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URONode.his
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URONode.his
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** Note: this file is depreciated, refer to CHANGES.*
URONode was spawned off of the original linuxnode by Tomi Manninen OH2BNS
Before URONode was FlexNode by Roy PE1RJA, and then by Stefano Noferi IZ5AWZ
who called it AWZNode. I took over the code willingly and on my own mainly
as a project I could do under C program coding in April 2003 after it
appeared that AWZNode was no longer being developed.
My first goal was to make it appear and act more like TheNet X1J and spent
most of my time configuring the node to behave as such which I felt I did
quite successfully. While doing that I thought I'd try to add in email
features by using the old PMS system written by Alan Cox, who has a lot
of code in the main linux kernel for it's IP stack (most of which is taken
directly out of KA9Q nos). While I was successful in doing that, Morgan
SM6TKY reported that the code was old and exploitable... unfortunately I had
a period where I couldn't devote the time into getting it repaired quickly
and URONode sat and suffered with a note explaining that certain features
should not be used or enabled. As a quick fix, I simply commented out the
found exploits and did some more cosmetics to the code and released a patch.
Still with users wanting EMAIL as a feature to the software, this inspired me
to pick up with the dropped axMail code and bring that more up to date. axMail
was originally started by Heikki Hannikainen, and then mailbox routines were
added by Marius Petrescu, however system configs were lacking. I took the
code and added in the routines which are in there now so that new users
are properly created within the basic linux filesystem schema, and passwords
can be created (optional) so that a web front-end such as NeoMail can be
used in conjunction with axMail giving users the choice of the web or RF
packet to do their SMTP based EMAIL with. It was and always will be an optional
add-on module for URONode, and other flavors of *node for linux.
These two packages together, along with F6FBB make for one heck of a feature
packed system a sysop can piece together on one server. Because of such,
URONode has become very popular in the NorthEast USA and in Central East
Florida within the EastNet FlexNet network and with the Florida MARS
networks. With this, I've taken the look and feel of URONode to try and
match that of a FlexNet interface.
The latest version of URONode under-went many face lifts! The node not only
auto-senses the incoming connection but delivers an interface which clones
that of the type of system they're connecting in from. A user connecting
in via IP will actually get a prompt that looks and acts similar to a
Unix bash prompt with custom aliased commands!.. and to top that all off
I've added an ansi schema to the IP interface!!
URONode is used world-wide in Europe, Africa, Asia, and in North America.
A web bbs is available at https://www.n1uro.net/forum where release notes
for URONode are posted. If the functionality of URONode isn't enough to
get interest in packet growing, the stability of URONode should!