we also need to redefine WRKSRC because of this lowercase affair...
which I start to dislike, because if poeple learn about a software
named FlowScan, then they start looking for a port named FlowScan
and not flowscan ...
no portrevision bump necessary, since port didn't work properly.
tricky configuration change to FreeBSD. The maintainer agrees it better
to use the Latest version of etherboot.
Submitted by: myself
Reviewed by: The maintainer.
by introducing a port of the FreeRADIUS project's RADIUS server,
currently labeled ``alpha''. The distfile is locally hosted so I
don't have to go chasing snapshots. (N.B.: I don't know whether this
actually works yet -- but it does compile and package!)
now after giving the port a lowerrcase name you have to set the
DISTFILES variable right, so sources (which use upper/lowercase)
can be found.
PORTREVISION not bumped since port didn't work up to now,
so no new (working) functionality.
But anyway, thanks for doing the CVS work !
FlowScan is a tool to monitor and graph flow information from
Cisco and Riverstone routers in near real-time.
Amonst many other things, FlowScan can measure and graph traffic
for applications such as Napster.
A sample of what FlowScan can do is at: http://wwwstats.net.wisc.edu
WWW: http://net.doit.wisc.edu/~plonka/FlowScan/
Cflow is a perl module for analyzing raw flow files written by
cflowd, a package used to collect Cisco NetFlow data.
WWW: http://net.doit.wisc.edu/~plonka/Cflow/
This module uses a Patricia Trie data structure to quickly perform
IP address prefix matching for applications such as IP subnet,
network or routing table lookups. The data structure is based on
a radix tree using a radix of two, so sometimes you see patricia
implementations called "radix" as well. The term "Trie" is derived
from the word "retrieval" but is pronounced like "try". Patricia
stands for "Practical Algorithm to Retrieve Information Coded as
Alphanumeric", and was first suggested for routing table lookups
by Van Jacobsen. Patricia Trie performance characteristics are
well-known as it has been employed for routing table lookups within
the BSD kernel since the 4.3 Reno release.
The BSD radix code is thoroughly described in "TCP/IP Illustrated,
Volume 2" by Wright and Stevens and in the paper ``A Tree-Based
Packet Routing Table for Berkeley Unix'' by Keith Sklower.
WWW: http://net.doit.wisc.edu/~plonka/Net-Patricia/
. build with or without TK (triggered by the NO_X knob)
. build against TCL-8.3 -- with or without stubs
. fix some bugs in the core Scotty code -- most notably
a bug in the icmp-command implementation, where an off-by-one
error in the argument processing loop resulted in random
crashes; all this fixes are grouped into a single file
patch-fixes
. make scotty executable itself as small as it needs to be
Approved by: maintainer
Perhaps, some day the security officer will tell me what _exactly_ is
wrong with regular Scotty (this one is beta of the new version), and
I'll be able to freshen that one up too and remove the FORBIDDEN.