proxy ARP. In a nutshell, this lets you proxy-ARP an arbitrary IP
address to an arbitrary MAC address, from any machine on the network.
This is useful if your router doesn't do proxy ARP, or does it only
in an all-or-none fashion.
This code will not work outside of 4.4BSD (it relies on BPF). Furthermore,
it won't run on most 4.4BSD operating systems, because a problem with the
standard BPF implementation (try spoofing your source ethernet frame
address on NetBSD).
See: http://www.enteract.com/~tqbf
- change MAINTAINER, ports@ -> brad@
- add 2 distribution patches;
squid-2.2.stable5-domain-match.patch
Matching a hostname and a domain name doesn't always work, depending on
leading dots and other edge conditions. Plus, the code for matching in
ACL's worked one way, while the code for matching 'cache_peer_domain' list
worked slighly different.
The patch below makes all host/domain matching operate the same way. It
also changes the rules a bit, so your current configuration probably will
not work the way you want after applying this patch.
- patch was included in the patches dir because of the difference in
relative path in comparison to all the other distribution patches.
squid-2.2.stable5-mkhttpdlogtime-end-of-year.patch = patch-ai
mkhttpdlogtime() generates a date string of the form 31/Dec/1999:23:59:59 +0900.
But when the year changes, the timezone offset will be wrong, for example:
01/Jan/2000:00:00:00 -1500.
do, such as collect form data, generate dynamic page content, or send
and receive cookies.
PHP also has support for talking to other services using protocols
such as IMAP, SNMP, NNTP, POP3, or even HTTP. You can also open raw
network sockets and interact using other protocols.
More information availible at http://www.php.net/
This port is worked by Jakob Schlyter <jakob@openbsd.org>.