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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Calculating Warp Coordinates in Cyberspace - Cyberspace Situational Awareness Post 302989108 by Neo on Sunday 8th of January 2017 05:01:42 AM
Old 01-08-2017
Calculating Warp Coordinates in Cyberspace - Cyberspace Situational Awareness

Please message me or post in this thread if anyone is interested in contributing some C, C++, or C# code for this project. Right now we have an open source C++ git project (created by someone else a few years ago) that fails when we try to compile on Ubuntu. I need someone to fix the make file and after that, write some code to locate the center (centroid) and the 3D span of the disconnected graph clusters in a force-directed graph. Thanks.


"Many researchers have attempted to realize cyberspace situational awareness without a proper model in place to represent cyberspace. In my research, I have proposed that we represent cyberspace as a graph, a set of nodes and edges. Keeping this in mind, I have proposed a model where the universal set of cyberspace is similar to how we observe our physical universe – outer space. In this model, cyberspace consists of countless disconnected clusters of related cyber-objects (also represented as graphs); very similar to how the universe appears to consist of countless galaxies of stars, planets and other physical matter".

 

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GO-REMOTE(7)						 Miscellaneous Information Manual					      GO-REMOTE(7)

NAME
go - tool for managing Go source code DESCRIPTION
An import path (see go-importpath(1)) denotes a package stored in the local file system. Certain import paths also describe how to obtain the source code for the package using a revision control system. A few common code hosting sites have special syntax: BitBucket (Mercurial) import "bitbucket.org/user/project" import "bitbucket.org/user/project/sub/directory" GitHub (Git) import "github.com/user/project" import "github.com/user/project/sub/directory" Google Code Project Hosting (Git, Mercurial, Subversion) import "code.google.com/p/project" import "code.google.com/p/project/sub/directory" import "code.google.com/p/project.subrepository" import "code.google.com/p/project.subrepository/sub/directory" Launchpad (Bazaar) import "launchpad.net/project" import "launchpad.net/project/series" import "launchpad.net/project/series/sub/directory" import "launchpad.net/~user/project/branch" import "launchpad.net/~user/project/branch/sub/directory" For code hosted on other servers, import paths may either be qualified with the version control type, or the go tool can dynamically fetch the import path over https/http and discover where the code resides from a <meta> tag in the HTML. To declare the code location, an import path of the form repository.vcs/path specifies the given repository, with or without the .vcs suffix, using the named version control system, and then the path inside that repository. The supported version control systems are: Bazaar .bzr Git .git Mercurial .hg Subversion .svn For example, import "example.org/user/foo.hg" denotes the root directory of the Mercurial repository at example.org/user/foo or foo.hg, and import "example.org/repo.git/foo/bar" denotes the foo/bar directory of the Git repository at example.com/repo or repo.git. When a version control system supports multiple protocols, each is tried in turn when downloading. For example, a Git download tries git://, then https://, then http://. If the import path is not a known code hosting site and also lacks a version control qualifier, the go tool attempts to fetch the import over https/http and looks for a <meta> tag in the document's HTML <head>. The meta tag has the form: <meta name="go-import" content="import-prefix vcs repo-root"> The import-prefix is the import path corresponding to the repository root. It must be a prefix or an exact match of the package being fetched with "go get". If it's not an exact match, another http request is made at the prefix to verify the <meta> tags match. The vcs is one of "git", "hg", "svn", etc, The repo-root is the root of the version control system containing a scheme and not containing a .vcs qualifier. For example, import "example.org/pkg/foo" will result in the following request(s): https://example.org/pkg/foo?go-get=1 (preferred) http://example.org/pkg/foo?go-get=1 (fallback) If that page contains the meta tag <meta name="go-import" content="example.org git https://code.org/r/p/exproj"> the go tool will verify that https://example.org/?go-get=1 contains the same meta tag and then git clone https://code.org/r/p/exproj into GOPATH/src/example.org. New downloaded packages are written to the first directory listed in the GOPATH environment variable (see go-path(1)). The go command attempts to download the version of the package appropriate for the Go release being used. See go-install(1) for more. AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Michael Stapelberg <stapelberg@debian.org>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others). 2012-05-13 GO-REMOTE(7)
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