automx makes setting up a mail account easy. All your users need to provide
is real name, mail address and password. Their mail client and automx will
safely handle the rest.
automx runs on your server and handles mail account profile requests from
your mail clients. Put an end to endless phone calls trying to coach users to
configure settings, whose dialogs they can't find. Stop wasting your time
writing Tutorials nobody reads.
automx unifies Microsoft's and Mozilla's mail account provisioning standards
in one powerful Open Source tool. Choose from many backends, including LDAP
and SQL, and let automx create standard and individualized profiles for
multiple domains on the fly!
Email::Stuffer, as its name suggests, is a fairly casual module used to stuff
things into an email and send them. It is a high-level module designed for
ease of use when doing a very specific common task, but implemented on top of
the light and tolerable Email:: modules.
Email::Stuffer is typically used to build emails and send them in a single
statement, as seen in the synopsis. And it is certain only for use when
creating and sending emails. As such, it contains no email parsing
capability, and little to no modification support.
This is a package for doing integer arithmetic while using a different
base representation than normal. In base n arithmetic you have n
symbols which have a representation. I was going to call them
"glyphs", but being text strings they are not really. On Tye McQueen's
whimsical suggestion I settled on the name Math::Fleximal, the set of
text representations is called a "flex", and the representation of
individual digits are the "flecks". These names are somewhat
unofficial...
This allows you to do basic arithmetic using whatever digits you want,
and to convert from one to another.
CLEX (pronounced KLEKS) is a file manager with full-screen user interface.
It displays directory contents, including file status details, and provides
features like command history, filename insertion, or name completion, in
order to help users to create commands to be executed by the shell.
CLEX is versatile tool for system administrators and all users that utilize
the enormous power of the command line. Its unique one-panel user interface
enhances productivity and lessens the probability of mistake. There are no
built-in commands; CLEX is an add-on to your favorite shell.
gonvert is a conversion utility that allows conversion between many units
like CGS, Ancient, Imperial with many categories like length, mass, numbers,
etc. All units converted values shown at once as you type. Easy to add/change
your own units.
Features:
- 51 categories, 981 units. See the entire list here.
- All units converted values shown at once as you type.
- Descriptions for many units.
- Sort by Unit Name, Value, or Unit symbol.
- Find Units.
- Fully OPEN source so that you can add your own custom calculations
and descriptions.
This module allows you to convert the full name for a countries
administrative region to the code commonly used for postal addressing.
The reverse lookup can also be done. Sub country codes are defined
in "ISO 3166-2:1998, Codes for the representation of names of
countries and their subdivisions".
Sub countries are termed as states in the US and Australia, provinces
in Canada and counties in the UK and Ireland.
Additionally, names and codes for all sub countries in a country
can be returned as either a hash or an array.
Seamus Venasse <svenasse@polaris.ca>
Approximate matching searching utilities to search for manpages and files.
This package holds THREE little search utilities:
* whichman -- search utility for man pages and it works
much like the well known Unix command "where".
* ftff -- a fault tolerant file finder
ftff works like the whichman above but searches the directory
tree. This is a case in-sensitive and fault tolerant way of
'find . -name xxxx -print'
* ftwhich -- a fault tolerant "which" command
ftwhich finds files (programs) which are in one of the directories in
your PATH and uses a fault tolerant search algorithm.
The general idea of these scripts is to check as many things as possible with
SNMP: disks, memory, load, network interfaces, running processes, etc...
The other idea is to select disks, interfaces, process using regular
expressions:
- it is possible to test more than one disk/int/process in one Nagios check
(ex.: eth* instead of eth0,eth1,eth2,...)
- you only have to provide a unique part of the name to select a
disk/int/process (ex. : "C:" instead of "C:\ Label: Serial Number xxxxxxx"
makes it easy to use on multiple Windows hosts).
Most of these scripts can make performance outputs.
A simple tool to convert packet captures in 802.11 format to Ethernet format.
Lots of tools can only understand Ethernet link types, so I wrote this
tool to convert captures to a format that they can understand.
Note that this tool is really only useful for encrypted traffic.
Specify a wireless packet capture as an input file, and the name of the
desired Ethernet-format output file. Wlan2eth will only convert data frames
to the output file, which will likely result in a significantly smaller output
packet capture file. Note that wlan2eth will only convert unencrypted frames.
A2ps formats each named file for printing in a postscript printer; if
no file is given, a2ps reads from the standard input. The format used
is nice and compact: normally two pages on each physical page, borders
surrounding pages, headers with useful information (page number,
printing date, file name or supplied header), line numbering, etc.
This is very useful for making archive listings of programs.
Additionally, A2ps "pretty print"s using special fonts for a wide array
of languages, making things like program listings much more legible.
LICENSE: GPL2 or later