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
to send Mac OS X Growl notifications across the network.
Author: Raphael ROULET <raphael@perl-auvergne.com>
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/~castor/Net-GrowlClient/
PR: ports/118184
Submitted by: Masahiro Teramoto <markun at onohara.to>
GNOME 2.20 release notes can be found at
http://www.gnome.org/start/2.20/notes/en/ . Beyond that, this update
includes the new GIMP 2.4 (courtesy of ahze).
The GNOME 2.20 update also includes a huge change in the FreeBSD GNOME
hierarchy. We are now using the more standard DATADIR of ${PREFIX}/share
rather than ${PREFIX}/share/gnome. The result is that fewer patches and
hacks are needed to port GNOME components to FreeBSD. This will mean some
user changes may be required, so be sure to read /usr/ports/UPDATING for
more details.
This release and the things we accomplished in it would not have been
possible without mezz's crazy idea to collapse DATADIR, and his persistence
to make it happen successfully. Ahze and pav also deserve thanks for
their work on porting modules and testing the whole ball of wax on
pointyhat (respectively).
The FreeBSD GNOME team would also like to thank our various testers and
contributors:
Yasuda Keisuke
Frank Jahnke
Pawel Worach
Brian Gruber
Franz Klammer
Yuri Pankov
Nick Barkas
Cristian KLEIN
Tony Maher
Scot Hetzel
Martin Matuska (mm)
Benoit Dejean
Martin Wilke (miwi)
(And anyone else I may have missed)
PRs fixed in this release:
111272, 113470, 115995, 116338
The main goal of this branch is to implement new
operation principles based on dynamic on-demand
links/bundles creation.
Repocopied from: net/mpd4
Repocopied by: marcus
Submitted by: maintainer
including device capture, raw and gz-compressed trace, and sockets; and mulitple
input formats, including pcap and DAG.
WWW: http://research.wand.net.nz/software/libtrace.php
PR: ports/117036
Submitted by: Matt Peterson <matt at peterson.org>
"ping packets". It is intended for use in network monitoring applications
or applications that would otherwise need to fork ping(1) frequently.
Included is a sample application, called oping, which demostrates the
library's abilities. It is like ping, ping6, and fping rolled into one.
WWW: http://verplant.org/liboping/
PR: ports/116735
Submitted by: Matt Peterson <matt at peterson.org>
network - IPv6 version
This is an IPv6 only version of fping. The fping with IPv6 patch cannot handle
IPv4 ping, therefore I think it is better to have two distinct port:
fping - IPv4 only
fping+ipv6 - IPv6 only
Maintainer of fping also copied. He can maintain both port if he agrees.
-------------------------------------------------
A tool to quickly ping N number of hosts to determine their reachability
without flooding the network.
fping is different from ping in that you can specify any number of
hosts on the command line, or specify a file containing the lists
of hosts to ping. Instead of trying one host until it timeouts or
replies, fping will send out a ping packet and move on to the next
host in a round-robin fashion. If a host replies, it is noted and
removed from the list of hosts to check. If a host does not respond
within a certain time limit and/or retry limit it will be considered
unreachable.
Unlike ping, fping is meant to be used in scripts and its
output is easy to parse.
This is an IPv6 only version.
WWW: http://www.fping.com/
Generated with FreeBSD Port Tools 0.77
PR: ports/112185
Submitted by: Janos Mohacsi <janos.mohacsi@bsd.hu>
Newport: net/yate
Yate is a telephony engine aimed at creating a telephony
server that performs well enough to deal with PBX requirements
and also flexible enough for complex Gateway and IVR
solutions.
WWW: http://YATE.null.ro/
PR: ports/114814
Submitted by: Balwinder S Dheeman <bdheeman@hotmail.com>
2007-08-22 databases/java-sqlrelay: Depends on obsolete version of jdk
2007-08-22 mail/yuzu: Depends on obsolete version of jdk
2007-08-29 net/ng_netflow: already in base in all supported versions of FreeBSD
2007-08-22 java/jdk12-doc: Obsolete version of jdk
2007-08-22 japanese/netypesv: Depends on obsolete version of jdk
server. It features multiple local and remote user and group imports, on
the fly share creation and user handling, including randomization of
usernames and passwords. PDF printing to shared/private directories or
email. It also features three levels of domain management strategies.
WWW: http://gadmintools.org
Ayala. It is a set of PHP classes - no PHP extensions required - that
allow developers to create and consume web services based on SOAP 1.1,
WSDL 1.1 and HTTP 1.0/1.1.
WWW: http://sourceforge.net/projects/nusoap/
PR: ports/116174
Submitted by: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin at gslin.org>
This is a port of csocks, A socks client with many features
WWW: http://csocks.virtuale.org
PR: ports/115265
Submitted by: Raffaele De Lorenzo <raffaele.delorenzo@libero.it>
From README:
TSP is a control protocol used to establish and maintain
static tunnels. The Gateway6 Client is used on the host
computer to connect to a tunnel broker using the TSP protocol
and to get the information for its tunnel. When it receives
the information for the tunnel, the Gateway6 client creates
the static tunnel on its operating system.
The Gateway6 Client code is mostly identical for all client
platforms. However, creating the static tunnel is operating
system dependent and is done by a script called by the
Gateway6 Client. These scripts are located under the template
directory in the Gateway6 Client installation directory.
The script executed by the Gateway6 Client to configure the
tunnel interface is customized for each type of supported
operating system and takes care of all specifics for the
target operating system. On Unix systems, it is a shell
script. This separation of the binary and script enables
fast and easy additions of new operating systems, as has
been shown by the community contributions for many operating
systems.
WWW: http://www.go6.net/
PR: ports/114544
Submitted by: Michael Scholz <mike@fth-devel.net>
gwhois is a generic whois client. It strives to know for all existing
tlds and all ip address range the appropiate whois server to ask. You
can simple call gwhois with a query for some domain or some ip and it
will ask the right server for you! It can even query webforms which
are unfortunately the only query type supported by many bad nics.
gwhois can also be used as a whois server. You can call it from the
inetd and make it accessable via a normal standard whois client. This
allows for example using a windows client and still make use of the
enhanced features of gwhois.
WWW: http://freshmeat.net/projects/gwhois/
Based on: pkgsrc-wip, Gentoo Portage
and decoding of data in Bittorrent format. You can also extract
useful informations from .torrent files, create .torrent files
and query the torrent's scrape page to get its statistics.
PHP5 only.
WWW: http://pear.php.net/package/File_Bittorrent2/
PR: ports/115891
Submitted by: Zhen REN <bg1tpt at gmail.com>
It takes care of all the details like building RADIUS packets, sending them
and decoding responses.
WWW: http://www.wiggy.net/code/pyrad/
PR: ports/115458
Submitted by: Blaz Zupan <blaz at si.FreeBSD.org>