Bandwidth Monitor NG is a small and simple console-based live
bandwidth monitor for Linux, BSD, Solaris, Mac OS X and others.
Short list of features:
* supports /proc/net/dev, netstat, getifaddr, sysctl, kstat and libstatgrab
* unlimited number of interfaces supported
* interfaces are added or removed dynamically from list
* white-/blacklist of interfaces
* output of KB/s, Kb/s, packets, errors, average, max and total sum
* output in curses, plain console, CSV or HTML
* configfile
多路由器流量记录仪(MRTG)是一个监控网络链路流量负载的工具。MRTG 生成
包含 PNG 图片的 HTML 页面,实时地以可视化的方式展现流量。查阅
获得示例。MRTG 基于 Perl 和 C,可工作于 UNIX 和 Windows NT。
MRTG 已成功用于很多网站。
参见 MRTG-Site-Map:
http://ee-staff.ethz.ch/~oetiker/webtools/mrtg/users.html
This port provides a utility for controlling USB OLED display found
on some ASUS laptops such as G-series models.
Originally it was written by Christian Lamparter <chunkeey@web.de>
for Linux and the early version is still available from here:
https://launchpad.net/asusoled
Now it is almost rewrite of the code with a lot of new features and
improvements by Jung-uk Kim <jkim@FreeBSD.org>.
This port offers VIQR<->VISCII (RFC 1456) conversion and VISCII ctype-like
routines for Vietnamese text processing. Of prime interest is the finite
state machine that reads 7-bit Viet-Net style Vietnamese and produces 8-bit
output. Developers are encouraged to take advantage of these routines for
these reasons:
- Parsing task is greatly simplified
- Makes one's code easier to port from one character encoding to another
- Ensures a consistent user interface across many software packages
The two programs "vn7to8" and "vn8to7" convert between the 7-bit
VIQR format for Vietnamese (Viet-Net like) and the 8-bit VISCII
data formats (RFC 1456).
The current supported version is VISCII 1.1.
The program "vn80to81" converts files from VISCII 1.0 to VISCII 1.1.
For complete details, please see the Viet-Std documents published elsewhere.
Contact "viet-std@haydn.Stanford.EDU" if you would like a copy.
David O'Brien
obrien@cs.ucdavis.edu
Mod_Authz_Unixgroup 1.0.x is a Unix group access control modules for Apache
version 2.2. If you have Apache 2.3 or Apache 2.4, you should be using
version 1.1.x of this module instead.
If you are having users authenticate with real Unix login ID over the net,
using something like my mod_authnz_external / pwauth combination, and you
want to do access control based on Unix group membership, then
mod_authz_unixgroup is exactly what you need.
Mod_Authz_Unixgroup 1.1.x is a Unix group access control modules for Apache
version 2.4. If you have Apache 2.2 you should be using version 1.0.x of
this module instead.
If you are having users authenticate with real Unix login ID over the net,
using something like my mod_authnz_external / pwauth combination, and you
want to do access control based on Unix group membership, then
mod_authz_unixgroup is exactly what you need.
A collection of dock applications for use with
the Enlightenment window manager.
The currently supported epplets are:
E-Areas, E-Bandwidth E-Biff, E-Clock, E-Cpu, E-Disk, E-Exec, E-Load,
E-LoadMeter, E-Magic, E-MemWatch, E-Mixer, E-MoonClock, E-Net,
E-NetFlame, E-NetGraph, E-OpenGL-Demo, E-Pants, E-Pinger, E-PlayCD,
E-Power, E-SD, E-ScreenSave, E-ScreenShoot, E-Slides, E-Sys, E-Time,
E-Toolbox, E-UrlWatch, E-Wireless, EMix
Oroborus is a small and simple window manager for X11 which has the
following features:
- Good default key bindings
- Windows are moveable by keyboard
- Highly configurable
- XPM-themable
- GNOME compatible
- NET_WM compatible
- Sort of KDE compatible
- And many, many more...
Oroborus doesn't provide any kind of dock, toolbar, program launcher,
background changer or root menu as these functions can be provided by
separate applications.
9e is a program to explore Plan9 archives. You can do whatever you
like with the source so long as you clearly indicate all modifications
and the author responsible for each.
Usage Summary:
$9e [options] <file> ...
Options:
-h: dump headers only
-v: dump file names and sizes while extracting
-r: specify alternate root directory
-?: help
If no file is named on the command line, standard input is assumed.
Note that the input file must be a decompressed archive (decompress
with gzip).