RightScale's AWS gems provide robust, fast, and secure Ruby interfaces
to Amazon EC2, Amazon S3, Amazon SQS, and Amazon SDB. The gems use
Amazon's REST and query interfaces to provide full programmatic
control. An optional robust HTTP layer retries and clears transient
errors.
PR: ports/123315
Submitted by: Greg Larkin <glarkin at sourcehosting.net>
RightScale's AWS gems provide robust, fast, and secure Ruby interfaces
to Amazon EC2, Amazon S3, Amazon SQS, and Amazon SDB. The gems use
Amazon's REST and query interfaces to provide full programmatic
control. An optional robust HTTP layer retries and clears transient
errors.
PR: ports/123314
Submitted by: Greg Larkin <glarkin at sourcehosting.net>
This module provides OO interface to Google REST (aka AJAX) API.
Currently support for Search, Feeds and Translate services.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/REST-Google/
parsing. It is inspired by Graham Barr's Perl Net::Netrc module.
WWW: http://net-netrc.rubyforge.org/
PR: ports/122709
Submitted by: IWATSUKI Hiroyuki <don at na.rim.or.jp>
in the URI Template draft that is currently being proposed to
the IETF.
WWW: http://pear.php.net/package/URI_Template/
PR: ports/122533
Submitted by: Wen heping <wenheping at gmail.com>
2008-04-02 net/dhcp-agent: Dhcp-agent has not been updated since 2003, it does not build with guile-1.8, and it is unmaintained
2008-04-22 net/ocaml-netclient: is part of ocaml-net
2008-04-06 net/samplicator: Project has vanished
2008-03-20 graphics/entice: Broken and unmaintained
daemon. It supports all vpopmaild commands, such as adding/removing
domains, users, robots (autoresponders), and ezmlm lists (todo),
as well as modifying domain limits, ip maps, etc.
WWW: http://pear.php.net/package/Net_Vpopmaild/
PR: ports/122689
Submitted by: Wen heping <wenheping at gmail.com>)
provides a new channel type and attempts to permit the use of packet
oriented UDP over stream oriented Tcl channels.
PR: ports/122315
Submitted by: Frank Fenor <frank@fenor.de>
Approved by: garga (mentor)
This module uses Hiveminder's REST API to let you manage your tasks
any way you want to.
This module is built on top of Net::Jifty. Consult that module's
documentation for the lower-level interface.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Net-Hiveminder/
The Alexa Site Thumbnail web service provides developers with
programmatic access to thumbnail images for the home pages of web
sites. It offers access to Alexa's large and growing collection of
images, gathered from its comprehensive web crawl. This web service
enables developers to enhance web sites, search results, web
directories, blog entries, and other web real estate with Alexa
thumbnail images.
PR: ports/121915
Submitted by: Greg Larkin <glarkin at sourcehosting.net>
This module creates the encrypted signature needed to login to
Amazon's Mechanical Turk and Alexa web services and any other web
services that Amazon might make in the future that require an
encrypted signature, assuming they follow the same convention.
PR: ports/121911
Submitted by: Greg Larkin <glarkin at sourcehosting.net>
FreeBSD. The official GNOME 2.22 release notes can be found at
http://library.gnome.org/misc/release-notes/2.22/ . On the FreeBSD front,
this release features an updated hal port with support for video4linux
devices, DRM (Direct Rendering), and better support of removable media. Work
is also underway to tie webkit more closely into GNOME. As part of the
GNOME 2.22 upgrade, GStreamer received a rather large upgrade as well.
Be sure to consult UPDATING on the proper steps to upgrade all of your
GNOME ports.
This release would not have been possible without the contributions and
testing efforts of the following people:
Pawel Worach
kan
edwin
Peter Ulrich Kruppa
J. W. Ballantine
Yasuda Keisuke
Andriy Gapon
for applications. Using this module, you can interact with that
REST interface to write client-side utilities.
You can use this module directly, but you'll be better off subclassing it.
This module also provides a number of convenient methods for writing
short scripts. For example, passing use_config => 1 to new will look at
the config file for the username and password (or SID) of the user.
If neither is available, it will prompt the user for them.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Net-Jifty/
- Deprecate old unsupported apps and modules (entice, devian, eveil, engage)
- Split evas and ecore to separate modules to handle dependencies properly
- Disable PAM in enlightenment-devel as it don't work anyway (requires root
privilegies)
- Add DBUS support.
Thanks to: az
2008-01-14 x11-themes/gtk-smooth-engine: Redundant port (now included in gtk-engines), no release since 2005
2007-09-21 security/amavis-perl: depends on misc/compat3x, which has security problems
2007-12-31 sysutils/cdbakeoven: Abandonware
2008-01-04 net/gnu-finger: no active development and known security vulnerabilities.
2007-11-16 misc/seizedesktop: development stalled for years, outdated, unmaintained
hourly, daily and monthly network traffic for the selected interface(s).
However, it isn't a packet sniffer. The traffic information is analyzed
from the proc(5) filesystem. That way vnStat can be used even
without root permissions.
PR: ports/120825
Submitted by: Dennis Herrmann <adox at mcx2.org> (maintainer)
The returned has is in the following format.
{DN}{ldap}{attribute}[array of values for this attribute]
The reason for the {ldap} is to allow for other values and
the like to be tagged onto a hash for a DN that are unrelated to LDAP.
