Open Source Development with CVS is a book published by Coriolis
Inc. as part of the Coriolis OpenPress series. Chapters 2, 4, 6, 8, 9,
and 10 -- comprising a complete introduction, tutorial and reference
to CVS -- are being released free under the terms of the GNU General
Public License.
This port installs HTML, GNU Info, PDF, and Postscript formats.
CVS Monitor is an CVS repository browser. It provides visibility of
activity in CVS to developers, management, and the general public.
Features:
* Look at any repository anywhere - CVS Monitor can act on any repository
that has at least a public read-only account, even if you don't own the
repository
* Aggressive Caching - all statistics, and most pages, are generated purely
from the cached information
* ChangeSet Visibility - present changes to the repository in ChangeSets,
a single change involves new revisions on multiple files
* Tracker Integration - CVS Monitor can be easily integrated with your Bug
tracking or Request tracking systems
CVSps is a program for generating 'patchset' information from a CVS
repository. A patchset in this case is defined as a set of changes made
to a collection of files, and all committed at the same time (using a
single 'cvs commit' command). This information is valuable to seeing the
big picture of the evolution of a cvs project. While cvs tracks revision
information, it is often difficult to see what changes were committed
'atomically' to the repository.
D-Feet is a D-Bus debugger written in PyGtk+ by John (J5) Palmieri.
Current Features
* View names on any bus
* View exported objects, interfaces, methods and signals
* View the full command line of services on the bus
* Execute methods with parameters on the bus and see their return values
The DBus-Tcl project provides a Tcl interface to the dbus message bus system.
It contains packages that allow Tcl programs to send and receive dbus signals,
as well as invoke and respond to dbus method calls.
Editor for the dconf configuration system.
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.
This is an implementation of an infix reader macro. It should run in any
valid Common Lisp and has been tested in Allegro CL 4.1, Lucid CL 4.0.1,
MCL 2.0 and CMU CL. It allows the user to type arithmetic expressions in
the traditional way (e.g., 1+2) when writing Lisp programs instead of
using the normal Lisp syntax (e.g., (+ 1 2)). It is not intended to be a
full replacement for the normal Lisp syntax.
It is known to be compatible with CMUCL, CLISP, MCL, and SBCL.
Written by Mark Kantrowitz, School of Computer Science,
Carnegie Mellon University, March 1993.
DITrack is a free, open source, lightweight, distributed issue (bug,
defect, ticket) tracking system using a Subversion repository instead
of a backend database. It is written in Python and runs in UNIX
environment (*BSD, Linux, MacOS X).
FSF binutils-2.16 for DJGPP cross-development.
This port is needed by devel/djgpp-gcc