========> [VMSLT99A.COAST]AAAREADME.TXT;2 <======== This directory contains programs and documents from the COAST security archive. Most of this material is for unixlike systems as initially written but it represents a significant amount of security material which should be presented. 01-README.;1 AAAREADME.TXT;1 ACMAINT-3.README;1 ACMAINT-3_TAR.Z;1 ANLPASSWD-2_3_TAR.Z;1 ANLPASSWD_SOLARIS2_2.MODIFICATIONS;1 ANLPASSWD_TAR.Z;1 ANNOUNCE.OLD;1 ARPMON.GZ;1 ARPWATCH-2_1A4_TAR.Z;1 ARPWATCH_TAR.Z;1 ASAX_TAR.TGZ;1 AUTHD-3_01_TAR.TGZ;1 BINAUDIT_TAR.TGZ;1 BROCHURE_PS.GZ;1 CARP.README;1 CBW_TAR.Z;1 CHALACE.C;1 CHALACE_BIN_386.LINUX;1 CHALACE_HIDLEHO.POST;1 CHANGELOG.GZ;1 CHAT2.PL;1 CHECKXUSERS.Z;1 CONF.H;1 CRYPTO-FILE-SYSTEM_PS.Z;1 DRAWBRIDGE-3.0-README;1 DRAWBRIDGE-3_0-2_2_8.TGZ;1 DRAWBRIDGE-3_0-SRC_TAR.TGZ;1 DRAWBRIDGE-CHANGES.;1 DUMP.GZ;1 E-COMM_OH.PS;1 E-COMM_OH_PS.GZ;1 ETHERLIST.GZ;1 EXECAS.;1 EXECAS.C;1 EXTERIOR-ACCESS.POLICY;1 HESS-PGPKEY.ASC;1 HIDLEHO.;1 HIDLEHO.C;1 HIDLEHO.CNF;1 HUTMP.H;1 IPREPORT.GZ;1 IRIX.TGZ;1 L5.README;1 L5.TGZ;1 LINUX.TGZ;1 LPRNG-353.TGZ;1 LPRNG_DOC-353.TGZ;1 MAKEFILE.;1 MD5.C;1 MD5.H;1 NASA_OH.PS-GZ;1 NCARP-1-0.README;1 NCARP-1-0.TGZ;1 NCARP-1-0P1.TGZ;1 NCARP-1_0P1.README;1 NCARP.TGZ;1 NETLOG-1-2.TGZ;1 NETLOG.README;1 NETRAMET-MAN.TGZ;1 NETRAMET.EXE;1 NETRAMET.TGZ;1 NETRAMET.ZIP;1 NETSEC-DATA.PL;1 NETSEC.;1 NETWATCH.README;1 NIGHTLY.GZ;1 NIS_PAPER.PS-GZ;1 OVERVIEW.;1 PASSWD_E.G;1 PATHS.PL-GZ;1 PGP.;1 PIEC95.PS;1 PIEC95.PS-GZ;1 POST-PROCESSING-19981009.TGZ;1 README-FIRST.;1 README-INSTALL.ANLPASSWD;1 README-SECOND.;1 README-THIRD.;1 README.;1 README.LOCAL;1 RELEASE.NOTE;1 ROUTER-CONF.;1 SCHALES-PGPKEY.ASC;1 SFW-2-0.SHAR_Z;1 SFW-2-0.TGZ;1 SOLARIS.TGZ;1 SPAF-PGPKEY.ASC;1 SPAR-1-2.TGZ;1 SPAR.README;1 SRA.PS-GZ;1 SRA.README;1 SRASRC-1-3-1.TGZ;1 SUNOS.TGZ;1 SURVEY1.README;1 SURVEY1.TGZ;1 TAMU-SECURITY-OVERVIEW.PS;1 TAMU-SECURITY-OVERVIEW.PS-GZ;1 TAMU_SUMMARY.TXT;1 TAMU_SUMMARY.TXT-GZ;1 TIGER-2-2-3-ARSC-19981008.TGZ;1 TIGER-2-2-3-CHECK_DEVS.FIX;1 TIGER-2-2-3.TGZ;1 TIGER.README;1 TRIPWIRE-1-2.TAR_Z;1 TRIPWIRE-APPDEV.PS_Z;1 TRIPWIRE.PS_Z;1 TRIPWIRE12.TAZ;1 WATSON.PS;1 WL_TO_ARR.AWK;1 WORDS.C;1 _31NETRAMET.TGZ;1 _31NETRAMET.ZIP;1 ========> [VMSLT99A.DJS]AAAREADME.TXT;1 <======== DJE Systems OpenVMS Freeware ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Legal Stuff UNZIP and ZIP for OpenVMS (VAX and Alpha) Port Print Facility - V1.2 (VAX and Alpha) Logical Disk Driver (VAX and Alpha, Digi Customers need this!) Queue Utilities (VAX and Alpha) UCX LPD Startup (VAX and Alpha) Print Queue Set-UP (VAX and Alpha) DOS Commands for OpenVMS (VAX and Alpha) ADDUSER Procedure (VAX and Alpha) Daily/Weekly/Month/Yearly Batch Job Driver (VAX and Alpha) Free Disk Space Display (VAX and Alpha) Moving System Roots, Consolidating System Disks (VAX and Alpha) Split and Re-join .ZIP Archives (VAX and Alpha) DJE Systems Links ------------------------------------------------------------------------ These files are "freeware" - that is, free software that you can use, abuse, modify, copy, re-distribute, ... Notice, however, that this means that there is NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND and NO SUPPORT - you are entirely on your own. Use these files at your own risk! All freeware files are provided as compressed .ZIP archives. You'll need the freeware UNZIP for OpenVMS. You can get UNZIP and ZIP for OpenVMS right here on the DJE Systems site. You can also get them for OpenVMS from Hunter Goatley's FILESERV site, and for any supported platform (including FreeBSD, DOS and Windows) from the InfoZip "home" site. A "README" file is provided in each freeware archive to explain the contents and how to use each one. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Port Print Facility - V1.2 A "must have" for telecommuters! This is a BASIC program and supporting DCL code that provides the ability to "queue up" files for printing via a printer attached to your printer port on a VT terminal, or via your PC printer if you're running a terminal emulation program. Provided in source and object form with a LINK.COM procedure so you won't need a BASIC compiler, and you can link it directly on the target system. Both VAX and Alpha support is included. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Page 2 Logical Disk Driver (VAX and Alpha) "READ ME" file - review this after downloading the software. (As of 18-Dec-1998, this file is hosed. Try this alternate link for now.) This is a "Logical Disk Driver" from Digital Equipment Corp. of the Netherlands. Use this to create container files and MOUNT them as logical disks. Includes an update to DCLTABLES and HELPLIB for the "LD" command (connect/disconnect container files and LDAu: devices). Especially useful for Digi International drivers for OpenVMS which are distributed by Digi as VMS-mountable diskette images. FTP the diskette image (as binary) from Digi's web site. COPY the diskette image file making the output file /CONTIGUOUS. Then, the diskette image file can be LD CONNECTed to an LDAu: device, the device can be MOUNTed, and the software kit (.PCSI file) can be extracted and/or COPY-ed to the target system. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Queue Utilities (VAX and Alpha) This is a pair of DCL procedures. REQUE.COM lets you SUBMIT a new version of a revised, timed-release batch job without the need to SHOW ENTRY/FULL, then retype the entire SUBMIT command. Great for folks who need DECscheduler, but can't afford CA's outrageous prices for PolyCenter products. RM_RET_ENT.COM lets you remove retained entries from a single queue, all PRINT queues, all batch ("SUBMIT") queues, all server queues or from all queues of any type. You can select retained jobs of a specific age or jobs of any age. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ UCX LPD Startup (finish the job UCX$LPD_STARTUP began) (VAX and Alpha) This .ZIP archive contains a pair of DCL procedures... LPD_SYSTARTUP.COM helps you deal with applications that MUST write to a device, even if that device is /SPOOLED. For every remote printer queue defined in your UCX$PRINTCAP.DAT, the procedure will create a "dummy" LTA device and spool it through the queue defined. A system-wide logical will also be created so that you never need to know which LTA device is spooled through which queue. In your application, you simply refer to the logical name LPD$queue_name instead of the LTA device. See the README file for complete information. The UCX$PRINTCAP.DAT file becomes the central repository for information about UCX remote printer queues, rather than doing this "LAT" thing in one or more other DCL procedures at system start-up time. LPD_SYSHUTDWN.COM will perform a STOP/RESET on each queue for every Page 3 remote printer queue defined in your UCX$PRINTCAP.DAT. It then sets the LTA device for that queue /NOSPOOLED. Note that reverse-TELNET queues are not supported (UCX limitation). However, this technique is also useful for your UCX$TELNETSYM queues.Simply set up a "dummy" LTA device, and SET it /SPOOLED through a UCX$TELNETSYM queue. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Print Queue Set-UP (VAX and Alpha) Watch this page for a set of DCL procedures that make system startup time set-up of your UCX$TELNETSYM, LATSYM, PRTSYM and other queues as simple as a one-line entry in a file. