Yet another network load monitor. Slurm started as a port of a Linux
PPP link monitor called pppstatus by Gabriel Montenegro. It was then
transformed into a generic netowrk load monitor that supports *BSD,
Linux, HP-UX, and Solaris.
Slurm shows `realtime' traffic statistics, has three graph modes,
can monitor any network device, and uses curses to draw ascii
graphics, including ascii theme support.
From maintainer Ryan Freeman, adjusted by myself and ajacoutot.
ok ajacoutot@
- Tweak how CONFIGURE_ARGS are passed along so as to remove
cases where the Makefile will pass along --without-foo
--with-foo
- Add missing crypto lib for WANTLIB with the ads FLAVOR
Part of the CONFIGURE_ARGS tweaking from form@
Missing lib from WANTLIB pointed out by sthen@
ok sthen@ ajacoutot@
- add -fPIC unconditionally (requested by naddy@) by adding it to
unix.mak (in pwlib) which get sourced by the other ports
feedback from and ok naddy@, thanks!
installed under /etc, whatever $SYSCONFDIR value is)
- s/PREFIX/LOCALBASE and the opposite where it makes sense
- README.OpenBSD is part of samba-docs, so no need to tell the user to
install samba-docs
ok mbalmer@ who gave me ten bonus points for solving the samba puzzle!
Net::FTPSSL is an object oriented Perl module which implements a simple
FTP client over a Secure Socket Layer (SSL) connection written following
the directives described in RFC959 and RFC2228.
from Pierre-Emmanuel Andre
LADVD uses CDP / LLDP frames to inform switches about connected hosts,
which simplifies ethernet switch management. It does this by creating
the required payloads and descriptors on startup and then switching
to a non-privileged user for the remaining runtime.
o add README.OpenBSD (includes heimdal setup instructions)
o rework openafs-setup to use arla's afsd in base, and heimdal
o fix a bug since 4.1 to not blow the thread stack on 64bit time functions in libc
dnstop is a libpcap application (a la tcpdump) that displays
various tables of DNS traffic on your network. Currently dnstop
displays tables of:
* Source IP addresses
* Destination IP addresses
* Query types
* Response codes
* Opcodes
* Top level domains
* Second level domains
* Third level domains
* etc...
dnstop supports both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
To help find especially undesirable DNS queries, dnstop provides a
number of filters. The filters tell dnstop to display only the following
types of queries:
* For unknown/invalid TLDs
* A queries where the query name is already an IP address
* PTR queries for RFC1918 address space
ok landry@
RTG is a flexible, scalable, high-performance SNMP statistics
monitoring system. It is designed for enterprises and service
providers who need to collect time-series SNMP data from a large
number of targets quickly. All collected data is inserted into a
relational database that provides a common interface for applications
to generate complex queries and reports. RTG includes utilities
that generate configuration and target files, traffic reports, 95th
percentile reports and graphical data plots. These utilities may
be used to produce a web-based interface to the data.
* Runs as a daemon, incurring no cron or kernel startup overhead
* Written entirely in C for speed, incurring no interpreter overhead
* Multi-threaded for asynchronous polling and database insertion
* Inserts data into a relational database where complex queries
and reports may be generated
* Performs no data averaging in order to support billing, etc.
* Can poll at sub-one-minute intervals
Based on a submission from Tim Kornau via bernd@ and used at bsws
(hence high initial PKGNAME=...p5) - requested by henning@.
which provides cookie-based persistence, automatic failover, header
insertion, deletion, modification on the fly, advanced logging contents
to help troubleshoot buggy applications and/or networks, and a few other
features. It uses its own state machine to achieve up to ten thousands
hits per second on modern hardware, even with thousands of simultaneous
connections.
feedback from merdely@, okan@, wcmaier@
ok merdely@ and pval@
alignment problems have been fixed upstream and no problems have
been seen with this version with default compiler flags, so
remove the hack and bump package.
ok brad@ jakob@
CVE-2008-1105.
Specifically crafted SMB responses can result in a heap overflow
in the Samba client code. Because the server process, smbd, can
itself act as a client during operations such as printer
notification and domain authentication, this issue affects both
Samba client and server installations.
Feedback from sthen@
ok mbalmer@ sthen@