For those people wondering who Jimmy Neutron is, he is a boy genius. Jimmy Neutron is also one of the only 3-D cartoon shows on the television.
It originally started out as small, two-minute shorts on Nickelodeon. They were pretty old, about ten-years-old. Most of them were about invention... (0 Replies)
I started on another thread and full story can be seen here: https://www.unix.com/security/91428-how-reset-root-password-old-unix-system-v.html
But my situation turned to land on this thread now.
I have old scsi HDD out of the UHC UNIX System V Rel. 4.0 Version 3.6 box. And need to read... (1 Reply)
Hi, this my be a weird request but I'm wondering if it's possible to instill a vintage unix (like early 1980's) onto a laptop or desktop. If so how I would I go about downloading and installing?
I'm mainly wanting to do this as an little porject and some funsies for me.
Thanks. (11 Replies)
Like SunOS, AT&T Unix or anything else of that era... anything running MGR as a graphics subsystem? I'd enjoy hearing from people that may have used MGR back in the day.
I have something of a collection of 32bit Suns sun4c, sun4m, sun4d etc..nothing bigger than an 8 way 85Mhz SS1000E though. The... (0 Replies)
I am having issues with the MOS (my oracle support) page. I downloaded the new critical patch and oct patchset. for solaris 10 64. However, I noticed that that the Entitlement class read vintage instead of extended in which we bought the service.
can anyone tell me the difference? it is safe... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: goya
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cryptcat
cryptcat(1) Cryptcat cryptcat(1)NAME
cryptcat - twofish encryption enabled version of nc(1)SYNOPSIS
cryptcat -k secret [-options] hostname port[s] [ports]
cryptcat -k secret -l -p port [-options] [hostname] [port]
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the cryptcat command. This manual page was written for the Debian GNU/Linux distribution because the
original program does not have a manual page. It only documents the features specific to cryptcat and not the features that are described
at length in the manpage for nc(1).
If you do not know nc then the chances are you won't have much use for this manpage.
cryptcat can act as a tcp or udp client or server - connecting to or listening on a socket, while otherwise working as the standard Unix
command cat(1).
cryptcat takes a password as a salt to encrypt the data being sent over the connection. Without a specified password cryptcat will default
to the hardcoded password ``metallica''. Needless to say, failure to specify a different password makes the connection as good as unen-
crypted.
OPTIONS
This programs does not follow the usual GNU command line syntax, with long options starting with two dashes (`-'). A summary of the
options specific to cryptcat is included below.
-h
Show summary of options.
-k secret password
Change the shared secret password to be used to establish a connection.
BUGS
This version of cryptcat does not support the -e command command line option available in some versions of nc.
SEE ALSO nc(1), cat(1).
/usr/share/doc/cryptcat/README.gz
/usr/share/doc/cryptcat/README.cryptcat
/usr/share/doc/cryptcat/README.Debian
AUTHOR
The original netcat was written by hobbit@avian.org.
cryptcat is the work of farm9 <info@farm9.org> with the help of Dan F, Jeff Nathan, Matt W, Frank Knobbe, Dragos, Bill Weiss, Jimmy.
This manual page was written by Lars Bahner <bahner@debian.org> for Debian.
Debian GNU/Linux August 9, 2001 cryptcat(1)