The filtered PS file is self-contained because this program appends\n
a hangul font \"n3f-5\" (N-byte 3BeolSik hangul Font 5) and \"n3f-5b\"
(the\n
bold font) to the file. This means that you can print hangul homepages\n
with ANY(!) PostScript printer.
NJAMD is a malloc debugger which protects against all common dynamic\n
memory bugs (including overflow, underflow, writes to freed memory,\n
and memory leaks) without recompiling or even relinking your\n
executable. NJAMD is able to trace memory leaks even through arbitrary\n
library functions that wrap malloc(3), such as strdup(3), GUI widget\n
allocators, and even C++ new and delete.\n
\n
NJAMD is fast enough for everyday use, and light enough to debug most\n
applications. Large applications will require more RAM for comfortable\n
debugging.
Nmap is a utility for network exploration or security auditing. It\n
supports ping scanning (determine which hosts are up), many port\n
scanning techniques (determine what services the hosts are offering),\n
and TCP/IP fingerprinting (remote host operating system\n
identification). Nmap also offers flexible target and port\n
specification, decoy scanning, determination of TCP sequence\n
predictability characteristics, reverse-identd scanning, and more.
Nmh is an e-mail system based on, and intended to be a (mostly)\n
compatible drop-in replacement for, the MH email system. Nmh is not a\n
single comprehensive program. Instead, it consists of a number of\n
fairly simple single-purpose programs for sending, receiving, saving,\n
retrieving and otherwise manipulating mail messages. You can freely\n
intersperse nmh commands with other shell commands or write custom\n
scripts which utilize nmh commands. If you want to use nmh as a true\n
e-mail user agent, you also need to install exmh to provide a user\n
interface for it -- nmh only has a command line interface.\n
\n
If you want to use nmh commands in shell scripts, or if you want to\n
use nmh and exmh together as your email user agent, you should install\n
nmh.
Nss_db is a set of C library extensions which allow Berkeley Databases\n
to be used as a primary source of aliases, ethers, groups, hosts,\n
networks, protocol, users, RPCs, services, and shadow passwords\n
(instead of or in addition to using flat files or NIS). Install nss_db\n
if your flat name service files are too large and lookups are slow.
Nss_db-compat is a set of C library extensions which allow Berkeley\n
Databases to be used as a primary source of aliases, ethers, groups,\n
hosts, networks, protocol, users, RPCs, services, and shadow passwords\n
(instead of or in addition to using flat files or NIS) from programs\n
linked against glibc 2.0.x.
This package includes two LDAP access clients: nss_ldap and pam_ldap.\n
Nss_ldap is a set of C library extensions that allow X.500 and LDAP\n
directory servers to be used as a primary source of aliases, ethers,\n
groups, hosts, networks, protocol, users, RPCs, services, and shadow\n
passwords (instead of or in addition to using flat files or NIS).\n
\n
Pam_ldap is a module for Linux-PAM that supports password changes, V2\n
clients, Netscape's SSL, ypldapd, Netscape Directory Server password\n
policies, access authorization, and crypted hashes.
The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is used to synchronize a computer's\n
time with another reference time source. The ntp package contains\n
utilities and daemons that will synchronize your computer's time to\n
Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) via the NTP protocol and NTP servers.\n
The ntp package includes ntpdate (a program for retrieving the date\n
and time from remote machines via a network) and ntpd (a daemon which\n
continuously adjusts system time).\n
\n
Install the ntp package if you need tools for keeping your system's\n
time synchronized via the NTP protocol.
Ntsysv provides a simple interface for setting which system services\n
are started or stopped in various runlevels (instead of directly\n
manipulating the numerous symbolic links in /etc/rc.d). Unless you\n
specify a runlevel or runlevels on the command line (see the man\n
page), ntsysv configures the current runlevel (5 if you're using X).
NUT (Network UPS Tools) provides programs for monitoring various\n
Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) devices. Many models of UPS have\n
serial ports that allow some form of state checking. This capability\n
has been harnessed, when possible, to allow for safe shutdowns, live\n
status tracking on webpages, and other capabilities. The nut-cgi\n
package contains the CGI programs needed for checking a UPS' status\n
via a Web browser.