configuration management to your entire infrastructure. With Chef, you can:
* Manage your servers by writing code, not by running commands.
* Integrate tightly with your applications, databases, LDAP directories, and
more.
* Easily configure applications that require knowledge about your entire
infrastructure ("What systems are running my application?" "What is the
current master database server?")
WWW: http://wiki.opscode.com/display/chef
PR: ports/163364
Submitted by: Scott Sanders <scott@jssjr.com>
Sponsored by: RideCharge Inc. / Taxi Magic
Chef Server under Jetty.
For more information, see the following pages on the Chef Wiki:
o wiki.opscode.com/display/chef/Search
o wiki.opscode.com/display/chef/Chef+Indexer
WWW: http://wiki.opscode.com/display/chef
PR: ports/163357
Submitted by: Scott Sanders <scott@jssjr.com>
Sponsored by: RideCharge Inc. / Taxi Magic
accomplishes this by forking a number of children that run I/O to a
filesystem.
This tool is intended to test storage stacks under stress and worst case
scenarios. However due to heavy fragmentation of the I/O files, it tends
to bypass caching algorithms in storage stacks.
WWW: http://www.peereboom.us/iogen/
To set as your default pager, export PAGER=vimpager in your shell's
rcfile.
See the manpage for various options. Of note, custom .vimrc files seem
to cause strange behaviour. Creating ~/.vimpagerrc will give you a clean
ViM environment.
WWW: http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=1723
Feature safe: yes
set of backups as defined by a YAML configuration file.
Features:
- Dynamic scheduling
- Keep an arbitrary number of backups of each schedule type
- Restrict schedules based on time of day
- Restrict feather run to a certain amount of wall time (max_runtime)
- Multiple backup paths per tarsnap
- Multiple exclude list per tarsnap
WWW: https://github.com/danrue/feather
Feature safe: yes
a simple process with a simple point-n-click interface.
WWW: http://makeapbi.sf.net
PR: ports/162341
Submitted by: Jesse <jessefrgsmith@yahoo.ca>
Feature safe: yes
(w/out the need of JailBreaking, and installing SSH-server on your iGadget).
iFuse is useful if you want to mount the device manually or
if you do not have GNOME with GVFS or KDE with kio-ufc installed
WWW: http://www.libimobiledevice.org
Submitted by: Gabor Zahemszky <gabor@zahemszky.hu> via e-mail
Feature safe: yes
It contains the following changes to the original /etc/rc.d/jail script:
- parameters support: you can specify any parameters supported by jail(8)
- ZFS support: you can deletate ZFS datasets to jails
- jails are not identified by a file in /var/spool/jail anymore
- two new commands "create" and "remove" to manage persistent jails
Please refer to the README file for more information.
Martin Matuska <mm_at_FreeBSD_dot_org>
limits the number of parallel executing jobs and starts new jobs when jobs
finish. Therefore, it combines the arguments from every input line with the
utility and arguments given on the command line. If no utility is given as an
argument to xjobs, then the first argument on every job line will be used as
utility. To execute utility xjobs searches the directories given in the PATH
environment variable and uses the first file found in these directories.
xjobs is most useful on multi-processor/core machines when one needs to execute
several time consuming command several that could possibly be run in parallel.
With xjobs this can be achieved easily, and it is possible to limit the load of
the machine to a useful value. It works similar to xargs, but starts several
processes simultaneously and gives only one line of arguments to each utility
call.
