CubicSDR
src
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CubicSDR | src | |
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7 | 745 | |
1,977 | 3,041 | |
- | 1.6% | |
4.9 | 10.0 | |
22 days ago | 4 days ago | |
C++ | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
CubicSDR
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Viruses in some SDR software?
Looks like I got cubic sdr executable cubicsdr_v0_2_6a_win64 from https://github.com/cjcliffe/CubicSDR/releases/tag/0.2.4.
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Looking for a good AM/FM Radio sollution
There is loads of software that will work such as SDR++, GQRX, CubicSDR, and SDRangel just to name a few. For HD radio reception, there is nrsc5. Nrsc5 only works with an rtl-sdr, so you will need one if you want to receive HD radio.
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SDR clients compatible with m1 macs?
CubicSDR and GQRX both work on my M1 Mac. I installed GQRX using homebrew, CubicSDR was downloaded from Github (https://github.com/cjcliffe/CubicSDR/releases/tag/0.2.5). Both are the x86_64 versions and run under the emulation layer provided by Mac OS.
- Leaving Debian
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What OS has the best software for RTL-SDR? I currently use gqrx but feel its limited.
CubicSDR
- Audio stream recording and archiving
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Wxwidgets 3.1.5 Released
Be aware that 3.1.5 enables EGL by default and, if your application uses GLX, you're going to have problems: https://github.com/cjcliffe/CubicSDR/issues/886
src
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OpenBSD Upgrade 7.3 to 7.4
The OpenBSD project released 7.4 of their OS on 16 Oct 2023 as their 55th release đź’«
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OpenBSD System-Call Pinning
Well since https://www.openbsd.org/ still says
> Only two remote holes in the default install, in a heck of a long time!
I'm assuming not, but I could always be mistaken.
- Project Bluefin: an immutable, developer-focused, Cloud-native Linux
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From Nand to Tetris: Building a Modern Computer from First Principles
> building a cat from scratch
> That would be an interesting project.
Here is the source code of the OpenBSD implementation of cat:
> https://github.com/openbsd/src/blob/master/bin/cat/cat.c
and here of the GNU coreutils implementation:
> https://github.com/coreutils/coreutils/blob/master/src/cat.c
Thus: I don't think building a cat from scratch or creating a tutorial about that topic is particularly hard (even though the HN audience would likely be interested in it). :-)
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OpenBSD – pinning all system calls
> I don't know how they define `MAX`, but I'm guessing it's a typical "a>b?a:b"
Indeed: https://github.com/openbsd/src/blob/master/sys/sys/param.h#L...
> Then `SYS_kbind` seems to be a signed int.
It's an untyped #define: https://github.com/openbsd/src/blob/master/sys/sys/syscall.h...
I believe your whole analysis is correct, that running an elf file with an openbsd.syscalls entry with .sysno > INT_MAX will allow an out-of-bounds write.
- Une nouvelle mise à jour de Systemd permettra à Linux de bénéficier de l'infâme "écran bleu de la mort" de Windows, mais la fonctionnalité a reçu un accueil très mitigé
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tmux causing ANSI color-response garbage on attaching?
I can reproduce it. And this is the commit that causes the issue: https://github.com/openbsd/src/commit/d21788ce70be80e9c4ed0c52c149e01147c4a823
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Sudo-rs' first security audit
This doesn’t really change your conclusion, but I think that’s the wrong file. This is the real doas afaict: https://github.com/openbsd/src/blob/master/usr.bin/doas/doas...
Still just a tidy 1072 lines in that folder though.
I spent 5 minutes staring at your file trying to understand how on earth it does the things in the man page, but of course it doesn’t.
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OpenBSD: Removing syscall(2) from libc and kernel
OpenBSD developers are making serious effort to kill off indirect syscalls, the base system is completely clean, take a look at the work Andrew Fresh did to adapt Perl. He write a complete syscall "dispatcher" or emulator for the Perl syscall function so that it calls the libc stubs.
https://github.com/openbsd/src/commit/312e26c80be876012ae979...
The ports tree is also being cleansed of syscall(2) usage, until they're all gone.
msyscall, pinsyscall, recent mandatory IBT/BTI, xonly. OpenBSD is making waves, but people aren't really seeing them yet.
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"<ESC>[31M"? ANSI Terminal security in 2023 and finding 10 CVEs
Actually, I got it wrong, too many vulnerabilities in flight. They did fix it: https://github.com/openbsd/src/commit/375ccafb2eb77de6cf240e...
What are some alternatives?
SDRPlusPlus - Cross-Platform SDR Software
cosmopolitan - build-once run-anywhere c library
sdrangel - SDR Rx/Tx software for Airspy, Airspy HF+, BladeRF, HackRF, LimeSDR, PlutoSDR, RTL-SDR, SDRplay RSP1 and FunCube
bastille - Bastille is an open-source system for automating deployment and management of containerized applications on FreeBSD.
gnuradio - GNU Radio – the Free and Open Software Radio Ecosystem
buttersink - Buttersink is like rsync for btrfs snapshots
shinysdr - Software-defined radio receiver application built on GNU Radio with a web-based UI and plugins. In development, usable but incomplete. Compatible with RTL-SDR.
PHPT - The PHP Interpreter
multimon-ng
Joomla! - Home of the Joomla! Content Management System
gentooLTO - A Gentoo Portage configuration for building with -O3, Graphite, and LTO optimizations
ctl - The C Template Library