An SNMP based command line network printer management tool.
Modern network printers are quite easily managable across a network.
However, until now, the only tools that make use of these capabilities
are the vendor supplied products such as Web JetAdmin by HP, Marknet by
Lexmark, Centreview by Xerox or PhaserLink by Tektronix. The problem is
that all of these tools are fundamentally GUI based applications and
there is no way to incorporate their functionality into scripts. This
program is designed to be called from scripts to find things out about
printers.
Information you can gather about printers with npadmin:
Model and vendor, Location and contact information,
Network configuration, Memory and disk usage, Max and min papersize,
Engine speed, Duplexer installed, Printer status, Printer languages,
Marker technology, Page count, Minimum margins,
Size, capacity and level of paper trays, Toner levels, Alert conditions,
Resolution, Display information, Cover pages on/off.
CD/DVD mastering tool for the gnome desktop. It has been designed to be
simple and easy to use.
Features:
Data CD/DVD:
- supports edition of discs contents
- can burn data CD/DVD on the fly
- supports multisession
- supports joliet extension
- can write the image to the hard drive
Audio CD:
- write CD-TEXT information (automatically found thanks to gstreamer)
- supports the edition of CD-TEXT information
- can burn audio CD on the fly
- can use all audio files handled by Gstreamer local installation
- can search for audio files inside dropped folders
CD/DVD copy:
- can copy a CD/DVD to the hard drive
- can copy DVD and CD on the fly
- supports single-session data DVD
- supports any kind of CD
A maintainance utility for sgml catalog files.
mkcatalog maintains sgml "catalog" files.
usage: mkcatalog [-pq] install|deinstall dtd-subdirectory [catalog-filename]
options:
-p preserve old catalog file.
-q silent mode
commands(required):
install set DTD configuration to catalog files.
deinstall usset DTD configuration from catalog files.
required arguments:
dtd-subdirectory DTD sub-directory.
(root sgml direcotry is ${PREFIX}/share/sgml.)
optional arguments:
catalog-filename DTD catalog filename.
for example:
# mkcatalog install html/4.0
This commands do the following actions:
1. Add `CATALOG "html/catalog"' to ${PREFIX}/share/sgml/catalog.
2. Add `CATALOG "4.0/catalog"'
to ${PREFIX}/share/sgml/html/catalog.
# mkcatalog install docbook/4.1 docbook41.cat
This commands do the following actions:
1. Add `CATALOG "docbook/catalog"' to ${PREFIX}/share/sgml/catalog.
2. Add `CATALOG "4.1/docbook41.cat"'
to ${PREFIX}/share/sgml/docbook/catalog.
# mkcatalog deinstall docbook/4.1 docbook41.cat
This commands do the following actions:
1. Delete `CATALOG "4.1/docbook41.cat"'
from ${PREFIX}/share/sgml/docbook/catalog.
2. Delete `CATALOG "docbook/catalog"'
from ${PREFIX}/share/sgml/catalog.
CSS::Minifier removes unnecessary whitespace from CSS. The primary requirement
developing this module is to not break working stylesheets: if working CSS is in
input then working CSS is output. The Mac/Internet Explorer comment hack will be
minimized but not stripped and so will continue to function.
This module understands space, horizontal tab, new line, carriage return, and
form feed characters to be whitespace. Any other characters that may be
considered whitespace are not minimized. These other characters include
paragraph separator and vertical tab.
For static CSS files, it is recommended that you minify during the build stage
of web deployment. If you minify on-the-fly then it might be a good idea to
cache the minified file. Minifying static files on-the-fly repeatedly is
wasteful.
Par is similar but superiour to the fmt(1) command included in the
base system.
Par is a filter that copies its input to its output, changing all
white characters (except newlines) to spaces, and reformatting
each paragraph. Paragraphs are separated by protected, blank, and
bodiless lines (see the Terminology section for definitions), and
optionally delimited by indentation (see the d option in the Options
section).
