Commit graph

7 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Kamel Ibn Aziz Derouiche
ca6f42e8c3 Added DESTDIR Support 2009-03-21 12:26:29 +00:00
David Howland
b70ef5cfbe Fix broken install in bulk-build. 2008-03-09 01:56:02 +00:00
Aleksey Cheusov
35f82d29fc man is replaced with ${PKGMANDIR} 2006-04-20 13:36:34 +00:00
Thomas Klausner
ad6cb11b6d "wip" is not a valid category -- please use the standard pkgsrc ones.
Remove wip from CATEGORIES, and guess category if wip was the only one
specified.
2005-11-02 17:59:54 +00:00
Roland Illig
4773c8fa75 Fixed pkglint warnings. 2005-09-28 07:38:35 +00:00
Roland Illig
b74b169ac9 Added two patches to make memdump build on NetBSD, too. 2005-09-28 07:37:13 +00:00
pancake ;)
72a61d3706 initial import of memdump
DESCR:
What can you expect to find in a system memory dump? Bits from the
operating system, from running processes, and from every file and
directory that has been accessed recently. Depending on the operating
system you may even find some information from deleted files and
exited processes, although that information tends to be short-lived.

To dump physical memory: 

    memdump | nc host port
    memdump | openssl s_client -connect host:port

For best results send output off-host over the network. Writing to      
file risks clobbering all the memory in the file system cache. Use
netcat, stunnel, or openssl, depending on your requirements.

With the exception of Linux, dumping UNIX system memory is a tricky
business because /dev/mem has holes that one has to carefully skip
around in order not to read nonsense or even miss information.

This software was tested on Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and
is distributed under the IBM Public License.
2005-09-03 15:49:30 +00:00