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TAHI Test Suite 4.0.3 (MIPv6)

TAHI Test Suite 4.0.3 (MIPv6)


TAHI Test Suite provides a mechanism for validating an IPv6 implementation against a standardized test. more>>
TAHI Test Suite provides a mechanism for validating an IPv6 implementation against a standardized test for conformance to the IPv6 specification, extensions and directly related protocols.
TAHI Project is the joint effort formed with the objective of developing and providing the verification technology for IPv6.
The growth process of IPv4 was the history of encountering various kinds of obstacles and conquering such obstacles. However, once the position as infrastructure was established, it is not allowed to repeat the same history. This is a reason why the verification technology is essential for IPv6 deployment.
We research and develop conformance tests and interoperability tests for IPv6.
We closely work with the KAME project and USAGI project. We help activities of them in the quality side by offering the verification technology we develop in the TAHI project and improve the development efficiency.
We open the results and fruits of the project to the public for FREE. Any developer concerned with IPv6 can utilize the results and fruits of TAHI project freely. A free software plays an important role in progress of the Internet. We believe that providing the verification technology for FREE contributes to advances of IPv6. Besides the programs, the specifications and criteria of verification will be included in the Package.
Enhancements:
- This release extends the tests in the specification and code.
- There are assorted minor bugfixes.
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Download (0.35MB)
Added: 2006-11-23 License: BSD License Price:
1067 downloads
 
Other version of TAHI Test Suite
TAHI Test Suite 3.0.12 (IPv6 Conformance Test Tool)We closely work with the KAME project and USAGI project. We help activities of them in the quality side by offering the verification technology we develop in the TAHI project and improve the development
License:BSD License
Download (0.40MB)
877 downloads
Added: 2007-06-04
License:BSD License
Download (0.40MB)
1409 downloads
Added: 2005-12-14
License:BSD License
Download (0.63MB)
851 downloads
Added: 2007-06-28
USAGI Project 20060508

USAGI Project 20060508


USAGI(UniverSAl playGround for Ipv6) Project works to deliver the production quality IPv6 and IPsec protocol. more>>
USAGI(UniverSAl playGround for Ipv6) Project works to deliver the production quality IPv6 and IPsec(for both IPv4 and IPv6) protocol stack for the Linux system, tightly collaborating with WIDE Project, KAME Project and TAHI Project.
USAGI Project is run by volunteers from various organizations. At this moment, the volunteers are from Japan, however, we are glad to work with volunteers in any country in the world.
We want to contribute to the Linux community and to the IPv6 community via the delivery of IPv6 protocol stack.
Enhancements:
- Unused code was removed.
- Minor bugfixes were made.
- Some of the additional utilities were reorganized.
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Download (3.7MB)
Added: 2006-05-10 License: Open Software License Price:
1273 downloads
PChar 1.5

PChar 1.5


pchar is a tool to characterize the bandwidth, latency, and loss of links along an end-to-end path through the Internet. more>>
pchar is a tool to characterize the bandwidth, latency, and loss of links along an end-to-end path through the Internet. It is based on the algorithms of the pathchar utility written by Van Jacobson, formerly of Lawrence Berkeley Laboratories.
pchar is a reimplementation of the pathchar utility, written by Van Jacobson. Both programs attempt to characterize the bandwidth, latency, and loss of links along an end-to-end path through the Internet. pchar works in both IPv4 and IPv6 networks.
As of pchar-1.5, the development stops.
pchar is written in C++. During various stages of development, the gcc-2.7.2.1, gcc-2.8.1, egcs-1.1.2, gcc-2.95, and gcc-3.4.2 compilers were used for building pchar. Some testing has also taken place with the Sun SparcWorks and IRIX MIPSpro C++ compilers.
pchars IPv6 support was originally written for the KAME 19991018 snapshot for FreeBSD 3.3-RELEASE. The KAME team has since tested it with FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD, for more recent versions of the KAME IPv6 stack and the integrated IPv6 stacks in FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD. pchar has also been run successfully on the native IPv6 stack in Solaris 8.
Enhancements:
- Source code moved from CVS to Subversion. Although generally not user-visible, the version control strings now use Subversions format.
- Builds on recent (RH 9.0-vintage) Linux systems seem to work now.
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- Some off-by-one errors have been fixed, based on patches submitted by Anil Madhavapeddy .
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- pchar with SNMP enabled now has at least a chance of working correctly.
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- pchar no longer incorrectly aborts after a hop with 100% packet loss.
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- pchar now does a better job of linking libraries using --with-snmp on machines where libsnmp depends on libcrypto, thanks to Matt Zimmerman .
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- Some problems using --with-pcap on RedHat 7.0/7.1 (possibly other Linux distributions as well) were found thanks to a debugging session with Fran Boon .
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Download (0.11MB)
Added: 2006-06-29 License: BSD License Price:
1221 downloads
FreeBSD 6.2

