This module provides a Perl wrapper around the Pushover ( http://pushover.net )
RESTful API. You'll need to register with Pushover to obtain an API token for
yourself and for your application before you'll be able to do anything with this
module.
Eventum is a user-friendly and flexible issue tracking system
that can be used by a support department to track incoming
technical support requests, or by a software development team
to quickly organize tasks and bugs.
Wiki: http://eventum.mysql.org/wiki
Tktray is an extension that is able to create system tray icons. It
follows http://www.freedesktop.org specifications when looking up the
system tray manager. This protocol is supported by modern versions of
KDE and Gnome panels, and by some other panel-like application.
The Gnome2 module allows a perl developer to use the Gnome libraries. Find out
more about Gnome+ at http://www.gnome.org/.
The perl bindings follow the C API very closely, and the C reference
documentation should be considered the canonical source.
This package is free software and is part of the
GNOME project.
The package contains an implementation of the draft "Desktop
Menu Specification" from freedesktop.org:
http://www.freedesktop.org/Standards/menu-spec
Also contained here are the GNOME menu layout configuration
files, .directory files and assorted menu related utility programs.
-- gnome-menus README
The Independent JPEG Group's JPEG software
==========================================
This distribution contains the eighth public release of the Independent JPEG
Group's free JPEG software. You are welcome to redistribute this software and
to use it for any purpose, subject to the conditions under LEGAL ISSUES, below.
This software is the work of Tom Lane, Guido Vollbeding, Philip Gladstone,
Bill Allombert, Jim Boucher, Lee Crocker, Bob Friesenhahn, Ben Jackson,
Julian Minguillon, Luis Ortiz, George Phillips, Davide Rossi, Ge' Weijers,
and other members of the Independent JPEG Group.
IJG is not affiliated with the official ISO JPEG standards committee.
Includes EXIF patches from:
http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=106060
http://sylvana.net/jpegcrop/exifpatch.html
Monit is a utility for managing and monitoring processes,
files, directories, devices and network services on a Unix system.
Monit conducts automatic maintenance and repair and can execute
meaningful causal actions in error situations.
monit supports:
* Daemon mode - poll services at a specified interval
* Group and manage groups of services, service dependencies
* Logging - syslog or own logfile
* Alert, start, stop and restart of services based on it's characteristics
* MD5 and SHA1 checksums
* Runtime Unix socket and TCP/IP port checking (TCP and UDP)
* Process status, timeout, memory and cpu usage, etc.
* Device usage monitoring (inodes and space)
* File monitoring (timestamp, checksum, permission, owner, etc.)
* Directory monitoring (timestamp, permission, owner, etc.)
* Remote network services monitoring (ping, response time, protocol, etc.)
* System load average monitoring
* Flexible and customizable email alert messages and notifications
* Protocol verification such as HTTP, FTP, SMTP, POP, IMAP, NNTP, NTP, etc.
* A HTTP interface with XML output option
and many more features :)
This is the KMFL IMEngine for IBus (Intelligent Input Bus) framework.
It allows you to use layouts written in KMN keyboard language through
standard IBus interface, through KMFL compiler (textproc/kmflcomp) and
KMFL library (textproc/libkmfl).
KMFL aims to bring Tavultesoft Keyman functionality to *nix operating
systems. KMFL is being jointly developed by SIL International
(http://www.sil.org) and Tavultesoft (http://www.tavultesoft.com).
The powerful KMN keyboard language supports contextual deadkeys, pre-
and post-processing of keystrokes, rules grouping, 'storing' of
character classes for use in similar rules, custom and Unicode character
constants, SIL Ethnologue language codes, etc.
Official Tavultesoft repository contains keyboards that cover more
than 220 languages. Significant number of them are open source.
The keyboard ports are textproc/kmfl-*.
KMFL aims to bring Tavultesoft Keyman functionality to *nix operating
systems. KMFL is being jointly developed by SIL International
(http://www.sil.org) and Tavultesoft (http://www.tavultesoft.com).
This is compiler for keyboard sources written in Keyman keyboard
language (.kmn files). Resulting binaries (.kmfl) can be used with
SCIM KMFL IMEngine (textproc/scim-kmfl-imengine).
The powerful KMN keyboard language supports contextual deadkeys,
pre- and post-processing of keystrokes, rules grouping, 'storing'
of character classes for use in similar rules, custom and Unicode
character constants, SIL Ethnologue language codes, etc.
Official Tavultesoft repository contains keyboards that cover more
than 220 languages. Significant number of them are open source.
Ported keyboards are textproc/scim-kmfl-*.
gaeutilities is a collection of classes to aid in development
on Google Appengine.
The stable version includes the following classes:
Session: An http session class to preserve identity across http requests.
It uses both BigTable and Memcache for performance and reliability.
It also includes middleware to plug in with django.
Cache: A BigTable and Memcache caching class. Any object that can be pickled
can be stored in cache.
Event: A subscribe/fire event system that gives developers the ability to set
callback functions.
Flash: A cookie based messaging library. Using json, data structures can be
stored as a cookie in the browser and retrieved on the next request.
Useful for messages such as "Thank you for logging in."