SLProxy applications get in by masquerading as the login server. You
start a proxy, which will say something like:
proxy ready at http://127.0.0.1:8080/
Then you start Second Life with the switch: -loginuri http://
127.0.0.1:8080/
There's some more information about how to do this in the README.
And yeah, that's how it started, I couldn't use Snowcrash since I'm
in OS X and I wanted to get in on the action :)
On 2006/07/23, at 23:48, Jesse Nesbitt wrote:
So, do I set this as my SOCKS proxy?
This is cool looking, btw. A bit like os agnostic snowcrash.
On 7/23/06, Austin Jennings <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Quoth the README:
SLProxy is a library that works in conjunction with libsecondlife to
allow applications to wedge themselves between the official Second
Life client and servers. SLProxy applications can inspect and modify
any packet as it passes between the client and the servers; remove
packets from the stream; and inject new packets into the stream.
SLProxy automatically takes care of tracking circuits and modifying
sequence numbers and acknowledgements to account for changes to the
packet stream.
SLProxy is now in the subversion repository in applications/SLProxy.
See the README for more information. You'll need make to build it
(perhaps someone could provide a Windows-friendly project file?).
Please be aware that this is a work in progress; there are still
changes to be made and bugs to be tracked down. I hope people find
this useful!
-- Era Pixel
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--Jesse
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-- Era Pixel
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