Changes since 0.30 include (please see the doc/changelog.txt in the hatari
source distribution for full details):
* Speed improvements
* Emulation improvements including:
+ GEMDOS hard disk
+ Mega-ST realtime clock
+ Improved memory mapping
+ Improved bus errors and exception cycles
+ Various games now work
+ Simple printer support
+ Initial MIDI emulation
* General bug fixes including:
+ rtc year fix
+ Fix corruption bug in MSA compression function
* Improvements added for cross-compilation of hatari
#undef truncate and tell in appropriate places. Workaround for Solaris
redefining them in unistd.h. Also reorder two includes to allow building on
Solaris.
Changes between 1.01 and 1.02 (18 Dec 2003)
* Integrated the i386 assembler decompressors into Autoconf.
* Integrated the i386 assembler decompressors into the build scripts.
* Added include file <ucl/ucl_asm.h> that provides prototypes for all
assembler functions.
* Under Mac OS X, the configure script now will use the `-no-cpp-precomp'
compiler option in order to work around bugs in Apple's native
"smart" preprocessor.
* Updated the configure system.
Changes:
2.1.0:
======
- A new connection tracking module, Flow (replaces conversation)
- A new portscan detector based off of Flow, Flow-Portscan (replaces
portscan2)
- A new http preprocessor, HttpInspect (replaces http_decode)
- Alert Thresholding and Suppression
- PCRE rule keyword (Perl Compat Regular Expressions)
- isdataat rule keyword (buffer length detection)
- A ton of new and updated rules.
2.0.6:
======
- 64-bit update for detection engine. (Thanks, Silio d'Angelo)
- Added better PPP decoding. (Thanks Jesper Peterson)
- Updated ip_proto optimization for high-speed detection engine.
- Fixed infinite loop problem that was introduced by the recursive pattern
matching patch. Reported by Lawrence Reed, thanks for testing out the
changes for us!
- Various changes to help respond (version 1) work a little better.
- spp_http_decode 64-bit patch from Dirk Mueller.
- Out-of-order ACK problem from Andrew Rucker. Also, updated stream4 to the
most recent version from HEAD.
- Minor fixes to tagging related to 'src' and 'dst' directives
- When counting one byte patterns in 'ningroup' added a check for
psLen==1 (wu-manber pattern matcher). Thanks Josh Sakofsky and Dennis
McGuire for helping us test this.
2.0.5:
======
- Stream4 fixes from Andrew Rucker Jones.
- Allow memcap to be configured for threshold features.
2.0.4:
======
- Fixed a core dump introduced with 2.0.3 when dealing with negated patterns
2.0.3:
======
- doe_ptr handling in byte_test/byte_jump slightly modified to work
better with the pcre patch
- content processing is now recursive to make distance/within processing
better ( thanks to Shai Rubin for patch! )
- fixed a bug in the mwm.c pattern matcher that resulted in some alerts
not firing in a particular configuration of rules
2.0.2:
======
- Added Thresholding and Suppression features (Marc Norton/Sourcefire)
- Fixed TCP RST processing bug found (Shai Rubin)
- Cleanup of spp_arpspoof (Jeff Nathan)
- Cleanup of win32 version including proper Event Log support (Chris Reid)
- Munged data fixes for stream4 (Chris Green)
Newsx is an NNTP client for Unix. It will connect to a remote NNTP server and
post outgoing articles batched by the news system, as well as fetch incoming
articles.
It provides the NNTP capabilities required for small local news spools on
installations with NNTP access only through limited ISP accounts. It works well
via a dialup SLIP/PPP connection.
Newsx is also well suited for large spools with normal feeds, being used for
pulling newsgroups from specific NNTP servers that are not distributed in the
usual manner. Since newsx obeys the normal news spool configuration file and
requires little or no specific configuration, the administrative burden should
be minimized.
Package Collection.
It will allow administrators of the Apache 2 HTTP server to authenticate
users against a MySQL database. It comes from the RedHat distribution.
# Version 0.83 (released 2003-12-31) hilights:
* Mainly bugfixes.
* Added some features especially useful for public servers.
(Like server-client pinging)
Nodename patch for OpenVMS thanks to Jouk Jansen
<joukj@hrem.stm.tudelft.nl>.
Speed up of lyapunov thanks to Yafe (yet another fractal explorer)
maintainer Alex Pankratov <ap@cipherica.com>.
The 5 OpenGL high intensity modes... atunnels, fire, sballs, sproingies,
and sometimes gears now have full screen defaults.
See XLock.ad and grep on 402 to change them back.
Three patches thanks to <michal.cihar@suse.cz>.
debug patch - s/if DEBUG/ifdef DEBUG/
helper patch - support for auth using external program
(The idea is xlock needs to be sgid shadow to allow reading
/etc/shadow. This way needs just some small binary to be sgid.)
various compile fixes
Maude 2 extends and generalizes Maude 1 to allow more expressive
modules and a wider range of computational commands.
The license has been changed to the GNU General Public License.
The tecla library provides UNIX and LINUX programs with interactive
command line editing facilities, similar to those of the UNIX tcsh
shell. In addition to simple command-line editing, it supports recall
of previously entered command lines, TAB completion of file names or
other tokens, and in-line wild-card expansion of filenames. The
internal functions which perform file-name completion and wild-card
expansion are also available externally for optional use by programs.
The BuDDy Binary Decision Diagrams (BDD) library presented here was made
as part of a ph.d. project on model checking of finite state machines.
The library has evolved from a simple introduction to BDDs to a full blown
BDD package with all the standard BDD operations, reordering and a wealth
of documentation.
note that this is ONLY_FOR_PLATFORM Linux/i386 until we have
glibc-2.3.2 and gtk2 (and dependencies) for Linux in pkgsrc.
Mozilla Firebird is a free, open-source and cross-platform web browser
for Windows, Linux, MacOS X and many other operating systems. It is
small, fast and easy to use, and offers many advantages over other web
browsers, such as tabbed browsing and the ability to block pop-up
windows.
Firebird also offers excellent bookmark and history management, and it
can be extended by developers using industry standards such as XML,
CSS, JavaScript, C++, etc. Many extensions are available.