Networking Tools related scripts & softwares
CGI-Telnet allows you to execute commands on your Web Server. It is a useful tool if you don't have telnet/shell access to your server. It is very easy to install and configure. It runs on both Unix and Windows NT. Features include: File Transfers - Upload and Download Files, Command Timeouts - Automatically stop commands after the specified timeout period, Real-Time Output - See the output of commands as it is generated, Security - Login required for running commands, and Support for Automatic logout.
Webtools is a suite of internet utilities including DNS Query, Finger, Host, NS Lookup, Ping, Traceroute, Whois (works with these 117 top level domains), Spamresolve, and HTTP.
CommandLiner lets you execute UNIX shell commands within your browser. Without a Telnet account for your server. Includes predefined lookups of the paths to the most important programs on UNIX servers (WHOIS, Finger, Traceroute, Perl, compilers).
This rather simple script provides you and/or your readers the ability to run common diagnostic commands such as ping, finger, traceroute, & whois. It has built-in safeguards to prevent outside hacking attempts and runaway processes from happening.
The Commander is a web-based UNIX shell interface. From a web browser, this script allows you to run UNIX commands on your web host server (depending on the permissions set by your server administrator). This is particularly useful if your domain hosting provider does not allow telnet access. Using this script may result in inadvertent deletion of very important files on your server. Use extreme caution.
WebDNS is a script that offers the bigtime WebDNS services perfect for people hosting domains. It offers expandability and everything you need in a DNS package. DNS is the system by which IPs resolve to names and vice versa. Many ISPs and Shell Providers offer this as a service to their users, and incresingly separate companies are setting up to offer the same facilities. WebDNS not only offers a system for the user to enter their zone data but offeres many separate options all through a central login system. Each user can have multiple domains and choose to Erase/Modify/Transfer (deletion of the domain from local database, change the zone data or which DNS we host, or transfer control of it to another user on the local system). Domains can be hsoted as Primary, Secondary, or both.
The jdresolve application resolves IP addresses into hostnames. To reduce the time necessary to resolve large batches of addresses, jdresolve opens many concurrent connections to the DNS servers, and keeps a large number of text lines in memory. These lines can have any content, as long as the IP addresses are the first field to the left. This is usually the case with most formats of HTTP and FTP log files. For addresses that can't be resolved due to timeouts or incorrectly configured reverse mappings, a recursive algorithm is available. A search is made for the parent domains (classes C, B and A) of the IP address and those domain names become available for composing a fake hostname, thru a user defined mask. Included is a tiny shell script called rhost to interface with jdresolve when resolving a single IP address. Think of it as a smart replacement for the 'host' utility that comes with bind-utils.
The Finger Server is a web based, "pseudo" unix finger server with a nice browser oriented interface. Users who have an account can logon and update their .plan files for other to see. Visitors to your site can check the plans of their favorite users for project updates, personal thoughts, etc. The Finger Server also makes a great internal company project status board and is a wonderful tool for bringing together an internet community devoted to a particular subject.
This is a quick script to run 'finger' on an email address in an endless loop to see whether the person is online and has unread email.
This is a simple finger script. It can be modified to perform basically any unix command, and print the output to a web page.
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