the one used by the "Hacha" software, a well known splitter in Spain and
Latinamerica. HOZ is an open-source and portable C implementation of an
"Hacha" compatible splitter.
PR: ports/86245 (based on)
Submitted by: Jose Alonso Cardenas Marquez <acardenas@bsd.org.pe>
Cmospwd is a BIOS password recovery tool which is known to work with the
following BIOS versions:
* ACER/IBM BIOS
* AMI BIOS
* AMI WinBIOS 2.5
* Award 4.5x/4.6x/6.0
* Compaq (1992)
* Compaq (New version)
* IBM (PS/2, Activa, Thinkpad)
* Packard Bell
* Phoenix 1.00.09.AC0 (1994), a486 1.03, 1.04, 1.10 A03,
4.05 rev 1.02.943, 4.06 rev 1.13.1107
* Phoenix 4 release 6
* Gateway Solo - Phoenix 4.0 release 6
* Toshiba
* Zenith AMI
WWW: http://www.cgsecurity.org/index.html?cmospwd.html
PR: ports/84250
Submitted by: Emanuel Haupt <ehaupt@critical.ch>
There are significant conceptual differences between SGE 5 and SGE
6 so potential upgraders should beware. At the file level the two
are entierly incompatable so SGE 5 must be removed before SGE 6 is
installed.
The port has seen limited testing so beware.
for the addition of an SGE 6 port.
- Remove the sgeee port as the distinction between regular and
Enterprise Edition has been removed in 6.0.
- Temporarily disconnect sysutil/sge to avoid conflicts.
- set NO_LATEST_LINK in sge(ee)53.
This port provides a program that can be used to clean out temporary-file
directories. It recursively searches the directory, refusing to chdir()
across symlinks, and removes files that have not been accessed in a
user-specified amount of time. You can specify a set of files to protect
from deletion with a shell pattern.
It will not remove symlinks, sockets, fifos, or special files unless given a
command line option enabling it to.
WWW: http://packages.debian.org/stable/admin/tmpreaper.html
PR: ports/83868
Submitted by: Emanuel Haupt <ehaupt@critical.ch>
Watchfolder watches specified folders for incoming files and processes them
with programs assigned to those folders. Afterwards, the files are removed
from the inbound directory.
WWW: http://freshmeat.net/projects/watchd/
PR: ports/83867
Submitted by: Emanuel Haupt <ehaupt@critical.ch>
Eiciel allows you to visually edit file ACL entries. You can add and remove
users and groups who will be granted permissions through the graphical
interface.
WWW: http://rofi.pinchito.com/eiciel/
PR: ports/83810
Submitted by: Andreas Kohn <andreas@syndrom23.de>
calls an external program to extract them. It looks at "magic bytes" in file
contents, so it can be used both as an undelete utility and for recovering a
corrupted drive or partition. As long as the file data is there, it will
find it.
It works on any file system, but on very fragmented file systems it can only
recover the first chunk of each file. Practical experience shows, however, that
chunks of 30-50MB are not uncommon.
PR: ports/83666
Submitted by: Emanuel Haupt <ehaupt@mx.critical.ch>
Approved by: flz (mentor)
program. It's loaded when the computer is turned on and allows you to choose
the operating system you want to use.
PR: ports/83346
Submitted by: Alejandro Pulver <alejandro@varnet.biz>
Rename is a quick and powerful tool written in C, featuring extended regular
expression support for searching and substituting pattern strings in filenames.
Rename can rename, convert to lowercase/uppercase, and change the ownership of
a large number of files.
WWW: http://rename.berlios.de/
PR: ports/83314
Submitted by: Chad Castleberry <crcastle@ius.edu>
Wavpack moves from main package to stand alone plugin.
New cdio plugin, spc plugin now enabled.
Mark the cairo plugin ignore because it needs a newer version of cairo.
Use gst-register-0.8 instead of gst-register.
Changelog: http://gstreamer.freedesktop.org/releases/gst-plugins/0.8.10.html
Approved by: maintainer (implicit)
processes some of the entries in order to present them in a more comprehensible
format, and then mails you the output. It is written specifically for large
network clusters where a lot of machines (around 50 and upwards) log to the
same loghost using syslog or syslog-ng. It is an alternative to a similar
package, called LogWatch.
PR: ports/82948
Submitted by: Alan Snelson <Alan@Wave2.co.uk>
of their daily activities. Since your management will typically have
no idea what you are doing to justify such an exorbitant salary any
amount of money they may be paying you being classified as
.exorbitant., and since most people forget what they do themselves,
it.s good to keep a record. Trot your logs out around performance
review time, and show them to your management after suitable
sanitization on a regular basis.
PR: ports/82867
Submitted by: Joseph Ross <jross@far2wise.net>
The ufs_copy copies a UFS filesystem image like dd(1).
It doesn't copy free blocks for speed and it generates a sparse destination
file for saving space.
WWW: http://people.freebsd.org/~simokawa/ufs/
This port provides an utility for controlling most of the LSI Logic's
MegaRAID BIOS functions.
WWW: http://www.lsilogic.com/products/megaraid/
PR: ports/82512
Submitted by: Gerrit Beine <tux@pinguru.net>
Gnome application for writing CD-Audio discs. It aims for simplicity,
usability and compability. Its features are:
o Supports multiple formats files, like WAV, MP3, OGG, FLAC and every other
gstreamer does
o Save and open PLS, M3U and XSPF playlists
o Extracts audio from video contents, like an MPEG video
o Uses audio metadata for better handling
o Supports drag and drop: drop musics directly from Rhythmbox or Nautilus!
o Clean and easy to use interface
o Easy integration with other applications
WWW: http://s1x.homelinux.net/projects/serpentine
There is probably a better way for handling os.statfs on FreeBSD than the way
I did, but this works. Patches welcome =)
Oak is a program that can be used to monitor syslogs from a collection
of servers and notify operators when problem conditions arise. In
addition to providing immediate notification of critical problems oak
will also batch less critical problems into summary messages that can
be sent less often and via any medium. For example you may wish to
have oak page you on critical events while sending a summary of less
important messages to your terminal once an hour. In addition you
could send a daily email message summarizing all events.
WWW: http://www.ktools.org/oak/
written by Alain Poirer for Linux, modified by Steve Tomljenovic. Binary
install, source code included.
PR: ports/80496
Submitted by: Remington <TastyNachos@charter.net>