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ DOS Commands for OpenVMS (VAX and Alpha) This .ZIP archive contains DCL procedures that provide some DOS-like and/or UNIX-like functionality for your OpenVMS System(s). CD.COM provides a "CD" command (or "CHDIR", your choice). It accepts OpenVMS format ([dir_spec]), DOS format (\dir_spec) or UN*X format (/dir_spec). With no "dir_spec" parameter, if displays your current default (the DOS behavior - UN*X would return you to your login directory). FSZ.COM includes only the "display file size in bytes" functionality. It uses the same algorithm as PCDIR.COM. GREP.COM provides a "global search and replace" capability. It accepts all filespec.'s, including wildcarded specifications. PCDIR.COM displays a directory listing in DOS format, listing both the "8.3" form and the "long name". Files sizes are displayed in bytes (estimated based on the number blocks used (not the number of blocks allocated)). Disk space remaining is displayed in bytes. For filespec.'s with a wildcarded path, each directory is sub-totaled for number files and bytes, and a total count of directories, files and bytes is displayed at the end of the listing. However, no "switches" (command options) are supported. We're also considering doing a "UXDIR.COM" to display directory listings in UN*X "ls -l" format, with file protections ("modes"), sizes and dates in UN*X format ("links" or "file aliases" are difficult to detect in DCL). ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ADDUSER Procedure (VAX and Alpha) This .ZIP archive contains a better ADDUSER.COM than the one you get with OpenVMS from Digital. Page 4 This version does a better job of providing default UICs, login device and directory, and login command procedure (LGICMD) because it allows you to select a template record other than DEFAULT. It uses the UIC group from the template record and offers that as the default UIC group for the new user record; it then finds the next unused user number within that UIC group (both group and user are converted to octal for you). Note: If your application allows more than one user to have the same UIC, you are better off using the ADDUSER.COM from Digital. Some poorly written (or poorly ported) applications even require all users to have the same UIC. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Daily/Weekly/Month/Yearly Batch Job Driver (VAX and Alpha) This .ZIP archive contains a DCL procedure for running your scheduled batch jobs. It supports nightly, weekly, monthly and yearly jobs, as well as jobs that run on certain dates (MM/DD) and on certain days every month (but does NOT solve the "last day every month" problem). This procedure lets you make changes to your scheduled batch jobs without the need to delete an entry and reSUBMIT it to make the changes take effect. It also fills in part of the gap for users who could benefit from DECscheduler, but can't justify the cost. Here's a hint for the "last day every month" problem: Set up 12 "yearly" jobs, one for the last day of every month. For example, under the [DAILY] directory, put jobs in [.0131], [.0228] (see the following for leap years), [.0331], [.0430], etc. In each directory, make a .COM file that invokes your "last day every month" procedure. That's where you could detect leap year and defer processing to the jobs in [.0229] when the current year is a leap year. (Remember that every 400 years, you skip a leap year; 2000 is NOT a leap year!) The job in [.0229] should do nothing except in a leap year. Easier still - just test to see if "TOMORROW" is the first of the month! (IF F$CVTIME( "TOMORROW",,"DAY") .EQ. 1) ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Free Disk Space Display (VAX and Alpha) This .ZIP archive contains a DCL procedure that shows each disk volume mounted, the media name reported to OpenVMS, the error count, the total number of blocks, the free blocks and the percentage of the disk that's free. At the bottom is a total of disk space and free space stated in MB, as well as a count of the disk volumes mounted. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Moving System Roots, Consolidating System Disks (VAX and Alpha) Page 5 This .ZIP archive contains DCL procedures for saving a system root ([SYSx]) directory tree, WITHOUT also copying the [.SYSCOMMON] ([VMS$COMMON]) tree. This is useful for consolidating multiple system disks to a single common system disk. You can, for example, save the [SYS0] root of one system disk and restore it as [SYS0], [SYS1], etc. on another system disk. You should exercise EXTREME CAUTION with these procedures! Make VERY CERTAIN that you have a good backup of the source and target disks before using these procedures! ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Split and Re-join .ZIP Archives (VAX and Alpha) This .ZIP archive contains a pair of DCL procedures for breaking large .ZIP archives up into smaller pieces (1.2 MB each, fit nicely on HD diskettes) and joining the pieces back together. These DCL procedures can be used for ANY large Fixed-512 files, such as text libraries, object libraries, etc.; however, they were originally intended for .ZIP files. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ DJE Systems Links: Stand-alone Backup for DOS FreeBSD Networking Paperless Office Disaster Recovery Timesharing Multi-Company Our Resume The SYS$COMMAND BBS ------------------------------------------------------------------------ DJE Systems P.O. Box 87856 Carol Stream, IL 60188-7856 Voice: 630-832-7527 FAX/BBS: 630-832-7528 "DJE Systems" is a service mark of David J. Dachtera, doing business as DJE Systems. ========> [VMSLT99A.GCE99A]AAAREADME.TXT;1 <======== Two short things. VDD64.zip is a reissue of vddriver for alpha. VDdriver allows you to treat contiguous files as complete disks. This variant works with DEC volume shadowing also. FAVOID is a fragmentation avoider. The kitinstal is approximately right, sources are OK. The fragmentation avoider alters the behavior of IO$_MODIFY on disks in two ways: 1. Extends are done contiguous best try every Nth time (default N=1) 2. Extend amounts default to 1/Nth (default 1/4) of current file size. However, they never are extended above 1/8th of free space by this operation, and extend amounts are never less than the program requested in any case. This causes extends to be done on the whole far less often than VMS defaults, speeding writes and fragmenting the disk less. This version, for Vax or Alpha, can be loaded anytime. Use one unit of jfdriver for each disk. In clusters point a jf unit at each disk from each machine. In volume sets also point a jf at each disk. In stripesets, just point a JF at the stripeset. Same with shadowsets: point the JF unit at the shadow driver device, not the underlying disks. (Won't hurt anything if you get it wrong, but won't help you either.) ========> [VMSLT99A.GNU]AAAREADME.TXT;2 <======== These programs are from the GNU effort and came out since the Fall 1998 sigtapes. See "Software.txt" for descriptions. A2PS-4_12.TGZ;1 AAAREADME.TXT;1 ADNS-0_2.TAR-GZ;1 AVL-1_3_0.TAR-GZ;1 BARCODE-0_91.TGZ;1 BISON-1_28.TGZ;1 CFENGINE-1_5_0.TAR-GZ;1 CGICC-3_0_1.TAR-GZ;1 CVSLINES-1_6_7_TAR.GZ;1 EMACS-20_4.TAR-GZ;1 FILES.LAST28DAYS;2 FILES.LAST7DAYS;9 FILEUTILS-4_0G.TGZ;1 FREEDOS-0_3BETA.TGZ;1 GDB-4_18.TGZ;1 GDBM-1_8_0.TAR-GZ;1 GIT-4_3_18.TGZ;1 GNAT311P-OPENVMS7_1.EXE;1 GNOME.README;1 GNUCASH-1_1_27.TGZ;1 GNUMACH-1_2.TAR-GZ;1 GNUMERIC-0_31.TGZ;1 GNUPG-1_0_0.TGZ;1 GNUPLOT-3_7.TGZ;1 GNUPLOT.README;1 GPROLOG-1_0_0.TGZ;2 GSTEP-CORE-0_5_5.TAR-GZ;1 GTK.README;1 GYVE-0_2_4.TGZ;1 HTTPTUNNEL-2_0.TAR-GZ;1 INDENT-1_9_1-WITHVMS.TGZ;1 INDENT-2_1_0-NOVMS.TGZ;1 JARG412.GZ;1 JAVA2HTML-1_00.TGZ;1 JAVA2HTML-1_1.TAR-GZ;1 KAWA-1_6_1.TAR-GZ;1 KAWA-1_6_58.TAR-GZ;1 KAWA_1_6_1.DSC;1 LESS-340.TAR-GZ;1 LIBGCJ-2_95.TGZ;1 LIBTOOL-1_3_3.TGZ;1 LYNX-2_8_2.TAR-GZ;1 MAVERIK-5_1.TAR-GZ;1 MIG-1_1.TAR-GZ;1 MOTTI-2_2.TAR-GZ;1 MYSQL-3_23_1.TGZ;1 NANA-2_4.TGZ;1 OCTAVE-2_0_14.TAR-GZ;1 OLEO-1_99_5.TGZ;1 PLOTUTILS-2_2.TGZ;1 PROFTPD-1_2_0PRE3.TGZ;1 PROFTPD1.TXT;1 PTH-1_0B2.TGZ;1 README.GNAT;1 RECODE-3_5.TAR-GZ;1 ROBOTS-0_95.TAR-GZ;1 SH-UTILS-2_0.TGZ;1 SHTOOL-1_4_5.TGZ;1 SOFTWARE.TXT;1 TAR-1_13_5.TGZ;2 TEXTUTILS-2_0.TAR-GZ;1 UNITS-1_55.TGZ;1 USERV-0_62.TGZ;1 VERA-1_5.TAR-GZ;2 VMSBASH.DIR;1 WHICH-2_7.TGZ;1 XLOGMASTER-1_6_0.TGZ;1 ========> [VMSLT99A.JED]AAAREADME.TXT;2 <======== John E. Davis programs JED is an editor, kind of a cross between EDT and Emacs, that runs on many platforms. It uses SLANG for its macro language. MOST is a text file viewer with many search and display options. SLRN is a news reader program for net news. AAAREADME.TXT;1 JED-B0_99-8_TAR.GZ;2 JEDB0998.ZIP;2 JEDSTATE-0_5_1.TGZ;1 MOST-4_9_0.TGZ;2 SLANG-1_3_8_TAR.GZ;2 SLANG-DOC.TGZ;1 SLRN-0_9_5_7.TGZ;1 ========> [VMSLT99A.MALMBERG]AAAREADME.TXT;1 <======== Subject: DECUS (or ?) L&T 1999 ? CDROM... Date: Fri, 4 Jun 1999 21:36:23 -0500 From: "John E. Malmberg" To: "'Glenn C. Everhart'" Greetings, I have done about as much as I probably am going to on the CMU-IP stuff. I would like to submit it for a future L&T or other DECUS archive. All of my stuff is now at ftp://ftp.qsl.net/pub/wb8tyw/ The stuff is in ZIP archives with readme files for easy transfer. It contains the following directories: [gcc281_u] This is a bunch of stuff missing from GCC 2.8.1 VAX. It basically is header files for TCP/IP (ANY) and also a more up to date prebuilt BINUTILS including GAS-VAX then I have found anywhere else. The binaries are linked against DECCRTL, but the objects are included, and can probably be relinked with VAXCRTL. [gzip] The differences between this one and the freeware 3.0 CD version is that this one can handle the latest LINUX gzip format and the freeware one can not. Also supports VMS style "/option" qualifiers in addition to UN*X style "-o" and FSF GNU style "--option". Full VMS wildcards are supported in the case that you want to gzip or gunzip a whole directory at once (still one file per archive). [sambavms_1_9_16p2] Binaries build in DEBUG for OpenVMS/VAX 5.5-2 and CMU-IP. Needs NETLIB and Socketshr. [sambavms_1_9_19-pre] Source that should build with either SOCKETSHR or other TCP-IP stack. Only tested with GCC 2.8.1. NMBD will not work for CMU-IP. SMBCLIENT will connect to NT systems using encrypted passwords. [SOCKETSHR] I had to fix some real and potential bugs. AFAIK, this is the latest available anywhere. [UCXSIM] Want to run VAX binaries developed for UCX on CMU-IP without source? This will make some of them work, but not all. Requires NETLIB. This makes all of the built-in socket routines in the DECCRTL work as well as possible with CMU-IP. (Also useful if you want to intercept the routines between the CRTL and the underlying TCP-IP stack, and need to know how the parameters are passed) I can also put them on a CD and deliver them to Providence. Page 2 -John The WB8TYW@QSL.NET is a refector that I will try to always keep pointing at my real e-mail account. Currently the home e-mail account is MALMBERG@columbia.total-web.net Currently busy integrating 3 thinkpads, and a MULTIA into the home network. If I can afford more RAM, I can get an ALPHA cluster running, as the reseller is not returning my calls about the qty zero Multia for $0.00 that arrived with the one that I ordered. ========> [VMSLT99A.MALMBERG.GCC281_U]AAAREADME.TXT;2 <======== Summary of changes to GCC 2.8.1 Header files 26-Jan-1999 This is as close as I can get to the X/OPEN header definitions. The biggest problems in the time.h definitions. The routines listed in the header definitions match the DEC C RTL and most of the VAX C RTL by default. Some conditional definitions allow for other run-time libraries. Some routines defined in these headers are not present in all or any versions of the DEC C RTL. They are present to aid in the writing additional libraries or emulation routines like are present in the SAMBA-VMS program. -John WB8TYW@QSL.NET [library] This is not an include file. The logical name GNU_CC_LIBRARY points to this directory. Here are some additional files for it. The sources for these routines are available on the World Wide Web. The LIBERTY.OLB is from BINUTILS-2.9.1. The GCC2DECC.OPT is used to build against the DECC RTL Shared image. This is simpler than maintaining a copy of the option file with each program. [BIN] This is the GNU_ROOT:[BIN]. It is a precompiled AS.EXE from BINUTILS-2.9.1. Otherwise known as GAS and GCC-AS. [SOURCE] These are files that I modified to build LIBERTY and GCC-AS.EXE, from the BINUITILS-2.9.1 sources. ([.gas])WRITE.C, ([.GAS.CONFIG])obj-vms.c, ([.libiberty]VMSBUILD.COM The GNU_CC_INCLUDE:[000000...] header file modifications are below. The file GNU_CC_INCLUDE:[000000]descrip.h was deleted. This was an incomplete file covering up the GNU_CC_INCLUDE:[VMS]descrip.h. [000000]aio.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]complex.h Placeholder for header required by ANSI working draft Page 2 [000000]cpio.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]ctype.h Added wide characters, and X/OPEN required prototypes [000000]curses.h Added some prototypes [000000]DIRENT.H Added conditional include of [VMS]descrip.h needed to resolve reference. Ported program would not always be expected to have the include already. Additional adjustments to support DEC C RTL and X/OPEN. [000000]dlfcn.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]errno.h Added several codes from X/OPEN [000000]FCNTL.H Moved to directory X/Open specified. Added missing constants that SAMBA needed. Updated to X/OPEN and the ANSI working draft. [000000]FENV.h Header required by X/OPEN. Does not seem to be used by DEC C RTL. [000000]FILE.H Added comment that this header has been superceeded by . [000000]fmtmsg.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]fnmatch.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]ftw.h New file. Seems to be DECC RTL specific [000000]glob.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]GRP.H New file needed for SAMBA adapted from the LINUX distribution. [000000]iconv.h New file. Seems to be DECC RTL specific [000000]IN.H New file that just includes [NETINET]IN.H for compatability with DEC C. [000000]inttypes.h New from X/OPEN [000000]IOCTL.H New file that just includes [SYS]IOCTL.H for compatability with DEC C. [000000]langinfo.h New file. Seems to be DECC RTL specific [000000]libgen.h New file. Seems to be DECC RTL specific [000000]limits.h Updated to match ANSI Working Draft Page 3 [000000]malloc.h Changed sbrk() accordign to X/OPEN [000000]math.h Fixed some conflicts with EDOM/ERANGE [000000]monetary.h New file. Seems to be DECC RTL specific [000000]mqueue.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]ndbm.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]NETDB.H New file needed for SAMBA adapted from the LINUX distribution. [000000]nl_types.h New file. Seems to be DECC RTL specific [000000]poll.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]pthread.h Added wrapper code to indicate that pthread_attr_t has been typedef. [000000]pwd.h New file needed for SAMBA adapted from the LINUX distribution. [000000]reentrancy.h New file. Seems to be DECC RTL specific [000000]regex.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]regexp.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]resolv.h New file. Seems to be DECC RTL specific [000000]re_comp.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]sched.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]search.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]semaphore.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]setjmp.h Added some DEC C RTL routines. [000000]signal.h Updates for X/OPEN, DEC C. [000000]socket.h New file that just includes [SYS]SOCKET.H for compatability with DEC C. [000000]socketshr.h Fixed to not conflict with POSIX$INCLUDE files. [000000]stat.h New file that just includes [SYS]STAT.H for compatability with DEC C. [000000]stdarg.h Wrapped va_start with #ifdef/#endif [000000]stdbool.h New file required by ANSI working draft [000000]stddef.h VAX C & DEC C has wchar_t an unsigned int. Page 4 [000000]stdio.h Updated for X/OPEN, and DECC$ routines. [000000]stdlib.h Updated for DEC C RTL. [000000]string.h Updated for DEC C RTL. [000000]strings.h Updated for X/OPEN and DEC C RTL. [000000]stropts.