This modules requires Lingua::ZH::TaBE, a Chinese Tokenizer on
steroids; it's a thin wrapper around Lingua::ZH::TaBE, as well as its
interface with overload and utf8 semantics.
Localized messages and documentation for libreoffice
Calibre is meant to be a complete e-library solution and thus includes
library management, format conversion, news feeds to ebook conversion,
as well as e-book reader sync features and an integrated e-book viewer.
F-Prot Antivirus for BSD Workstations utilizes the renowned F-Prot
Antivirus scanning engine for primary scan but has in addition to
that a system of internal heuristics devised to search for unknown
viruses.
This version of F-Prot is a command line on-demand scanner.
Please note that the license explicitly permits that F-Prot Antivirus
for BSD Workstations is free for personal users on personal
workstations. For any other use please consult their website for
licensing information.
qchroot is a csh script for simplified administration of chroots on a
host system. This is a viable alternate to jail(8) when jail(8) is too
restrictive. This runs on RELEASE-9.3 and all newer RELEASES.
The chroot filesystem shares a single copy of the system binaries which
is mounted nullfs "read only" to the named chroot container filesystem.
This provides 2 levels of security protection which is better than chroot
by its self.
dwm is a minimalistic window manager. It manages windows in tiling and floating
modes, much like ion, larswm and wmii. dwm however is much smaller, faster and
simpler.
It consists of a single binary, configuration is done at compile-time by a
single config.h file. dwm reads from standard input to print arbitrary status
text such as the date and/or system load.
dmenu is a minimalistic X11 menu. It reads a newline separated list of items
from stdin and shows them as a menu on the top of the screen. When the user
selects one item or types any text and presses Enter, his choice is printed to
stdout.
dmenu was developed as an addition to the dynamic window manager (dwm), but can
be used in any X11-environment.
SiLK, the System for Internet-Level Knowledge, is a collection of
netflow tools developed by the CERT/NetSA (Network Situational
Awareness) Team to facilitate security analysis in large networks.
SiLK consists of a suite of tools which collect and examine netflow
data, allowing analysts to rapidly query large sets of data.
This is the last version that handles both the 8.x and 9.x install
media formats.
Qjail [ q = quick ] is a 4th generation wrapper for the basic chroot jail
system that includes security and performance enhancements. Plus a new level
of "user friendliness" enhancements dealing with deploying just a few jails or
large jail environments consisting of 100's of jails.
Qjail requires no knowledge of the jail command usage. It uses "nullfs" for
read-only system binaries, sharing one copy of them with all the jails.
Uses "mdconfig" to create sparse image jails. Sparse image jails provide a
method to limit the total disk space a jail can consume, while only occupying
the physical disk space of the sum size of the files in the image jail.
Ability to assign ip address with their network device name,
so aliases are auto created on jail start and auto removed on jail stop.
Ability to create "ZONE"s of identical qjail systems, each with their own
group of jails.
Ability to designate a portion of the jail name as a group prefix so the
command being executed will apply to only those jail names matching that prefix.
This qjail version only supports the RELEASE-10.x series of releases.
Qjail [ q = quick ] is a 4th generation wrapper for the basic chroot jail
system that includes security and performance enhancements. Plus a new level
of "user friendliness" enhancements dealing with deploying just a few jails or
large scale jail environments consisting of 100's of jails.
Qjail uses the jail(8) jail.conf method. This provides the ability to enable
the following options on a per-jail basis. exec.fib, securelevel, allow.sysvipc,
devfs_rulesets, allow.raw_sockets, allow.quotas, allow.mount.nullfs,
allow.mount.tmpfs, allow.mount.zfs, vnet.interface, and vnet. The vnet option
gives a jail its own network stack using the experimental vimage kernel module.
The vnet option has only been tested on i386 and amd64 equipment.
Qjail requires no knowledge of the jail command usage. It uses "nullfs" for
read-only system executables, sharing one copy of them with all the jails.
Uses "mdconfig" to create sparse image jails. Sparse image jails provide a
method to limit the total disk space a jail can consume, while only occupying
the physical disk space of the sum size of the files in the image jail.
Ability to assign ip address with their network device name,
so aliases are auto created on jail start and auto removed on jail stop.
Ability to create "ZONE"s of identical qjail systems, each with their own
group of jails.
Ability to designate a portion of the jail name as a group prefix so the
command being executed will apply to only those jail names matching that prefix.
Qjail has been incorporated into the Finch open source project,
see http://dreamcat4.github.io/finch/ for details.