Julian Elischer suggested a new category "net/benchmarks" because
he believes that too many ports are listed under net/. Checking
into it, I noticed that these two ports are described as
benchmarking programs. In the Porters' Handbook, the net
category is described as "miscellaneous networking software".
The benchmarks category seems more specific so I feel that it
is preferable.
PR: ports/39095
Submitted by: Trevor Johnson <trevor@jpj.net>
self-describing ASCII format easily readable by humans and
programs. Ipsumdump can read packets from network interfaces,
from tcpdump files, and from existing ipsumdump files. It will
transparently uncompress tcpdump or ipsumdump files when
necessary. It can randomly sample traffic, filter traffic based
on its contents, anonymize IP addresses, and sort packets from
multiple dumps by timestamp. Also, it can optionally create a
tcpdump file containing actual packet data.
Update of Papaya to version 0.9.6.
Removed the papaya-plugins directory.
Updated to version 0.9.6
Disabled the plugins due to problems with python support
PR: ports/39193
Submitted by: Edwin Groothuis <edwin@mavetju.org> (long time ago)
ICPLD (Internet Connection Performance Logging Daemon) is a
daemon which, by sending ICMP requests to an IP address of your
choice, monitors whether your machine has a working network
connection. It will log any failed attempts, and will stamp a
log as soon as a reply is received. It keeps track of when the
connection was unavailable, as well as for how long. It records
both total down time and each occasion of interrupted
connection. The log can also be duplicated in HTML format to
put online.
scr_ipfm is a script written in php, used to graphically show amount of data
downloaded by users in local network. To do that, it uses logs generated by
ipfm program (ipfm is available at the address: http://robert.cheramy.net/ipfm/)
scr_ipfm features:
- sorting by field in, out, host and total
- aggregated data of downloaded amount of data
- daily, monthly, annually and global statistics
WWW: http://scripfm.sourceforge.net/
PR: 58566
Submitted by: HSIN-HSIUNG CHANG <sexbear@tmu.edu.tw>
os-independent SILC client. Silky is intended to contain all
necessary features of a SILC client, while keeping the UI as
simple and clean as possible.
PR: 60849
Submitted by: Evgueni V. Gavrilov <aquatique@rusunix.org>
[New Port]:: net/wistumbler2
WiStumbler2 is a fork of original wistumbler caused by the
incommunication of the original author, because seems that
development was getting stopped.
In the fork of wistumbler I add some new features and
bugfixes.
Diff on wistumbler:
- gtk2 support.
- some gtk widgets wasn't correctly used.
- Support for console mode (no X needed).
- Allow log-saving on the fly (new button).
- Patches some GPS pointers that segfaults.
- 0 warnings with -Wall on gcc3.3 on NetBSD-current.
- Speaker beeps like windows-stumbler. (ear-wardriving)
PR: ports/59527
Submitted by: Sebastian Yepes F. [ESN] <esn@x123.info>
(and fake) auth reply regardless of the ip/port pair quoted.
Its intended use is on firewalls and NAT machines - where you
may want to simply syphon off auth-requests from for example
irc servers.
PR: ports/60766
Submitted by: Dirk-Willem van Gulik <dirkx@skutsje.san.webweaving.org>
This is a server for the linux network block device (nbd). It allows linux to
use a partition or a file over the network as a regular block device.
PR: 60242
Submitted by: Christian Laursen <xi@borderworlds.dk>
This is a redistribution of the linux-decnet project's
software, with FreeBSD compatability added. It is based very
closely on the NetBSD port by Matt Fredette and has benefitted
from the assistance of Patrick Caulfield (the original author).
PR: 60519
Submitted by: Tillman Hodgson <tillman@seekingfire.com>
Sipsak is a small command line tool for developers and administrators of
Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) applications.
It can be used for some simple tests on SIP applications and services.
WWW: http://sipsak.berlios.de/
PR: 53923
Submitted by: jesusr@FreeBSD.org
tcping does a TCP connect to the given ip/port combination.
The user can specify a timeout in seconds.
This is useful in shell scripts running in firewalled environments.
Often SYNs are just being dropped by firewalls,
thus connection establishment will be retried several times
(for minutes) until a TCP timeout is reached.
With tcping it is possible to check first if the desired port
is reachable and then start connection establishment.
Author: Marc Kirchner <mail(at)marc(dash)kirchner(dot)de>
WWW: http://stud.fh-heilbronn.de/~kirchner/tcping/tcping.html
PR: 60301
Submitted by: Dryice Liu
The Nagios Service Check Acceptor (NSCA) is used to send service check
results to a central Nagios server. This consists of the "nsca" daemon
which runs on the main Nagios server and accepts results and the
"check_nsca" plugin which is used to send results to the server.
Author: Ethan Galstad
WWW: http://www.nagios.org/
PR: 59436
Submitted by: Paul Dlug <paul@nerdlabs.com>
libpcap right now, in the areas of wireless and mesh networking. Import this port so as not to disturb the vendor branch, and bring the bleeding
edge stuff to a wider audience.
I will merge in optional radiotap patches later.
Sponsored by: consume.net
libpcap right now, in the areas of wireless and mesh networking. Import
this port so as not to disturb the vendor branch, and bring the bleeding
edge stuff to a wider audience.
Sponsored by: consume.net