WWW: http://www.maier-komor.de/xjobs.html
PR: ports/162109
Submitted by: Jason Helfman <jhelfman@experts-exchange.com>
sysutils/rsyslog4-devel-dbi||2011-11-02|is now stable see sysutils/rsyslog4
sysutils/rsyslog4-devel-gnutls||2011-11-02|is now stable see sysutils/rsyslog4
sysutils/rsyslog4-devel-gssapi||2011-11-02|is now stable see sysutils/rsyslog4
sysutils/rsyslog4-devel-mysql||2011-11-02|is now stable see sysutils/rsyslog4
sysutils/rsyslog4-devel-pgsql||2011-11-02|is now stable see sysutils/rsyslog4
sysutils/rsyslog4-devel-relp||2011-11-02|is now stable see sysutils/rsyslog4
sysutils/rsyslog4-devel-rfc3195||2011-11-02|is now stable see sysutils/rsyslog4
sysutils/rsyslog4-devel-snmp||2011-11-02|is now stable see sysutils/rsyslog4
audio/shoutcast Unfetchable; website rearranged
audio/linux-shoutcast Unfetchable; website rearranged
chinese/scim-chewing Does not configure
converters/py-cjkcodecs Integrated into every python version in the tree
databases/kpogre Does not compile
deskutils/mhc Does not fetch
deskutils/org-mode.el6 Does not fetch
deskutils/gemcal Does not fetch
devel/erlang-thrift Does not build
dns/domtools Does not fetch
editors/richtext Does not compile
games/vultures-claw Does not fetch
games/bomb Does not fetch
games/lgeneral-data Bad plist
games/linux-enemyterritory-jaymod Does not fetch
games/xphotohunter Does not fetch
graphics/gimpshop Fails to patch
graphics/lightspark-devel Does not compile
graphics/xmms-plazma Does not fetch
graphics/py-cgkit Does not fetch, does not compile on ia64, powerpc, or sparc64
japanese/rxvt Does not fetch, fails to build with new utmpx
japanese/epic4 Some distfiles do not fetch
java/jde Does not fetch
java/kaffe Does not fetch
korean/gdick HTMLs from the Yahoo! Korea Dictionary cannot be parsed, other runtime problems
korean/hanterm-xf86 Does not compile
korean/stardict2-dict-kr Does not fetch
lang/p5-JavaScript Does not fetch
lang/TenDRA Website disappeared; last release 2006, Does not compile on recent FreeBSD-9
mail/freepops Does not build
mail/itraxp Does not build
misc/tellico Leaves file behind on deinstall
net/gsambad Does not fetch
net/nocatauth-gateway Uses a UID registered to another port
net/nocatauth-server Uses a UID registered to another port
net/libosip2 Does not fetch
net/kmuddy Does not fetch
net/netboot Does not build
net-mgmt/jffnms Does not fetch
net-p2p/frostwire Does not fetch
net-p2p/azureus Does not fetch
news/cleanscore Does not fetch
news/nntpswitch Does not fetch
news/p5-NewsLib Does not fetch
russian/cyrproxy Does not fetch
science/gerris Does not fetch
security/opensaml Does not fetch
sysutils/wmbattery Does not fetch
sysutils/cpuburn No more public distfiles
textproc/tei-guidelines-p4 Does not fetch
textproc/tei-p4 Does not fetch
textproc/py-hyperestraier Does not fetch
textproc/tdtd.el Does not fetch
textproc/tei-lite Does not fetch
www/phpwiki13 Does not fetch
www/p5-Apache-Scoreboard Depends on mod_perl
www/p5-B-LexInfo Broken due the new mod_perl2 API
www/phpwiki Does not fetch
www/smb2www Apache13 is deprecated, migrate to 2.2.x+ now
www/spip Checksum is changing daily
www/monkey Does not fetch
x11-toolkits/jdic Does not fetch
x11-toolkits/py-kde Does not compile
Monitor::Simple allows simple monitoring of applications and services of your IT
infrastructure. There are many such tools, some of them very complex and
sophisticated. For example, one widely used is Nagios (http://www.nagios.org/).
The Monitor::Simple does not aim, as its name indicates, for all features
provided by those tools. It allows, however, to check whether your applications
and services are running correctly. Its simple command-line interface can be
used in cron jobs and reports can be viewed as a single HTML or text page.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Monitor-Simple/
fex works like cut or awk in its field navigation, but allows
you to specify token-based fields in a much more concise, flexible,
and readable way.
Due to the simplicity of fex's language, it can enable you to replace
many common invocations of cut and awk with a single invocation of fex.
WWW: http://semicomplete.com/projects/fex/
and will fire events when said state changes (create/update/delete). FSSM
supports using FSEvents on MacOS, Inotify on GNU/Linux, and polling anywhere
else.
WWW: https://github.com/ttilley/fssm
PR: ports/161464
Submitted by: Jason Helfman <jhelfman@experts-exchange.com>
mcelog processes machine checks (in particular memory and CPU
hardware errors) on modern x86-based unix systems and
produces human-readable output.
FreeBSD conversion patches were originally written by John
Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org> and later incorporated into this
port.
WWW: http://mcelog.org/
PR: ports/161395
Submitted by: Jeremy Chadwick <freebsd@jdc.parodius.com>
2011-09-01 sysutils/wots: No more public distfiles
2011-09-15 sysutils/gpart: Upstream disappeared
2011-09-01 sysutils/plod: No more public distfiles
2011-09-01 sysutils/checkservice: BROKEN for more than 6 month
2011-09-01 security/nsm-console: BROKEN for more than 6 month
2011-09-01 security/fressh: No more public distfiles
2011-09-01 palm/pose: No more public distfiles
2011-09-01 palm/isilo: No more public distfiles
2011-09-01 news/ija: BROKEN for more than 6 month
2011-09-01 news/PicMonger: Abandonware
Unix provides the standard du utility, which scans your disk and tells you which
directories contain the largest amounts of data. That can help you narrow your
search to the things most worth deleting.
However, that only tells you what's big. What you really want to know is what's
too big. By itself, du won't let you distinguish between data that's big because
you're doing something that needs it to be big, and data that's big because you
unpacked it once and forgot about it.
