[3718] in linux-announce channel archive
Linux-Announce Digest #10
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Digestifier)
Mon Aug 27 14:13:11 2001
Message-ID: <20010827181306.10461.qmail@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu>
From: Digestifier <Linux-Announce-Request@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu>
To: Linux-Announce@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
Reply-To: Linux-Announce@senator-bedfellow.mit.edu
Date: Mon, 27 Aug 2001 14:13:05 EDT
Linux-Announce Digest #10, Volume #4 Mon, 27 Aug 2001 14:13:05 EDT
Contents:
lbrate 1.0 - extract/decompress CP/M LBR archives (Russell Marks)
GNU MDK version 0.3.5 released ("Jose A. Ortega Ruiz")
nomarch 1.1 - extract `.arc' files (Russell Marks)
FS: Harley Hahn's "Open Computing Unix Unbound" -$6 + shipping. (J)
Re: NetWatcher - another network monitoring system (Eugene Crosser)
KSnuffle-2.2 released (Jimmy Tucker)
KSnuffle-2.2 released ("[KLEIN] B")
Proposal for New Linux User Group ("Rodney Crater")
Re: General Graphics/Input Interface 2.0.1 ("Brian S. Julin")
New multithread producer/consumer library (Giuseppe Corbelli)
KSnuffle-2.2 released ("[KLEIN] B")
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Mon, 27 Aug 2001 12:54:31 CST
Subject: lbrate 1.0 - extract/decompress CP/M LBR archives
Reply-To: russell.marks@ntlworld.com
From: Russell Marks <russell.marks@spam^H^H^H^Hntlworld.com>
lbrate extracts/decompresses files from the CP/M LBR format. (It can
also list and test such archives.) It does this in an `unzip'-like
manner, mostly hiding the details of individually compressed and
renamed files, and transparently deals with the required
decompression/renaming.
lbrate is also (I believe) the only non-CP/M program to fully support
decompressing files from all three CP/M compression schemes (Q, Z, Y).
With this in mind, it can decompress such files directly, treating
them as if they were single-entry LBRs.
You can download it from ibiblio:
ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/utils/compress/lbrate-1.0.tar.gz
There's also a web page here:
http://rus.members.beeb.net/lbrate.html
Here's the LSM entry:
==========================================================================
Begin4
Title: lbrate
Version: 1.0
Entered-date: 2001-08-20
Description: lbrate extracts/decompresses files from the CP/M LBR
format. It does this in an `unzip'-like manner, mostly
hiding the details of individually compressed and
renamed files.
At the time of writing, lbrate seems to be the only
non-CP/M program to fully support decompressing files
from all three CP/M compression schemes (Q, Z, Y).
With this in mind, it can decompress such files
directly, treating them as if they were single-entry
LBRs.
Keywords: CP/M LBR archive format extract decompress
squeezed crunched LZH
Author: rus@svgalib.org (Russell Marks)
Primary-site: ftp.ibiblio.org /pub/Linux/utils/compress
28485 lbrate-1.0.tar.gz
Copying-policy: GPL
End
==========================================================================
-Rus.
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 27 Aug 2001 12:55:27 CST
Subject: GNU MDK version 0.3.5 released
From: "Jose A. Ortega Ruiz" <jaortega@acm.org>
GNU MDK 0.3.5 has been released. It is available from
ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/mdk/ and mirrors of that site (see list of
mirror sites at http://www.gnu.org/order/ftp.html) [0].
GNU MDK provides a simulator of D. Knuth's MIX computer, and a
development environment to write, run and debug MIXAL programs on it.
New in this release:
** In gmixvm, when the mouse pointer is over a MIXAL source line, the
status bar shows the value of the variables appearing in this line.
** The current symbol table can be displayed, in gmixvm, using the menu
command Debug->Symbols...
** Bug fix: the load, compile and run file dialogs now get the correct
filename under linux.
** Bug fix: fonts used by gmixvm are now always correctly saved.
** Bug fix: 'psym' now works correctly in gmixvm.
** Bug fix: the symbol table for a MIX file is now correctly recovered
both in gmixvm and mixvm (negative values where incorrectly
converted to a positive value).
Visit the MDK home page at http://www.gnu.org/software/mdk/mdk.html.
Bug reports should go to bug-gnu-mdk@gnu.org.
Enjoy!
[0] GNU MDK source and binary packages can also be downloaded from
http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=13897&release_id=35894
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 27 Aug 2001 12:57:27 CST
Subject: nomarch 1.1 - extract `.arc' files
Reply-To: russell.marks@ntlworld.com
From: Russell Marks <russell.marks@spam^H^H^H^Hntlworld.com>
nomarch lists/extracts/tests `.arc' archives. (It also handles `.ark'
files, they're exactly the same.) This is a *very* outdated file
format which should never be used for anything new, but unfortunately,
you can still run into it every so often (especially if you mess about
with old CP/M stuff). So nomarch is handy as a way to deal with these
files.
(nomarch is primarily intended as a `replacement' for the non-Free
`arc' program.)
You can download it from ibiblio:
ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/Linux/utils/compress/nomarch-1.1.tar.gz
There's also a web page here:
http://rus.members.beeb.net/nomarch.html
1.1 adds an option necessary for nomarch to be usable from Emacs, and
has some fairly minor bugfixes.
Here's the changes relative to the previous version (from NEWS):
New `-U' option, to use uppercase archive member filenames - or more
precisely, to avoid lowercasing them. (In practice, almost all
archives use uppercase member filenames.)
File-writing errors didn't previously cause a non-zero exit value -
they do now.
Fixed memory leak when not all of an archive file member could be
read.
Added section on how to use nomarch with Emacs to man page.
Here's the LSM entry:
==========================================================================
Begin4
Title: nomarch
Version: 1.1
Entered-date: 2001-08-20
Description: nomarch extracts files from the old `.arc' archive
format. (At the time of writing, it seems to be the
only Free utility available to do this.) It can also
list and test such archives.
Keywords: ARC archive format extract decompress
Author: rus@svgalib.org (Russell Marks)
Primary-site: ftp.ibiblio.org /pub/Linux/utils/compress
19969 nomarch-1.1.tar.gz
Copying-policy: GPL
End
==========================================================================
-Rus.
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 27 Aug 2001 12:57:28 CST
From: jadapturSPAMNOT@hotmail.com (J)
Subject: FS: Harley Hahn's "Open Computing Unix Unbound" -$6 + shipping.
Reply-To: jadapturSPAMNOT@hotmail.com
FS: Harley Hahn's "Open Computing Unix Unbound" - $6 + shipping.
Published by Osborne
ISBN 0-07-882050-2
I have a short supply.
These books originally sold for $27.95 and are considered by many to
be one of the best books ever written as an introduction/reference to
the Unix Operating System (also applies to Linux, the BSDs, and
Solaris ).
They feature info on Unix, X windows, multiple shells, the Vi editor
the Emacs editor, etc.
The Apendixes and Quick Indexes are tremendous resources for finding
commands. There are summaries of commands for unix, vi, and emacs:
it's worth the price for this alone.
I'm asking $5.00 plus a flat rate shipping/handling charge.
Total price shipped at book rate: $10.00 total in Lower 48 states.
Total price shipped Priorty mail: $13.00 total in Lower 48 states.
For immediate shipment use Paypal; I will, also, accept a prepaid
*Postal* Money order but the books will we be shipped in the order
that I receive payment (I'll return MO's for unfulfilled orders).
Use Paypal and be sure. All sales final.
Please respond via email..
Remove SPAMNOT from the email address to reply.
J
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 27 Aug 2001 12:57:31 CST
From: Eugene Crosser <crosser@average.org>
Subject: Re: NetWatcher - another network monitoring system
Reply-To: Eugene Crosser <crosser@average.org>
On 27-Aug-01 at 03:13, jason andrade (jason@dstc.edu.au) wrote:
> > http://netwatcher.sourceforge.net/
>
> hi eugene,
>
> would it be possible to mirror the netwatcher site and downloads, here
> in australia ?
Sure, no problem. But the particular method of mirroring should be
justified with Sourceforge, I think. If any cooperation is needed from
my side go ahead and tell me what to do.
Eugene
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 27 Aug 2001 12:57:32 CST
From: Jimmy Tucker <jimmy@N5JTT.WORKGROUP>
Subject: KSnuffle-2.2 released
Thanks!
==========[snip]========
KSnuffle, the KDE network packet sniffer, is now available for download
from:
ftp://195.92.31.34/ksnuffle-2.2/ksnuffle-2.2.tgz
This version has been built against a fairly recent KDE2.1 CVS snapshot.
The manual pages are online at
http://www.quaking.demon.co.uk/ksnuffle.manual
The main change from 2.1 is a work-around for the forthcoming KDE
change whereby setuid programs will not be run.
Please note that if the remote sniffer interface is not compatible with
2.0 and earlier versions. If you use remote sniffers, then you will need to
reinstall the rsnuffle daemon.
A few people have asked about RPMs. Sorry, none avaiable. I've got a
non-standard setup anyway, and there are two many combinations (RH, Suse,
Mandrake, installed under /usr or /opt/kde, etc.) to do this. Volunteers?
Regards
Mike Richardson
mike@quaking.demon.co.uk
=====[The Actual Announcement]========================================
KSnuffle is a network packet sniffer for KDE. Features include:
* Basic filtering and packet selection via the GUI
* Advanced filtering and packet selection via filter programs
* Multiple concurrent monitors
* Text and binary logging, plus replay of binary log files
* Textual display of network traffic overview
* Full(er) details of protocol and application data available
* Display of data in TCP/IP streams
* Network load histograms and time-averaged load display
* Parallel display of multiple load histograms
* Save and restored filter and packet selection configurations
* Support for use by selected non-root users
* Plugin support - 0.8 contains plugins for
* TCP/IP stream monitoring
* DNS lookup monitoring,
* Traffic summaries
* End-to-End summaries
In its current state it is, so far as I can tell, quite reliable. The
main area where is is lacking is actually decoding different network
packets. At the moment, it handles basic decoding of TCP/IP and UDP/IP,
plus ARP/RARP and ICMP. Packet decoding does not go down into the
application level except for DNS packets.
Also, KSnuffle uses libpcap-0.4, as used by tcpdump. As I only have access
to Linux boxen, I cannot build or test it for any other Unix. I'd be
interested if anyone else could try.
KSnuffle is available from ftp://195.92.31.34/pub/ksnuffle-2.1/ ; there
is a homepage at http://www.quaking.demon.co.uk/ksnuffle.html. The latter
contains some screen shots and other information.
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 27 Aug 2001 12:57:33 CST
From: "[KLEIN] B" <klein@klein.thirdb>
Subject: KSnuffle-2.2 released
Thanks!
==========[snip]========
KSnuffle, the KDE network packet sniffer, is now available for download
from:
ftp://195.92.31.34/ksnuffle-2.2/ksnuffle-2.2.tgz
This version has been built against a fairly recent KDE2.1 CVS snapshot.
The manual pages are online at
http://www.quaking.demon.co.uk/ksnuffle.manual
The main change from 2.1 is a work-around for the forthcoming KDE
change whereby setuid programs will not be run.
Please note that if the remote sniffer interface is not compatible with
2.0 and earlier versions. If you use remote sniffers, then you will need to
reinstall the rsnuffle daemon.
A few people have asked about RPMs. Sorry, none avaiable. I've got a
non-standard setup anyway, and there are two many combinations (RH, Suse,
Mandrake, installed under /usr or /opt/kde, etc.) to do this. Volunteers?
Regards
Mike Richardson
mike@quaking.demon.co.uk
=====[The Actual Announcement]========================================
KSnuffle is a network packet sniffer for KDE. Features include:
* Basic filtering and packet selection via the GUI
* Advanced filtering and packet selection via filter programs
* Multiple concurrent monitors
* Text and binary logging, plus replay of binary log files
* Textual display of network traffic overview
* Full(er) details of protocol and application data available
* Display of data in TCP/IP streams
* Network load histograms and time-averaged load display
* Parallel display of multiple load histograms
* Save and restored filter and packet selection configurations
* Support for use by selected non-root users
* Plugin support - 0.8 contains plugins for
* TCP/IP stream monitoring
* DNS lookup monitoring,
* Traffic summaries
* End-to-End summaries
In its current state it is, so far as I can tell, quite reliable. The
main area where is is lacking is actually decoding different network
packets. At the moment, it handles basic decoding of TCP/IP and UDP/IP,
plus ARP/RARP and ICMP. Packet decoding does not go down into the
application level except for DNS packets.
Also, KSnuffle uses libpcap-0.4, as used by tcpdump. As I only have access
to Linux boxen, I cannot build or test it for any other Unix. I'd be
interested if anyone else could try.
KSnuffle is available from ftp://195.92.31.34/pub/ksnuffle-2.1/ ; there
is a homepage at http://www.quaking.demon.co.uk/ksnuffle.html. The latter
contains some screen shots and other information.
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 27 Aug 2001 12:57:37 CST
From: "Rodney Crater" <RCRATERrcraterAT@EARTHLINKearthlinkDOT.NETnet>
Subject: Proposal for New Linux User Group
There are a couple of persons contemplating starting a new Linux Users Group
in the Sheldon/Spencer/Spirit Lake area of Iowa. This is a request for any
group that is supporting this area to please contact me so that we do not
duplicate areas.
Sincerely,
Rodney A. Crater
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 27 Aug 2001 12:57:37 CST
From: "Brian S. Julin" <bri@tull.umassp.edu>
Subject: Re: General Graphics/Input Interface 2.0.1
The GGI Project is proud to announce a new release of LibGGI (2.0.1),
LibGII (0.8.1), and LibGGIMisc (2.0.1).
The General Graphics Interface (LibGGI) abstracts various graphics systems
such that programs coded to the LibGGI API will run interchangeably,
without recompilation. In addition, LibGGI is extendable allowing addition
of new API functions through a modular plugin-like system. Supported
backends include SVGALib, libVGL, DirectX, GLIDE, various flavors of
X11, Linux fbdev (with or without DirectFB), various ASCII-art/text displays,
interprocess/networked client/server displays, and a suite of utility
displays that allow you to do such things as tile an application across
multiple slave displays or draw in memory while saving frames into files.
The General Input Interface is similar in architecture, but handles input
subsystems. In addition to supporting a plethora of input backends (linux
joystick/evdev/mouse/keyboard, vgl, DirectInput, X11 to name the favorites)
LibGII defines an architecture for filters which can transmute inputs in
very interesting ways.
LibGGIMisc is an extension to LibGGI which handles features commonly,
but not pervasively, found in graphics systems, such as syncronization
with vertical retrace on raster-based displays.
If you are interested in developing a unified cross-platform graphics
library, please feel welcome on our mailing list. Subscription
instructions, bug reporting system, and additional information about
the GGI-project are available at the URL: http://www.ggi-project.org
and downloads for the current release are available at:
URL: http://www.ggi-project.org/download.php
Enjoy,
The GGI Project
LibGII Changes since 2.0:
* Prelimiary support for using DirectFB drivers under display-fbdev
* More documentation updates.
* Many corrections/improvements to build files
* Started move towards using libtool versioning, as interface is stable.
LibGGIMisc changes since LibGGI 2.0b3:
* Broken from LibGII, source tree rewrite.
* Added GetRayPos test into demo.
* added fbdev target
LibGII Changes since 0.8:
* Many corrections/improvements to build files
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 27 Aug 2001 12:57:31 CST
From: cowo@cowo.net (Giuseppe Corbelli)
Subject: New multithread producer/consumer library
Reply-To: IHATESPAM@lugbs.linux.it
Hi all
I have released the first working release of libmtrwe, a C library
aimed at solving the producer/consumer problem. It has been programmed and
tested under Linux using LinuxThreads (pthread_create). Documentation and
examples included. I'm not a threads guru: I'm posting here to ask for help
and advice. Please take a look at the code if you've got some time to spend.
Main features
* Circular shared buffer
* Support for 3 encoding routines apart from producer and consumer
* User-definable producer and consumer
* 4 buffering types available
Missing
* On-the-fly definition of buffer sizes
* Signal handling
* ...
The tarball can be found at the following address:
http://cowo.mascanc.net
--
Giuseppe "Cowo" Corbelli \/\ My software: http://cowo.mascanc.net
**ANTI-SPAM** -- **Substitute IHATESPAM with cowo to reply by mail**
-<! A mathematician is a device for turning coffee into theorems. !>-
P. Erdos
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------------------------------
Date: Mon, 27 Aug 2001 12:57:41 CST
From: "[KLEIN] B" <klein@klein.thirdb>
Subject: KSnuffle-2.2 released
Thanks!
==========[snip]========
KSnuffle, the KDE network packet sniffer, is now available for download
from:
ftp://195.92.31.34/ksnuffle-2.2/ksnuffle-2.2.tgz
This version has been built against a fairly recent KDE2.1 CVS snapshot.
The manual pages are online at
http://www.quaking.demon.co.uk/ksnuffle.manual
The main change from 2.1 is a work-around for the forthcoming KDE
change whereby setuid programs will not be run.
Please note that if the remote sniffer interface is not compatible with
2.0 and earlier versions. If you use remote sniffers, then you will need to
reinstall the rsnuffle daemon.
A few people have asked about RPMs. Sorry, none avaiable. I've got a
non-standard setup anyway, and there are two many combinations (RH, Suse,
Mandrake, installed under /usr or /opt/kde, etc.) to do this. Volunteers?
Regards
Mike Richardson
mike@quaking.demon.co.uk
=====[The Actual Announcement]========================================
KSnuffle is a network packet sniffer for KDE. Features include:
* Basic filtering and packet selection via the GUI
* Advanced filtering and packet selection via filter programs
* Multiple concurrent monitors
* Text and binary logging, plus replay of binary log files
* Textual display of network traffic overview
* Full(er) details of protocol and application data available
* Display of data in TCP/IP streams
* Network load histograms and time-averaged load display
* Parallel display of multiple load histograms
* Save and restored filter and packet selection configurations
* Support for use by selected non-root users
* Plugin support - 0.8 contains plugins for
* TCP/IP stream monitoring
* DNS lookup monitoring,
* Traffic summaries
* End-to-End summaries
In its current state it is, so far as I can tell, quite reliable. The
main area where is is lacking is actually decoding different network
packets. At the moment, it handles basic decoding of TCP/IP and UDP/IP,
plus ARP/RARP and ICMP. Packet decoding does not go down into the
application level except for DNS packets.
Also, KSnuffle uses libpcap-0.4, as used by tcpdump. As I only have access
to Linux boxen, I cannot build or test it for any other Unix. I'd be
interested if anyone else could try.
KSnuffle is available from ftp://195.92.31.34/pub/ksnuffle-2.1/ ; there
is a homepage at http://www.quaking.demon.co.uk/ksnuffle.html. The latter
contains some screen shots and other information.
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------------------------------
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