arping
null
arping | null | |
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3 | 1 | |
394 | 32 | |
- | - | |
6.8 | 0.0 | |
2 months ago | over 2 years ago | |
C | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
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.
arping
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How to get IP if I know device MAC address
Install Linux and arping
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Compiling from source for MIPS architecture on an x86_64 machine
I want to compile the arping utility for an embedded device running Linux that has MIPS architecture. I used the instructions in the GitHub repo and I was able to compile it for my PC by running ./bootstrap.sh, ./configure, make, and sudo make install but that was compiled for my machine which is an x86_64 computer and probably won't work on the MIPS device. Can anyone walk me through the process of compiling this for MIPS architecture? I've never really compiled anything from source before so I don't know what I am doing. I searched online and couldn't find anything that helped me, I don't really know what to search for honestly.
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Ask HN: What are some tools / libraries you built yourself?
A curious question. Aside from my day job, this seems like a thing I do all day. :-)
I'm not sure what the motivation for your question is. Do you feel like everything's been invented and built already, and it's just a matter of (at most) plugging the things together?
I find myself constantly thinking "this should exist". I don't have time to make them all exist.
https://github.com/ThomasHabets/arping
Nothing like it existed at the time, and I wanted to send ARP requests as easily as sending ICMP ping.
https://github.com/ThomasHabets/simple-tpm-pk11
I wanted to use a TPM chip for SSH client keys, and couldn't find anything like it.
https://github.com/ThomasHabets/tlssh
I wanted to explore what it would be like to have SSH, but with identities not based on providing username, but an x509 cert. (and TPM chip protecting the key)
null
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Ask HN: What are some tools / libraries you built yourself?
I build a logging library for Go, because I couldn't find one that logs to stdout AND stderr. If you used a logging lib on GCP for example, all log output went into the same pile of junk and it was hard to find "real" errors: https://github.com/emvi/logbuch
Then there is "null", also because I couldn't find one that got both, marshalling to JSON and be able to store null values in db: https://github.com/emvi/null
And finally, our "flagship" open-source project Pirsch, an embedded library for web analytics: https://github.com/pirsch-analytics/pirsch
What are some alternatives?
leapp - Leapp is the DevTool to access your cloud
go-edlib - 📚 String comparison and edit distance algorithms library, featuring : Levenshtein, LCS, Hamming, Damerau levenshtein (OSA and Adjacent transpositions algorithms), Jaro-Winkler, Cosine, etc...
sqldb-logger - A logger for Go SQL database driver without modifying existing *sql.DB stdlib usage.
nan - Zero allocation Nullable structures in one library with handy conversion functions, marshallers and unmarshallers
yadm - Yet Another Dotfiles Manager
gocache - ☔️ A complete Go cache library that brings you multiple ways of managing your caches
Shynet - Modern, privacy-friendly, and detailed web analytics that works without cookies or JS.
algorithms - CLRS study. Codes are written with golang.
vaku - vaku extends the vault api & cli
gota - Gota: DataFrames and data wrangling in Go (Golang)
tera - A template engine for Rust based on Jinja2/Django
bitmap - Simple dense bitmap index in Go with binary operators