* Let the install target print correct location of the conf file.
* Use CFLAGS+= instead of commenting it out.
* Add -DPREFIX="${PREFIX}" to the CFLAGS.
Requested by: Garrett Wollman <wollman@FreeBSD.ORG>:
"If you have an RSA license, you DON'T want to use rsaref -- it's
slow as hell. The only reason you would want to use rsaref is:
1) You are in the US.
2) The patent hasn't expired yet (600-someodd days and counting).
3) You wouldn't have the right to use RSA otherwise."
Use newly introduced %%PARL_ARCH%% for dirname of architecture
dependent libraries.
(i.e. s!%%PERL_VER%%/i386-freebsd!%%PERL_VER%%/%%PERL_ARCH%%!)
Approved by: asami
OpenSSL is a successor of SSLeay (see http://www.openssl.org/).
This port uses almost the same files as SSLeay. So they can't be
installed both.
- make the port ${PREFIX} clean
- reorganize PLIST (list links as normal files, which makes the PLIST
shorter and easier to maintain)
- reference ${PREFIX}/etc/ssleay.cnf only (there was a reference to
${PREFIX}/lib/ssleay.cnf somewhere)
- some other minor portlint changes
This port requireat least s version 1.41 of the Qt library.
There will be an error reported by configure, if only an earlier
version is found, but no automatic port dependency exists (i.e.
the x11-toolkits/qt141 port has to be manually built and installed).
There may still be a problem with a missing -lXext in the kdesupport
port. This will be taken care of during the next few days, if the
problem still exists ...
dependencies to perl5 in -current. This might cause some unwanted
perl5 installations on -stable (if it was originally RUN_DEPENDS,
perl5 will now be installed during build too, etc.), but its lifetime
is limited anyway.
This program filters the tcpump raw packet data looking for logins and
passwords on the most commonly used tcp ports (ftp telnet pop3 ...).
It dumps sniffed data to a file named sniff.log
PR: 9039
Submitted by: admin@righi.ml.org
Sentry is part of the Abacus Project suite of security tools.
It is a program designed to detect and respond to port scans
against a target host in real-time. There are other port scan
detectors that peform similar detection of scans,but the Sentry
has some unique features that may make it worth looking into.
PR: ports/5475
Submitted by: chris@still.whet.org
order I've ever seen. Haven't these guys ever done Unix programming
before?
* Quiet some compiling warnings. For "security" software, this code should
NOT have as many warnings and unused vars as it does.