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]syslog.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]tar.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]term.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]termios.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]tgmath.h Placeholder for header required by ANSI working draft [000000]time.h Update to include , instead of duplicating it's values. Update for DEC C RTL. [000000]timers.h New file. Seems to be DEC C specific. [000000]types.h New file that just includes [SYS]types.h for compatability with DEC C. [000000]unistd.h Make definition of NULL consistent with the other header files to remove ordering dependencies. [000000]utime.h File needed for SAMBA adapted from the LINUX distribution. [000000]ucontext.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]ulimit.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]unctrl.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]unistd.h Fixed NULL, X/OPEN and DEC C RTL update. [000000]unixio.h Added fsync(). Not an X/OPEN header. [000000]unixlib.h Added DEC C RTL. Not an X/OPEN header. [000000]utime.h New file, required by X/OPEN. [000000]utmpx.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]varargs.h Updated to DEC C RTL [000000]wchar.h Wide character support Page 5 [000000]wctype.h Wide character types [000000]wordexp.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [000000]xti.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [arpa]inet.h Converted to X/OPEN format. [NET]if.h New file needed for SAMBA adapted from the LINUX distribution. [netinet]in.h Updated according to X/OPEN [SYS]FCNTL.H New file that just conditionally includes [000000]FCNTL.H. For programs that look in the [SYS] directory. [SYS]IOCTL.H Adapted from the SOCKETSHR Distribution. Needed for SAMBA. [SYS]IPC.H X/OPEN Interprocess communication stuff. [SYS]MMAN.H Memory Mapped Stuff. [SYS]msg.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [SYS]resource.h X/OPEN header from LINUX. [SYS]sem.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [SYS]shm.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [SYS]signal.h Conditionally conclude [000000]signal.h for programs that expect it in the [SYS] directory. [SYS]sockios.h New file needed for SAMBA adapted from the LINUX distribution. [SYS]socket.h New file required by SAMBA adapted from the LINUX distribution. Adapted to match DEC C RTL and X/OPEN. [SYS]stat.h Added some missing definitions. Added hack to allow code written for UNIX to more easily be ported. [SYS]statfs.h Used by SAMBA. Created from LINUX VFS.H. Seems to be the same as the statvfs.h in X/OPEN. [SYS]statvfs.h X/OPEN header derived from LINUX. [SYS]time.h Change to just call [000000]time.h to attempt to resolve problems where DEC C programs do not expect two header files with the same name. Also some stuff in this file does not seem to compile. [SYS]timeb.h Moved ftime() here to comply with X/OPEN. Page 6 [SYS]times.h X/OPEN updates. [SYS]types.h Added X/OPEN and ANSI definitions. Set uid_t size to unsigned int to match DECCRTL and VAXCRTL. [SYS]uio.h From the LINUX distribution, used in rebuilding SOCKETSHR. [SYS]un.h Placeholder for header required by X/OPEN [SYS]vfs.h New file needed for SAMBA adapted from the LINUX distribution. Just calls . [SYS]wait.h X/OPEN header needed for SAMBA adapted from the LINUX distribution. [vms]objdef.h VAX object language definitions. ========> [VMSLT99A.MOELLER]AAAREADME.TXT;1 <======== Note that several additional of Mr. Moeller's packages are present here too. With Turbo Pascal now freely distributed, for example, the code that lets you use an old PC to house added disk storage for your VMS box is all the more worth having. Likewise many of his other works. The key item is the support for SCSI disks on VS2000. From: GWDVMS::MOELLER [moeller@gwdvms.dnet.gwdg.de] Sent: Friday, April 09, 1999 10:52 PM To: Info-VAX@Mvb.Saic.Com Subject: Preview: PK2K V1.3 & VAXstation 2000-plus ROM For the new PK2K (Vs2000/uVAX2000 SCSI port driver) versions I mentioned yesterday (V5.5-2 thru V7.1), I've created a "preview" directory with the somewhat incomplete kits that I assembled thus far - due to German DECUS, I won't find the time in the next few days to tidy them up. Meanwhile, do have a look, save a few Vs2000s from the dumpster (preferably those with >4MB of memory), and get you some SCSI widgets ... ftp://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/vms/pk2k/preview/ http://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/vms/pk2k/preview/ As usual, in the anonymous FTP (UCX V4, line mode!) directories [.VMS.PK2K...] on gwdw04.gwdg.de there may be some additional stuff. BTW, all files in [.VMS.PK2K.TEST] except for the (tentative) VMS V5.3 driver are obsoleted by the new versions. Expect them to vanish soon. I have no desire to build (let alone test) PK2K for VMS versions prior to V5.5-2, but sure it can be done, given a VAX with V5.3 .. V5.5 installed. No idea about V6.0. Given the `stability' of OVMS VAX, I'd also expect to be able to build PK2K for versions beyond V7.1 from e.g. V6.2 sources - the Vs3100 SCSI changed very little since (and the latest V7.1 ECO seems to only fix a bug that surfaced - and was fixed on the spot - during PK2K testing in 1997 :-). NOTE that PK2K does not touch upon the SCSI disk (DK) & tape (MK) drivers, which are rather well-known to have some version-specific `peculiarities'. E.g. for V6.1, some VAXSCSI*_061 ECO is _highly_ recommended ... Comments, corrections, criticism, propaganda, etc. welcome! Acknowledgements: Most of PK2K is straight PKNDRIVER (Vs3100 SCSI, (c) DEC). Thanks are also due to several anonymous contributors - I even received a copy of the rarely seen DEC-made Vs2000 CD-ROM driver (note that PK2K's scope is quite a bit wider - it can even been used to _write_ CDs). And of course, without DISM32 (Andrew Pavlin) there was no ROM patch. Wolfgang J. Moeller, Tel. +49 551 2011516 or -510, moeller@gwdvms.dnet.gwdg.de GWDG, D-37077 Goettingen, F.R.Germany | Disclaimer: No claim intended! ----- ----- ========> [VMSLT99A.MON-ALPHA-TT]AAAREADME.TXT;1 <======== This area contains the code for a program which allows one to monitor a TT class device on Alpha from another process. The code seems to be little known, so inquiries on the net continually talk about commercial software. This is a free version. The kernel code is structured as a driver (one of the easy ways to get it loaded) but it will do the job. ========> [VMSLT99A.MOREAU]AAAREADME.TXT;2 <======== This area contains DECwindows enhancements for VMS. Included are Ghostview (works with Ghostscript to show Postscript on screen) Imagamagick, a set of image manipulation routines, M4, a macro programming language, MESA (related to Open3D), Timidity (music editor), XEarth (shows earth as seen from space, earth image moves with time of day), XPDF (view PDF [aka Adobe Acrobat] files on VMS) and some others. AAAREADME.TXT;1 DIFFUTILS-2_7-19970316.ZIP;1 GV_358_BIN_AXP.ZIP;1 GV_358_SRC.ZIP;1 IMAGEMAGICK-421.ZIP;1 M4-1_2-19970316.ZIP;1 MESA-25.ZIP;1 OONSOO-11.ZIP;1 PATCH-2_1-19970316.ZIP;1 ROSEGARDEN-21-XAW3D.ZIP;1 TIMIDITY-220.ZIP;1 XCLIPBOARD.ZIP;1 XEARTH.ZIP;1 XEPHEM-322-BIN.ZIP;1 XEPHEM-322.ZIP;2 XPDF-0-8-DECR.PATCH;1 XPDF-0-80.TGZ;1 XPDF-0_80-VMS.ZIP;1 XPDF-0_90.ZIP;1 XPDF-VMS.TXT;1 XPOSTIT.ZIP;1 ========> [VMSLT99A.NET]AAAREADME.TXT;2 <======== This area contains numerous items that came from the net with lots of test files to describe them. [.APACHEVMS] has VMS sources for Apache and some build info. VNC is a system for letting machines access screens of other machines more simply than with X. There is a VMS client, so you can among other things use it with VNC on a Windows box to achieve what "pcanywhere" or "back orifice 2000" can do for you. AVFS is a library allowing one to look inside tar, zip, etc. files without recompiling. 