_MK Multisite monitoring servers and resides in systray or as a floating statusbar at the desktop showing a brief summary of critical, warning, unknown, unreachable and down hosts and services and pops up a detailed status overview when moving the mouse pointer over it. Connecting to displayed hosts and services is easily established by context menu via SSH, RDP and VNC. Users can be notified by sound. Hosts and services can be filtered by category and regular expressions.
net-mgmt/riemann-0.2.11 (Score: 0.0038809602)
Monitors distributed systems
Riemann monitors low-latency, transient shared state for systems with many moving parts. Riemann aggregates events from your servers and applications with a powerful stream processing language. Send an email for every exception raised by your code. Track the latency distribution of your web app. See the top processes on any host, by memory and CPU. Combine statistics from every Riak node in your cluster and forward to Graphite. Send alerts when a key process fails to check in. Know how many users signed up right this second.
net/dgd-1.4.22 (Score: 0.0038809602)
Dworkin's Game Driver
DGD is a rewrite from scratch of the LPMud server. It runs on Windows, MacOS, BeOS and many versions of Unix. This is the core distribution of DGD, providing all the tools needed to implement interactive servers, for instance MUD, IRC, WWW, etc. A reference implementation of a kernel library is provided, which can be further built on. Normally with DGD, there is a kernel library to define the programming environment and a database library to define the interaction environment. Please report bugs to <felix@dworkin.nl>.
net/ntp-4.3.93 (Score: 0.0038809602)
The Network Time Protocol Distribution
The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is used to synchronize the time of a computer client or server to another server or reference time source, such as a radio or satellite receiver or modem. It provides client accuracies typically within a millisecond on LANs and up to a few tens of milliseconds on WANs relative to a primary server synchronized to Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) via a Global Positioning Service (GPS) receiver, for example. Typical NTP configurations utilize multiple redundant servers and diverse network paths, in order to achieve high accuracy and reliability. Some configurations include cryptographic authentication to prevent accidental or malicious protocol attacks. See homepage for more infos: