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(Page 3 of 6) < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next > Category: Replacement Secure rm (srm) Added 2001-10-22 srm (secure rm) is a command-line compatible rm(1) which destroys file contents before unlinking. The goal is to provide drop in security for users who wish to prevent command line recovery of deleted information, even if the machine is compromised. Solaris kernel module Added 2001-10-22 A Solaris kernel module to emulate /dev/random and /dev/urandom known from Linux in Solaris. Use at your own risk. SDSC/GT Secure FTP Added 2001-10-22 Secure FTP is a client package that allows for a secure connection to be made to an FTP daemon via SSL. distribuNet Added 2001-10-22 distribuNet is a mid-level statically linked C library for cross-platform distributed networking applications. The library operates almost exactly like th Berkeley socket libraries that it wraps. The library has been compiled and tested on Linux 2.2 and Linux 2.0 with g++. All programs built with the library must use g++ as well, since it takes advantage of some of the C++ gcc modules. Security SetUp II - Light Added 2001-10-22 Security SetUp is a 'security shell' for Windows 9x and Windows NT that allows you to edit the security settings build into Windows by Microsoft. Security settings can also be accessed via PolEdit.exe, however the goal of Security SetUp is to make this task simple and uncomplicated. Security SetUp is very intuitive and comes with easy to use build in help. Security Setup is shareware. Postfix Added 2001-10-22 Postfix is Wietse Venema's attempt to provide an alternative to the widely-used Sendmail program. Sendmail is responsible for delivery of billions of e-mail messages daily. A stunning number. Postfix attempts to be fast, easy to administer, and secure, while at the same time being sendmail compatible enough to not upset existing users. PortMap 4 Added 2001-10-22 Replacement portmapper with access control. Makes it somewhat harder to attack your RPC daemons, for example to steal YP password maps or NFS file handles. Must be linked against a library produced with a recent tcp wrapper release (see above). Tested with SunOS 4.1.x. Also supports HP-UX 9.0, AIX 3.x (bsdcc compiler with -D_SUN), AIX 4.x and Digital UNIX (OSF/1). If you run SunOS 4, the securelib library (see above) is better because it can also cope with direct attacks on your RPC daemons (i.e. attacks without assistance from portmap). fping Added 2001-10-22 fping is a ping(1) like program which uses the Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) echo request to determine if a host is up. fping is different from ping in that you can specify any number of hosts on the command line, or specify a file containing the lists of hosts to ping. Instead of trying one host until it timeouts or replies, fping will send out a ping packet and move on to the next host in a round-robin fashion. If a host replies, it is noted and removed from the list of hosts to check. If a host does not respond within a certain time limit and/or retry limit it will be considered unreachable. Srsh Simplified Restricted Shell Added 2001-10-22 Simplified Restricted Shell 0.1.3. Major purpose of this shell is to maintain `not permitted explictly then not allowed' policy on machines which provide shell access to users, which can not be trusted, while trying to keep KISS rule. Of course you should carefully check up and configure applications, which you allow your users to run, otherwise it still would be trivial to break your policy with badly configured pine or lynx for example. NSBD - Not-So-Bad Distribution Added 2001-10-22 NSBD, Not-So-Bad Distribution, is an automated Web-based distribution system that is designed for distributing free software on the internet, where users cannot trust the network and cannot entirely trust the maintainers of software. NSBD authenticates packages with GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG) or "Pretty Good(Tm) Privacy" (PGP(Tm)) digital signatures so users can be assured that packages have not been tampered with, and it limits the maintainer to only update selected files and directories on the user's computer. NSBD's focus is on security, leaving as much control as is practical in the users' hands. Browse by category |
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