The LWP::Protocol::https module provide support for using https schemed URLs
with LWP. This module is a plug-in to the LWP protocol handling, so you don't
use it directly. Once the module is installed LWP is able to access sites using
HTTP over SSL/TLS.
If hostname verification is requested by LWP::UserAgent's ssl_opts, and neither
SSL_ca_file nor SSL_ca_path is set, then SSL_ca_file is implied to be the one
provided by Mozilla::CA. If the Mozilla::CA module isn't available SSL requests
will fail. Either install this module, set up an alternative SSL_ca_file or
disable hostname verification.
This module used to be bundled with the libwww-perl, but it was unbundled in
v6.02 in order to be able to declare its dependencies properly for the CPAN
tool-chain. Applications that need https support can just declare their
dependency on LWP::Protocol::https and will no longer need to know what
underlying modules to install.
http://www.linuxtv.org/vdrwiki/index.php/Remote-plugin
This plugin extends the remote control capabilities of vdr.
The following remote control devices are supported:
(a) Linux input device driver ('/dev/input/eventX', X=0,1,2,...)
(currently not supported on FreeBSD)
(b) keyboard (tty driver): /dev/console, /dev/ttyX
(c) TCP connection (telnet)
(d) LIRC
(e) some(?) FreeBSD uhid(4) devices (experimental support added by this port)
To use, add something like this to vdr_flags: '-Premote -h /dev/uhid0',
(re)start vdr, then the osd should ask you to configure the
remote by pressing the buttons you want to assign.
Note: If your remote is detected as a keyboard you'll have to
tell ukbd(4) to ignore it first by doing (as root) something like:
usbconfig add_dev_quirk_vplh 0x1241 0xe000 0 0xffff UQ_KBD_IGNORE
(and possibly unplug it for a moment or reset it via usbconfig,
0x1241 there is the vendor id, 0xe000 the product id of the
device, you can get yours by doing
usbconfig -d 1.2 dump_device_desc
and looking for idVendor and idProduct, -d 1.2 there corresponds
to ugen1.2 listed by usbconfig w/o args.)
You can check with:
usbconfig show_ifdrv
if the device is then listed as ugen...: uhid... you're good to go.
2nd note: If vdr cannot open your uhid device check it is not claimed
by xorg:
fstat |grep uhid
If it is you may need an xorg.conf(5) with manually defined
InputDevice sections for mouse and keyboard and
Option "AutoAddDevices" "False"
in the ServerFlags section.
And if for some reason you want to reassign the buttons on the
remote you can stop vdr and do:
touch /usr/local/etc/vdr/channels.conf
and/or remove uhid entries from
/usr/local/etc/vdr/remote.conf .
When you then start vdr again it should ask to configure the
remote again.
tosha reads CD-DA (digital audio) and CD-XA (digital video)
tracks and writes them to the hard disk. Several audio formats
are supported: raw PCM (little-endian and big-endian byte
order), WAV / RIFF, AIFF and Sun AU.
You can also pipe the data directly into an audio or video
player. A simple audio player is included ("pcmplay"). To
playback VideoCD data, you need a third-party product, for
example MpegTV (see http://www.mpegtv.com/).
tosha reads the digital audio / video data through the SCSI
bus; therefore it does not work with IDE/ATAPI CD-ROM drives
nor with proprietary interfaces.
statik allows you to embed a directory of static files into your
Go binary to be later served from an http.FileSystem. Is this a
crazy idea? No, not necessarily. If you're building a tool that
has a Web component, you typically want to serve some images, CSS
and JavaScript. You like the comfort of distributing a single binary,
so you don't want to mess with deploying them elsewhere. If your
static files are not large in size and will be browsed by a few
people, statik is a solution you are looking for.
The curl() and curl_download() functions provide highly configurable
drop-in replacements for base url() and download.file() with better
performance, support for encryption (https://, ftps://), 'gzip'
compression, authentication, and other 'libcurl' goodies. The core
of the package implements a framework for performing fully customized
requests where data can be processed either in memory, on disk, or
streaming via the callback or connection interfaces. Some knowledge
of 'libcurl' is recommended; for a more-user-friendly web client
see the 'httr' package which builds on this package with HTTP
specific tools and logic.
XEmeraldia, Drop the blocks. If you drop a square on top of one of the
same color, they (as well as any neighboring blocks of the same color)
will both be shaken by an "impact". The first impact will cause fractures;
the second will cause the block(s) to dissolve.
You can either use the arrow keys or vi-style (hjkl) keys to move/
rotate the blocks. `s' or `p' will pause the game, and if your boss
comes along, `q' can be used to avoid an unpleasant confrontation.
http://www.reloco.com.ar/xemeraldia/
GKrellM plugin which shows weather info from the US National Weather
Service
Features
- Choose the location nearest to you by 4-letter METAR station
identifier code.(http://www.nws.noaa.gov/tg/siteloc.php)
- Monitor temperature, dew point, pressure, relative humidity, sky
condition, wind direction and speed
- Display using imperial units (degrees Fareheight, inches of
Mercury, miles per hour)
- Display using metric units (degrees Celsius, millimeters of
Mercury, kilometers per hour)
- Display pressure in kPa, hPa and mmHg
- Display wind speeds in kmph, mps and Beaufort scale
The mplex multiplexes MPEG audio and video streams into system layers.
From INSTRUCT (in the mplex source):
>
> Please note that I do not have a comprehensive instruction manual for this
> release. I suggest you try the program out with some default values and
> learn something more about ISO/IEC 11172-1 (aka MPEG1/Systems).
>
>
> Christoph.
> moar@heaven.zfe.siemens.de
> +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+
> | http://www.informatik.tu-muenchen.de/ | Christoph Moar |
> | cgi-bin/nph-gateway/hphalle6/~moar/ | Kaulbachstr.29a |
> | index.html | 80539 Munich |
> | email:moar@informatik.tu-muenchen.de | voice: ++49 - 89 - 23862874 |
> +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+
OpenH323 is a multi-platform H323 Video Conferencing library.
This is used to make H323 Video Conferencing applications
like GnomeMeeting and ohphone. (both in the FreeBSD ports tree)
The library includes a sample program called simph323.
The OpenH323 library makes use of PWLib. http://www.equival.com
PWLib is a multi-platform code library that can be used to write
applications that will compile and run on the BSD Unixes, Windows, Linux
and a few other Unix variants. It was developed by Equivalence Ltd Pty.
Belle-sip is a SIP (RFC3261) implementation written in C, with an object
oriented API.
* RFC3261 compliant implementation of SIP parser, writer, transactions and
dialog layers
* http client api
* support of client TLS certificate
* fully asynchronous transport layer (UDP, TCP, TLS)
* fully asynchronous DNS resolution with SRV
* full dual-stack IPv6 support
* SIP transaction state machines with lastest corrections (RFC6026)
* automatic management of request refreshes with network disconnection
resiliency thanks to the "refresher" object
* supported platforms: Linux, Mac OSX, Windows XP+, iOS, Android,
Blackberry 10