Chac Mol
CDR Spy
Nokia Charging Gateway® provides users with an overwhelming amount of useful data. With the continous increase in traffic and services it may be difficult to navigate the enourmous number of CDRs produced by Charging Gateway. CDR Spy was initially developed by SoftStar for internal use while consulting with a major Latin American operator. Top
CDR Spy brochure may be found here.
NetEye
Developed between 1993 and 1994 NetEye was the first fully functional SNMP based network management system for Linux. It was reviewed in Linux Journal.
NetEye user manual may be found here. Top
RACF PassSync
Identity Management is a key element for enterprise wide security. An enterprise that wishes to tame the userid lifecycle beast will certainly opt for a Meta Directory based solution. All products on the market centralize user information in LDAP based repositories.
Legacy system are still with us and will be for the forseable future. Synchronizing passwords with IBM Z/OS®, OS/390® or earlier operating systems can become quite expensive due to licensing costs. SoftStar has developed RACF PassSync in order to drastically reduce the cost of integrating mainframes in an Identity Management solution. By acting as a RACF extension, PassSyn propagates password changes to and from LDAP based repositories.
RACF PassSync description may be found here (only italian available for now). Top
LDAP Filter for IIS
This product was born while SoftStar was performing a security audit prior to the implementation of a Meta Directory solution.
LDAP Filter for IIS is a Microsoft Internet Information Server® filter that permits user authentication against most common LDAP v.3 directory servers. Activating this filter on IIS installations allows the integration of this platform in a corporate wide AAA (Authentication, Authorization and Accounting) infrastructure, for example a Meta Directory, thus removing constraints imposed by proprietary solutions such as NTLM.
LDAP Filter for IIS brochure may be found here. Top
BER to ASN.1 dumper
ASN.1 and BER are encodings common to Mobile, Security and Network Management to name a few. This Web based tool can come handy when it is necessary to verify the contents of a BER buffer.
Usage is simple. Just cut & paste your BER buffer in the text field below then press Decode. Since BER is a binary format it is mandatory to submit a B64 formatted buffer.
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