FreeBSD 6.2


FreeBSD is an advanced operating system for Intel ia32 compatible, DEC Alpha, and PC-98 architectures. more>>
FreeBSD is an advanced operating system for x86 compatible (including Pentium and Athlon), amd64 compatible (including Opteron, Athlon 64, and EM64T), IA-64, PC-98, Alpha/AXP and UltraSPARC architectures.
It is derived from BSD, the version of UNIX developed at the University of California, Berkeley. It is developed and maintained by a large team of individuals. Additional platforms are in various stages of development.
FreeBSD offers advanced networking, performance, security and compatibility features today which are still missing in other operating systems, even some of the best commercial ones.
FreeBSD makes an ideal Internet or Intranet server. It provides robust network services under the heaviest loads and uses memory efficiently to maintain good response times for thousands of simultaneous user processes.
The quality of FreeBSD combined with todays low-cost, high-speed PC hardware makes FreeBSD a very economical alternative to commercial UNIX workstations. It is well-suited for a great number of both desktop and server applications.
FreeBSD can be installed from a variety of media including CD-ROM, DVD-ROM, floppy disk, magnetic tape, an MS-DOS partition, or if you have a network connection, you can install it directly over anonymous FTP or NFS.
While you might expect an operating system with these features to sell for a high price, FreeBSD is available free of charge and comes with full source code.
It is easy to contribute to FreeBSD. All you need to do is find a part of FreeBSD which you think could be improved and make those changes (carefully and cleanly) and submit that back to the Project by means of send-pr or a committer, if you know one. This could be anything from documentation to artwork to source code.
Even if you are not a programmer, there are other ways to contribute to FreeBSD. The FreeBSD Foundation is a non-profit organization for which direct contributions are fully tax deductible.
Main features:
- A merged virtual memory and filesystem buffer cache continuously tunes the amount of memory used for programs and the disk cache. As a result, programs receive both excellent memory management and high performance disk access, and the system administrator is freed from the task of tuning cache sizes.
- Compatibility modules enable programs for other operating systems to run on FreeBSD, including programs for Linux, SCO UNIX, and System V Release 4.
- Soft Updates allows improved filesystem performance without sacrificing safety and reliability. It analyzes meta-data filesystem operations to avoid having to perform all of those operations synchronously. Instead, it maintains internal state about pending meta-data operations and uses this information to cache meta-data, rewrite meta-data operations to combine subsequent operations on the same files, and reorder meta-data operations so that they may be processed more efficiently. Features such as background filesystem checking and file system snapshots are built on the consistency and performance foundations of soft updates.
- File system snapshots, permitting administrators to take atomic file system snapshots for backup purposes using the free space in the file system, as well as facilitating background fsck, which allows the system to reach multiuser mode without waiting on file system cleanup operations following power outages.
- Support for IP Security (IPsec) allows improved security in networks, and support for the next-generation Internet Protocol, IPv6. The FreeBSD IPSEC implementation includes support for a broad range of accelerated crypto hardware.
- Out of the box support for IPv6 via the KAME IPv6 stack allows FreeBSD to be seamlessly integrated into next generation networking environments. FreeBSD even ships with many applications extended to support IPv6!
- Multi-threaded SMP architecture capable of executing the kernel in parallel on multiple processors, and with kernel preemption, allowing high priority kernel tasks to preempt other kernel activity, reducing latency. This includes a multi-threaded network stack and a multi-threaded virtual memory subsystem. With FreeBSD 6.x, support for a fully parallel VFS allows the UFS file system to run on multiple processors simultaneously, permitting load sharing of CPU-intensive I/O optimization.
- M:N application threading via pthreads permitting threads to execute on multiple CPUs in a scaleable manner, mapping many user threads onto a small number of Kernel Schedulable Entities. By adopting the Scheduler Activation model, the threading approach can be adapted to the specific requirements of a broad range of applications.
- Netgraph pluggable network stack allows developers to dynamically and easily extend the network stack through clean layered network abstractions. Netgraph nodes can implement a broad range of new network services, including encapsulation, tunneling, encryption, and performance adaptation. As a result, rapid prototyping and production deployment of enhanced network services can be performed far more easily and with fewer bugs.
- TrustedBSD MAC Framework extensible kernel security, which allows developers to customize the operating system security model for specific environments, from creating hardening policies to deploying mandatory labeled confidentiality of integrity policies. Sample seucrity policies include Multi-Level Security (MLS), and Biba Integrity Protection. Third party modules include SEBSD, a FLASK-based implementation of Type Enforcement.
- GEOM pluggable storage layer, which permits new storage services to be quickly developed and cleanly integrated into the FreeBSD storage subsystem. GEOM provides a consistent and coherrent model for discovering and layering storage services, making it possible to layer services such as RAID and volume management easily.
- FreeBSDs GEOM-Based Disk Encryption (GBDE), provides strong cryptographic protection using the GEOM Framework, and can protect file systems, swap devices, and other use of storage media.
- Kernel Queues allow programs to respond more efficiently to a variety of asynchronous events including file and socket IO, improving application and system performance.
- Accept Filters allow connection-intensive applications, such as web servers, to cleanly push part of their functionality into the operating system kernel, improving performance.
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Download (616.3MB)
Added: 2007-01-15 License: BSD License Price:
1071 downloads
 
Other version of FreeBSD
FreeBSD 5.5Out of the box support for IPv6 via the KAME IPv6 stack allows FreeBSD to be seamlessly integrated into next generation networking environments. FreeBSD even ships with many applications extended
License:BSD License
Download (511.4MB)
1255 downloads
Added: 2006-05-25
IPsec-Tools 0.6.6

IPsec-Tools 0.6.6


IPsec-Tools is a Linux port of the user-space tools from KAME. more>>
IPsec-Tools is a port of KAMEs IPsec utilities to the Linux-2.6 IPsec implementation. IPsec-Tools supports NetBSD and FreeBSD as well.
Contents:
libipsec
Library with PF_KEY implementation.
setkey
Tool to manipulate and dump the kernel Security Policy Database (SPD) and Security Association Database (SAD).
racoon
Internet Key Exchange (IKE) daemon for automatically keying IPsec connections.
racoonctl
A shell-based control tool for racoon
Enhancements:
- Some various bugfixes
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Download (0.64MB)
Added: 2006-06-13 License: BSD License Price:
1236 downloads
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