zfsnap makes rolling ZFS snapshots easy and - with cron - automatic.
The main advantages of zfsnap are its portability, simplicity, and performance.
It is written purely in /bin/sh and does not require any additional software -
other than a few core *nix utilies.
zfsnap stores all the information it needs about a snapshot directly in its
name; no database or special ZFS properties are needed. The information is
stored in a way that is human readable, making it much easier for a sysadmin to
manage and audit backup schedules.
Snapshot names are in the format of pool/fs@[prefix]Timestamp--TimeToLive
(e.g. pool/fs@weekly-2014-04-07_05.30.00--6m). The prefix is optional but can
be quite useful for filtering, Timestamp is the date and time when the snapshot
was created, and TimeToLive (TTL) is the amount of time the snapshot will be
kept until it can be deleted.
Allows you to quickly change and apply a different locale from the
tools menu:
* Handy tool for all people involved with multilingual usage of Mozilla
applications.
* Switches the Mozilla User Interface language (general.useragent.locale
preference)
* Switches the accept_language preference, so complete websites will be
translated. (if the http accept language header is supported, e.g.
like Google does)
* Switches the Spell Checker Dictionary preference. (if supported by
your Mozilla application)
* Remembers the dictionary and content locale for each site and
automatically switches when you load that site. It also tries to detect
the language of sites itself, and if found automatically switches to
that language.
* Auto restarts the application in versions 1.4+ (only if needed)
* Includes country flag icons for 'all' countries by famfamfam.com.
* Displays the flag of the currently selected locale on your statusbar.
* Add 3 of your own custom defined locales.
Do you ever wish you could cut two or more separate pieces of text
at once from a window? Do you ever need to save the output from one
command for reuse in several subsequent tasks? Do you ever find
yourself wanting some easy means of globally exporting data, e.g.
to a parent shell, to another xterm or application, or to another
machine or user? If you answer yes to any of these questions, then
xcb is for you.
Xcb provides access to the cut buffers built into every X server.
It allows the buffers to be manipulated either via the command line,
or with the mouse in a point and click manner. The buffers can be
used as holding pens to store and retrieve arbitrary data fragments,
so any number of different pieces of data can be saved and recalled later.
The program is designed primarily for use with textual data.
The xxkb program is a keyboard layout switcher and indicator. Unlike the
programs that reload keyboard maps and use their own hot-keys, xxkb is a
simple GUI for XKB (X keyboard extension) and just sends commands to and
accepts events from XKB. That means that it will work with the existing
configuration of X11 server without any modifications.
Additional features include:
- Remembers the current layout in each application and switches to it
on window focus change
- Can put its own icon on an application window titlebar
- Allows to designate two main layouts from multi-layout keymaps
- Alternative layouts can be set separately for each application and
can be changed during run-time
- Supports custom actions for certain windows (e.g. ignore, set initial
active layout on application startup)
- Can be docked as a docklet or placed in the system tray
The Heirloom Toolchest is a collection of standard Unix utilities.
Highlights are:
* Derived from original Unix material released as open source by Caldera
* Up to four versions of each utility corresponding to SVID3/SVR4,
SVID4/SVR4.2MP, POSIX.2/SUSV2, and 4BSD (SVR4 /usr/ucb)
* Support for lines of arbitrary length and in many cases binary input data
* Support for multibyte character sets, especially UTF-8
* More than 100 individual utilities including bc, cpio, diff, ed, file,
find, grep, man, nawk, oawk, pax, ps, sed, sort, spell, and tar
* The cpio utility can read and write zip files, GNU tar files, and
the cpio formats of Cray UNICOS, SGI IRIX (-K), SCO UnixWare (-c)
and Tru64 UNIX (-e). It is also available with the pax interface
* Extensive documentation including a manual page for any utility
* Runs on Linux, Solaris, Open UNIX, and FreeBSD
mod_log_mysql is a module for the Apache 2 webserver which permits
request logging into a MySQL database.
Key features are:
* Seamless integration into the standard Apache logging
configuration.
* Only a single configuration line needed to start logging.
* Free SQL use.
* Multiple databases, database users and/or database servers.
* Connection pooling, only one connection per log target, per
child process.
* Logs data as it is: e.g. times as SQL DATETIME and n/a items
as SQL NULL.
* Won't loose data if the database server is down.
Note: this module requires mod_log_config-st
This plugin displays the current keyboard layout, and refreshes when
layout changes. Also the layout can be switched by simply clicking on
the plugin. The new version can display the layout as text label and
also as an image of the corresponding country's flag. If the flag
image is unavailable then the plugin falls back to displaying text
label for that layout.
This plugin is used along with the XKB extension. For now the keyboard
layouts cannot be configured from the plugin itself, they should be
set in the Xorg file or some other way (e.g. setxkbmap).
This is a port of btoa version 5.2, written by Paul Rutter, Joe
Orost & Stefan Parmark. btoa converts 4 binary characters to 5
ascii ones, causing a 25% expansion. (btoa is thus more efficient
than uuencode, which causes a 33% expansion.) Spaces will not be
used, which should make it safe to send files over e-mail or Usenet
without risking that blanks become tabs. Each resulting row of
text has a single-byte checksum for error detection. A diagnosis
file provides a list of errors found this way, which could then be
used to retransmit only the failing lines.
Patch 1 is an unofficial, non-platform-specific patch to version
5.2 of btoa. It allows for automatic decoding of btoa files if
the program is invoked as "atob" (no -a argument necessary). It
also outfits the Makefile to do clean and install.
The Storable package brings you persistency for your perl data
structures containing SCALAR, ARRAY, HASH or REF objects, i.e. anything
that can be conveniently stored to disk and retrieved at a later time.
It can be used in the regular procedural way by calling store with a
reference to the object to store, and providing a file name. The routine
returns undef for I/O problems or other internal error, a true value
otherwise. Serious errors are propagated as a die exception.
To retrieve data stored to disk, you use retrieve with a file name, and
the objects stored into that file are recreated into memory for you, and
a reference to the root object is returned. In case an I/O error
occurred while reading, undef is returned instead. Other serious errors
are propagated via die.
Courier is a modular multiprotocol mail server that's designed to
strike a balance between reasonable performance, flexibility and
features:
* Can be configured to function as an intermediate mail relay, or
as a mail server that receives mail for one or more domains, or
anything in between.
* Web-based administration and configuration tool.
* Uses an efficient maildir format as its native mail storage
format. Some support is provided for legacy mbox mailboxes.
* STARTTLS ESMTP extension (as well as IMAP/POP3/Webmail over SSL)
in both the client and the server (requires OpenSSL). The ESMTP
client can optionally require that the remote server's X.509
certificate is signed by a trusted root CA (a default set of
root CAs is provided).
* Mailboxes can be accessed via POP3, IMAP, SMAP, and HTTP.
* A faxmail gateway that forwards E-mail messages via fax.
* Courier includes a mailing list manager.
* PAM, LDAP, PostgreSQL, or MySQL authentication.
* Authenticated SMTP.
* Integrated mail filtering.