Squash is a C/Ncurses based music player. It supports mp3 and ogg through
libraries (and planned flac support). Squash uses statistics to determine songs
to play automatically. It garners this information through whether or not a song
is skipped. Squash also avoids picking the same song twice. Thus Squash is
like a radio station that plays the songs you like -- and you don't even have to
call in requests!
This is lmbench-3.0-a9, a (sometimes controversial) system performance
measurement tool. lmbench is a suite of simple, portable, ANSI/C
microbenchmarks for UNIX/POSIX. In general, it measures two key features:
latency and bandwidth. lmbench is intended to give system developers insight
into basic costs of key operations. You can go to /usr/local/lib/lmbench and
do one of the following:
make results (to run the benchmarks)
make rerun (to rerun the benchmarks)
make see (to see how you did)
Gadfly is a relational database management system which uses a
large subset of very standard SQL as its query language and Python
modules and optional Python/C extension modules as its underlying
engine. Gadfly stores the active database in memory, with recovery
logging to a file system. It supports an optional TCP/IP based
client server mode and log based failure recovery for system or
software failures (but not for disk failures).
A unique flat-file database module, written in pure perl. True multi-level
hash/array support (unlike MLDBM, which is faked), hybrid OO / tie() interface,
cross-platform FTPable files, and quite fast. Can handle millions of keys and
unlimited hash levels without significant slow-down. Written from the ground-up
in pure perl -- this is NOT a wrapper around a C-based DBM. Out-of-the-box
compatibility with Unix, Mac OS X and Windows.
PgDBF is a program for converting XBase databases - particularly FoxPro
tables with memo files - into a format that PostgreSQL can directly
import. It's a compact C project with no dependencies other than standard
Unix libraries. While the project is relatively tiny and simple, it's also
heavily optimized via profiling - routine benchmark were many times faster
than with other Open Source programs. In fact, even on slower systems,
conversions are typically limited by hard drive speed.
XHProf is a function-level hierarchical profiler for PHP and has a simple HTML
based navigational interface. The raw data collection component is implemented
in C (as a PHP extension). The reporting/UI layer is all in PHP. It is capable
of reporting function-level inclusive and exclusive wall times, memory usage,
CPU times and number of calls for each function. Additionally, it supports
ability to compare two runs (hierarchical DIFF reports), or aggregate results
from multiple runs.
This Perl module is a direct translation of Steffen Beyer's excellent
Date::Calc module to use Perl only instead of a combination of Perl and C.
This package consists of a Perl module for all kinds of date calculations
based on the Gregorian calendar (the one used in all western countries
today), thereby complying with all relevant norms and standards:
ISO/R 2015-1971, DIN 1355 and, to some extent, ISO 8601 (where applicable).
PuDB is a full-screen, console-based visual debugger for Python.
Its goal is to provide all the niceties of modern GUI-based debuggers in a more
lightweight and keyboard-friendly package. PuDB allows you to debug code right
where you write and test it--in a terminal. If you've worked with the excellent
(but nowadays ancient) DOS-based Turbo Pascal or C tools, PuDB's UI might look
familiar.
t1lib is a library written in the C programming language allowing a programmer
to generate bitmaps from Adobe (TM) Type 1 fonts quite easily. These bitmaps
are returned in a data structure with type GLYPH. This special GLYPH-type is
also used in the X11 window system to describe character bitmaps. It contains
the bitmap data as well as some metric information. But t1lib is in itself
entirely independent of the X11-system or any other graphical user interface.
Virtual Game Boy is the Nintendo GameBoy(tm) emulator on X-Window.
Test your VGB installation with the command(default):
vgb /usr/X11R6/share/vgb/CART.GB
Virtual GameBoy (VGB) is a portable emulator of the Nintendo GameBoy
handheld videogame console. It allows to run most of GameBoy software
on a personal computer, as well as debug this software. As VGB is
written in a portable C programming language, it runs on many
different platforms and operating systems