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PEGWIT-SOURCE.ZIP;1 PERL_LEXICAL.ZIP;1 PFDSK.DIR;1 PFTP-1_0_5.TGZ;1 PGPCRACK99.TGZ;1 PGPPASS.ZIP;1 PHRACK5154.ZIP;1 PK2K-00README.TEST;1 PK2K-053-TEST.ZIP;1 PK2K-062-TEST.ZIP;1 PK2K-071-TEST.ZIP;1 PMAGD.TXT;2 PML062499.HTM;1 POPCRACK.ZIP;1 PORTSENTRY-0_61.TGZ;1 PORTSENTRY-0_99_1.TGZ;1 Page 4 PPTPD-0_7_38.TGZ;1 PPTPV2-PAPER.HTML;1 PRINTSUBS.MAR;1 PRIV-PROPAGATION-ERR.TXT;1 PRIVACY-DG.TXT;1 PROCMAIL_3131.TGZ;1 PROLOG-3_2_6.TGZ;1 PROLOG-HTMLMANUAL.HTML-GZ;1 PROXY-MIXED-AXPVAX.TXT;1 PROXYARP-0_7_3.TGZ;1 PRO_AGENT_1_0.TAR;1 PTD.ZIP;1 PVMSYNC-0_39.TAR-GZ;1 PY152.TGZ;1 PYTH151.TGZ;1 PYTHON-DOC-HTML-1_5_1P.TGZ;1 PYTHON-LOC.TXT;1 PYTHON111.README;1 PYVMS1_5_1-V008DOC.TLB;1 PYVMS1_5_1-V008OBJ_ALPHA.ZIP;1 PYVMS1_5_1-V008OBJ_VAX.ZIP;1 PYVMS1_5_1-V008SRC.ZIP;1 PYVMSSTARTGDE.TXT;1 PYVMS_970216.README;1 PYVMS_970216.ZIP;2 QMAN-FILE-PERMFIX.TXT;1 QPOPPER3_0B15.TAR_Z;1 QSCHEME-0_2.TGZ;1 QUADRA-1_0_1-1_TAR.GZ;1 QUADRA101.EXE;1 QUICKTIMELINUX-0_6_5.TGZ;1 QUOTE-MAIL-VMS.TXT;1 RABBIT18.TGZ;1 RAWRITE.C;1 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VMS-IMAP-SPD-LOC.TXT;1 VMS-MODEL-SUPP.TXT;1 VMS-ON-MULTIA-DISKSETUP.TXT;1 VMS-PATCH-1.GZ;1 VMS-PATCH-1.README;1 VMS-PORT-OF-PATCH-LOCS_TXT.TXT;1 VMS-RETURN-ARGS-NEW-SEC-SVCS.TXT;1 VMS-SER-PORT-NAMING.TXT;1 VMS-SET-SRM-VBLS-SRC.TXT;2 VMS-SSH-LOCS.TXT;1 VMS.FAQ;1 VMSBASHBIN.ZIP;2 VMSFS-LINUX.TGZ;1 VMSTARU9033.TAR;1 VMSTARU9033_SRC.ZIP;1 VMS_DOS.ZIP;1 VNC-3_3_2BETA_WINCESRC.ZIP;1 VNC-3_3_2R2_JAVASRC.ZIP;2 VNC-3_3_2R3_DOC.ZIP;2 VNC-3_3_2R3_UNIXSRC.ZIP;2 VNC-3_3_2R6_WINSRC.ZIP;1 VPND-1_0_3.TGZ;1 VPPP-2_1.TGZ;1 VROUTER-0_02_SRC.TGZ;1 VROUTER-0_02_SRC_TAR.GZ;1 VROUTER-FAQ.HTML;1 VS2000-EXP-DISK-CABLE.TXT;1 VS2000-EXP-DISK-CABLE_HTMLX.HTM;1 VS3100-BOOT-DIAGS.TXT;1 VS3100-BOOT-NUM-DECODE.TXT;1 VS3100-CONSOLE-CODES-PTR.TXT;1 VS3100-SCSI-MORE-RE-MSGS.TXT;1 VTUN-1_1.TGZ;2 VUNIXTOOLS.DIR;1 W98-SNS.TXT;1 WATCHMAN3.TXT;1 WHAT-HAPPENED-TO-PACKETSTORM.TXT;1 WILDFIRE1.GIF;1 WILDFIRE2.GIF;1 WILDFIRE3.GIF;1 WILDFIRE4.GIF;1 WILDFIRE5.GIF;1 WILDFIRE6.GIF;1 WIN-NT-IP-ANALYZ-SOURCES.ZIP;1 WIN-TCPDUMP-SOURCES.ZIP;1 WIN95-CODA-5_2_0.ZIP;1 WINDOG-DTK.ZIP;1 WINDUMP.EXE;1 WINDUMP95.EXE;1 WINE-990704.TGZ;1 WINFINGERPRINT.ZIP;1 WOTS-GALAXY1.TXT;1 WRITE-CACHE-CONTROL-IN-OVMS.TXT;1 WRITE-TO-OPR-MBX-SRC.TXT;1 WU-FTPD-2_5_0.TGZ;1 WWWSSL.ZIP;1 WWW_PROXY-0_0_3.TGZ;1 XATTRD-2_1.TGZ;1 XAUTOLOCK-PL15.TGZ;1 XDELTA-1_0_6.TGZ;1 XEARTH-1_0.TGZ;1 XEB_2_0.TAR;1 XEB_MANUAL_1_0.PDF;1 XFILESSOURCE1_3_1.TGZ;1 XLCKM413.TGZ;1 XLOCKMORE-4_14.TGZ;1 XPDF-0_90.TGZ;1 XSCREENSAVER-3_17.TGZ;1 XWHIRL-1_1.TGZ;1 YAP4_2_0-PROLOG.TGZ;1 ZDEC_C.TXT;1 ZIPSPLIT.ZIP;1 ZLIB-0_7_0.TGZ;1 ZLIB-0_7_3.ZIP;1 ZLIB-1_1_2.TGZ;1 ZLIBC-0_9H.TGZ;1 ZLIBC.TXT;1 ZLIBCFAQ.TXT;1 ZLIP-DNS-WEAKNESSES.TGZ;1 Total of 736 files. ========> [VMSLT99A.NT]AAAREADME.TXT;2 <======== This area contains utilities, often with sources, for Windows NT and various text files of interest for NT internals programming. Note they include an undelete command; this must be started first, and causes NT deletions to move things into the recycle bin, even from command prompt deletions or program deletions, so they can be put back if you decide you made a terrible mistake. Sources for this are present also. AAAREADME.TXT;1 ACTSNT.ZIP;1 ADDVXD.TXT;1 AFIND.EXE;1 AOLPRESSPACK.TXT;1 APR98.ZIP;1 AUG98.ZIP;1 AUTOSRC.ZIP;2 BEADMINSS.ZIP;1 BECOME-ADMIN-WITH-SYSDIR-ACCESS.TXT;1 BESYSADMCS.ZIP;1 BILLGPC-PERIN.HTML;1 BILLGPC.ZIP;1 BOOTINI.TXT;1 CASSANDRA-SOFTWARE.TXT;1 CASSANDRA-US.ZIP;1 CHKDSKX.TXT;1 CLEAN-UP-THREAD.TXT;1 CLEAR-CACHE-NT-DVR.TXT;1 COMPORT.TXT;1 CONTIG.TXT;1 CONTIG.ZIP;1 CPHANTOM.ZIP;1 CPPSUM.ZIP;1 CSM-PROXY-ADMINISTRATION.TXT;1 CS_VULNERABILITY.TXT;1 CTRL2CAP.HTM;1 CTRL2CAP.ZIP;1 DBGV98.ZIP;2 DBGVIEW.HTM;2 DCOM-SECURITY-REFERENCES.TXT;1 DEC98.ZIP;1 DEFRAG.HTM;1 DEFRAG.TXT;1 DEFRAG.ZIP;2 DELETEDEVICE-MEMLEAK.TXT;1 DEVSEC.HTM;1 DIRSYNCH.EXE;1 DISKKEY.HTM;1 DISKKEY.TXT;1 DISKKEY.ZIP;2 DISKMON.HTM;2 DISKMON.ZIP;2 DRIVER-COMPLETION.TXT;1 DRIVER-INTERCEPT-HANGS.TXT;1 DUMPACL.ZIP;1 DUMPEVT.ZIP;1 DUMPREG.ZIP;1 EFSDUMP.ZIP;2 EXCEL-VUL.TXT;1 EXTREME-MANY-REGISTRY-CALLS.TXT;1 FEB98.ZIP;1 FEB99.ZIP;1 FILEMON.HTM;1 FILEMON.TXT;1 FILESRC.ZIP;2 FINDING-NT-AUTH-INFO.TXT;1 FIXING-UNEXPECTED-NT-PAGE-WRTS.TXT;1 FMIFS.HTM;2 FMIFS.TXT;1 FMIFS.ZIP;2 FORENSICTOOLKIT14.EXE;1 GET-PROC-NAME-HOW.TXT;1 GETADMIN4.TXT;1 GUIDEONV110.EXE;1 HANDLEEX.HTM;2 HANDLEEX.ZIP;2 HARDCODED-BREAK-HOW.TXT;1 HOSTNAME.ZIP;2 HSM-IMPOSSIBLE-IN-NT.TXT;1 IE5-HOLE-HTA.TXT;1 IFSQLIST.HTML;1 IIS-INJECT-SRC.TXT;1 IIS-OVFL-AD06081999-EXPLOIT.HTML;1 IIS-OVFL-VUL.HTML;1 IIS-RDB-DISC2.TXT;1 IIS-RDS-VUL-CURE.TXT;1 IIS-RDS-VUL.TXT;1 IIS-VUL-AND-FIX-COMMENT.TXT;1 IIS4-PASSWD-ATTACK.TXT;1 IISHACK.ASM;1 IJB20.ZIP;1 IJUNKBUSTER-U-BLD-JBFAQ.TXT;1 IMDRV.ZIP;1 IM_RAS.HTML;1 ISTRIAL.ZIP;2 JAN98.ZIP;1 JAN99.ZIP;1 JUL98.ZIP;1 JUN98.ZIP;1 JUNKB-W9X-IJB20.ZIP;1 JUNKBUSTER-U-IJB20.TGZ;1 JUNKBUSTERINS.TXT;1 LGDONSRC.ZIP;2 MAR98.ZIP;1 MAR99.ZIP;1 MAY98.ZIP;1 MISC.HTM;2 MOUSEVXD.ZIP;1 MS-DIALER-EXPLOIT.TXT;1 NATIVE.HTM;1 NATIVE.ZIP;1 NDISFAQ.HTM;1 NDISIMFAQ.HTM;1 NETBIOSMACADDR.TXT;1 NETSTATP.ZIP;2 NEWSID.HTM;1 NOV98.ZIP;1 NT-DRIVER-FILE-HANDLES.TXT;1 NT-DVR-WRITEHANG-QUEST.TXT;1 NT-HANDLING-MANY-WRITES-DRIVER.TXT;1 NT-INTERNALS.HTM;2 NT-LOGGING-USELESSNESS.TXT;1 NT-NONPRV-CRASHER-SRC.TXT;1 NT-SHUTDOWN-CALL-FSD-GRABS.TXT;1 NT-TELL-WHAT-APP-MADE-REQ.TXT;1 NT-WIN-INT-LATENCY.PDF;1 NT4-DRIVERS-IN-NT2000.TXT;1 NT5.HTM;1 NT5.TXT;1 NTDEV-DSK-DVRS-NT2K-MODS.TXT;1 NTDLL.HTM;1 NTDLL.TXT;1 NTFROB.HTM;2 NTFROB.ZIP;2 NTFSINFO.HTM;1 NTFSINFO.TXT;1 NTFSISRC.ZIP;2 NTHANDLE.HTM;2 NTHANDLE.ZIP;2 NTQUERYSYSTEMINFO.TXT;1 NTSWEEP.ZIP;1 NTSYSLOG.EXE;1 NTSYSLOG.TXT;1 NULL-SESS-WEAKNESS.TXT;1 O97-VUL-FIX.TXT;1 OCT98.ZIP;1 ODBC-BUG-SAMPLEPAGE.TXT;1 OFFCAB.ZIP;1 OFFCAB16.ZIP;1 OFID-NT-EXAMPLE.TXT;1 OPENLIST.ZIP;2 OUTLOOK-SPOOF.TXT;1 PHYSMEM.ZIP;2 PIPELIST.ZIP;2 PORTM98.ZIP;2 PORTMON.HTM;2 PRIBOOST-W9X.TXT;1 QUERY-PLUGPLAY-DVC-SRC.TXT;1 Page 2 QUEUEUSERAPC-CALL.TXT;1 REDIALS.ZIP;1 REDIRECTOR.HTML;1 REGHIDE.ZIP;2 REGISTRY-DEFAULT-HOLE.TXT;1 REGMON.HTM;1 REGMON.TXT;1 REGSRC.ZIP;3 RGEDIT.ZIP;1 SDELETE.HTM;1 SECHOLE.ZIP;1 SECURE-CITRIX-HOWTO.TXT;1 SECURE_NT_OFFICE_97.TXT;1 SEP98.ZIP;1 SHOPPA-SIZE-LTR.TXT;1 SIDSRC.ZIP;1 SNTRANS.ZIP;1 STREAMS.ZIP;2 STRINGS.ZIP;2 STUNNEL-3_3.TGZ;1 SYNC.ZIP;2 TARA-2_2_7.TGZ;1 TC201.ZIP;2 TCPVIEW.HTM;2 TCPVIEW.ZIP;2 TDI-EXPOSED-HOW.TXT;1 TDI-SAMPLES.HTM;1 TDI-SAMPLES.HTML;1 TDIFAQ.HTM;1 TESTGRP.ZIP;1 TIPS.HTM;1 TIPS.TXT;2 TURBOPASCAL5-5.ZIP;1 TURN-OFF-SRC-ROUTE-SP5.TXT;1 UNDELETE.EXE;2 UNDELETE.TXT;2 UNDELSRC.ZIP;2 UNEXPECTED-PAGE-WRITES-ADVICE.TXT;1 UPTIME.ZIP;1 USERV.TGZ;1 VIRT-DEVICE-HINT.TXT;1 VMERGE21.ZIP;1 VOLID.ZIP;2 VXDMON.HTM;2 VXDSRC.ZIP;2 VXDTDI.DOC;1 VXDTDI.ZIP;1 WEEDER-0_9_7.TGZ;1 WHERE-TO-GET-DDK.TXT;1 WINFREEZ.C;1 WRITE-FAKING.TXT;1 WRITE-FROM-FILTER3.TXT;1 WRITE-TIMEOUTS.TXT;1 WRITING-FILE-FROM-DRIVER-HINT2.TXT;1 WWW_PCUSA_COM-INFOAVAIL.HTML;1 ZWCREATE-IN-DRIVER-HINT.TXT;1 ========> [VMSLT99A.PERL]AAAREADME.TXT;2 <======== This area contains the distribution for PERL, a string oriented language with many extensions widely used to implement portable command programs. Several VMS plugins are present also which provide access to VMS system services, queues, etc. AAAREADME.TXT;1 CRYPT-DES-1_0.TAR;2 CRYPT-DES.TAR-GZ;2 CRYPT-IDEA-1_0.TGZ;2 CRYPTIX-1_16_TAR.GZ;2 PENGUIN-3_00.README;2 PENGUIN-3_00.TAR;2 PERL-README.HTML;2 PERL500503.ZIP;2 PERL5_005_57_990622A.ZIP;1 PERLDOC-5_005_02_TXT.GZ;2 VMS-DEVICE-0_01.README;2 VMS-DEVICE-0_01.ZIP;2 VMS-DEVICE-0_02.README;2 VMS-DEVICE-0_02.ZIP;2 VMS-DEVICE-0_05.README;2 VMS-DEVICE-0_05.ZIP;2 VMS-DEVICE-0_06.README;2 VMS-DEVICE-0_06.ZIP;2 VMS-INDEXEDFILE-0_02.README;2 VMS-MONITOR-0_06.README;2 