Poslib is a portable C++ DNS library, a part of Posadis project.
It consists of two parts: a client library and a server library.
Using the client library, you can simply develop applications that use
the Domain Name System (DNS). It includes many functions for resolving,
domain-name manipulation and Resource Record (RR) creation.
The server library, based on the client core, can be used to develop
DNS servers. By implementing a query entry-point function using the
Poslib library of functions, you can easily create DNS servers,
without worrying about low-level details such as DNS message compilation,
domain-name compression and UDP/TCP transmission.
Java-Readline is a port of GNU Readline for Java. Or, to be more
precise, it is a JNI-wrapper to Readline. It is distributed under the
LGPL.
You must call Readline.load(ReadlineLibrary lib); before using any
other methods. If you omit the call to the load()-method, the pure
Java fallback solution is used. Possible values for lib are:
ReadlineLibrary.PureJava
ReadlineLibrary.GnuReadline
ReadlineLibrary.Editline
ReadlineLibrary.Getline
Note that all programs using GnuReadline will fall under the GPL,
since Gnu-Readline is GPL software!
pyNotifier is a notifier/event scheduler abstraction written in python.
It implements notification mechanisms for socket events (read or write)
and timers. Additionally external event dispatchers may be called during
an idle period.
json-py is a simple, pure-python implementation of a JSON (http://json.org)
reader and writer. JSON is used to exchange data across systems written in
various languages. It is particularly suited to dynamic languages like Python,
Javascript, etc. JSON = Javascript Object Notation implies it is suitable for
AJAX applications that exchange data from servers to Javascript applications
running on web browser clients.
mercurial-server gives your developers remote read/write access to centralized
Mercurial repositories using SSH public key authentication; it provides
convenient and fine-grained key management and access control.
All of the repositories controlled by mercurial-server are owned by a single
user (the "hg" user in what follows), but many remote users can act on them,
and different users can have different permissions. We don't use file
permissions to achieve that - instead, developers log in as the "hg" user
when they connect to the repository host using SSH, using SSH URLs of the
form "ssh://hg@repository-host/repository-name". A restricted shell prevents
them from using this access for unauthorized purposes. Developers
are authenticated only using SSH keys; no other form of authentication is
supported.
To give a user access to the repository, place their key in an
appropriately-named subdirectory of "/usr/lcoal/etc/mercurialserver/keys"
and run "refresh-auth". You can then control what access they have to what
repositories by editing the control file
"/usr/local/etc/mercurialserver/access.conf", which can match the names of
these keys against a glob pattern.
For convenient remote control of access, you can instead (if you have the
privileges) make changes to a special repository called "hgadmin", which
contains its own "access.conf" file and "keys" directory. Changes pushed to
this repository take effect immediately. The two "access.conf" files are
concatenated, and the keys directories merged.
OcempGUI is a small toolkit, which comes with various modules suitable for
event management, user interfaces, 2D drawing and accessibility.
OcempGUI enables developers to enhance their python and/or pygame applications
and games easily with graphical UI elements such as buttons, entry boxes,
scrolling abilities and more as well as simple event brokers or features, which
enhance the program by adding accessibility to its objects.
It can save a developer much time by providing a broad range of drawing
routines and ready-to-use event capable object types. The developer can focus
on the main tasks instead of taking care about needed low-level components,
which are given to him with OcempGUI.
Enables you to easily integrate gettext support, themed icons and scrollkeeper
based documentation into Python's distutils.
Collection of repoze.who friendly form plugins
repoze.who-friendlyform is a repoze.who plugin which
provides a collection of developer-friendly form plugins,
although for the time being such a collection has only
one item.
repoze.who-testutil is a repoze.who plugin which modifies
repoze.who's original middleware to make it easier to forge
authentication, without bypassing identification (this is,
running the metadata providers).
It's been created to ease testing of repoze.who-powered
applications, in a way independent of the identifiers,
authenticators and challengers used originally by your
application, so that you won't have to update your test
suite as your application grows and the authentication
method changes.
Terminfo database required by Linux applications using ncurses, such as
Matlab (r).