AutoDia is a modular application that parses source code or data (if a
handler is available) and produces an XML document in Dia format,
essentially a Dia diagram auto creation package. The diagrams it creates
are standard UML diagrams showing dependencies, superclasses, packages,
classes and inheritances, as well as the methods, etc of each class.
AutoDia supports any language that a Handler has been written for -
currently this is C++, DBI, Java, PHP, Perl, Python, SQL and Torque (XML
DB schema).
Adding a handler is easy - read the DEVELOP file for details.
The OATH Toolkit contains a shared library, command line tool
and a PAM module that makes it possible to build one-time
password authentication systems. Supported technologies include
the event-based HOTP algorithm and the time-based TOTP algorithm.
OATH is the Open AuTHentication organization which specify
the algorithms.
The components included in the package is:
- liboath: A shared and static C library for OATH handling.
- oathtool: A command line tool for generating and validating OTPs.
- pam_oath: A PAM module for pluggable login authentication for OATH.
Solitaire is a top-notch pencil-and-paper encryption system developed
by Bruce Schneier. Here is the description in Schneier's own words:
"Solitaire gets its security from the inherent randomness in a
shuffled deck of cards. By manipulating this deck, a communicant
can create a string of "random" letters that he then combines with
his message. Of course Solitaire can be simulated on a computer,
but it is designed to be implemented by hand.
"Solitaire may be low-tech, but its security is intended to be
high-tech. I designed Solitaire to be secure even against the most
well-funded military adversaries with the biggest computers and the
smartest cryptanalysts. Of course, there is no guarantee that someone
won't find a clever attack against Solitaire, but the algorithm is
certainly better than any other pencil-and-paper cipher I've ever
seen."
Simple system, easy to use, and relatively fast.
Seamus Venasse <svenasse@polaris.ca>
From the safecat README:
safecat is an implementation of D. J. Bernstein's maildir algorithm.
It can be used to write mail messages to a qmail-style maildir, or to
write data to a "spool" directory reliably. There are no lockfiles with
safecat, and nothing is left to chance. If safecat returns a successful
exit status, then you can be (practically) 100% sure your data is
safely committed to disk. Further, if data is written to a directory
using safecat (or other implementations of the maildir algorithm),
then every file in that directory is guaranteed to be complete. If
safecat fails to write all of the data, there will be no file at all
in the destination directory.
Of course, you know that such a thing cannot be: between UNIX and
the different hardware options available, a 100% guarantee is not
possible. However, safecat takes every precaution possible in writing
your data.
Blitz is a PHP templating engine with two main features:
Fast. Blitz is written in C and built as PHP-extension which makes it one of
the fastest template engines (you may see the benchmarks section below)
Clear. Blitz has quite simple and clear syntax and makes developer to build
compact and easy-to-read-and-support code even for applications with very
complex presentation logic
Styx is a scanner/parser generator designed to address some
shortcomings of the traditional lex/yacc combination.
It has unique features like automatic derivation of depth grammar,
production of the derivation tree including it's C interface,
preservation of full source information and pretty printing to
facilitate source-source translation, persistence to aid rapid
interpreter writing.
For application in contemporary computing environments, it supports
unicode, reentrancy and offers thread-safeness.
Minimum Profit is an easy to use programmer's text editor. Its features:
- Syntax highlighting for many popular languages and file formats
- Fully scriptable using a C-like scripting language
- Unlimited undo levels; configurable keys, menus, and colors
- Can edit multiple files at the same time (shared copy/paste buffer)
- Creative use of tags, symbol name auto-completion
- Intelligent, context-dependent help system
- Automatic indentation, word wrapping, internal grep, etc.
- Spellchecking support (via the ispell package)
- Multilingual; has complete Unicode support
Xcpc is a portable Amstrad CPC464/CPC664/CPC6128 Emulator written in C.
It is designed to run on any POSIX system (Linux/BSD/UNIX-like OSes).
Implemented Features:
* Athena GUI (selected at compilation time)
* Motif* GUI (selected at compilation time)
* Floppy disk images support (*.dsk)
* Snapshot memory images support (*.sna)
* Drag and Drop support (*.dsk, *.sna)
* Keyboard emulation (QWERTY, AZERTY)
* Joystick emulation (numeric keypad, numlock disabled)
* Almost full CRTC-6845 / GateArray emulation
* Adaptative frame-rate
The GCL system contains C and Lisp source files to build a Common
Lisp sytem. The original KCL system was written by Taiichi Yuasa
and Masami Hagiya in 1984. The AKCL system work was begun in 1987
by William Schelter and continued through 1994. In 1994 AKCL was
released as GCL (GNU Common Lisp) under the GNU public library
license.
NOTE: GCL supports Tk bindings with Tcl 8 and Tk 8.
This module aims to provide a nicer syntax and method to catch errors in
Perl, similar to what is found in other languages (such as Java, Python
or C++). The standard method of using eval {}; if ($@) {} is often prone
to subtle bugs, primarily that its far too easy to stomp on the error in
error handlers. And also eval/if isn't the nicest idiom.