logfile. It is similar like tail (1) but offers some extra
functionality for output formatting. To show only the new
messages appeared since the last call fetchlog uses a bookmark
to remember which messages have been fetched.
PR: 55506
Submitted by: Alexander Haderer <alexander.haderer@charite.de>
Pftop is a small, curses-based utility for real-time display of active
states and rule statistics for pf, the packet filter (for OpenBSD)
This used to be part of security/pf but is now individual after
(ports/57305)
PR: ports/57307
Submitted by: Max Laier <max@love2party.net>
The Coroner's Toolkit (TCT) is a collection of tools designed
to assist in a forensic examination of a computer. It is
primarily designed for Unix systems, but it can some small
amount of data collection & analysis from non-Unix disks/media.
WWW: http://www.fish.com/tct/
- Francisco Gomez -
francisco@gomezmarin.com
PR: ports/57048
Submitted by: Francisco Gomez <francisco@gomezmarin.com>
AFB Graphics Accelerators aka Sun Microsystems Elite 3D. The microcode
is necessary if you want to run XFree86 with acceleration on these cards.
The microcode in itself has to be obtained from an existing SunOS/Solaris
installation.
Submitted by: Marius Strobl <marius@alchemy.franken.de>
The Autopsy Forensic Browser is a graphical interface to
the command line digital forensic analysis tools in The
Sleuth Kit. Together, The Sleuth Kit and Autopsy provide
many of the same features as commercial digital forensics
tools for the analysis of Windows and UNIX file systems
(NTFS, FAT, FFS, EXT2FS, and EXT3FS).
The Sleuth Kit and Autopsy are both Open Source and run on
UNIX platforms. As Autopsy is HTML-based, the investigator
can connect to the Autopsy server from any platform using
an HTML browser. Autopsy provides a "File Manager"-like
interface and shows details about deleted data and file
system structures.
PR: ports/55543
Submitted by: Pieter Danhieux <pieter@securax.be>
The @stake Sleuth Kit (TASK) is the only open source forensic
toolkit for a complete analysis of Microsoft and UNIX file
systems. TASK enables investigators to identify and recover
evidence from images acquired during incident response or
from live systems.
WWW: http://www.atstake.com/research/tools/task/
PR: ports/55545
Submitted by: Pieter Danhieux <pieter@securax.be>
distribution of the files within time as well as size, number, and
age constraints. Its main purpose is to keep a set of daily-created
backup files in manageable size, while still providing reasonable
access to older versions. Specifying a size, file number, or age
constraint will simply remove files starting from the oldest, until
the constraint is met. The distribution specification (exponential,
Gaussian (normal), or Fibonacci) provides finer control of the files
to delete, allowing the retention of recent copies and the increasingly
aggressive pruning of the older files. The retention schedule
specifies the age intervals for which files will be retained.
Submitted by: dds
Filelight graphically represents a file system as a set
of concentric segmented-rings, indicating where diskspace is
being used. Segments expanding from the center represent files
(including directories), with each segment's size being
proportional to the file's size and directories having child
segments.
PR: 56152
Submitted by: Markus Brueffer <brueffer@phoenix-systems.de>
worldtools consists of 3 simple scripts:
- whereintheworld displays the great lines behind the build logs of a
buildworld. It shows at which step the build is at, and which module
is currently being built.
- buildit runs a command, time(1)s it, logs the output and optionally
sends a notification to the user by email when finished.
- upgrade is a wrapper for buildit, whereintheworld, cvsup and make
buildworld.
PR: 55995
Submitted by: The Anarcat <anarcat@anarcat.ath.cx>
Approved by: roberto (mentor)
Displays a mini-command line on the xfce4-panel. Uses the same history file as
xfrun4. Use <Up> and <Down> to scroll through history. <Enter> executes the
command and <Ctrl>-<Enter> executes the command in a terminal.
bksh is a simple (some would say trivial) program designed to be used
as a shell by ssh or rsh-like programs. All it does it to copy its
input to a restricted set of backup files.
It was made to allow administrators to create backup servers in
potentially hostile environments without allowing full shell access to
the server or the client.
PR: 53786
Submitted by: The Anarcat <anarcat@anarcat.ath.cx>
hashed spwd.db, which is a useful thing if you screw up a vipw(8) or
mergemaster(8), or otherwise corrupt your plaintext file, and don't
have a recent enough backup.
