A suite of Unix command-line tools and a server designed to remotely
administer the file systems of multiple Unix machines.
At its core, radmind operates as a tripwire. It is able to detect
changes to any managed filesystem object, e.g. files, directories,
links, etc. However, radmind goes further than just integrity
checking: once a change is detected, radmind can optionally reverse
the change.
WWW: http://rsug.itd.umich.edu/software/radmind/
from William Yodlowsky <bsd at openbsd.rutgers.edu>
--
findlib provides a scheme to manage reusable Objective Caml software
components in the form of libraries, and includes tools that support
this scheme.
* gkrellm 2.2.0
* mms 2.1.19
* mss 2.5
* sun 0.11.0
* volume 2.1.9
* wireless 2.0.3
This also updates the dependancy on gkrellm to a minimum of 2.2.0, since
there are several updates that require some of the new functions.
From: Peter Hessler <spambox@theapt.org>
There exists security vulnerabilites in the monit HTTP interface,
which could allow an attacker in the worst case to gain root access
to the system. This issue only affect monit if monit is started
with http server support.
From: Robert Nagy <thuglife at bsd dot hu>
No response from MAINTAINER.
Colortail works like standard tail(1) but it can optionally read
one or more configuration files that specify which patterns result
in which colors. It can be used to quickly get an overview of
interesting activity, e.g. by colorizing keywords bright red or
some other color of your choice.
move post-patch to pre-configure
new patch from Aleksander Piotrowski <aleksander.piotrowski at nic.com.pl>
via maintainer Peter Hessler <phessler at theapt.org>
In addition to the standard bugfixes, this is a major port rewrite.
The port now uses a '_ups' user and the CGIs created can now run under
either chrooted Apache or non-chrooted Apache.
besides bringing gkrellm and the plugins up2date, this introduces a new
port structure, where all plugins are located in sysutils/gkrellm/plugins.
the set of plugins consists of:
aclock, bgchg, flynn, itime, kam, launch, mailwatch, mms, moon, mss, reminder
shoot, stock, sun, volume, weather and wireless
ports done and maintained by Peter Hessler <spambox@theapt.org>
all prior maintainers either agreed to him taking over their plugins or
timed out.
the primary master_site webserver instead of a 404 so the backup
master_site doesn't work
update to fetch bzip2 version of 1.2.13
noted by scott francis <darkuncle at darkuncle.net>
Anacron is a periodic command scheduler. It executes
commands at intervals specified in days. Unlike cron, it
does not assume that the system is running continuously.
It can therefore be used to control the execution of
daily, weekly and monthly jobs (or anything with a period
of n days), on systems that don't run 24 hours a day.
When installed and configured properly, Anacron will make
sure that the commands are run at the specified intervals
as closely as machine-uptime permits.
WWW: http://anacron.sourceforge.net/
from Andreas Kahari <andreas.kahari@unix.net> with some cleanup by me
stress is a tool which imposes a configurable amount of CPU, memory,
I/O, or disk stress on a POSIX-compliant operating system. It is
written in highly-portable ANSI C, and uses the GNU Autotools to
compile on a great number of UNIX-like operating systems. stress is not
a benchmark. It is a tool used by system administrators to evaluate how
well their systems will scale, by kernel programmers to evaluate
perceived performance characteristics, and by systems programmers to
expose the classes of bugs which only or more frequently manifest
themselves when the system is under heavy load.
GNU Stow is a Perl program for managing the installation of
software packages, keeping them separate (/opt/stow/emacs-21.3.1
vs. /opt/stow/perl-5.8.0, for example) while making them appear
to be installed in the same place (/opt).
Stow may be used by non-root users to set up a private hierarchy
under e.g. $HOME/local.
WWW: http://www.gnu.org/software/stow/stow.html
from Andreas Kahari <andreas.kahari@unix.net>
--
Main changes:
* Monit now reloads configuration ONLY after it receives SIGHUP.
Automatic reload based on monit's control file timestamp is now
defunct.
* New monit command 'reload' is added. If used, it will reinitialize
a running monit daemon (send it the SIGHUP signal).
* A new monit option '-t' is added. If used, monit will run a syntax
check for the control file and exit with the status.
* The ssl version for TCPSSL tests can now explicitly be set if auto-
detection should fail. (Thanks to Mark Foster for
the bugreport)
* Added support for LDAPv2 and LDAPv3, and DWP.
* Restart method added to monit httpd cervlet
* Alert messages in passive mode fixed
* Console command "monit restart [service]" in daemon mode fixed
* Start/stop/restart race condition fixed.
Changelog: http://www.tildeslash.com/monit/changes.html
Patches OpenBSD specific submitted to authors.
--
freedt is a reimplementation of Dan Bernstein's daemontools under the GNU GPL,
sharing no code with the original implementation.
It currently includes feature-equivalent replacements for argv0, envdir,
envuidgid, setlock, setuidgid, softlimit, supervise, svc, svok, svscan, svstat
and recordio. It also includes dumblog (a simple multilog replacement),
mkservice (a script for automatically creating service directories), anonidentd
(an anonimising identd implementation) and ratelimit (a bandwidth-limiting
filter along the lines of recordio). All the tools include usage messages; for
instance, do "ratelimit -h" for a brief rundown of the options.
Please note that this package is not a drop-in replacement for daemontools; the
internal state files in service directories are different, and the error
messages (and a few of the options) aren't quite the same.
WWW: http://azz.us-lot.org/code/freedt.html
userland (and breaks build on sparc) instead use sysconf(3) to get
page size.
lead to the right direction by naddy & miod - thanks
Problem reported by John Pavlakis <xyloplax@yahoo.com>
--
The Sleuth Kit (previously known as TASK) is a collection of
UNIX-based command line file system forensic tools that allow
an investigator to examine NTFS, FAT, FFS, EXT2FS, and EXT3FS
file systems of a suspect computer in a non-intrusive fashion.
The tools have a layer-based design and can extract data from
internal file system structures. Because the tools do not rely
on the operating system to process the file systems, deleted
and hidden content is shown.
This port replaces TASK, previously removed.
--
multitail allows the viewing of one or multiple files like
the original tail(1) program.
The difference is that this program creates multiple windows
windows on the console (with ncurses). It can also use colors
while displaying the logfiles for faster recognizing which
lines are important and which are not. It is optimized for
terminal-sessions through slow links.
--
ModLogAn is a modular logfile analyzer which is able to analyze
15 logfiles from different servers.
Its template engine generates XHTML based on usersupplied themes
which makes it possible to provide different look and feel.
It's written in C and provides a plugin system.
From: Michael Coulter <mjc@bitz.ca> with some changes from me.
Tentakel is a simple program for executing the same command on many
hosts in parallel using ssh or rsh. It takes care of managing remote
return errors and remote stderr/stdout as well.
KNUTClient is a graphical interface to NUT - the Network UPS Tool.
KNUTClient allows realtime monitoring of UPS variables such as load,
voltage and temperature. Supports accessing NUT across networks.