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Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Software Releases - RSS News Tor 0.2.1.7-alpha (Testing branch) Post 302260713 by Linux Bot on Friday 21st of November 2008 01:20:03 PM
Old 11-21-2008
Tor 0.2.1.7-alpha (Testing branch)

ImageTor is a network of virtual tunnels that allows people and groups to improve their privacy and security on the Internet. It also enables software developers to create new communication tools with built-in privacy features. It provides the foundation for a range of applications that allow organizations and individuals to share information over public networks without compromising their privacy. Individuals can use it to keep remote Websites from tracking them and their family members. They can also use it to connect to resources such as news sites or instant messaging services that are blocked by their local Internet service providers (ISPs). License: BSD License (revised)Changes:
This release fixes a major security problem inDebian and Ubuntu packages (and maybe otherpackages). A smaller security flaw that mightallow an attacker to access local services wasfixed. Defense against DNS poisoning attacks onexit relays was improved. Hidden serviceperformance was further improved. A variety ofother issues were fixed.Image

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IMGSIZER(1)															       IMGSIZER(1)

NAME
imgsizer - automatically splice in height and width params for HTML IMG tags SYNOPSIS
imgsizer [-d file] [--document-root file] [-h file] [--help file] [-n] [--no-overwrite] [HTMLFile] [-v file] [--version] OPTIONS
Display version information and exit. Display usage information. Directory where absolute image filenames (i.e, ones which contain a leading "/") may be found. -n, --no-overwwrite, .SH DESCRIPTION The imgsizer script automates away the tedious task of creating and updating the extension HEIGHT and WIDTH parameters in HTML IMG tags. These parameters help many browsers (including the Netscape/Mozilla family) to multi-thread image loading, instead of having to load images in strict sequence in order to have each one's dimensions available so the next can be placed. This generally allows text on the remainder of the page to load much faster. This script will try create such attributes for any IMG tag that lacks them. It will correct existing HEIGHT and WIDTH tags unless either contains a percent (%) sign, in which case the existing dimensions are presumed to be relative and left unaltered. This script may be called with no arguments. In this mode, it filters HTML presented on stdin to HTML (unaltered except for added or cor- rected HEIGHT and WIDTH attributes) on stdout. If called with file arguments, it will attempt to transform each file in place. Each argu- ment file is not actually modified until the script completes a successful conversion pass. The -d <directory> option sets the DocumentRoot, where images with an absolute filename (i.e., ones which contain a leading "/") may be found. If none is specified, the DocumentRoot defaults to the current working directory. The -n (no-overwrite) opion prevents the program from overwriting existing width and height tags if both are present. Additional options may also be specified in the environmental variable "IMGSIZER". For example, to avoid typing "imgsizer -d /var/www/docs" each time imgsizer is invoked, you might tell sh (or one of its descendants): IMGSIZER="-d /var/www/docs"; export IMGSIZER or, if you use csh: setenv IMGSIZER "-d /var/www/docs" This script is written in Python, and thus requires a Python interpreter on the host system. It also requires either the identify(1) utili- ty distributed in the open-source ImageMagick suite of image-display and manipulation tools, or a modern version of file(1) and rdjpg- com(1). These utilities are used to extract sizes from the images; imgsizer itself has no knowledge of graphics formats. The script will handle any image format known to identify(1) including PNG, GIF, JPEG, XBM, XPM, PostScript, BMP, TIFF, and anything else even remotely likely to show up as an inline image. NOTE
The -q, -l, and -m options of the 1.0 versions are gone. What they used to do has been made unnecessary by smarter logic. BUGS
The code uses regular expressions rather than true HTML/XML parsing. Some perverse but legal constructions, like extraneous space within quoted numeric attributes, will be mangled. AUTHOR
Originally created by Eric S. Raymond <esr@thyrsus.com>. Additional code contributed by Erik Rossen, Michael C. Toren <michael@toren.net>, and others. For updates, see <http://www.catb.org/~esr: http://www.catb.org/~esr> SEE ALSO
identify(1), file(1), rdjpgcom(1). IMGSIZER(1)
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