Courier library which implements several algorithms related to the
Unicode Standard:
- Look up uppercase, lowercase, and titlecase equivalents of a
unicode character.
- Implementation of grapheme and work breaking rules.
- Implementation of line breaking rules.
- Several ancillary functions, like looking up the unicode character
that corresponds to some HTML 4.0 entity (such as "&", for
example), and determining the normal width or a double-width status
of a unicode character. Also, an adaptation of the iconv(3) API
for this unicode library.
This library also implements C++ bindings for these algorithms.
FreeBSD-CVSweb is a WWW CGI script that allows remote users to browse
a CVS repository tree via web. It can display the revision history of
a file, as well as diffs between revisions and downloading the whole
file.
The cvsweb script has been written by Bill Fenner <fenner@FreeBSD.org>
for the FreeBSD project, improved visually and functionally by Henner
Zeller <zeller@think.de>, Henrik Nordstrom <hno@hem.passagen.se>, and
Ken Coar <Ken.Coar@Golux.Com>, then Akinori MUSHA <knu@FreeBSD.org>
brought it back to the FreeBSD community and made further
improvements. FreeBSD-CVSweb is currently maintained by Ville Skytta.
GConf extends the concept of a configuration registry. It provides
a simple way for applications and administrators to store data;
often GConf is used to store preferences for applications.
Some of the features of GConf are:
GConf provides:
* Documentation for each configuration key, so that administrators
can better modify the value.
* Notifications to interested applications when configuration data
is changed. The notification service works across networks,
affecting all login sessions for a single user.
* Proper locking so that configuration data doesn't get corrupted
when accessed by multiple applications at the same time.
DParser is a simple but powerful tool for parsing. You can specify the form of
the text to be parsed using a combination of regular expressions and grammar
productions. Because of the parsing technique (technically a scannerless GLR
parser based on the Tomita algorithm) there are no restrictions. The grammar
can be ambiguous, right or left recursive, have any number of null productions,
and because there is no separate tokenizer, can include whitespace in terminals
and have terminals which are prefixes of other terminals. DParser handles not
just well formed computer languages and data files, but just about any wacky
situation that occurs in the real world.
An extension Library
This is mostly to fill in some gaps in the standard and Unix
libraries, either for completeness or because they're things I find
myself needing a lot of the time, and a few modules that aren't worthy
of being their own releases. Enjoy. Most of this used to be part of an
old library (stew) that I broke up into a couple of smaller ones. This
one /was/ extlib, now annexlib. Its companion is mathlib.
See supplied documentation for additional info.
This is a Perl-based make replacement, but does not provide make
compatibility. It has a number of powerful capabilities not found
in other software construction systems, including make.
Cons is a system for constructing, primarily, software, but is
quite different from previous software construction systems. Cons
was designed from the ground up to deal easily with the construction
of software spread over multiple source directories. Cons makes it
easy to create build scripts that are simple, understandable and
maintainable. Cons ensures that complex software is easily and
accurately reproducible.
Exuberant Ctags generates an index (or tag) file of source language
objects in source files that allows these items to be quickly and
easily located by a text editor or other utility.
Alternatively, it can generate a cross reference file which lists,
in human-readable form, information about the various objects found
in a set of source code files.
Supported languages include: Assembler, ASP, AWK, BETA, C, C++, C#,
COBOL, Eiffel, Fortran, HTML, Java, Javascript, Lisp, Lua, Make,
Pascal, Perl, PHP, PL/SQL, Python, REXX, Ruby, S-Lang, Scheme, Shell
(Bourne/Korn/Z), Standard ML, Tcl, Vera, Verilog, Vim and Yacc.
FreeBSD-CVSweb is a WWW CGI script that allows remote users to browse
a CVS repository tree via web. It can display the revision history of
a file, as well as diffs between revisions and downloading the whole
file.
The cvsweb script has been written by Bill Fenner <fenner@FreeBSD.org>
for the FreeBSD project, improved visually and functionally by Henner
Zeller <zeller@think.de>, Henrik Nordstrom <hno@hem.passagen.se>, and
Ken Coar <Ken.Coar@Golux.Com>, then Akinori MUSHA <knu@FreeBSD.org>
brought it back to the FreeBSD community and made further
improvements.
FGA is a simple yet powerful implementation of a general genetic algorithm, and
provides many types of crossover and selection procedures.
It is suitable to solve mathematical problems such as combinatorial
optimization ones, as well as to build artificial life simulations.
Written in C++, the library is released under the terms of the GNU Lesser
General Public License, and it's easy to incorporate in other applications.
A parallel version of the algorithm (using POSIX threads) is included in order
to take advantage of multi-processor environments.
Fnorb is a CORBA 2.0 object request broker (ORB) written in Python. It
supports all CORBA 2.0 datatypes (including Any's) and provides a full
implementation of IIOP. Fnorb is Python and CORBA/IDL specific which makes
it simple, light-weight and easy to use. Fnorb is ideal for prototyping
complex CORBA architectures, for use as a scripting tool, and for building
test harnesses for CORBA development projects.
Fnorb is being developed at the CRC for Distributed Systems Technology based
at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia.