Portelli with minor changes by me.
Honeyd is a small daemon that creates virtual hosts on a network. The hosts
can be configured to run arbitrary services, and their personality can be
adapted so that they appear to be running certain operating systems. Honeyd
enables a single host to claim multiple addresses - I have tested up to
65536 - on a LAN for network simulation. Honeyd improves cyber security by
providing mechanisms for threat detection and assessment. It also deters
adversaries by hiding real systems in the middle of virtual systems.
The changes to the code include:
* A '-f' flag to destry with force any type of file that isn't a Regular
File or a Directory.
* Bug fixes.
* Code Clean-up.
under IRIX. Other OS regen the catman page.
This addresses PR pkg/23452.
Since just depending on textproc/groff would pull in a large number of
packages (such as perl, ghostscript, tiff etc.), and since this is a very
important package that should NOT depend on all this gunk, Jeremy C. Reed
suggested this solution.
Ok agc.
This is to make sure that libexec/gnupg/gpgkeys_mailto is
installed. (Okay'd by wiz.)
This assumes that /usr/sbin/sendmail is sendmail.
PKGREVISION is not bumped because package couldn't be made
in first place if libexec/gnupg/gpgkeys_mailto was missing.
private mail, ok'd by lukem. Changes:
> Use the URL node and {head,tail}URL edge-attribute and link
> to "Web of trust statistics and pathfinder"-Site.
>
> This site provides a statistical analysis of the key (linked behind
> each node) and a path between to keys (linked behind tail and
> head of a edge).
>
> Those URL statements take only affect if one generates IMAP or CMAP
> output and uses this on a HTML-Site as imagemap.
gnome-keyring is a program that keeps passwords and other secrets for
users. It is run as a damon in the session, similar to ssh-agent, and
other applications can locate it by an environment variable.
The program can manage several keyrings, each with its own master
password, and there is also a session keyring which is never stored to
disk, but forgotten when the session ends.
The library libgnome-keyring is used by applications to integrate with
the gnome keyring system. However, at this point the library hasn't
been tested and used enough to consider the API to be publically exposed.
Therefore use of libgnome-keyring is at the moment limited to internal
use in the gnome desktop. However, we hope that the gnome-keyring API
will turn out useful and good, so that later it can be made public for
any application to use.
* Support for AES in GSSAPI has been implemented. This corresponds to the
in-progress work in the IETF (CFX).
* To avoid compatibility problems, unrecognized TGS options will now be
ignored.
* 128-bit AES has been added to the default enctypes.
* AES cryptosystem now chains IVs. This WILL break backwards compatibility
for the kcmd applications, if they are using AES session keys.
* Assorted minor bug fixes and plugged memory leaks.