The guacamole-server package is a set of software which forms the
basis of the Guacamole stack. It consists of guacd, libguac, and
several protocol support libraries.
guacd is the Guacamole proxy daemon used by the Guacamole web
application and framework. As JavaScript cannot handle binary
protocols (like VNC and remote desktop) efficiently, a new test-based
protocol was developed which would contain a common superset of the
operations needed for efficient remote desktop access, but would
be easy for JavaScript programs to process. guacd is the proxy which
translates between arbitrary protocols and the Guacamole protocol.
GUPnP-AV is a collection of helpers for building AV (audio/video) applications
using GUPnP.
GUPnP DLNA is a small utility library that aims to ease the DLNA-related tasks
such as media profile guessing, transcoding to a given profile, etc.
This is a library to handle UPnP IGD port mapping.
GUPnP-UI provides a collection of simple GTK+ widgets on top of GUPnP.
GUPnP is an elegant, object-oriented open source framework for creating UPnP
devices and control points, written in C using GObject and libsoup. The GUPnP
API is intended to be easy to use, efficient and flexible. It provides the same
set of features as libupnp, but shields the developer from most of UPnP's
internals.
GUPnP implements the UPnP specification: resource announcement and discovery,
description, control, event notification, and presentation (GUPnP includes basic
web server functionality through libsoup). GUPnP does not include helpers for
construction or control of specific standardized resources (e.g. MediaServer);
this is left for higher level libraries utilizing the GUPnP framework.
gwhois is a generic whois client. It strives to know for all existing
tlds and all ip address range the appropiate whois server to ask. You
can simple call gwhois with a query for some domain or some ip and it
will ask the right server for you! It can even query webforms which
are unfortunately the only query type supported by many bad nics.
gwhois can also be used as a whois server. You can call it from the
inetd and make it accessable via a normal standard whois client. This
allows for example using a Windows client and still make use of the
enhanced features of gwhois.
Hans makes it possible to tunnel IPv4 through ICMP echo packets, so you
could call it a ping tunnel. This can be useful when you find yourself
in the situation that your Internet access is firewalled, but pings are
allowed.
Hans runs on Linux as a client and a server. It runs on Mac OS X,
iPhone/iPod touch, FreeBSD and OpenBSD as a client only.
KNemo - the KDE Network Monitor
KNemo offers a network monitor similar to the one found in Windows.
For every network interface it displays an icon in the systray.
KRDC is a client application that allows you to view or even control
the desktop session on another machine that is running a compatible
server. VNC and RDP is supported.