Waffle is a cross-platform C library that allows one to defer selection
of an OpenGL API and window system until runtime. For example, on Linux,
Waffle enables an application to select X11/EGL with an OpenGL 3.3
core profile, Wayland with OpenGL ES2, and other window system / API
combinations.
Waffle's immediate goal is to enable Piglit, Mesa's OpenGL test suite,
to test multiple OpenGL flavors in a cross-platform way. However,
Waffle's design does not preclude it from being useful to other
projects.
The sigrok project aims at creating a portable, cross-platform,
Free/Libre/Open-Source signal analysis software suite that supports
various device types, such as logic analyzers, MSOs, oscilloscopes,
multimeters, LCR meters, sound level meters, thermometers,
hygrometers, anemometers, light meters, DAQs, dataloggers,
function generators, spectrum analyzers, power supplies,
GPIB interfaces, and more.
sigrok-cli is a command-line tool written in C, which uses both libsigrok
and libsigrokdecode to provide the basic sigrok functionality from the
command-line. Among other things, it's useful for scripting purposes.
Fast AES cipher implementation with advanced mode of operations. The modes
of operations available are ECB (Electronic code book), CBC (Cipher block
chaining), CTR (Counter), XTS (XEX with ciphertext stealing), GCM (Galois
Counter Mode). The AES implementation uses AES-NI when available (on x86
and x86-64 architecture), but fallback gracefully to a software C
implementation. The software implementation uses S-Boxes, which might
suffer for cache timing issues. However do notes that most other known
software implementations, including very popular one (openssl, gnutls)
also uses same implementation. If it matters for your case, you should
make sure you have AES-NI available, or you'll need to use a different
implementation.
HFS is the "Hierarchical File System" used on modern Macintosh computers.
With this package, you can read and write Macintosh-formatted media such as
floppy disks, CD-ROMs, and SCSI hard disks on most Unix platforms. You can
also format raw media or file into an HFS volume.
This package contains a number of different tools:
- Several command-line programs (hmount, hls, hcopy, et al.)
- Tk-based front-end for browsing and copying files through a
variety of transfer modes (MacBinary, BinHex, text, etc.)
- Tcl package and interface for scriptable access to volumes
- C library for low-level access to volumes
Support for Apple's new Extended Format (HFS+) is currently not available.
Tokyo Dystopia is a full-text search system. You can search lots of records
for some records including specified patterns. The characteristic of
Tokyo Dystopia is the following.
* High performance of search
* High scalability of target documents
* Perfect recall ratio by character N-gram method
* Phrase matching, prefix matching, suffix matching, and token matching
* Multilingualism with Unicode
* Layered Architecture of APIs
Tokyo Dystopia is available on platforms which have API conforming to C99 and
POSIX. Tokyo Dystopia is a free software licensed under the GNU Lesser General
Public License.
XSV is a command-line tool for performing schema-validity
assessment of XML documents in accord with the
W3C XML Schema specification, second edition.
XSV (XML Schema Validator) is an open source (GPLed) work-in-progress
attempt at a conformant schema-aware processor, as defined by
XML Schema Part 1: Structures, Second Edition of 28 October 2004.
It has been developed at the Language Technology Group of the Human
Communication Research Centre in the School of Informatics at the
University of Edinburgh, with support for one of us (Thompson)
from the World Wide Web Consortium.
HTTP::MHTTP - this library provides reasonably low level access to the
HTTP protocol, for perl. This does not replace LWP (what possibly could
:-) but is a cut for speed. It also supports all of HTTP 1.0, so you
have GET, POST, PUT, HEAD, and DELETE. Some support of HTTP 1.1 is
available - specifically Transfer-Encoding = chunked and the Keep-Alive
extensions.
Additionally - rudimentary SSL support compiled in. This effectively
enables negotiation of TLS, but does not validate the certificates.
A way faster http access library that uses C extension based on mhttp to
do the calls.
SAOimage (pronounced S-A-0-image) displays astronomical images in the X11
window environment. It was written by Mike Van Hilst while he was at the
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (SAO) in 1990 and is now maintained by
Doug Mink also at the SAO.
Online help and documentation are on the webpage.
Image files can be read directly, or image data may be passed through a
named pipe (Unix) or a mailbox (VMS) from IRAF display tasks. SAOimage
provides a large selection of options for zooming, panning, scaling,
coloring, pixel readback, display blinking, and region specification. User
interactions are generally performed with the mouse, but keyboard
alternatives are often available.
The SAOimage desktop includes, a main image display window, a button menu
panel, a display magnifier, a pan and zoom reference image, and a color bar.
A color table graph window can be brought up by clicking on the color bar.
Texmaker is a program, that integrates many tools needed to develop documents
with LaTeX, in just one application.
Features :
* an editor to write your LaTeX source files
* the principal LaTex tags can be inserted directly
* 370 mathematical symbols can be inserted in just one click
* wizards to generate code
* LaTeX-related programs can be launched via the "Tools" menu
* the standard Bibtex entry types can be inserted in the ".bib" file
* a "structure view" of the document for easier navigation of a document
* extensive LaTeX documentation
* in the "Messages / Log File" frame, you can see information about
processes and the logfile after a LaTeX compilation
* the "Next Latex Error" and "Previous Latex Error" commands let you reach
the LaTeX errors detected by Kile in the log file
* by clicking on the number of a line in the log file, the cursor jumps to
the corresponding line in the editor
This is sieve-connect. A client for the ManageSieve protocol, as specifed in
RFC 5804. Historically, this was MANAGESIEVE as implemented by timsieved in
Cyrus IMAP.
This is not yet fully compatible with RFC 5804, but is moving towards that from
the timsieved baseline; some issues to be worked on are documented in the
"TODO" file.
sieve-connect speaks ManageSieve and supports TLS for connection privacy and
also authentication if using client certificates. sieve-connect will use SASL
authentication; SASL integrity layers are not supported, use TLS instead.
GSSAPI-based authentication should generally work, provided that client and
server can use a common underlaying protocol. If it doesn't work for you,
please report the issue.
sieve-connect is designed to be both a tool which can be invoked from scripts
and also a decent interactive client. It should also be a drop-in replacement
for "sieveshell", as supplied with Cyrus IMAP.