PR: 54670
Submitted by: Matthew D. Fuller <fullermd@over-yonder.net>
- service supervision
- clean process state
- reliable logging facility
- fast system bootup and shutdown
- packaging friendly
- small code size
Submitted by: Sergei Kolobov <sergei@kolobov.com>
PR: 54513
JDiskReport is Java program to graphically display disk usage statistics.
For more information: http://www.jgoodies.com/freeware/jdiskreport/
PR: 52701
Submitted by: Jonathan Belson <jon@witchspace.com>
Ports manager is a ncurses based, graphical front-end to manage
the FreeBSD ports collection. It behaves like a package manager
and comes with many features.
PR: ports/47192
Submitted by: Anselm Garbe <anselmg@t-online.de>
p5-UPS-Nut provides a perl interface to setting and retrieving
values from the Network UPS tools servers.
PR: ports/50765
Submitted by: Eric Schnoebelen <eric@mr-bill.cirr.com>
Chgrep searches the input files (or standard input if no files are named)
for oldstring and changes them to new string. If some file and file.lock
exist then chgrep leaves both files unchanged. This program can be very use-
full for mail servers. Chgrep is fast, much faster than grep or sed.
PR: 51198
Submitted by: Kirill Ponomarew <ponomarew@oberon.net>
that gives you control of your system without needing a keyboard.
The GOK makes available a hierarchical button system that enables
keyboardless entry of common accelerators, and contains a
clickable keyboard that sports suggested autocompletion of many
common words, and even some commands. The GOK will provide an
alternative interface to common commands and functions within
applications that utilize the AT SPI.
The GOK is is designed to be usable by many alternative input
methods, i.e. not a common keyboard and mouse combination.
Acidlaunch is a small, light-weight dockable app launcher with a simple
XML-based configuration syntax. It's great as a small, simple app launcher, and
it can optionally run in a withdrawn mode for embedding in the BlackBox
slit.
Submitted by: Alexey Dokuchaev
WMMemFree shows system memory usage. It runs as a dockapp for window
manager like WindowMaker or some other which supports dockapps. On
the top side you have your physical memory usage and on the bottom there
is your swap space usage.
Submitted by: Alexey Dokuchaev
'Dialog' utility which comes with freebsd distribution is almost out-dated:
this port comes from linux base and solves this problem.
PR: 45800
Submitted by: vitale
Ganglia provides a complete real-time monitoring and execution
environment that is in use by hundreds of universities, private and
government laboratories and commercial cluster implementors around the
world. Whether you want to monitor hundreds of computers in real-time
across a university campus or around the world, ganglia is for you.
PR: ports/48551
Submitted by: Brooks Davis <brooks@freebsd.org>
This Perl5 module retrieves the 1 minute, 5 minute, and 15
minute load average of a machine.
PR: ports/46862
Submitted by: Lars Thegler <lars@thegler.dk>
KDirStat (for KDE Directory Statistics) is a small utility
program that sums up disk usage for direcory trees. Its
functionality is similar to the Unix du command, but it
provides more helpful diagnostic information. KDirStat also
features some built-in cleanup facilities and the ability
to include your own cleanup commands or scripts.
PR: ports/39854
Submitted by: Stefan Jahn <stefan.jahn@nemesis-sektor.de>
Dump9660 is a tool for creating ISO 9660 compliant CD images
suitable for use with tools such as FreeBSD's burncd.
Dump9660 supports the El Torrito bootable CD and Microsoft
Joliet extensions as well as the Rock Ridge and Plan 9
system use extensions.
PR: ports/39847
Submitted by: William Josephson <wkj-freebsd@honk.eecs.harvard.edu>
Arson is a feature-rich frontend to various CD burning and
ripping tools. It supports audio and date CD burning, audio CD
ripping, CD-to-CD copying and ISO/[S]VCD image creation.
PR: ports/39697
Submitted by: Stefan Jahn <stefan.jahn@nemesis-sektor.de>
The screen is split into as many parts as there are files to watch.
Compiles on both -STABLE and -CURRENT.
PR: ports/46958
Submitted by: Michael L. Hostbaek <mich@freebsdcluster.org>
Sun format is a util for formatting/partitioning/analysis/repairing of SCSI
disks. While formatting and partitioning currently is only usefule on big-
endian systems in order to create Sun disk labels, analysis and repairing
works on either endian and are very useful to remap defect blocks when
AWRE/ARRE fail for some reason. Tested on i386 and sparc64, respawned a
disk here.
Submitted by: marius@alchemy.franken.de
helping debug USB device(driver).
maho@ is gathering reports from users to compile a FreeBSD-ready
USB device list. udesc_dump is exceptionally useful for that
purpose and should be made handily available.
