Ruby OO library to access an EMC Atmos server with rexml as XML parser.
Simian (Similarity Analyser) identifies duplication in Java, C#,
C, C++, COBOL, Ruby, JSP, ASP, HTML, XML, Visual Basic Groovy source
code and even plain text files. In fact, simian can be used on any
human readable files such as ini files, deployment descriptors, you
name it.
Note: The port uses the java version by default. You can select the .NET
version via WITH_MONO=yes, and disable installation of the
java parts with WITHOUT_JAVA=yes.
SMACK is a low-level I/O storage library which packs data into sorted blobs,
compressed with zlib, bzip2, or snappy.
It was created to host huge amount of rather small compressible data in
Elliptics, providing extremely fast write performance (tens of thousands RPS
per node with hundreds of millions already written objects); its backend
architecture was implemented with HBase in mind, but some changes were
tested and made different.
Data is compressed and sorted by key, that is, you get HBase-like scans for
free (although this is not yet exported to Elliptics API).
Spice protocol defines a set of protocol messages for accessing,
controlling, and receiving inputs from remote computing devices
(e.g., keyboard, video, mouse) across networks, and sending output
to them. A controlled device can reside on either side, client
and/or server.
STFL is a library which implements a curses-based widget set for text
terminals. The STFL API can be used from C, SPL, Python, Perl and Ruby.
Since the API is only 14 simple function calls big and there are
already generic SWIG bindings it is very easy to port STFL to
additional scripting languages.
A special language (the Structured Terminal Forms Language) is used to
describe STFL GUIs. The language is designed to be easy and fast to
write so an application programmer does not need to spend ages fiddling
around with the GUI and can concentrate on the more interesting
programming tasks.
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.
XXL is a library for C and C++ that provides exception handling and asset
management. Asset management is integrated with the exception handling
mechanism such that assets may be automatically cleaned up if an exception
is thrown, which allows for much simplified program structure with respect
to error handling.
By allowing XXL to track assets and using its exception handling features,
the programmer no longer has to check error conditions on every function
call and cleanup the assets on failure because XXL does the work.
This is the Tcl/Tk frontend to Perforce's p4. You have to
have p4-client binary installed -- it is available from
The actual front-end is by Rick Macdonald <rickm@vsl.com>:
Vstr is a string library, designed so you can work optimally with
readv()/writev() for input/output. This means that, for instance, you
can readv() data to the end of the string and writev() data from the
beginning of the string without having to allocate or move memory. It
also means that the library is completely happy with data that has
multiple zero bytes in it.
WebSocket++ is an open source (BSD license) header only C++ library that
implements RFC6455 The WebSocket Protocol.
It allows integrating WebSocket client and server functionality into
C++ programs. It uses interchangable network transport modules including
one based on C++ iostreams and one based on Boost Asio.