Most Unix file systems, in their default mode, helpfully record when a file was
last accessed. Not just when it was written or modified, but when it was even
read. So if you generated a large amount of data years ago, forgot to clean it
up, and have never used it since, then it ought in principle to be possible to
use those last-access time stamps to tell the difference between that and a
large amount of data you're still using regularly.
agedu is a program which does this. It does basically the same sort of disk scan
as du, but it also records the last-access times of everything it scans. Then it
builds an index that lets it efficiently generate reports giving a summary of
the results for each subdirectory, and then it produces those reports on demand.
WWW: http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/agedu/
Key features:
* Transparently runs on top of existing file systems
* Random per file tweak value for encryption
* Stores metadata only in encrypted file name
* Arbitrary number of keys per file system, mixing keys in same
directory and key chains
* Modern cryptographic algorithms: AES and Camellia in XTS mode,
PKCS#5v2 and HKDF for key generation.
WWW: http://github.com/glk/pefs
WWW: http://wiki.freebsd.org/PEFS
PR: ports/156002
Submitted by: Gleb Kurtsou <gk@freebsd.org>
Approved by: jadawin@ (mentor)
battery status of your notebook.
It is also able to take certain actions depending on battery status.
It's simple, easy, fairly environment-independent, and "just works" without
tons of (Gnome|KDE|..) dependencies.
WWW: http://code.google.com/p/battray/
PR: ports/159152
Submitted by: Martin Tournoij <carpetsmoker@daemonforums.org>
Approved by: bapt (mentor)
encrypted and authenticated pipes between socket addresses, so that one may
connect to one address (e.g., a UNIX socket on localhost) and transparently
have a connection established to another address (e.g., a UNIX socket on a
different system). This is similar to 'ssh -L' functionality, but does not
use SSH and requires a pre-shared symmetric key.
WWW: http://www.tarsnap.com/spiped.html
- Colin Percival
cperciva@tarsnap.com
PR: ports/159899
Submitted by: Colin Percival
A modern scalable datacenter orchestration framework
WWW: http://marionette-collective.org/
PR: ports/159673
Submitted by: Russell Jackson <raj at csub.edu>
from killing by the kernel when memory is exhausted.
The P_PROTECTED flag protects processes from killing by the kernel
when memory is exhausted. This may be useful for protection many
critical daemons, such as cron, syslogd, inetd, sshd or mysqld.
WWW: http://www.zonov.org/
PR: ports/151774
Submitted by: Andrey Zonov <andrey.zonov@gmail.com>
2011-08-03 comms/ruby-serialport: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 databases/ruby-search-namazu: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 databases/ruby-sqlite: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 databases/rubygem-kirbybase: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-eet: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-filelock: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-filemagic: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-metaruby: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-poll: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-rrb: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-strongtyping: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 devel/ruby-textbuf: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 graphics/ruby-graph: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 graphics/ruby-libpng: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 japanese/ruby-kakasi: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 lang/ruby-extensions: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 lang/ruby-lua: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 lang/ruby-perl: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 mail/ruby-tmail: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 math/ruby-bitset: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 math/ruby-bitvector: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 math/ruby-gmp: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 net/ruby-mpi: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 net/ruby-nis: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 net/ruby-pcap: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 net/ruby-romp: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 net/ruby-spread: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 print/ruby-pdflib: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 security/ruby-aes: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 security/ruby-blowfish: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 security/ruby-cast_256: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 security/ruby-mcrypt: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 security/ruby-pam: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 sysutils/ruby-log4r: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-csv: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-formvalidator: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-gdome: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-htmltools: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-nqxml: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-quixml: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-raspell: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-tempura: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 textproc/ruby-xtemplate: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-03 www/ruby-tmpl: Doesn't work with Ruby 1.9
2011-08-08 russian/messarge: Has expired: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-08 russian/pgp.language: Has expired: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-08 security/ifd-gempc410: Has expired: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-08 security/libidea: Has expired: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-08 security/rain: Has expired: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-08 sysutils/Tee: Has expired: No more public distfile
2011-08-08 sysutils/curly: Has expired: No more public distfiles
2011-08-08 sysutils/i855vidctl10: Has expired: No more public distfiles
2011-08-08 sysutils/ltrace: Has expired: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-08 sysutils/rsyslog3-snmp: Has expired: unsupported upstream
2011-08-08 sysutils/xapply: Has expired: No more public distfiles
2011-08-08 textproc/asm2html: Has expired: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-08 textproc/diff-mode.el: Has expired: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-08 vietnamese/gtk-im-vi: Has expired: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-08 www/campsite: Has expired: Does not work
2011-08-08 www/p5-PLP: Has expired: No more upstream, looks like an abandonware
2011-08-08 www/wcol: Has expired: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles
2011-08-08 x11-toolkits/sdl_gui: Has expired: Looks like an abandonware, no more public distfiles