This function does not make any attempt to check if the search succedded
or not.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Net-LDAP-LDAPhash/
PR: ports/120589
Submitted by: Zane C, Bowers <vvelox at vvelox.net>
and IPFIX, and the encoding function for NetFlow version 9 and IPFIX.
It supports NetFlow version 9 (RFC3945) and NetFlow version 5
(http://www.cisco.com/) and IPFIX(draft-ietf-ipfix-protocol-26.txt).
Regretfully, it doesn't provide the full specification of IPFIX, yet.
It is future work. You can easily make the Flow Proxy, Protocol Converter
and Flow Concentrator by using the combination of both function. And also,
you can make the flexible Collector which can receive any Templates
by using the Storable perl module.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Net-Flow/
PR: ports/120747
Submitted by: Tsung-Han Yeh <snowfly at yuntech.edu.tw>
heuristics over the UDP network traffic. It works well with SIP, H.323, SCCP
and any other signaling protocol. In particular, it doesn't require the presence
of RTCP packets (voipong needs them) that aren't always transmitted from the
recent VoIP clients.
WWW: http://xenion.antifork.org/rtpbreak/
PR: ports/120728
Submitted by: Prudhvi Krishna <prudhvikrishna at gmail.com>
following when trying to upload configuration or download images
from it: The TFTP server doesn't support the blocksize option.
My curiousity was triggered, it took me some reading of RFCs and
other documentation to find out what was possible and what could
be done. Was plain TFTP very simple in its handshake, TFTP with
options was kind of messy because of its backwards capability: The
first packet returned could either be an acknowledgement of options,
or the first data packet.
Going through the source code of src/libexec/tftpd and going through
the code of src/usr.bin/tftp showed that there was a lot of duplicate
code, and the addition of options would only increase the amount
of duplicate code. After all, both the client and the server can
act as a sender and receiver.
At the end, it ended up with a nearly complete rewrite of the tftp
client and server. It has been tested against the following TFTP
clients and servers:
- Itself (yay!)
- The standard FreeBSD tftp client and server
- The Fedora Core 6 tftp client and server
- Cisco router tftp client
- Extreme Networks tftp client
It supports the following RFCs:
RFC1350 - THE TFTP PROTOCOL (REVISION 2)
RFC2347 - TFTP Option Extension
RFC2348 - TFTP Blocksize Option
RFC2349 - TFTP Timeout Interval and Transfer Size Options
RFC3617 - Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) Scheme and Applicability
Statement for the Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP)
It supports the following unofficial TFTP Options as described at
http://www.compuphase.com/tftp.htm:
blksize2 - Block size restricted to powers of 2, excluding protocol headers
rollover - Block counter roll-over (roll back to zero or to one)
From the tftp program point of view the following things are changed:
- New commands: "blocksize", "blocksize2", "rollover" and "options"
- Development features: "debug" and "packetdrop"
If you try this tftp/tftpd implementation, please let me know if
it works (or doesn't work) and against which implementaion so I can
get a list of confirmed working systems.
Author: Edwin Groothuis <edwin@FreeBSD.org>
The usage of the miniUPnP client library is useful whenever an application
needs to listen for incoming connections.
Examples : P2P applications, FTP clients for active mode, IRC (for DCC)
or IM applications, network games, any server.
WWW: http://miniupnp.free.fr/
relayd is a daemon to relay and dynamically redirect incoming
connections to a target host. Its main purposes are to run as a
load-balancer, application layer gateway, or transparent proxy. The
daemon is able to monitor groups of hosts for availability, which is
determined by checking for a specific service common to a host group.
WWW: http://spootnik.org/relayd/
# This port will work on $OSVERSION >= 700049.
# If you want to use on RELENG_6, apply a patch in
# http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb/src/sys/net/pf_table.c.diff?r1=1.67&r2=1.68
relays the data transfered between the source and the destination.
The goal of this module is to abstract the different methods used to
connect from the proxy to the destination.
A proxy is a program that transfer data across a network boundary
between a client and a server. Net::Proxy introduces the concept of
"connectors" (implemented as Net::Proxy::Connector subclasses), which
abstract the server part (connected to the client) and the client part
(connected to the server) of the proxy.
This architecture makes it easy to implement specific techniques to
cross a given network boundary, possibly by using a proxy on one side of
the network fence, and a reverse-proxy on the other side of the fence.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Net-Proxy
PR: ports/119301
Submitted by: Philippe Audeoud <jadawin at tuxaco.net>
automation. This package contains the EIBnet/IP tunneling and routing daemon
which is part of the BCU SDK. It provides access to an EIB bus over TCP/IP and
Unix domain sockets.
WWW: http://www.auto.tuwien.ac.at/~mkoegler/index.php/eibd
PR: ports/118471
Submitted by: Björn König <bkoenig at alpha-tierchen.de>
high loaded routers with tens interfaces and thousands hosts behind them.
It's fast and does not depend on any side library. Some ideas was
taken from Edwin's dhcprelay (net/dhcprelay) which has some shortages.
It's distributed under BSD license.
It is designed to handle communication with multiple Asterisk servers. It also
acts as a single point of contact for applications. AstManProxy supports
multiple input/output formats, including Standard, XML, CSV, and HTTP, HTTPS and
SSL.
WWW: http://www.popvox.com/astmanproxy/
Author: David C. Troy <dave@popvox.com>
PR: ports/117864
Submitted by: ditesh at gathani.org