This is a port of the ircd-ratbox IRC daemon.
ircd-ratbox is the primary ircd used on EFnet; it combines the stability
of an ircd required for a large production network together with a rich
set of features, making it also suitable for use on smaller networks.
Changes Include:
o Optional SSL support to enable encrypted connections between clients
and servers, as well as server to server links.
o Add support for SSL only channels, channel mode +S.
o sqlite3 for handling and storing k/x/d lines.
o Support for global CIDR limits.
o Added adminwall allowing admins to broadcast messages to each other.
o Creation of new library archive 'libratbox'.
o Support for forced nick changes (instead of collision kills).
o New ssld and bandb processes for SSL connections and ban checking;
these allow ratbox-3 to make better use of multi-processor systems.
This code forms a set of C++ libraries for multimedia streaming,
using open standard protocols (RTP/RTCP and RTSP). These libraries
- which can be compiled for Unix (including Linux and Mac OS X),
Windows, and QNX(and other POSIX-compliant systems) - can be used
to build streaming applications. The libraries are already being
used to implement applications such as "liveCaster" and "playRTPMPEG"
(for streaming MP3 audio using RTP/RTCP). The libraries can also
be used to stream, receive, and process MPEG video, and can easily be
extended to support additional (audio and/or video) codecs. They can
also be used to build basic RTSP clients and servers, and have been
used to add streaming support to existing media player applications,
such as "mplayer".
This module provides a WebDAV server. WebDAV stands for "Web-based
Distributed Authoring and Versioning". It is a set of extensions to
the HTTP protocol which allows users to collaboratively edit and
manage files on remote web servers.
Net::DAV::Server provides a WebDAV server and exports a filesystem for
you using the Filesys::Virtual suite of modules. If you simply want to
export a local filesystem, use Filesys::Virtual::Plain as above.
This module doesn't currently provide a full WebDAV implementation.
However, I am working through the WebDAV server protocol compliance
test suite (litmus, see http://www.webdav.org/neon/litmus/) and will
provide more compliance in future. The important thing is that it
supports cadaver and the Mac OS X Finder as clients.
Charm is a command-line client written in Python for interacting with
LiveJournal servers.
Bindgraph makes pretty query statistics about BIND servers. It was derived
from well-known mailgraph package.
A thread-safe DNS library for both clients and servers written in pure
Haskell.
This library servers for displaying PNG images in programs
using the Allegro multimedia library.
A simple callback-based HTTP request/response parser for writing http servers,
clients and proxies.
Rubygem-oauth is a RubyGem for implementing both OAuth clients and
servers in Ruby applications.
nats-top is a top-like tool for monitoring NATS servers.