An HTTP client engine, intended as a base layer for more user-friendly
packages.
Compile a log format string to perl-code. For faster generating
access_log line.
An object for mapping a URI to an on-disk storage directory
Raphael JS as a Rubygem for use in the Rails asset pipeline
Ruby/WebKitGtk2 is a Ruby binding of WebKitGTK+ for Gtk 2.0 Toolkit
Cascade is a program for analyzing the noise and distortion performance
of a cascade of elements in an electronic system. A typical application
of cascade is the analysis of a receiver. A text description of the
receiver block diagram consisting of things like amplifiers, mixers,
and filters is entered into cascade. Each element is characterized
by its gain and optionally noise figure, and third order intercept
point. The program then analyzes the system and produces a report
detailing the performance at each stage.
A summary is produced which shows the relative contributions to the
total system performance of each block. This allows easy identification
of what limits system performance.
mod_layout is a utility to wrap served webpages. This means it can
add a footer or header to a document. This allows you to create a
standard look and feel throughout a website without using SSI.
Some example uses are adding standard disclaimers to the bottom of
all pages, banner ads to the top of all pages, or even a menu at
the beginning of a page. There are many other per-document settings
you can modify with mod_layout.
THIS VERSION IS ONLY FOR APACHE 2.2.X
The purpose of this program is to compare two versions of an
Internet Draft and as output produce a diff in one of several
formats:
- side-by-side html diff
- paged wdiff output in a text terminal
- a text file with changebars in the left margin
- a simple unified diff output
In all cases, internet-draft headers and footers are stripped before
generating the diff, to produce a cleaner diff.
Let's suppose you want to find the title of things on the web. This
seems like a really simple request, just get() the object, parse for a
title tag, you're done. There are several problems with this approach:
- What if the resource is on a very slow server? Do we wait for ever or
what?
- What if the resource is a 900 gig file? You don't want to download
that.
- What if the page title isn't in a title tag, but is buried in the HTML
somewhere?
- What if the resource is an MP3 file, or a word document or something?
This module attempts to solve this problem.
XBellD is a small daemon for replacing the standard X Window
System terminal bell with a more interesting set of sounds.
This is useful for systems where the terminal bell is handled
by the "PC Speaker," or where different sounds are desired for
different classes of X clients.
XBellD works by intercepting terminal bell requests on the
server side, and then playing user-specified sounds through a
PCM capable soundcard. The resource class of the client making
a terminal bell request is used to match a corresponding sound
file which should be played when such a request is made.