VMS-MONITOR-0_06.ZIP;2 VMS-PRIV-1_31.README;2 VMS-PRIV-1_31.ZIP;2 VMS-PROCESS-1_04.README;2 VMS-PROCESS-1_04.ZIP;2 VMS-PROCESS-1_05.README;2 VMS-PROCESS-1_05.ZIP;2 VMS-QUEUE-0_50.README;2 VMS-QUEUE-0_51.README;2 VMS-QUEUE-0_51.ZIP;2 VMS-QUEUE-0_53.README;2 VMS-QUEUE-0_53.ZIP;2 VMS-QUEUE-0_54.README;2 VMS-QUEUE-0_54.ZIP;2 VMS-USER-0_01.README;2 VMS-USER-0_01.ZIP;2 VMS_MONITOR-0_05.README;2 VMS_MONITOR-0_05.ZIP;2 VMS_PERSONA-1_01.README;2 VMS_PERSONA-1_01.ZIP;2 VMS_SYSTEM-1_04.README;2 VMS_SYSTEM-1_04.ZIP;2 ========> [VMSLT99A.RAGOSTA]AAAREADME.TXT;2 <======== Art Ragosta's Things Adam - Very extended EVE editor for TPU FPP - Fortran programming preprocessor Kronos - Job scheduler for VMS Merlib - utility library needed for the rest SDIR - sorted directory, sort by many fields like date modified. ========> [VMSLT99A.SAFETY]AAAREADME.TXT;1 <======== The enclosed is a minor revision of Safety. With the release of VMS 7.2 on Alpha it was necessary to recompile various components to allow the new PSB structure (which holds process privileges) to be properly recognized. Note that Safety will not alter process privs or IDs if there is more than one persona in use by the process and only diddles the base ("natural") persona. Other functions are unchanged. General Cybernetic Engineering Software Product Description Safety V1.3b Comprehensive Data Safety for your VMS systems. from General Cybernetic Engineering Executive Summary: There are many perils your data faces, and loss of data can cost time, money, and jobs. Intruders, disgruntled insiders, or hidden flaws in installed software can destroy records. What is more, mistaken losses occur constantly. Safety protects your system and your critical data in three ways: 1. A comprehensive security system adds extra checks for access to VMS files so that access by intruders or by people in non-job-required ways can be regulated or prevented. This allows your business - critical data to finally be protected against misuse, tampering, or abuse. Access from programs doing background dirty work (viruses, Trojans, worms, and the like, or even programs with security holes which can be exploited remotely (like Java browsers)) can also be blocked without damaging normal use. This active protection works three ways: by checking integrity of your files against tampering, by preventing of untrusted images from gaining privilege, and by regulating what other parts of the system an image may access. 2. A deletion protection system provides a way to undelete files which were deleted by mistake and to optionally copy deleted files to backup facilities before removal. Unlike all other VMS "undelete" programs on the market, this facility does not rely on finding the disk storage that contained the file and reclaiming it before it is overwritten. Rather, it changes the semantics of the file system delete to use a "wastebasket" system and captures the file intact. Thus, this system works reliably. No others do. This facility is also useful where you have a requirement to keep all files of a certain set of types, since the backup function can be used to capture such files while permitting otherwise normal system function. The shelving or linking functions are also available for moving copies offline if this is desired. The Safety protection features are Page 2 fully integrated with the DPS subsystem, so that deletion protection does not involve destroying file security. 3. When space runs out, hasty decisions about what to keep online often must be made, and the risk of accidentally losing something important is high. Safety protects you from running out of space. Space can be monitored and older items in the wastebasket deleted if it is becoming low, without manual intervention. In addition, Safety is able to "shelve" files so that they are stored anywhere else desired on your system, and they are brought back automatically when accessed. Thus no manual arrangements need be made for reloading them. Safety can also keep the files on secondary storage, keeping a "soft link" to the files at their original site so they will be accessed on the secondary storage instead. Also, Safety can store files compressed, or can store them on secondary storage so that read access is done on the secondary storage, but write access causes the file to be copied back to its original site. Standard VMS utilities are used for all file movement, and moved files are also directly accessible in their swapped sites with standard VMS utilities. The VMS file system remains completely valid at all times. Safety gives you a full complement of tools for dealing with space issues automatically according to your site policy. These facilities are safe and easily understood. A comprehensive utility is provided by which you set your site policy to select which files are and are not eligible for automatic shelving. Also you are provided with screen oritented utilities for selecting files to shelve at any time. Access to the shelved files of course causes unshelving if the normal shelving-by-copy mode is used. Also, a simple set of rules permit locating shelved or softlink target files at any time, even without Safety running. Safety at no time invalidates your file structures for normal VMS access...not even for an instant. In addition Safety contains functions to speed file access and inhibit disk fragmentation. The major subsystems of Safety will now be described. The Security Function System: Summary: Managing access to data critical to your business using ACL facilities in native VMS can be cumbersome and still is vulnerable to intruders or people acting in excess of their authority. Want to be sure your critical records can't be accessed save at authorized places, times, and with the programs that are supposed to access them (instead of, say, COPY.EXE)? Want to have protection against privileged users bypasssing access controls? Page 3 Want to be able to password protect individual files? Want to be able to invisibly hide selected files from unauthorized intruders? Have you read that attacks on machines can happen because a Java browser points at a web site that damages the system (as has been reported in the press)? Want to be able to protect your systems? The Safety security subsystem builds in facilities permitting all of these, and is not vulnerable to intruders who disable the AUDIT facility as all other commercial packages which purport to monitor access are. Description: When your business depends on critical files, or when you are obliged by law or contract to maintain confidentiality of data on your system, in most cases the options provided by VMS for securing this data can be cumbersome and far too coarse-grained. The problem is that certain kinds of access to data are often needed by people in a shop, but other access should be prevented and audited. Moreover, the wide system access that can come as a result of having system privileges often does not mean that it should be used to browse or disclose data stored on the system. A system manager will in general not, for example, have any valid reason to browse the customer contact file, the payroll database, or a contract negotiation file, save in a few cases where these files need to be repaired or reloaded from backups. Likewise, a payroll clerk may need read and write access to the payroll file, but not in general with the COPY utility, nor from a modem, nor in most cases at 4AM. Finally, a person who must have privileges to design a driver and test it should ordinarily not have the run of the file system as well. Given examples like these, it is easy to see that simple authorization of user access to files is inadequate. While it is possible to build systems that grant identifiers to attempt some extra control, these can be circumvented by privilege, and create very long ACLs which become