Approved by: portmgr (knu)
Reviewed by: Jigoku <gehenna@jp.FreeBSD.org>
it's a stress testing tool designed to test out your web server and web site.
PR: ports/45485
Submitted by: John Von Essen <john@essenz.com>
Somepart by: me
signal processes matching criteria
o Based on current NetBSD's pgrep(1) and pkill(1) with the following
differences:
1) -STABLE version does not support filtering by session
ID since this information is only available in kernel
space. -CURRENT supports this.
2) Added -M and -N flags following ps(1). Therefore, drop
additional privileges (drop_privs) if any of those flags
are defined.
3) kvm access without sgid
o Items (2) and (3) are based on jmallett code sent to me for
inspiration. :) Great thanks to jmallett for that.
Obtained from: NetBSD CVS (original pkill/pgrep code)
- It is not actively developed.
- The creator seems to have disappeared from the net.
- There are viable alternatives in the ports collection.
PR: 44000
Submitted by: Dominik Brettnacher <domi@saargate.de>
for a complete analysis of Microsoft and UNIX file systems. TASK
enables investigators to identify and recover evidence from images
acquired during incident response or from live systems.
Obtained from: openbsd
libchk is a tool to help users obtain the following information:
- A list of executables that have unresolvable shared library links
- A list of shared libraries that are not referenced by any binary
- A list of binaries for each shared library that are linked with
the library
This will help to get a hint as to if you can safely remove shared
libraries that look obsolete.
Author: Akinori MUSHA <knu@FreeBSD.org>
WWW: http://www.iDaemons.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi/libchk/
A GKrellm-Plugin that horizontally scrolls in a panel a list of currently
logged on users (excluding the invoking user).
PR: 41554
Submitted by: Steffen Vogelreuter <Steffen@Vogelreuter.De>
The wait_on command allows shell scripts to access the facilities provided by
kqueue(3). This allows scripts to detect files being added to directories, data
appended to files and many other things - all without polling.
Submitted by: Andrew Stevenson <andrew@ugh.net.au>
PR: ports/34414
displays memory and swap space usage. It is very heavily based on WMMemMon
and WMCPULoad.
PR: 38073
Submitted by: Alexey Dokuchaev <danfe@regency.nsu.ru>
rclean provides a command-line tool to order and clean content of
rc.conf, using option order from /etc/defaults/rc.conf and printing only
choices that were different by the default value in /etc/rc.conf.
PR: ports/37593
Submitted by: Lapo Luchini <lapo@lapo.it>
original versions of these ports, so some PORTREVISIONs were bumped. See
http://freebsd.kde.org/ and mailing lists linked to from there for info
on the packages generated to test these ports.
bsd.kde.mk has already been updated a few days ago to work with these.
Some patches applied to fix a few bugs were:
deskutils/kdepim3:
[1] Remove kpilot from build because it wasn't ready at release.
editors/koffice-kde3:
[2] Fix compile time bugs for FreeBSD.
misc/kdeedu3:
[3] Fix compile problem with kvoctrain.
x11/kdebase3:
[4] Fix KDM CPU usage and login bug.
Some caveats:
* All PLISTs are broken for deinstall due to script bug that I
didn't notice until very recently. This will be fixed when I
commit an update tomorrow. These ports should still install
perfectly fine though. They should also deinstall without
giving errors, but will leave directories behind.
* You can't install this with any other version of QT or KDE
already installed. I am not sure the checks are 100% working,
but fixes for these will be forthcoming. This is mainly due
to a policy decision made by kde@ to make QT/KDE ports install
the way the rest of the world expects it to while also still
conforming to FreeBSD's hier(7). For reference on this decision,
please consult the KDE/FreeBSD mailing list archives. This
decision fixes 2-year-old bug reports relating to how we handled
this for KDE2 vs KDE1.
Submitted by: [1] Adrian de Groot <adridg@cs.kun.nl>,
[2] David Faure <faure@kde.org>,
Andy Fawcett <andy@athame.co.uk>
Lauri Watts <lauri@kde.org>
[3] Lauri Watts <lauri@kde.org>
[4] Alan Eldridge <alane@geeksrus.net>
Oswald Buddenhagen <ossi@kde.org>
Reviewed by: kde
Logmon will monitor one or more log files, updating when more data is
available ala 'tail -f' , within a common terminal window via a "split window".
User can scroll up/down/left/right through all the windows.
PR: 30516
Submitted by: Gea-Suan Lin <gslin@infomath.math.nctu.edu.tw>