Working on a new cybersecurity, dystopian world series and made a short 2 min teaser today.
Cyber Dystopia (720 HD)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g9Ca07J_YC8
If anyone has any ideas for the story, please write out some story lines in the comments and join the production team! (1 Reply)
Hi All,
We have a requirement to Integrate Cyber-Ark with Informatica .
Basically cyberark will contain the username and password for Database.
First step will be
1)In shell Script run curl command calling cyber-Ark RESTAPI requesting the credentials and store the secret in a variable.
... (0 Replies)
FYI,
I am planning to release the first book in a new mini-series the end of May:
Pre-Order Cancelled. See this update.
(Cyberspace Situational Awareness Book 1)
https://www.unix.com/members/1-albums215-picture844.jpg
If anyone want to write a short book for this mini-series, or... (3 Replies)
I do have a question about the great cyber wall of certain countries, like the UK for example. For years I just fetched once a week a public podcast that recently answered "notukerror", by chance I read just this weekend on slashdot about this topic. Does this mean the efforts enhanced by the EME... (4 Replies)
Qpsmtpd::Command(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Qpsmtpd::Command(3pm)NAME
Qpsmtpd::Command - parse arguments to SMTP commands
DESCRIPTION
Qpsmtpd::Command provides just one public sub routine: parse().
This sub expects two or three arguments. The first is the name of the SMTP command (such as HELO, MAIL, ...). The second must be the
remaining of the line the client sent.
If no third argument is given (or it's not a reference to a CODE) it parses the line according to RFC 1869 (SMTP Service Extensions) for
the MAIL and RCPT commands and splitting by spaces (" ") for all other.
Any module can supply it's own parsing routine by returning a sub routine reference from a hook_*_parse. This sub will be called with
$self, $cmd and $line.
On successfull parsing it MUST return OK (the constant from Qpsmtpd::Constants) success as first argument and a list of values, which will
be the arguments to the hook for this command.
If parsing failed, the second returned value (if any) will be returned to the client as error message.
EXAMPLE
Inside a plugin
sub hook_unrecognized_command_parse {
my ($self, $transaction, $cmd) = @_;
return (OK, &bdat_parser) if ($cmd eq 'bdat');
}
sub bdat_parser {
my ($self,$cmd,$line) = @_;
# .. do something with $line...
return (DENY, "Invalid arguments")
if $some_reason_why_there_is_a_syntax_error;
return (OK, @args);
}
sub hook_unrecognized_command {
my ($self, $transaction, $cmd, @args) = @_;
return (DECLINED) if ($self->qp->connection->hello eq 'helo');
return (DECLINED) unless ($cmd eq 'bdat');
....
}
perl v5.14.2 2009-04-02 Qpsmtpd::Command(3pm)