U-Boot loader for Wandboard Solo, Dual, and Quad.
Install the u-boot.imx file onto the boot disk using:
dd if=u-boot.imx of=/dev/whatever bs=1k oseek=1 conv=sync
The U-Boot built by this port expects the first 1MB of the boot media to
be reserved for the U-Boot executable and saved environment. The u-boot.imx
file begins at an offset of 1K from the start of the boot disk. The U-Boot
environment area begins at an offset of 512K.
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled to support ubldr.
* A single U-Boot image supports Solo, Dual[lite], and Quad processors.
* When the selected board has multiple SD or MMC devices available, the
mmc0 device in U-Boot (and thus the disk0 device in loader(8)) will be
whichever device U-Boot was loaded from by the ROM bootloader routines.
The sources for this port were originally obtained from commit 87f595d1ee
at https://github.com/TechNexion/U-Boot-edm/ which appears to be a slightly
modified fork of the stock U-Boot 2013.10 release. As of this writing,
the changes in this fork have not been rolled back into upstream U-Boot.
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
Displays a rendered view of the earth in your root window, similar to
xearth, but instead uses a satellite image map of the earth. You can also
substitute surface maps of other planets if you're feeling cosmic.
A configuration system allowing for either file or LDAP backed storage. A
utility is included as well, 'zcrunner'. It can be used to configure
actions and run files using them.
Wrapper code to start/stop a Java application as a daemon.
Daemon is made of 2 parts. One written in C that makes the
interface to the operating system and the other in Java that
provides the Daemon API.
This module attempts to generate a stack dump from a core file by
locating the best available debugger (if any) and running it with the
appropriate arguments and command script.
rbison generates a Ruby parser class from a Bison-like specification
file. rbison uses Bison to do all the hard work (generating state
transition tables, etc), then translates the Bison-generated C code
into Ruby code.
Annoy, like your annoying friend that asks you questions all the time. Rudy
uses annoy to present the user with a simple question before continuing with a
destructive action.
This is keyprint: a quick hack for printing S/Key keys on a small piece
of paper, twice the size of a credit card for easy storage in a
wallet, card holder, etc. It produces a PostScript file which can be
printed and then trimmed to size:
hn38925
+----------------------------------------+
| 1 af fd alfal 26 fd s fdas da |
| 2 af fd alfal 27 fd s fdas da |
| 3 af fd alfal 28 fd s fdas da |
| . . |
| . . |
| 74 af fd alfal 98 fd s fdas da |
| 75 af fd alfal 99 fd s fdas da |
+----------------------------------------+
Warning: If you don't have a secure network, then it is not a good
idea to print this key set on a network printer. It might be obvious,
but you never know.
This takes from a search and turns it into a hash.
The returned has is in the following format.
{DN}{ldap}{attribute}[array of values for this attribute]
The reason for the {ldap} is to allow for other values and
the like to be tagged onto a hash for a DN that are unrelated to LDAP.
This function does not make any attempt to check if the search succedded
or not.
This automatically logs a user out if they're idle for a set amount
of time. We define 'idle' as having not refreshed the right-hand
frame. The administrator can set a standard time for all users or
allow users to set their own timeout values.