BOINC is a software platform for distributed computing using volunteer
computer resources.
Many different projects can use BOINC. SETI@HOME, for example, has
been redesigned to use BOINC and the astro/boinc-setiathome port
supercedes the astro/setiathome port.
WWW: http://boinc.berkeley.edu/
PR: ports/72714
Submitted by: J.R. Oldroyd <fbsd@opal.com>
It handles registrations of SIP clients on a private IP network
and performs rewriting of the SIP message bodies to make SIP
connections possible via a masquerading firewall.
It allows SIP clients (like kphone, linphone) to work behind
an IP masquerading firewall or router.
PR: ports/72691
Submitted by: Frank W. Josellis <frank@dynamical-systems.org>
Add verlihub-plugins, bringing increased functionality and
versatility to the verlihub direct connect protocol software.
Support is included for off-line messaging, chatrooms,
statistics, flood protection, lua scripts, and more. Requires
perl5.8
PR: ports/71779
Submitted by: Bill Cadwallader <hurbold@yahoo.com>
It detects attacks on high speed links through real-time NetFlow
aggregation and analysis.
PR: ports/69011
Submitted by: David Thiel <lx@redundancy.redundancy.org>
It allows users to add/remove RSS feeds, and consult and update them through
a button on the conversation window.
PR: 70163
Submitted by: Patrick MARIE <mycroft@virgaria.org>
Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6) developed by the KAME
project.
The implementation mainly conforms to the following standards:
- RFC3315: Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6)
- RFC3319: Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCPv6) Options
for Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Servers
- RFC3633: IPv6 Prefix Options for Dynamic Host Configuration
Protocol (DHCP)
- RFC3646: DNS Configuration options for Dynamic Host
Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6)
Note that the current implementation does not support IPv6 address
allocation by DHCPv6, and there is no plan to implement that feature
at the moment. The main purpose of this implementation is to provide
a way of IPv6 prefix delegation (RFC3633) and to provide some
"stateless" configuration information such as DNS recursive server
addresses.
WWW: http://www.kame.net/
ldapsh is an interactive shell you can use to administer ldap
directories. It provides an extensible command mechanism, with
most of the necessary builtin commands (such as 'clone', 'edit',
'rm'), and it's relatively easy to add more commands.
It supports configuring multiple LDAP sources, and storing your
UID for each source so you don't have to type them each time.
PR: ports/69721
Submitted by: Florent Thoumie <flz@xbsd.org>
to debug network problems and to detect IPv6-in-IPv4 tunnels in the path
to a destination.
FindMTU only performs IPv6 path MTU discovery. It does not know about
IPv4.
PR: ports/68985
Submitted by: Janos Mohacsi <janos.mohacsi@bsd.hu>
The ntpd daemon implements the Simple Network Time Protocol version 4 as
described in RFC 2030 and the Network Time Protocol version 3 as de-
scribed in RFC 1305. It can synchronize the local clock to one or more
remote NTP servers and act as NTP server itself, redistributing the local
time.
encryption. It runs on Unix-like operating systems and on Microsoft
Win32. sbd features AES-CBC-128 + HMAC-SHA1 encryption (by Christophe
Devine), program execution (-e option), choosing source port, continuous
reconnection with delay, and some other nice features. Only TCP/IP
communication is supported. Source code and binaries are distributed
under the GNU General Public License.
sbd can be used for any number of network-related things, e.g.:
* Secure file transfer
* Remote administration
* Simple (but secure) peer-to-peer chat
* Pen-test tool (crypto avoids NIDS detection and telnet-style traffic
recording)
PR: 68838
Submitted by: David Thiel <lx@redundancy.redundancy.org>
Approved by: krion (mentor)
The following cards are known to work with the acx driver:
Card Bus
Binatone WL-1000 CARDBUS
D-Link DWL-650+ CARDBUS
US Robotics USR2210 CARDBUS
US Robotics USR2216 PCI
WWW: http://wlan.kewl.org/
PR: ports/68612
Submitted by: Leonid Zolotarev <leoz@saunalahti.fi>
netinfo piece of gnome-network broken out into its own distribution.
Gnome-nettool is a MacOS X-like Network Utility that disaplys interface
information as well as front-ends many useful network tools like ping,
netstat, traceroute, host, finger, and whois.