ickle is an ICQ2000 Client using the GTK+ graphical toolkit. It aims to
bring all the useful features of ICQ2000 to non-windows users, such as
SMS messaging.
couldn't parse motif/tools/wml/Uil.y. (I read that others
had same issue.) My system didn't have a Berkeley Yacc.
Also note that various (5+) versions of byacc exist.
This package could check if NetBSD or if /usr/bin/yacc exists,
and skip, but since uses name byacc, I think is fine.
Nagios is a program that will monitor hosts and services on your
network. It has the ability to email or page you when a problem arises
and when it gets resolved. Nagios is written in C and is designed to
run under Linux, although it should work under most other *NIX variants.
It can run either as a normal process or as a daemon, intermittently
running checks on various services that you specify. The actual service
checks are performed by external "plugins" which return service
information to Nagios. Several CGI programs are included with Nagios
in order to allow you to view the current service status, history, etc.
via a web browser.
This was requested by Lubomir Sedlacik <salo@Xtrmntr.org> to
match pkgsrc's naming scheme for Python pkgs.
pyPgSQL is a package of two modules that provide a Python DB-API 2.0 compliant
interface to PostgreSQL databases. The first module, libpq, exports the
PostgreSQL C API to Python. This module is written in C and can be compiled
into Python or can be dynamically loaded on demand. The second module, PgSQL,
provides the DB-API 2.0 compliant interface and support for various PostgreSQL
data types, such as INT8, NUMERIC, MONEY, BOOL, ARRAYS, etc. This module is
written in Python.
This was requested by Lubomir Sedlacik <salo@Xtrmntr.org> to
match pkgsrc's naming scheme for Python pkgs.
This archive contains modules that allow you to use gtk in Python
programs. At present, it is a fairly complete set of bindings.
Despite the low version number, this piece of software is quite
useful, and is usable to write moderately complex programs. (see the
examples directory for some examples of the simpler programs you could
write).
Mailfilter filters mail on a pop3 server, allowing junk to be deleted on
the server rather than after it has been downloaded, and integrates with
other programs such as fetchmail.
Seems to work fine, I need this tested/reviewed though.
Perltidy reads a Perl script and writes an indented, reformatted
script. The default formatting closely follows the recommendations
in perlstyle(1). Perltidy can also display perl code in syntax-
colored HTML output.
All of this works, so it seems.
cvsd is a wrapper program for cvs in pserver mode. It will run 'cvs pserver'
under a special uid/gid in a chroot jail.
cvsd is run as a daemon and is controlled through a configuration file. It
is relatively easy to configure and tools are provided for easily setting up
a rootjail.
This server can be useful if you want to run a public cvs pserver. You should
however be aware of the security limitations of running a cvs pserver. If you
want any kind of authentication you should really consider using secure shell
as a secure authentication mechanism and transport. Passwords used in cvs
pserver are transmitted in plaintext and this wrapper won't change that.
This server adds a layer of security to cvs. cvs is a very powerful tool and
is capable of running scripts and other things. By running cvs in a rootjail
it is possible to limit the amount of "damage" cvs can do if it is exploited.
It is generally a good idea to run cvsd without any write permissions to any
directory on the system.
There's one problem: the startup script. It gets installed to
/usr/pkg/etc/init.d instead of in /usr/pkg/etc/rc.d. You could do
USE_REINPLACE=yes but I didn't know if this is possible in NetBSD.
I Tried to implement it in the Makefile like this:
post-patch:
@${REINPLACE_CMD} -e 's|init.d/cvsd|rc.d/cvsd.sh.sample|g ; \
s|init.d|rc.d|g' ${WRKSRC}/Makefile.in
But I get an error.
IRC Services is a system of services to be used with Internet
Relay Chat networks. Services provides for definitive nickname
and channel ownership, as well as the ability to send messages
to offline users, and gives IRC operators considerably more
control over the network.
Chksniff is a small tool to check in what mode network interfaces are
running. If they are running in promiscuous mode (which generally means
an interface is sniffed) this gets displayed by chksniff.
All works.