Mugshot network. Mugshot makes it easy to show off
what you're doing online and keep track of what
your friends are up to.
WWW: http://www.mugshot.org/
- Ashish Shukla
wahjava@gmail.com
PR: ports/107174
Submitted by: Ashish Shukla<wahjava@gmail.com>
Ruby OpenID makes it easy to add OpenID authentication to your web
applications.
This library is a port of the Python OpenID library, and features:
* API for verifying OpenID identities (OpenID::Consumer)
* API for serving OpenID identities (OpenID::Server)
* Consumer and server support for extensions, including simple registration
* Yadis 1.0 and OpenID 1.0 service discovery, including server fallback
* Does not depend on underlying web framework
* Multiple storage implementations (Filesystem, SQL)
* Comprehensive test suite
* Example code to help you get started, including:
o WEBrick based consumer
o Ruby on rails based server
o OpenIDLoginGenerator for quickly creating a rails app that uses OpenID
for authentication
o ActiveRecord adapter for using an SQL store in rails
WWW: http://www.openidenabled.com/openid/libraries/ruby/
------------
This code implements relying party support for the Yadis service discovery
protocol. The protocol was developed for use by decentralized URL-based
identity systems, but is useful for advertising services provided by or on
behalf of a certain URL.
To learn more about Yadis, see http://www.openidenabled.com/yadis
The module yadis.xrires also provides a method of resolving XRI.
The JanRain Python OpenID library uses this library for discovery of OpenID
service endpoints. See that library for an example of library usage.
WWW: http://www.openidenabled.com/yadis/libraries/python/
ruby-yadis contains full yadis service discovery functionality.
Point releases will be issued as the Yadis 1.0 specification
gets rounded out. Features include:
* Easy to use interface for fetching Yadis service information
* XRDS parser
* HTTPS and server certificate verification support
* Test suite
* BSD license
WWW: http://www.openidenabled.com/yadis/libraries/ruby/
network, along with all necessary access information such as name, IP
address, and port number for a given service.
Bonjour allows you to register a network service, such as a printer or file
server, so that it can be found by name or browsed for by service type and
domain.
WWW: http://gnustep.dyndns.org/
(aka identity consumers or membersites) to determine automatically,
without end-user intervention, the most appropriate protocol to use.
Examples of such services are:
* Single sign-on across web sites
* Profile exchange and form filling
* Blog anti-spam
Yadis provides the first step for any service that uses identifiers for
authentication, accountability, privacy controlled data exchange and more.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Net-Yadis/http://yadis.org/wiki/What_is_Yadis
component that provides UPnP media devices with information on available
multimedia files. uShare uses the built-in http server of libupnp to stream
the files to clients.
WWW: http://ushare.geexbox.org/
PR: ports/106634
Submitted by: Volker Theile <votdev at gmx.de>
2006-12-01 www/nspostgres: Use www/aolserver with WITH_NSPOSTGRES=1 instead.
2006-12-01 www/fxhtml: crusty old a.out binary, not useful any more
2006-12-01 www/jakarta-tomcat3: Please use www/tomcat55 instead
2006-12-10 shells/mudsh: Project disappeared from the internet
2006-12-09 print/py-freetype: Project has disappeared and is no longer fetchable
2006-12-01 palm/syncal: Does not build with new pilot-link
2006-12-01 net/tn3270: dumps core. Please use net/c3270 instead
2006-12-01 multimedia/dvdwizard: has an incomplete dependency list
The daemon is written in Python using the Twisted Conch libraries.
WWW: http://kojoney.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/106384
Submitted by: mj <systemoperator at gmail.com>
with the tracker with their name, URL and some other vitals, and
clients connecting to the tracker will be able to retrieve a listing
of all online servers.
WWW: http://www.zankasoftware.com/wired/tracker/
PR: ports/106169
Submitted by: trasz <trasz at pin.if.uz.zgora.pl>
with the aim to stop the Denial of Service
and Distributed Denial of Service attacks that
have been torturing the Internet for the last
few years.
It is based on real-time processing of Cisco (R)
NetFlow (TM) data, since this seems to be the
most efficient approach as it is router-centric,
allowing for automated central response without
intervention from the affected organizations'
network administrators.
WWW: http://panoptis.sourceforge.net/
Submitted by: Babak Farrokhi <farrokhi at FreeBSD.org>
client/server system, providing chat, messaging and file
transfers.
Wire is a screen-oriented command line Wired client.
It supports most Wired features, including file transfers.
WWW: http://www.zankasoftware.com/wired/wire/
PR: ports/105797
Submitted by: trasz <trasz at pin.if.uz.zgora.pl>
2006-11-16 math/p5-AI-NeuralNet-Mesh: project no longer exists
2006-11-16 net/p5-Archie: project no longer exists
2006-11-15 www/mod_jk2: "JK2 is officially unsupported, no further development will take place."
2006-11-15 www/mod_jk2-apache2: "JK2 is officially unsupported, no further development will take place."
web and other TCP-based servers, allowing for server load balancing (SLB)
functionality through *BSD's PF packet filter.
WWW: http://slbd.sourceforge.net/
PR: ports/104926
Submitted by: Janos Mohacsi <janos.mohacsi at bsd.hu>
old Zilla.app of NeXTstep days. It is based on GNUstep, the most promising
OPENSTEP replacement as of today. Jobs can be created from simple template
projects and can be submitted with a single command to the Zillion Server
which in turn will distribute the job amongst the registered clients. No other
network resources than the distributed objects (DO) port of the server machine
has to be available. The key features are as follows:
* Rapid turn around cycles for job submission
* Dynamic addition/removal of client nodes
* Full OO-design
* No need for shared network resources
* Real-time capabilities
* Lean and clean
* Open and free
WWW: http://zillion.sourceforge.net/
Unreal Tournament matches over Internet on computers
connected by a LAN sharing a dial up connection, but
it could be used to play other games (such as Quake)
and by every program using a UDP protocol where clients
don't have to bind a fixed port (not only games!).
WWW: http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Vista/8155/uproxy/
PR: ports/104697
Submitted by: Alexander Logvinov <ports@logvinov.com>
to be simple to get going, requiring only three parameters;
the port to listen on, the host to forward to, and the port
on that host to connect to.
PR: ports/104902
Submitted by: self
Approved by: miwi (mentor)
An implementation of the netstrings protocol developed by D.J. Bernstein.
netstrings transmits each string as the length followed by : followed by
the string.
DHCPerf Provides Communication Providers with Predictive Planning
Tools to Scale Networks.
This tool, DHCPerf, delivers accurate performance metrics of
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) services. These
tools are easy-to-use and simulate real Internet workloads to
provide the necessary insight that carriers need to plan and
deploy network services.
DHCPerf measures the DHCP lease assignments to client computers
by ramping up lease assignment over time to determine the maximum
performance profile.
WWW: http://www.nominum.com/testing_tools.php
PR: ports/104663
Submitted by: Edwin Groothuis <edwin@mavetju.org>