Mail::SPF is an object-oriented Perl implementation of the Sender Policy
Framework (SPF) e-mail sender authentication system.
This release of Mail::SPF fully conforms to RFC 4408 and passes the 2006.11
release of the official test-suite <http://www.openspf.org/Test_Suite>.
The Mail::SPF source package includes the following additional tools:
- spfquery: A command-line tool for performing SPF checks.
- spfd: A daemon for services that perform SPF checks frequently.
Class to handle mail queue managment.
Wrapper for PEAR::Mail and PEAR::DB (or PEAR::MDB/MDB2).
It can load, save and send saved mails in background
and also backup some mails.
The Mail_Queue class puts mails in a temporary container,
waiting to be fed to the MTA (Mail Transport Agent),
and sends them later (e.g. a certain amount of mails
every few minutes) by crontab or in other way.
This program is a filter which shall improve the readability for messages
(emails and posts) by *hiding* some annoying parts, including:
- mailing list footers
- excessive quoting
- overlong signatures
- Outlook-style "TOFU" (text above - full quote below)
- squeeze sequences of blank lines or punctuation
Its primary mode of operation is a display filter in MUA (it has special
support for Mutt), but it can also be used in MTA/MDA - e.g. for immediately
bouncing "improper" messages.
The octave-forge package is the result of The GNU Octave Repositry project,
which is intended to be a central location for custom scripts, functions and
extensions for GNU Octave. contains the source for all the functions plus
build and install scripts.
This is parallel.
Parallel execution package for cluster computers. For parallel execution on a
single machine see e.g. function parcellfun (author: Jaroslav Hajek) in
package general.
ssh-askpass is a small applet intended for use in conjunction with
OpenSSH. It pops up a window and requests the user input their SSH
passphrase. It is not designed to be executed directly, but to be called
by OpenSSH's ssh-add(1) utility. If no controlling terminal is found (e.g.
ssh-add is called from the .xinitrc as part of the X login process), and
DISPLAY is set, ssh-add will spawn ssh-askpass to request the password.
This is not an interface (like "Digest::MD5") but a Perl implementation
of MD5. It is written in perl only and because of this it is slow but it
works without C-Code. You should use "Digest::MD5" instead of this
module if it is available. This module is only usefull for
computers where you cannot install "Digest::MD5" (e.g. lack of a
C-Compiler).
lttoolbox is a toolbox for lexical processing, morphological analysis
and generation of words. The analysis is the process of splitting of
words splitting a word (e.g. cats) into its lemma 'cat' and the
grammatical information <n><pl>. The generation is the opposite
process.
The package is split into three programs, lt-comp, the compiler,
lt-proc, the processor, and lt-expand, which generates all possible
mappings between surface forms and lexical forms in the dictionary.
Ruby wrapper around David Loren Parsons' discount, a fast,
BSD-licensed C implementation of John Gruber's Markdown plus
some aspects of SmartyPants. Markdown is a text-to-HTML
conversion language for web writers, inspired by the format
of plain-text e-mail messages. Markdown allows you to write
in an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then
convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML).
This class is the parent for all access method supported by the WWW::Search
library. This library implements a Perl API to web-based search engines.
Current search engines supported include AltaVista (both web and news),
Dejanews, Excite (web only), HotBot (web only), Infoseek (e-mail, web, and news)
and Lycos.
Search results are limited and there is a pause between each request for results
to avoid overloading either the client or the server.
retawq is an interactive, multi-threaded network client ("web browser") for
text terminals on computers with Unix-like operating systems (Linux, BSD,
Solaris, ...). It is fast, small, nicely configurable, and comfortable;
e.g. the low-level communications are performed in a non-blocking way, and
you can keep open as many "virtual windows" as you want and work
simultaneously in two of them in a split-screen mode.