TI MSP430 debugging interface library
MQ4CPP, or "Message Queuing for C++", is an open source implementation of
enterprise messaging system, also referred to as message-oriented
middleware (MOM).
The ncurses software includes a SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible
curses library as well as terminfo tools including "tic", "infocmp",
and "captoinfo". The library is used by other programs for text-mode
support of color, multiple highlights, forms-drawing characters,
automatic recognition of keypad and function-key sequences, and
more.
The ncurses library uses a terminfo database (included), but can
be configured to use BSD's /etc/termcap file instead. This has
been approved by the old 4.4BSD curses maintainer as the official
4.4BSD curses successor.
The intention of the nglogc library is to provide an easy to use and powerful
logging API with mechanism which allows to cram source codes with log
statements at the start of implementation and decide at the level of building
or at runtime which statements should be processed.
Therefore the log statements could be controlled by various log levels and
define switches are available to completely remove the call of the functions at
pre-processor time. So it is possible to switch on the logging only if it is
necessary or only print selected messages without any changes in the source
code. Different publishers are provided also as different formats of outputs to
fulfil the requirements for software development.
The "findlib" library provides a scheme to manage reusable software
components (packages), and includes tools that support this
scheme. Packages are collections of OCaml modules for which
metainformation can be stored. The packages are kept in the filesystem
hierarchy, but with strict directory structure. The library contains
functions to look the directory up that stores a package, to query
metainformation about a package, and to retrieve dependency
information about multiple packages. There is also a tool that allows
the user to enter queries on the command-line. In order to simplify
compilation and linkage, there are new frontends of the various OCaml
compilers that can directly deal with packages.
[ excerpt from developer's www site ]
An ocaml wrapper for the libmagic(3) API. The libmagic API consults
on a magic(5) database file in order to provide information to
identify the type of a given file.
OUnit is a unit testing framework for Objective Caml, inspired by
the JUnit tool for Java, and the HUnit tool for Haskell.
GNU binutils for vanilla ARM cross-development
Cppo is an equivalent of the C preprocessor targeted at the OCaml language
The main purpose of cppo is to provide a lightweight tool for simple
macro substitution (#define) and file inclusion (#include) for the
occasional case when this is useful in OCaml. Processing specific
sections of files by calling external programs is also possible via
#ext directives.
The implementation of cppo relies on the standard library of OCaml and
on the standard parsing tools Ocamllex and Ocamlyacc, which contribute
to the robustness of cppo across OCaml versions.
This is a camlp4 extension that expands brace expansions like a shell
does. See sample.ml for examples.