Each output paragraph is generated from the corresponding input
paragraph as follows:
1) An optional prefix and/or suffix is removed from each input line.
2) The remainder is divided into words (separated by spaces).
3) The words are joined into lines to make an eye-pleasing paragraph.
4) The prefixes and suffixes are reattached.
If there are suffixes, spaces are inserted before them so that they
all end in the same column.
MathML::Entities a content conversion filter for named XHTML+MathML
entities. There are over two thousand named entities in the XHTML+MathML
DTD. All the Entities defined in the XHTML+MathML DTD except the five
"safe" ones (<, >, &, ", '), will be converted to the
equivalent numeric character references or to utf-8 characters. Named
entities which are not in the XHTML+MathML DTD are escaped. This makes the
resulting XHTML (or XHTML+MathML) safe for consumption by non-validating
XML parsers.
Unlike, HTML::Entities, the mapping between MathML named entities and
codepoints is many-to-one. Therefore, there's no particular sense in
having an inverse function, which takes codepoints to named entities.
Based on: HTML::Entities by Koichi Taniguchi <taniguchi@livedoor.jp>
Sigil is a multi-platform EPUB ebook editor with the following features:
* Free and open source software under GPLv3
* Multi-platform
* Full UTF-16 support
* EPUB 2 spec support with limited EPUB 3 support
* Multiple Views: Book View, Code View and Preview View
* WYSIWYG editing in Book View
* Complete control over directly editing EPUB syntax in Code View
* Table of Contents generator with multi-level heading support
* Metadata editor
* User interface translated into many languages
* Spell checking with default and user configurable dictionaries
* Full Regular Expression (PCRE) support for Find & Replace
* Supports import of EPUB and HTML files, images, and style sheets
* Documents can be validated for EPUB compliance with the integrated
* All imported files have their formatting corrected, and your editing
can be optionally cleaned
* Plugins!
dwdiff is a diff program that operates at the word level instead of the line
level. It is different from wdiff in that it allows the user to specify what
should be considered whitespace, and in that it takes an optional list of
characters that should be considered delimiters. Delimiters are single
characters that are treated as if they are words, even when there is no
whitespace separating them from preceding words or delimiters. dwdiff is
mostly commandline compatible with wdiff. Only the --autopager, --terminal
and --avoid-wraps options are not supported.
The default output from dwdiff is the new text, with the deleted and inserted
parts annotated with markers. Command line options are available to change
both what is printed, and the markers.
CalDavZAP is an open source CalDAV web client implementation released under GNU
Affero General Public License (version 3.0).
Main features:
* 100% JavaScript+jQuery CalDAV web client/application - no special server
software required for standard setup (except the CalDAV server of course)
* server-based XML configuration generator (for special setup) with HTTP and
LDAP authentication plugins
* asynchronous read-only and read/write calendar collection detection
* asynchronous background synchronization
* support for delegated calendars
* support for subscribed calendars
* time-range filtering (server support required)
* support for RFC compliant vCalendars (version 2.0) and automatic correction
of most common errors in invalid vCalendars
* support for background calendars - if there is at least one event defined for
the given day in a background calendar, the background color for that day
will be pink/light-red
and much more ...
transproxy - transparently proxy HTTP requests.
This program is used with ipfw's fwd rules or Darren Reed's IPFILTER
package, and is used to intercept HTTP requests and divert them to a
HTTP proxy server (eg: squid), without requiring user intervention or
configuration.
It accepts connections on the redirected port, connects to the real proxy
server, and transports data between the two sockets. The original HTTP
request is modified to allow the HTTP proxy server to fetch the correct
document. In most cases this doesn't cause any DNS activity.
Unlike some other transparent proxy solutions, this does not require the
HTTP proxy server to run on the machine itself.
See /usr/local/sbin/tproxyrun for an example of how to add filter rules
and start tproxy. Also see /usr/local/sbin/tproxywatch for an example of
how to ensure that tproxy keeps running regardless of faults.