mtail is a small tail workalike that performs output coloring using ansi
escape sequences (although the sequences are overridable, so you could cause
it to output something else, e.g. html font tags, if you really wanted to).
mtail is written in python, is fairly small, and should be relatively
platform-independent.
It has a config file that can contain an arbitrary number of entries, each
of which has a series of regular expressions to indicate which files to color
according to which entry. for each entry, the config file specifies a coloring
scheme using regular expressions and, optionally, filters to apply to each
line before coloring (for example, to strip out extra info, etc.). the config
file also may override the predefined colors and the escape sequences (or
whatever) actually used to perform the coloring.
Logtool is a command line program that will parse ASCII logfiles into a more
palatable format. It will take anything resembling a standard syslog file
(this includes syslog-ng, multilog, and probably most of the other variantse),
and crunch it into one of the following formats for your viewing pleasure:
- ANSI (colorized for easy "at a glance" viewing)
- ASCII (for e-mail'ed reports, and term's that don't support color)
- CSV (for importing into your favorite spreadsheet/database)
- HTML (for generating web pages)
- RAW (for no good reason)
It can be configured to parse the data any one of several ways, including
suppressing duplicate messages, stripping the host, and/or program fields,
and modifying the time display format (supports TAI64 timestamps produced
by DJB's multilog) of the log entries.
Coppermine Photo Gallery is a picture gallery script. Users can upload
pictures with a web browser (thumbnails are created on the fly), rate
pictures, add comments and send e-cards. The admins can manage the
galleries and batch add pictures that have been uploaded on the server
by FTP.
Images are stored in albums and albums can be grouped by categories. The
script supports multiple users and each user can possibly have its own
set of albums.
The script also supports multiple languages and has a theme system. It
uses PHP, a MySQL database and the GD library (version 1.x or 2.x)
or ImageMagick to make the thumbnails. An install script makes the
installation fast and simple.
This module exposes the perl interpreter's PL_compiling variable to perl.
PL_check is an array indexed by opcode number (op_type) that contains
function pointers invoked as the last stage of optree compilation,
per op.
These functions make it easier to manipulate the op tree.
OpenRM Scene Graph is set of tools and utilities that implement a
high performance, flexible and extendible scene graph API. Underneath
OpenRM, OpenGL(tm) is used as the graphics platform for rendering,
so OpenRM is highly portable and can deliver blazing rendering speeds.
OpenRM can be used on any platform that has OpenGL, and has been
built and tested on:
x86 Linux (s/w via Mesa, h/w using vendor drivers, e.g., nVidia)
Irix
Solaris
FreeBSD
Win32 (95/98/NT/2K/ME).
OpenRM is a derivative work of RM Scene Graph (tm), a commercial
scene graph product from R3vis Corporation. Late in 1999, R3vis announced
the release of OpenRM into the Open Source community, with the
OpenRM debut occuring on 1 March 2000. R3vis continues to maintain
and develop RM Scene Graph, which contains additional features not
present in OpenRM.
xxdiff is a graphical tool for viewing the differences between two or three
files, or between two directories, and can produce a merged version thereof.
Some of its features:
- Comparing two files, three files, or two directories (shallow and
recursive)
- Horizontal diffs highlighting
- Files can be merged interactively and resulting output visualized
and saved
- Has features to assist in performing merge reviews/policing
- Can unmerge CVS conflicts in automatically merged file and display
them as two files, to help resolve conflicts
- Uses external diff program to compute differences: works with GNU
diff, SGI diff and ClearCase's cleardiff, and any other diff whose
output is similar to those
- Fully customizable with a resource file
- Look-and-feel similar to Rudy Wortel's/SGI xdiff; it is desktop
agnostic (i.e. will work equally well with KDE or GNOME)
- Features and output that ease integration with scripts
Tumgreyspf, an external policy checker for the postfix mail server. It can
optionally greylist and/or use spfquery to check SPF records to determine if
email should be accepted by your server.
Because of its design, legitimate e-mail is never trapped or rejected. Only
spam and viruses are caught. Since adding it to our mail server (which also uses
Spam Assassin, ClamAV, and an outsourced anti-spam system), our spam level has
dropped by an order of magnitude.
It uses the file-system as its database, no additional database is required to
use it.
Inline::C is a module that allows you to write Perl subroutines in C. Since
version 0.30 the Inline module supports multiple programming languages and each
language has its own support module. This document describes how to use Inline
with the C programming language. It also goes a bit into Perl C internals.