PVM (Parallel Virtual Machine) is a portable message-passing programming
system, designed to link separate host machines to form a virtual machine
which is a single, manageable computing resource.
The virtual machine can be composed of hosts of different architectures,
located in physically remote locations. PVM applications can be composed
of any number of separate processes, or components, written in a mixture
of C, C++, and Fortran. The system is portable to a wide variety of
architectures, including workstations, multiprocessors, supercomputers,
and PCs.
The Nmap::Parser library provides a Ruby interface to
Nmap's scan data. It can run Nmap and parse its XML
output directly from the scan, parse a file containing
the XML data from a separate scan, parse a String of
XML data from a scan, or parse XML data from an object
via its read() method. This information is presented
in an easy-to-use and intuitive fashion for storage
and manipulation.
pkcs11-gateway is a software that allows you to use a Linux 32-bit PKCS#11
module on FreeBSD i386/amd64.
It consists of a FreeBSD Cryptoki wrapper library that serializes and forwards
PKCS#11 function calls to a Linux server program that dlopen() and use the
real module. The communication between the two components is via a UNIX socket.
pkcs11-gateway is based on the rpc-layer of Gnome Keyring.
Wcd is a command-line program to change directory fast. It saves time typing
at the keyboard. One needs to type only a part of a directory name and wcd
will jump to it. Wcd has a fast selection method in case of multiple matches
and allows aliasing and banning of directories. Wcd also includes a full
screen interactive directory tree browser with speed search.
Fpart is a tool that helps you sort files and pack them into bags
("partitions"). It is developped in C and available under the BSD license.
It splits a list of directories and files into a certain number of partitions,
trying to produce partitions with the same size and number of files. It can
also produce partitions with a given number of files or a limited size.
The FreeSBIE port is a collection of scripts which
help a user to create CDs/DVDs containing a complete
operating system based on FreeBSD.
It is used as "live-cd" and boots straight from CD.
Consequent use of filesystem compressing techniques allow to
include a huge number of applications on a single disc.
Creation of the CDs/DVDs is completely dialog based as well as
building and installing of packages.
For further information, please visit the official homepage.
This is a port of am-utils, The Berkeley Automounter Suite of Utilities
The Berkeley Automounter, Amd, may be used as a replacement for Sun's
automounter.
An automounter maintains a cache of mounted file systems. File systems
are mounted on demand when they are first referenced, and unmounted
after a period of inactivity. This helps to centralize all file system
access, provide a uniform site-wide namespace, and minimize downtimes
for clients.
Anacron is a periodic command scheduler. It executes commands at
intervals specified in days. Unlike cron, it does not assume that the
system is running continuously. It can therefore be used to control
the execution of daily, weekly and monthly jobs (or anything with a
period of n days), on systems that don't run 24 hours a day.
Anacron is not an attempt to make cron redundant.
Requirements
- A functioning syslog daemon.
- A functioning /usr/sbin/sendmail command. (all MTAs should have that).
libchk is a tool to help users obtain the following information:
- A list of executables that have unresolvable shared library links
- A list of shared libraries that are not referenced by any binary
- A list of binaries for each shared library that are linked with
the library
This will help to get a hint as to if you can safely remove shared
libraries that look obsolete.
This port provides a program that can be used to clean out temporary-file
directories. It recursively searches the directory, refusing to chdir()
across symlinks, and removes files that have not been accessed in a
user-specified amount of time. You can specify a set of files to protect
from deletion with a shell pattern.
It will not remove symlinks, sockets, fifos, or special files unless given a
command line option enabling it to.