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Kifarunix is blog dedicated to providing tips, tricks and HowTos for Nix enthusiasts; Command cheat sheets, monitoring, server configurations, virtualization, systems security, networking…the whole FOSS technologies. The major aim of all this is to share our Nix skills and knowledge with anyone who is interested especially the upcoming system admins. Stay connected and let us grow together.
A community making great, flexible, user-friendly manuals together.
We create booklets, course materials and manuals for creative, cultural and campaigning uses of Free Software.
OpenTAXII is a robust Python implementation of TAXII Services with a rich feature set and extensible, code-level APIs.
LIRC is a package that allows you to decode and send infra-red signals of many (but not all) commonly used remote controls.
Recent linux kernels makes it possible to use some IR remote controls as regular input devices. Sometimes this makes LIRC redundant. However, LIRC offers more flexibility and functionality and is still the right tool in a lot of scenarios.
The most important part of LIRC is the lircd daemon which decodes IR signals received by the device drivers and provides the information on a socket. It also accepts commands for IR signals to be sent if the hardware supports this.
The user space applications allows you to control your computer with your remote control. You can send X11 events to applications, start programs and much more on just one button press. The possible applications are obvious: Infra-red mouse, remote control for your TV tuner card or CD-ROM, shutdown by remote, program your VCR and/or satellite tuner with your computer, etc. Using lirc on Raspberry Pie is quite popular these days.
MQTT Explorer is a comprehensive MQTT client that provides a structured overview of your MQTT topics and makes working with devices/services on your broker dead-simple.
The "open Home Automation Bus" (openHAB) is an open source, technology agnostic home automation platform which runs as the center of your smart home. Besides 200 other add-ons for all kinds of technologies, openHAB provides an MQTT add-on ("binding") to interface with systems like Tasmota.
By following the guide below you'll be able to observe, control and manage your Tasmotamodules from your openHAB system. If you are new to openHAB, please learn about the basic concepts and the initial setup. The below article will not cover any basics which are out of scope to the Tasmota integration.
Apache Lounge is all about the Apache Web Server provided by the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) HTTPD Server Project. Apache Lounge has provided up-to-date Windows binaries and popular third-party modules for more than 15 years. We have hundreds of thousands of satisfied users: small and big companies as well as home users.
What Really Happens On Your Network? Part Seven – Pi-hole®: A black hole for Internet advertisements
We’re back with the latest iteration of users discovering things on their network via Pi-hole. This post is a compilation of things users have discovered over the past year. Some were bad, some were interesting, and some were enlightening. This isn’t the first time we’ve written a post like this, but we will try to go into more detail about what people have discovered and group together similar discoveries. Below you’ll find previous renditions of this type of post.
TegraRcmSmash
A reimplementation of fusee-launcher in C++ for Windows platforms.
Lets you launch fusee/shofEL2 payloads to a USB connected Switch in RCM mode.
File tests each argument in an attempt to classify it. There are three sets of tests, performed in this order: filesystem tests, magic number tests, and language tests. The first test that succeeds causes the file type to be printed. The type printed will usually contain one of the words text (the file contains only printing characters and a few common control characters and is probably safe to read on an ASCII terminal), executable (the file contains the result of compiling a program in a form understandable to some UNIX kernel or another), or data meaning anything else (data is usually `binary' or non-printable). Exceptions are well-known file formats (core files, tar archives) that are known to contain binary data.
KiTTY is a fork from version 0.69 of PuTTY, the best telnet / SSH client in the world.
KiTTY is only designed for the Microsoft® Windows® platform. For more information about the original software, or pre-compiled binaries on other systems, you can go to the Simon Tatham PuTTY page.
KiTTY has all the features from the original software, and adds many others as described.
MobaXterm provides all the important remote network tools (SSH, X11, RDP, VNC, FTP, MOSH, ...) and Unix commands (bash, ls, cat, sed, grep, awk, rsync, ...) to Windows desktop, in a single portable exe file which works out of the box. More info on supported network protocols
Great Scott Gadgets makes open source hardware for innovative people.
Everything we produce at Great Scott Gadgets is open source, including all our hardware designs, software, and educational content. Our goal is to enable you to do things nobody has done before. We do that by building innovative hardware and software tools and by educating the community both online and through industry events. Most importantly, we support the community by releasing all of our work under open source licenses.
I work for OETIKER+PARTNER AG a consultancy company based in Olten, Switzerland. We use OpenSource Software extensively in all our projects. So I made it a habit to open source code we write whenever possible. Below is a list of notable projects I have created or been involved with over the years.
Guides & How-To
[May 29, 2007] - A complete Guide to Ris & Linux - Still a work in progress but almost complete
Clear your cache before downloading the guide, look the date as reference
Ris for Linux Tools: ris-linux-0.4.tar.gz
A working tftpd/samba session log, check it against your own log if you get problems
WINPE RIS from Linux - How to setup a ris server to boot winpe from network
RIS for Linux - Install windows using ris, without having a window server (multiplatform)
BINL protocol explained - Work in progress, Binl protocol analysis
Sources hosted on:
The Open Book Project is aimed at the educational community and seeks to encourage and coordinate collaboration among students and teachers for the development of high quality, freely distributable textbooks and educational materials on a wide range of topics. The advent of the Internet and the World Wide Web are making collaboration among educators on a global scale possible for the first time. We want to harness this exciting technology to promote learning and sharing.
SuperTuxKart is a 3D open-source arcade racer with a variety characters, tracks, and modes to play. Discover more...
This is software for producing a 2D animation.
It is based on the software "Toonz", which was developed by Digital Video S.p.A. in Italy, customized by Studio Ghibli, and has been used for creating its works for many years. Dwango launches this OpenToonz project, in cooperation with Digital Video and Studio Ghibli.
This software can be used by anyone free of charge, no matter whether the purpose of use is commercial or not.
This is available as an open source, so that users can modify its source code freely.
We aim to develop a new platform for connecting the academic research into frontline animation production.
Suricata is a free and open source, mature, fast and robust network threat detection engine. The Suricata engine is capable of real time intrusion detection (IDS), inline intrusion prevention (IPS), network security monitoring (NSM) and offline pcap processing.
Suricata inspects the network traffic using a powerful and extensive rules and signature language, and has powerful Lua scripting support for detection of complex threats. With standard input and output formats like YAML and JSON integrations with tools like existing SIEMs, Splunk, Logstash/Elasticsearch, Kibana, and other database become effortless. Suricata’s fast paced community driven development focuses on security, usability and efficiency.
The Suricata project and code is owned and supported by the Open Information Security Foundation (OISF), a non-profit foundation committed to ensuring Suricata’s development and sustained success as an open source project.