It uses the GTK+ library, and so is usually run under XWindows,
although GTK+ environments also exist for Windows and Mac OS X.
PR: ports/83296
Submitted by: Filippo Natali <filippo.natali@gmail.com>
Its main features are:
o Download torrent files
o Upload speed capping, seeing that most people can't upload infinite
amounts of data
o Internet searching using The Bittorrent website's search engine
o UDP Trackers
WWW: http://ktorrent.pwsp.net/
brokers, Freenet6 uses an innovative model based on the TSP Client. The TSP
Client is software that usually runs on a PC and that implements the Tunnel
Setup Protocol (TSP). The TSP Client is used to automatically negotiate a
configured tunnel between a PC or router and the Freenet6 tunnel broker,
making IPv6 easy to install and maintain. The TSP Client source code is
licensed under the GPL. A commercial license is also available.
PR: ports/83260
Submitted by: Linas Valiukas <shirshegsm@gmail.com>
in conjunction with iwi(4). iwi(4) had already been included in HEAD, but
according to Damien Bergamini, there are no plans to MFC it to RELENG_5.
There is an option (WITH_)MODULE to build and install an iwi(4) module
from a snapshot if you're running RELENG_5.
Note: As of the date of this commit, it seems there are issues with the
iwi(4) snapshot and you might experience some problems.
is a very useful network graphics protocol which allows multiple simple
remote viewers to watch and control a single desktop. x11vnc differs from
traditional UNIX VNC servers in that it is accessing a real X displays that
may already be in progress rather than creating it's own X server for clients
to connect to.
WWW: http://www.karlrunge.com/x11vnc/
PR: ports/81995
Submitted by: Loren M. Lang <lorenl@alzatex.com>
to make the power of MPI available to Ruby users in a way that fits into the
language's object oriented model. In order to do this, the buffer and datatype
management necessary in the C, C++, and Fortran bindings have been removed.
What this means is that MPI Ruby allows you to treat objects as messages.
PR: ports/80310
Submitted by: Michael Neumann <mneumann@ntecs.de>
This is a port of IPVS (aka LVS) on FreeBSD. IPVS is a highly scalable
and highly available server built on a cluster of real servers, with the
load balancer. The architecture of the server cluster is fully
transparent to end users, and the users interact as if it were a single
high-performance virtual server.
http://dragon.linux-vs.org/~dragonfly/htm/lvs_freebsd.htm
useful in corporate networks, where there is only http proxy, so ntp don't
work.
PR: ports/82067
Submitted by: Vsevolod Stakhov <vsevolod@highsecure.ru>
The purpose of this transport is to provide a way for users to be logged into
ICQ via their Jabber account. It is implemented in Python, using the Twisted
framework. This project is just getting off the ground, and so it does not have
quite the functionality of other transports yet. That will come in time.
PR: ports/81994
Submitted by: Renato Botelho <freebsd@galle.com.br>
mobile HTTP user agents. It'll be useful in page dispatching by user agents.
This package was ported from Perl's HTTP::MobileAgent.
PR: ports/81936
Submitted by: Shinsuke Matsui <smatsui@karashi.org>
The port will be based on dated CVS snapshots until the release of version 1.0
(thus PORTVERSION 0.0).
PR: 81917
Submitted by: Krzysztof Pawlowski <msciciel@darkzone.ma.cx>
The Net::OpenDHT module provides a simple interface to the Open DHT
service. Open DHT is a publicly accessible distributed hash table (DHT)
service. In contrast to the usual DHT model, clients of Open DHT do not
need to run a DHT node in order to use the service. Instead, they can
issue put and get operations to any DHT node, which processes the
operations on their behalf. No credentials or accounts are required to use
the service, and the available storage is fairly shared across all active
clients.
This service model of DHT usage greatly simplifies deploying client
applications. By using Open DHT as a highly-available naming and storage
service, clients can ignore the complexities of deploying and maintaining
a DHT and instead concentrate on developing more sophisticated distributed
applications.
WWW: http://opendht.org/users-guide.html
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Net-OpenDHT/
Author: Leon Brocard <acme@astray.com>
PR: ports/81366
Submitted by: Aaron Dalton <aaron@daltons.ca>
Libopennet allows you to open_net() remote files as easily as you open()
local files.
WWW: http://www.rkeene.org/oss/libopennet/
PR: ports/81338
Submitted by: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin@netnews.NCTU.edu.tw>
tool for IPv4 and IPv6 traceroute with path
MTU discovery.
The submitter agreed, that the original author of scamper
(Matthew Luckie <mjl@luckie.org.nz>) will be the
port maintainer.
Matthew recommended using a more recent snapshot of the software than the
version used in the PR.
PR: 81186
Submitted by: Dikshie <dikshie@lapi.itb.ac.id>
DConnect Daemon is a Direct Connect Hub clone for Unix. It allows people to
share their resources, i.e.: programs, graphics, other files...
Features:
* fast, pure C implementation
* libwrap support (hosts.allow, hosts.deny)
* low per-user memory consumption
* uses threads (no forking)
* nick pattern matching
* simple administration through telnet console
WWW: http://www.dc.ds.pg.gda.pl/
PR: ports/81021
Submitted by: Aleksandr S. Goncharov <mraleks@bk.ru>
in conjunction with ipw(4). ipw(4) had already been included in HEAD, but
according to Damien Bergamini, there are no plans to MFC it to RELENG_5.
This port comes with ipwcontrol(8) but not with ipw(4), I guess it could
be a good idea to add a knob to build the module for RELENG_5 users. I'll
probably do that if people ask for it.
- License is quite restrictive but I think I'm not violating anything
allowing pointyhat to build a package (implicitly, it means pointyhat/I
agree with license terms).
primarily targetted on (but not limited to) UNIX-like systems and distributed
under the GNU General Public License.
* Both IPv4 and IPv6 (use --enable-ipv6 when configuring)
* Multiple routing tables
* BGP
* RIP
* OSPF (IPv4 only)
* Static routes
* Inter-table protocol
provide automatic failover. It is a portable userland implementation of the
secure and patent-free Common Address Redundancy Protocol (CARP, OpenBSD's
alternative to the VRRP).
PR: ports/80696
Submitted by: Meno Abels <meno.abels@adviser.com>
There is development version of openldap named 2.3.2beta2.
These ports are based on http://people.freebsd.org/~eik/ports/openldap23.shar.
The repocopy has been already made in ports/77170.
PR: ports/80618
Submitted by: Vsevolod Stakhov <vsevolod@highsecure.ru>