these will be added as soon as I can track them down properly (probably
along with an upgrade to 3.1.1)
This update incorporates contributions from Dru Lavigne and Dmitriy
Kirhlarov, and was sponsored by the University of Tromsø (uit.no).
Groundwork Fruity is a PHP based web-frontend to your Nagios
configuration. It support handling Nagios 2.x configurations and it
can import your old Nagios 1.x configurations. It also supports
Nagios templates and makes them even more powerful.
Feature List:
- Supports Nagios 2.x Directives
- Supports New Servicegroups
- Supports Nagios Templates with Advanced Features
- Supports inherited templates
- Supports Overridding Template Values
- Supports Importing Nagios 2.x and 1.x Configurations
WWW: http://fruity.sourceforge.net/
of jobs that have already run. It obtains its information from your catalog
database. Aside from a nice graphical display, it provides summaries of your
jobs, as well as graphs of job usage. This is a fairly high level bacula
management tool. Here are a few points that one user made concerning this
important tool:
- It is web-based so can be accessed from anywhere.
- It is "read only" users can examine the state of the backups but not write
to anything and therefore do no damage
- It packs a phenomenal amount of information into a single web-page - that I
credit as being very good design!
The documentation for bacula-web can be found in a separate bacula-web
document in the bacula-docs release.
WWW: http://www.bacula.org/
PR: ports/107617
Submitted by: Dan Langille <dan at langille.org>
- Make sure nagios user/group is created when installing from ports
- Pass maintainership to submitter
PR: ports/107175
Submitted by: Dan Langille <dan at langille.org>
NDPMon, Neighbor Discovery Protocol Monitor, is a tool working with
ICMPv6 packets. NDPMon observes the local network to see if nodes
using neighbor discovery messages behave properly. When it detects
a suspicious Neighbor Discovery message, it notifies the administrator
by writing in the syslog and in some cases by sending an email
report.
WWW: http://ndpmon.sourceforge.net
Janos Mohacsi <janos.mohacsi@bsd.hu>
PR: ports/106840
Submitted by: janos.mohacsi at bsd.hu
or network device clients. It is used to transfer
configurations, boot images, and kernels images
(eg: IOS) to the devices.
These files are often tranfered with TFTP, but TFTP
has reliability and speed issues and file size
limitations due to it's protocol specification and
underlying transport; while RCP is not affected.
WWW: http://www.shrubbery.net/rcpd/
Submitted by: Babak Farrokhi <farrokhi at FreeBSD.org>
* It will monitor nearly anything you ask it to monitor (TCP + UDP
applications, IP connectivity, SNMP OIDS, Programs, Databases,
etc).
* It presents a nice clean, easy to view web interface that will keep both the
managers happy (Red Bad. Green Good.) and the techs happy ("Ah! that's what
the problem is").
* It can send alerts numerous ways (such as via pager) and can automatically
escalate if someone falls asleep.
WWW: http://argus.tcp4me.com/
PR: ports/105837
Submitted by: Brock Williams <brock@gringo.cotcomsol.com>
- Use USE_RC_SUBR for rc scripts
- Use SUB_FILES to simplify
- Update pkg-descr
PR: ports/105564
Submitted by: Viktor Fomichev <vfom at narod.ru> (maintainer)
tables reachable from other hosts. You can add/delete/flush
IP addresses to/from a remote table with a single UDP
datagram. A simple client program is included to do this
from the command line.
WWW: http://wolfermann.org/pftabled.html
PR: ports/105713
Submitted by: Bartlomiej Rutkowski <r at robakdesign.com>