impossible to administer over a long period as users come and go. What is needed is a mechanism that is secure, cannot be circumvented by turning on privileges, and which provides a simple to administer and fine grained control that lets you specify who can get at your critical files, with what images, when, from where, and with what privileges. It is also desirable to be able to control what privileges the images ever see, and to be able to check critical command files or images for tampering before use, so that they cannot be used as back doors to your system. It should be possible to demand extra authentication for particular files as well, and to prevent a malicious user from even seeing a particularly critical file unless he can be permitted access. Page 4 The Safety security subsystem is a VMS add-in security package which provides abilities to control security problems due to intruders, to damage or loss by system "insiders" (users exceeding their authority), and to covert code (worms and viruses). It provides a much easier management interface to handle security permissions than bare VMS and provides facilities permitting control over even privileged file accesses, for cases where there are privileged users whose access should be limited. Unlike systems which only intercept the AUDIT output, EACF can and does protect against ANY file accesses, and can protect files against deletion by unauthorized people or programs in real time as well as against access. The Safety security subsystem offers the following capabilities: * Files can be password protected individually. If a file open or delete is attempted for such a file and no password has been entered, the open or delete fails. * Access can be controlled by time of day. Added protections can be in place only some of the time, access can be denied some times of day, write accesses can be denied at certain times, or various other modalities of access can be allowed. * You can control who may access a file, where they may be (or may not be), with what images they may or may not access the file, and with what privileges the file may be accessed. Thus, for instance, it is trivial to allow a clerk access to the payroll file with the payroll programs, but not with COPY or BACKUP, not on dialup lines, and not if they have unexpected privileges. The privilege checks can be helpful where there are consultants working on a system who should be denied access to sensitive corporate information but who need privileges to develop programs, or in similar circumstances. You specify what privileges are permitted for opening the file, and a process with excess privileges is prevented from access. Vital business data access should not always be implied by someone having privilege. With this system you can be sure your proprietary plans or data stay in house, and are available only to those with business reasons to need them, not to everyone needing system privileges for unrelated reasons. Unlike packages using the VMS Audit facility's output (which can be silently turned off by public domain code), Safety cannot be circumvented by well known means. Its controls are designed to leave evidence of what was done with them as well. * You can hide files from unauthorized access. If someone not authorized to access a file tries to open it, they can be set to open instead some other file anywhere on the system. Meanwhile, Safety generates alarms and can execute site specific commands to react to the illegal access before it can happen. This can be helpful in gathering evidence of what a saboteur is up to without exposing real sensitive files to danger. Normal access goes through transparently. Page 5 * You can arrange that opening a file grants identifiers to the process that opens it and that closing it revokes these identifiers. Set an interpretive file to do this and set it to be openable only by the interpreter and you have a protected subsystem capability that works for 4GLs which are interpretive. (Safety identifier granting, privilege modification, and base priority alteration is protected by a cryptographic authenticator preventing forging or duplication.) * You can actively prevent covert code ( viruses and worms) from running in two ways. First, Safety can attach a cryptographic checksum to a file such that the file will not open if it has been tampered with. Second, Safety can attach a privilege mask to a file which will replace all privilege masks for the process that opens it. By setting such a mask to minimal privileges, you can ensure that an untrusted image will never see a very privileged environment, and thus will be unable to perform privilege-based intrusions into your system even if run from a privileged user's account. * You can control base priority by image. Thus, a particularly CPU intensive image can be made to run at lower than normal base priority even if it is run interactively. * You can run a site-chosen script to further refine selection criteria. (Some facilities for doing additional checking while an image runs exist also.) * You can have "suspect" images set a "low-integrity-image" mode in which all file opens are checked with a site script which can report or veto access. This can be used to track or regulate what a Java applet can do, in case someone happens to browse a web site which exploits a Java hole to browse your system or damage it. Safety allows you to exempt certain images (e.g., disk defragmenters) from access checks, and it is possible to put a process into a temporary override mode also (leaving a record this was done) where this is needed. Safety facilities are controllable per disk, and impose generally negligible overhead. Safety will work with any VMS file structure using the normal driver interfaces. Also, Safety marking information resides sufficiently in kernel space that it cannot be removed from lower access modes, yet it uses a limited amount of memory regardless of volume size. Best of all, the Safety protection is provided within the file system and does not depend on the audit facility. Thus it prevents file access or loss before it happens, and does not have to react to it afterwards. Safety allows all of its security provisions to be managed together in a simple screen-oriented display in which files, or groups of files, can be tagged with the desired security profiles or edited as Page 6 desired. Safety protections are in addition to normal VMS file protections, which are left completely intact. Therefore, no existing security is broken or even altered. Safety simply adds additional checking which finally provides a usable machine encoding of "need to know" for the files where it matters. The Safety Deletion Protection Subsystem. Description: The Safety Deletion Protection System is designed to provide protection against accidental deletion of file types chosen by the site, and to allow files to be routed by the system to backup media before they are finally removed from the system. This is accomplished by an add-in to the VMS file system so that security holes are not introduced by the system's action. The user interface is an UNDELETE command which permits one or more files to be restored to their original locations provided it is issued within the site-chosen time window after the undesired deletion took place. In addition, an EXPUNGE command is provided which allows files to be deleted at once, irretrievably, where space for such is required. Provision for automatic safe-storing of files prior to final deletion is present also in Safety DPS. Safety DPS is implemented as a VMS file system add-in which functions by intercepting the DELETE operation and allowing the file to be deleted to be copied or renamed to a "wastebasket" holding area pending final action, and to be disposed of by a disposal agent. The supplied agent will