Hi!
As many of you will have noticed already, I took the liberty to reorganize
the CVS tree structure. This was needed to get a better seperation
between independent parts of the project.
pserver.netfilter.org:/cvspublic now has the following modules:
iptables
this is what netfilter/userspace used to be
pkttables
this is what netfilter/iptables2 used to be.
patch-o-matic-ng
this is the new patch-o-matic, used to live below
/netfilter, too.
documentation
this is the FAQ's and HOWTO's, used to be
/netfilter/documentation
homepage
this is the new docbook-website homepage, used to be
/netfilter/homepage-xml
security-advisories
a seperate, new module containing text files of the security
advisories. http://www.netfilter.org/security/* is built
from those text files.
--
- Harald Welte <laforge@netfilter.org> http://www.netfilter.org/
============================================================================
"Fragmentation is like classful addressing -- an interesting early
architectural error that shows how much experimentation was going
on while IP was being designed." -- Paul Vixie
As many of you will have noticed already, I took the liberty to reorganize
the CVS tree structure. This was needed to get a better seperation
between independent parts of the project.
pserver.netfilter.org:/cvspublic now has the following modules:
iptables
this is what netfilter/userspace used to be
pkttables
this is what netfilter/iptables2 used to be.
patch-o-matic-ng
this is the new patch-o-matic, used to live below
/netfilter, too.
documentation
this is the FAQ's and HOWTO's, used to be
/netfilter/documentation
homepage
this is the new docbook-website homepage, used to be
/netfilter/homepage-xml
security-advisories
a seperate, new module containing text files of the security
advisories. http://www.netfilter.org/security/* is built
from those text files.
--
- Harald Welte <laforge@netfilter.org> http://www.netfilter.org/
============================================================================
"Fragmentation is like classful addressing -- an interesting early
architectural error that shows how much experimentation was going
on while IP was being designed." -- Paul Vixie