Commit graph

9 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
jlam
9c8b5ede43 Point MAINTAINER to pkgsrc-users@NetBSD.org in the case where no
developer is officially maintaining the package.

The rationale for changing this from "tech-pkg" to "pkgsrc-users" is
that it implies that any user can try to maintain the package (by
submitting patches to the mailing list).  Since the folks most likely
to care about the package are the folks that want to use it or are
already using it, this would leverage the energy of users who aren't
developers.
2006-03-04 21:28:51 +00:00
joerg
5911def816 Recursive revision bump / recommended bump for gettext ABI change. 2006-02-05 23:08:03 +00:00
tv
7f00eaada9 "Oops." BUILDLINK_DEPMETHOD.libevent was defaulting to "build", which is
no longer correct since update to libevent 1.x; it now uses libtool and
generates a shlib.

Remove the offending bl3 line, and bump all dependents' PKGREVISIONs, since
the binary pkg changes for any OS that doesn't have a sufficient builtin
libevent version (or the package has requested a non-builtin version).
2005-09-16 14:46:42 +00:00
tv
f816d81489 Remove USE_BUILDLINK3 and NO_BUILDLINK; these are no longer used. 2005-04-11 21:44:48 +00:00
wiz
b8e0eb28f4 Remove FreeBSD RCS Ids. pkgsrc has diverged too much for syncing to be
useful.
2005-03-24 21:12:50 +00:00
jmmv
7cdc08d2d9 Use BUILDLINK_PREFIX.libdnet rather than PREFIX to locate libdnet. 2005-03-20 16:37:04 +00:00
tv
02cfaf79b9 libevent has no shlibs. Make BUILDLINK_DEPMETHOD.libevent=build. 2004-04-30 17:26:23 +00:00
snj
a417c0a985 Convert to buildlink3. 2004-04-25 05:02:23 +00:00
agc
09077a7922 Initial import of fragroute-1.2 into the NetBSD Packages Collection,
provided in PR 24022 by ISIHARA Takanori. This was taken from the
FreeBSD Packages Collection and ported to NetBSD by ISIHARA Takanori.

Additional fixes to make the package compile on NetBSD by myself,
along with fixes for the build infrastructure (since libevent is part
of NetBSD-current).

"Fragroute intercepts, modifies, and rewrites egress traffic destined
for a specified host, implementing most of the attacks described in the
Secure Networks "Insertion, Evasion, and Denial of Service: Eluding
Network Intrusion Detection" paper of January 1998.

It features a simple ruleset language to delay, duplicate, drop,
fragment, overlap, print, reorder, segment, source-route, or otherwise
monkey with all outbound packets destined for a target host, with
minimal support for randomized or probabilistic behaviour.

This tool was written in good faith to aid in the testing of network
intrusion detection systems, firewalls, and basic TCP/IP stack
behaviour. Please do not abuse this software."
2004-01-08 17:55:15 +00:00