Librarian is a framework for writing bundlers, which are tools that resolve,
fetch, install, and isolate a project's dependencies, in Ruby.
This is a forked version of devel/rubygem-librarian with improvements in
order to provide better support for librarian-puppet.
The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are:
* ld - the GNU linker.
* as - the GNU assembler.
Most of these programs use BFD, the Binary File Descriptor library, to do
low-level manipulation. Many of them also use the opcodes library to assemble
and disassemble machine instructions.
This port may be used as a replacement for the system binutils and support
features from the latest versions of GCC.
For cross-compilation, see the devel/cross-binutils port.
Devel::TraceFuncs provides utilities to trace the
execution of a program. It can print traces that look
something like:
+-> global: '0'
| +-> main::fo(4, 5) (in ./t.pm:32): 'now then'
| | +-> main::fp(4, 5) (in ./t.pm:19)
| | | +-> main::fq() (in ./t.pm:13)
| | | | que pee doll (in ./t.pm:8)
| | | +-< main::fq() (in ./t.pm:13)
| | | cee dee (in ./t.pm:14)
| | +-< main::fp(4, 5) (in ./t.pm:19)
| | ha
| | hs (in ./t.pm:20)
| +-< main::fo(4, 5) (in ./t.pm:32): 'now then'
| done (in ./t.pm:34)
+-< global: '0'
Tcllib is a collection of utility modules for Tcl. The intent is to
collect commonly used function into a single library, which users can
rely on to be available and stable.
There are too many modules now to list here. Browse the on-line
documentation at
http://tcllib.sourceforge.net/doc/
to get the idea.
This port installs pure-Tcl versions of the modules only.
C-implementations -- for some of the modules -- can be added by
installing devel/tcllibc port.
These modules provide a basis for parsing snort configuration files and
rules, allow tools to be built that muck with rulesets with less effort.
An example tool, snortconfig, is included.
The libopencm3 project aims to create an open-source firmware library for
various ARM Cortex-M3 microcontrollers.
Currently (at least partly) supported microcontrollers:
- ST STM32F1 series
- ST STM32F2 series
- ST STM32F4 series
- NXP LPC1311/13/42/43
The library is written completely from scratch based on the vendor datasheets,
programming manuals, and application notes. The code is meant to be used
with a GCC toolchain for ARM (arm-elf or arm-none-eabi), flashing of the
code to a microcontroller can be done using the OpenOCD ARM JTAG software.
This port depends on devel/gcc-arm-embedded toolchain.
This package contains the data files for the m17n library. m17n-lib
currently supports input of more than 60 languages with more than 150
language specific input methods.
m17n-db now incorporates a set of user-contributed input methods,
formerly known as m17n-contrib.
The package also provides the tbl2mim.awk script for conversion of keyboard
files used by table based IMEngines of SCIM/IBus into m17n-lib's .mim
format.
The documentation is available through devel/m17n-docs.
dm-devise adds DataMapper support to devise (devel/rubygem-devise) for
authentication support for Rails.
This module provides Perl bindings for the GNU IDN Library (Libidn)
(see also Port devel/libidn).
The m17n library provides following facilities to handle multilingual
text.
* M-text: A data structure for a multilingual text. It is
basically a string but with attributes called text property, and
is designed to substitute for the C string. It is the most
important object of the m17n library.
* Functions for creating and processing M-texts.
* Functions for converting M-texts from/to strings encoded in
various existing formats.
* A huge character space, which contains all the Unicode
characters and more non-Unicode characters.
* Chartable: A data structure that contains per-character
information efficiently.
* Functions for inputting and displaying M-text on a window system.
The documentation is available through devel/m17n-docs.