allow a site script to save the files if this is desired, and then finally deletes any files which have been deleted more than some number N seconds ago. If the UNDELETE command is given, the file(s) undeleted are replaced in their original sites. The supplied system can also be configured to rename files to a wastebasket area or to copy them directly, for undeletion by systems people only. (These options are faster than the site command file option.) Safety DPS can be configured to omit certain file types from deletion protection (for example, *.LIS* or *.MAP* could be omitted), to include only certain files in the protected sets, or both. This can reduce the overhead of saving files which are likely to be easily recreated, or tailor the system for such actions as saving all mail files (by selecting *.MAI for inclusion). In addition, Safety DPS monitors free space on disks, and when a file create or extend would cause space exhaustion, Safety DPS runs a site script. By setting this script to perform final deletions, Safety DPS can be run in a purely automatic mode in which deleted files are saved as long as possible, but never Page 7 less than some minimum period (e.g., 5 or 10 minutes). Safety DPS files can be stored in any location accessible to VMS. If they are renamed, they must reside on the same disk they came from. Otherwise they can be stored in any desired place. Safety DPS is installed and configured using a screen oriented configuration utility to set it up, and basically runs unattended once installed. The Safety Storage Migration Subsystem Description: Safety has the ability to move files to secondary storage and automatically retrieve them when they are accessed. This backing can be similar to what HSM systems call "shelving", though it can be done in multiple levels, or it can be done in a way which permits files moved to secondary storage to be accessed there as though the files remained online. This resembles what are called "soft links" in Unix systems, in that file opens are transparently redirected to a file stored somewhere else reachable on the system, and the channel reset to the original device on close. A "readonly link" mode acts like a soft link for readonly access, and like an unshelve operation where a file is opened read/write, should this be desired. Full control over this shelving and unshelving is provided. This provides a great deal of flexibility in reclaiming space when the Safety space monitoring function detects that space is needed. Not only can previously deleted files be finally moved to backup destinations and deleted, but the system can migrate seldom accessed files to nearline storage transparently. The site policy can drive this, or utilities provided can be used instead. Where it is chosen to run Safety in a lights-out fashion (with Safety reacting to low disk situations by emptying older deleted files from the wastebasket and/or file migration to backing store), the policy chosen for controlling such setting is handled by a full-screen, easily used, tool which sets the policy. Should still greater flexibility be needed, the scripts used for a number of operations are supplied together with a full description of the command line interface of the underlying software. This facilitates linking Safety file management functions with other packages should such be desired. Safety can be run in a mode where there is essentially no overhead at all imposed (just a few instructions added along some paths and no disk access) for any files except those which need softlinks or possible unshelving. There is no limit to how Page 8 many files may be so marked on a disk. A fullscreen setup script allows one to select the Safety run modes. Even if Safety is forced to examine all files for its markings, the overhead imposes no added disk access and costs only a tiny added time (typically a percent or two) in open intensive applications. In addition, Safety can be turned off or back on at any convenient point should this be desired. (This must be done using special tools provided for use by those specially authorized to do so.) Support: Safety runs on VAX VMS 5.5 or greater or AXP VMS 6.1 or greater. The same facilities exist across all systems. HSM must be installed on each cluster node of a VMScluster where it is to be used but imposes no restrictions on types of disk it works for. Safety will work with any file structure used by VMS, so long as a disk class device is used to hold it. It is specifically NOT limited to use with ODS-2 disks. Safety is available for 45 day trial use licenses or can be licensed permanently. Safety is available for 45 day trial use licenses or can be licensed permanently. Safety is required on every node of a cluster using it, or its benefits will not be available on nodes not having the software running. Apart from this, there are no problems with having Safety available on only part of a VMS cluster. Safety is brought to you by General Cybernetic Engineering Glenn C. Everhart 156 Clark Farm Road Smyrna, Delaware 19977 302 659 0460 (fax: 306 659 5870) For orders, contact the above address or Sales@GCE.COM. For technical information contact Info@GCE.Com For support contact Support@GCE.Com ========> [VMSLT99A.SAMBA]AAAREADME.TXT;1 <======== This area contains latest dist and latest VMS dist of SAMBA, a package which allows systems to access Windows NT or Windows 9x disk "shares". The client end is somewhat TAR-like, not a full filesystem, but it does allow access, and allows Windows boxes to access VMS filesystems as shares (and allows printer sharing also). ========> [VMSLT99A.SEC]AAAREADME.TXT;2 <======== This area is for security relevant stuff, many platforms. 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XIP-1_3_2.TGZ;1 XXPLOIT.C;1 ZHACK400.ZIP;1 ZLIP.TGZ;1 ========> [VMSLT99A.TK]AAAREADME.TXT;2 <======== Catdoc - extract text from MS-Word documents Ethermon - ethernet monitor extract - Select groups of records from files GV - GhostView - view Postscript files on screen without Postscript LNMLOOKUP - src code to look up logicals MBOX - DCL interface to mailbox commands MGFTP - FTP server for VMS MPG123 - Mpeg encode/decode Persona - Assume persona of another user Postman - Manage incoming mail with deliver Rcard - Display cardfiler cards on VT Syslogd - VMS syslogd and logger Watcher - Idle process killer for VMS ========> [VMSLT99A.TMESIS]AAAREADME.TXT;1 <======== Information on connecting a fast modem to Alpha, info on porting software to Alpha (from material on the very first shipped Alphas way back in 1992 or so) by Brian Schenkenberger, lib$tparse replacement techniques, various other internals tricks from one ofthe masters of the art. ========> [VMSLT99A.UCRACK]AAAREADME.TXT;1 <======== Tutorial on cracking unix passwords ========> [VMSLT99A.VMSUTL]AAAREADME.TXT;1 <======== Updates to Gnu C compiler, headers etc. for VMS. Update to Gzip for VMS Latest SOCKETSHR VMS sockets routine fixing an R2 initialization bug. ========> [VMSLT99A.WWW]AAAREADME.TXT;2 <======== VMS Mosaic 3.4 - web browser MMK - "Make" or MMS clone for VMS HTML servers: Apache, HTTPD Lynx - Text only web brorser AAAREADME.FIRST;1 AAAREADME.TXT;1 AAAREADME_FIRST-MOSAIC33.FIR;1 APACHE_1_3_6-4_VMS_X0_1-4.BCK-DCX_AXPEXE;1 CGIUTL110.ZIP;1 FORTIFY_ANIM3.GIF;1 HTFILE.C;1 HTMLTABLE_C.HTM;1 HTROOT600.TXT;1 HTROOT601.ZIP;1 HTTPD532.ZIP;1 HTTP_SERVER_3-5.ZIP;1 INDEX.HTML;1 LYNX2_8_3DEV4.ZIP;1 MMK.ZIP;1 MOSAIC-3-4-PATCH1.ZIP;1 MOSAIC-3-4-README.BUGS;1 MOSAIC33-README.BUGS;1 MOSAIC3_4.ZIP;1 OVMSRING.GIF;1 README.VMS;2 WASD-6_0-HTTP-SERV-ANN.TXT;1 WASD.HTML;1 WASDOPENSSL093-AXP.ZIP;1 WASDOPENSSL093-VAX.ZIP;1 WASDOSU981202.ZIP;1 WASDOSU981202UPD.ZIP;1 WASDSCRIPTS990604.TXT;1 WASDSCRIPTS990604.ZIP;1 WASDSSLEAY090B.ZIP;1 WASD_ANALOG3_0.TXT;1 WASD_ANALOG3_0.ZIP;1 WASD_WWWCOUNT2_3.TXT;1 WASD_WWWCOUNT2_3.ZIP;1