Browsing tag

ethernet

GhostInTheNet – Ultimate Network Stealther that makes Linux a Ghost In The Net and protects from MITM/DOS/scan

Ultimate Network Stealther that makes Linux a Ghost In The Net and protects from MITM/DOS/scan. Properties: Network Invisibility Network Anonymity Protects from MITM/DOS Transparent Cross-platform Minimalistic Dependencies: Linux 2.4.26+ – will work on any Linux-based OS, including Whonix and RaspberryPI BASH – the whole script root privileges – for kernel controlling Limitations: You can still […]

NIELD v0.6.1 – Network Interface Events Logging Daemon

NIELD (Network Interface Events Logging Daemon) is a tool to receive notifications from kernel through netlink socket, and generate logs related to interfaces, neighbor cache (ARP,NDP), IP address (IPv4,IPv6), routing, FIB rules, traffic control. Download  $ git clone https://github.com/t2mune/nield.git Install $ ./configure $ make # make install Usage nield [-vh46inarft] [-p lock_file] [-s buffer_size] [-l […]

How To Set Ethernet As Windows Metered Connection? | Set As Metered Connection

Short Bytes: Setting an ethernet connection as metered in Microsoft Windows isn’t any rocket science. Earlier, it was available for WiFi, and the process was a little bit tedious, but Microsoft introduced Set as metered connection feature for Ethernet in Creators Update. The feature restricts the machine from downloading OS updates, live tile updates, etc. […]

How To Turn On Internal Mobile Hotspot In Windows 10 And Share Internet?

Short Bytes: Windows 10 operating system comes with inbuilt functionality to create a WiFi hotspot. Using this, you share your internet with other devices using different connections like WiFi and Ethernet. It is possible to use the WiFi hardware present in your laptops to enable wireless hotspot functionality. Many of you might have used third-party software […]

Linux Lexicon — How Does Linux Kernel Work?

Short Bytes: The Linux kernel is the most used piece of software in the history of computing. It’s everywhere. It’s in computers, servers, phones, TVs, set-top boxes, submarines, airplanes, self-driving cars, and it even runs the International Space Station. But how does it work? That’s more than a mouthful, so I’ll try to break it up […]