Yapi! Code
Brought to you by:
olelen
| File | Date | Author | Commit |
|---|---|---|---|
| src | 2009-10-02 | olelen | [r6] Prooved and corrected that source files has to ... |
| AUTHORS | 2009-09-29 | olelen | [r4] Added authors and todo files |
| COPYING | 2009-09-29 | olelen | [r1] First commit, added the copyright and an uncomp... |
| INSTALL | 2009-09-29 | olelen | [r2] Added INSTALL file |
| README | 2009-10-05 | olelen | [r7] |
| TODO | 2009-09-29 | olelen | [r4] Added authors and todo files |
Yapi! - Yet Another Packet Injector!
Copyright (C) 2009 David L. Luengo
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I dedicate yapi! to my mother, Macu Luengo Merino, the kernel of my life,
you're more important for me than libnet for yapi!. I have no time in my life
to say 'thanks' as many times as you deserve, but at least I can write this,
my little geek code for you:
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
while (0x01ec0ded)
printf ("Thanks mom.\n");
return 0x01ec0ded;
}
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I have to apologize for my poor English.
- Project description:
Yapi! pretends to be a tool for those people who want to learn or teach others
how networks work. It is well known that theory knowledge of any discipline
is necessary, but it use to be boring if it is not accompany with some practical
teaching that make the learner get more involved with what he/she is learning.
This fact can cause, specially at universities, bad network professionals.
Since I am a network and teaching lover, I cannot avoid the fact and want to
try to solve it or, at least, help others to solve it.
My point is create a tool that permit a learner to quickly design and build a
datagram/packet and inject it to the network to see what happens. Moreover, the
datagram/packet could be of any layer (if you don't know what a layer is try to
use the tool and you will see that in order to create a datagram/packet of a
specific protocol you must first select in which layer that protocol is).
Of course this kind of software is very useful too for systems and networks
administrators.
Happy hacking!