'gateway' addres/ports does not work (yet) due to the address handling
changes in pf. Other functionality should work. Also fixes two minor
bugs reported by many. Suggestions and ok naddy@
Duplicity incrementally backs up files and directory by encrypting
tar-format volumes with GnuPG and uploading them to a remote (or local)
file server. Currently local, ftp, ssh/scp, rsync, WebDAV, WebDAVs, HSi
and Amazon S3 backends are available. Because duplicity uses librsync,
the incremental archives are space efficient and only record the parts
of files that have changed since the last backup. Currently duplicity
supports deleted files, full unix permissions, directories, symbolic
links, fifos, etc., but not hard links.
The duplicity package also includes the rdiffdir utility. Rdiffdir is
an extension of librsync's rdiff to directories - it can be used to
produce signatures and deltas of directories as well as regular files.
These signatures and deltas are in GNU tar format.
based on the original submission from Bruno Bigras <bruno@burnbox.net>
feedback and ok wcmaier@ merdely@
Stan is a console application that analyzes binary streams and
calculates several useful statistical information from the observed
data. It features statistical, pattern and bit analysis. Stan has been
designed as a "swiss-knife" for first steps in reverse engineering and
cryptographic analysis.
from zinovik at kspu.karelia.ru (MAINTAINER), with tweaks by me.
rpl is a UN*X text replacement utility. It will replace strings with new
strings in multiple text files. It can work recursively over directories
and supports limiting the search to specific file suffixes.
From James Turner (james - bsdgroup dot org)
ok mbalmer@
this allows famd to run much more reliably, especially under KDE and
GNOME; if someone wants to fix the imon emulation through kqueue, be my
guest... meanwhile, I'd rather use stable software
- more typos fixes in man pages while here
"go ahead" fgsch@, "looks correct" jasper@
Apple's Time Machine is a great feature in their OS, and UNIX has
almost all of the required technology already built in to recreate it.
This is a simple GUI to make it easy to use.
help and ok ajacoutot@
this ensures that changes to syscalls alter the package signature.
Bump package and note with XXX. Without this, packages using it
(e.g. MailScanner) will abort trap.
ok/suggestion to add WANTLIB from espie.
This is a tool to make it easy for end-users to install open-source
Rails apps. It was originally created for Typo, and has been
extracted so other projects can use it as well.
Joint work with maintainer Paul Irofti.
KRename is a powerful batch renamer for KDE. It allows you to easily
rename hundreds or even more files in one go. The filenames can be
created by parts of the original filename, numbering the files or
accessing hundreds of informations about the file, like creation date or
Exif informations of an image, thanks to KDE file plugins.
Based on a submission by Vadim Zhukov
<persgray at gmail dot com> (MAINTAINER)
- Better AD support
- Better SSL/TLS support
- Alternate server support
NOTE: The config file format has changed from version <= 3.3, refer to
the man page and examples.
I've taken over maintainership (with OK from previous MAINTAINER). And
moved the project to Sourceforge.
openldap testing by William Yodlowsky < bsd + openbsd - rutgers - edu >
ok landry, okan
Vlad the Deployer is pragmatic application deployment automation,
without mercy. Much like Capistrano, but with 1/10th the
complexity. Vlad integrates seamlessly with Rake, and uses familiar
and standard tools like ssh and rsync.
Impale your application on the heartless spike of the Deployer.
Bacula changelog:
http://bacula.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/bacula/branches/Branch-2.2/bacula/ChangeLog?revision=6309&view=markup
Major port change in this version:
-main subpackage is now bacula-client
-server subpackage remains bacula-server
-bat subpackage is new bacula admin tool
-client subpackage goes away.
If the old -main subpackage was installed, the upgrade path is to
install both bacula-client and bacula-server.
Lots of input and assistance from sthen and okan.
ok okan; "if it works for you, go for it" sthen
Capistrano is a utility and framework for executing commands in parallel
on multiple remote machines, via SSH. It uses a simple DSL (borrowed in
part from Rake that allows you to define _tasks_), which may be applied
to machines in certain roles. It also supports tunneling connections via
some gateway machine to allow operations to be performed behind VPN's
and firewalls.
Capistrano was originally designed to simplify and automate deployment
of web applications to distributed environments, and originally came
bundled with a set of tasks designed for deploying Rails applications.
This library comes from the gksu program. It provides a Gtk+ dialog and
X authentication facilities for running programs as root or another user
in a X session.
ok martynas@
This library comes from the gksu program. It provides a simple API to
use su and sudo in programs that need to execute tasks as other user. It
provides X authentication facilities for running programs in a X
session.
ok martynas@
This library comes from the gksu program. It provides a Gtk+ dialog and
X authentication facilities for running programs as root or another user
in a X session.
ok martynas@
This library comes from the gksu program. It provides a simple API to
use su and sudo in programs that need to execute tasks as other user. It
provides X authentication facilities for running programs in a X
session.
ok martynas@
fixes message size computation that is easily exceeded on -current
and causes symon to err out on startup in these cases
(symon: data.c:364: maxlen too small)
note that on systems showing that error the symux they send to must
be >= 2.77 since it has the same check for received messages.