The VPCS can simulate up to 9 PCs. You can ping/traceroute them, or
ping/traceroute the other hosts/routers from the virtual PCs when you study the
Cisco routers in the Dynamips. VPCS is not the traditional PC, it is just a
program running on the Linux or FreeBSD, and only few network commands can be
used in it. But VPCS can give you a big hand when you study the Cisco devices in
the Dynamips. VPCS can replace the routers or VMware boxes which are used as PCs
in the Dynamips network. It can save your CPU/Memory. It is very small.
VPCS can be run in udp or ether mode. In the udp mode, VPCS sends or receives
the packets via udp. In the ether mode, via /dev/tap.
Devel::PackagePath is a Perl module to inspect and manipulate a Path based on
a Package name.
Provides a convinient way of setting up an CGI enviroment from a HTTP::Request.
Place five pieces in a row on a 3d board
A 3d version of gomoku. Similar to connect four, but it is played
in 3D on a 19x19 board and a play is allowed on any location of the
board.
makefaq is a Python program that creates a Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
list from a specially formatted text data file. For output, it can
generate either an HTML page, a text file, or a DocBook XML file.
Hash::Slice lets you easily make a deep slice of a hash, specifically a hash
containing one or more nested hashes. Instead of just taking a slice of the
first level of a hash in an all-or-nothing manner, you can use slice to take a
slice of the first level, then take a particular slice of the second level, and
so on.
daemonize is a command-line utility that runs a command as a Unix daemon. See
the accompanying man page for full details.
Vnc2flv is a cross-platform screen recording tool for UNIX, Windows or Mac.
It captures a VNC desktop session (either your own screen or a remote computer)
and saves as a Flash Video (FLV) file.
bitedit is a simple ncurses program for editing a file. It allows
you to directly edit of the individual bits of a binary file in a
graphical fashion. It is useful for editing all sorts of binary files.
This ports contains multilingualized nex/nvi.
nex/nvi is a freely redistributable implementation of ex/vi text
editors originally distributed as part of the Fourth Berkeley
Software Distribution (4BSD), by the University of California,
Berkeley.
Multilingual patch enables you to use the following multilingual
encoding methods, such as:
none iso-8859-[1234789] latin1 latin2
euc-jp-1978 euc-jp euc-jp-1983 euc-jp-1990 euc-cn euc-kr
iso-2022-cn iso-2022-jp iso-2022-kr
iso-2022-7-1 iso-2022-7-2 iso-2022-8-2
sjis big5 hz euc-tw
Multilingual support has been set up to use some of the above (guess from
the name of the ports/packages) as default value.
You can change encoding style on the fly, or by setting up ~/.exrc.
With configurations, for Japanese encodings, you can also enjoy the
embedded canna support.
See /usr/local/share/vi/README.* for details of multilingual patch.