XML::Compile::WSDL11 understands WSDL version 1.1. An WSDL file defines a set of
messages to be send and received over (SOAP) connections. This involves encoding
of the message to be send into XML, sending the message to the server, collect
the answer, and finally decoding the XML to Perl.
As end-user, you do not have to worry about the complex details of the messages
and the way to exchange them: it's all simple Perl for you. Also, faults are
handled automatically. The only complication you have to worry about is to shape
a nested HASH structure to the sending message structure.
XML::Compile::Schema::template() may help you.
When the definitions are spread over multiple files you will need to use
addWSDL() (wsdl) or importDefinitions() (additional schema's) explicitly.
Usually, interreferences between those files are broken. Often they reference
over networks (you should never trust). So, on purpose you must explicitly load
the files you need from local disk! (of course, it is simple to find one-liners
as work-arounds, but I will to tell you how!)
psbook rearranges pages into signatures
psselect selects pages and page ranges
pstops performs general page rearrangement and selection
psnup put multiple pages per physical sheet of paper
psresize alter document paper size
epsffit fits an EPSF file to a given bounding box
getafm (sh) outputs PostScript to retrieve AFM file from printer
showchar (sh) outputs PostScript to draw a character with metric info
fixdlsrps (perl) filter to fix DviLaser/PS output so that PSUtils works
fixfmps (perl) filter to fix framemaker documents so that psselect etc. work
fixmacps (perl) filter to fix Macintosh documents with saner version of md
fixpsditps (perl) filter to fix Transcript psdit documents to work with PSUtils
fixpspps (perl) filter to fix PSPrint PostScript so that psselect etc. work
fixscribeps (perl) filter to fix Scribe PostScript so that psselect etc. work
fixtpps (perl) filter to fix Troff Tpscript documents
fixwfwps (perl) filter to fix Word for Windows documents for PSUtils
fixwpps (perl) filter to fix WordPerfect documents for PSUtils
fixwwps (perl) filter to fix Windows Write documents for PSUtils
extractres (perl) filter to extract resources from PostScript files
includeres (perl) filter to include resources into PostScript files
psmerge (perl) hack script to merge multiple PostScript files
SpliX is a set of CUPS printer drivers for SPL (Samsung Printer Language)
printers. Below is a non-exhaustive list of currently supported printers.
Manufacturer Model State
Dell 1100 Works
Dell 1110 Works
Samsung CLP-200 Untested
Samsung CLP-300 Works
Samsung CLP-500 Works
Samsung CLP-510 Works
Samsung CLP-550 Works
Samsung CLP-600 Untested
Samsung CLP-610 Untested
Samsung CLX-216X Works
Samsung CLX-2170 Untested
Samsung CLX-3160 Works
Samsung ML-1510 Works
Samsung ML-1520 Works
Samsung ML-1610 Works
Samsung ML-1630 Works
Samsung ML-1640 Works
Samsung ML-1710 Works
Samsung ML-1740 Works
Samsung ML-1750 Works
Samsung ML-2010 Works
Samsung ML-2150 Untested
Samsung ML-2250 Works
Samsung ML-2251 Works
Samsung ML-2510 Works
Samsung ML-2570 Works
Samsung ML-2550 Works
Samsung ML-3050 Untested
Samsung ML-3560 Works
Samsung SCX-4200 Works
Samsung SCX-4500 Works
Xerox Phaser 3115 Untested
Xerox Phaser 3116 Untested
Xerox Phaser 3117 Works
Xerox Phaser 3120 Untested
Xerox Phaser 3121 Works
Xerox Phaser 3122 Untested
Xerox Phaser 3130 Works
Xerox Phaser 3150 Untested
Xerox Phaser 3160 Works
Xerox Phaser 3420 Untested
Xerox Phaser 3425 Untested
Xerox Phaser 5500 Untested
Xerox Phaser 6100 Works
Xerox Phaser 6110 Works
Xerox WorkCentre 3119 Untested
Implementation of a function 'digest()' for the creation of hash
digests of arbitrary R objects (using the md5, sha-1, sha-256,
crc32, xxhash and murmurhash algorithms) permitting easy comparison
of R language objects, as well as a function 'hmac()' to create
hash-based message authentication code. The md5 algorithm by Ron
Rivest is specified in RFC 1321, the sha-1 and sha-256 algorithms
are specified in FIPS-180-1 and FIPS-180-2, and the crc32 algorithm
is described in ftp://ftp.rocksoft.com/cliens/rocksoft/papers/crc_v3.txt.
For md5, sha-1, sha-256 and aes, this package uses small standalone
implementations that were provided by Christophe Devine. For crc32,
code from the zlib library is used. For sha-512, an implementation
by Aaron D. Gifford is used. For xxHash, the implementation by Yann
Collet is used. For murmurhash, an implementation by Shane Day is
used. Please note that this package is not meant to be deployed for
cryptographic purposes for which more comprehensive (and widely
tested) libraries such as OpenSSL should be used.
The Free Software Foundation's core utilities:
basename, cat, chgrp, chmod, chown, chroot, cksum, comm, cp, csplit,
cut, date, dd, df, dir, dircolors, dirname, du, echo, env, expand, expr,
factor, false, fmt, fold, groups, head, hostid, hostname, id, install,
join, kill, link, ln, logname, ls, md5sum, mkdir, mkfifo, mknod, mv, nice,
nl, nohup, od, paste, pathchk, pinky, pr, printenv, printf, ptx, pwd,
readlink, rm, rmdir, seq, sha1sum, shred, sleep, sort, split, stat, stty,
su, sum, sync, tac, tail, tee, test, touch, tr, true, tsort, tty, uname,
unexpand, uniq, unlink, uptime, users, vdir, wc, who, whoami, yes
Similar utilities to most of these exist in the FreeBSD base system,
but many of the GNU versions have added functionality that is
useful.
Note that this port will install these utilities with a `g' prefix,
for example gdate, gexpr, and gtest, but the texinfo documentation
will refer to them without the `g' prefix.
GNU su does not support a wheel group. This port installs it
without the suid bit, unless you define WITH_SUID while building.
RDF.rb is a pure-Ruby library for working with Resource Description
Framework (RDF) data.
Features:
* 100% pure Ruby with minimal dependencies and no bloat.
* Fully compatible with RDF 1.1 specifications.
* 100% free and unencumbered public domain software.
* Provides a clean, well-designed RDF object model and related APIs.
* Supports parsing and serializing N-Triples and N-Quads out of the box, with
more serialization format support available through add-on extensions.
* Includes in-memory graph and repository implementations, with more storage
adapter support available through add-on extensions.
* Implements basic graph pattern (BGP) query evaluation.
* Plays nice with others: entirely contained in the RDF module, and does not
modify any of Ruby's core classes or standard library.
* Based entirely on Ruby's autoloading, meaning that you can generally make use
of any one part of the library without needing to load up the rest.
* Compatible with Ruby Ruby 2.x, Rubinius and JRuby 1.7+ (in Ruby 2.0 mode).
* Performs auto-detection of input to select appropriate Reader class if one can
not be determined from file characteristics.
aria2 is a lightweight multi-protocol & multi-source command-line download
utility. It supports HTTP/HTTPS, FTP, BitTorrent and Metalink. aria2 can be
manipulated via built-in JSON-RPC and XML-RPC interfaces. Its features include:
- Multi-Connection Download.
aria2 can download a file from multiple sources/protocols and tries to utilize
your maximum download bandwidth. Really speeds up your download experience.
- Lightweight.
aria2 doesn't require much memory and CPU time. The physical memory usage is
typically 4MiB (normal HTTP/FTP downloads) to 9MiB (BitTorrent downloads). CPU
usage in BitTorrent with download speed of 2.8MiB/sec is around 6%.
- Fully Featured BitTorrent Client.
All features you want in BitTorrent client are available: DHT, PEX,
Encryption, Magnet URI, Web-Seeding, Selective Downloads and Local Peer
Discovery.
- Metalink Enabled.
aria2 supports The Metalink Download Description Format (aka Metalink v4),
Metalink version 3 and Metalink/HTTP. Metalink offers the file verification,
HTTP/FTP/BitTorrent integration and the various configurations for language,
location, OS, etc.
- Remote Control.
aria2 supports RPC interface to control the aria2 process. The supported
interfaces are JSON-RPC (over HTTP and WebSocket) and XML-RPC.
XMX is an X protocol multiplexor. It is a standalone utility for displaying
an X Windows session on multiple displays. XMX takes advantage of the
networked nature of the X Window System by tapping the communication link
between an X client and an X server. In this way, XMX works with any
X clients and any X servers, without the need to modify either.
It's tempting to call this "broadcast software," and that is certainly the
effect. In reality, though, XMX is "multicast" software. It must know
all the slave machines ahead of time and it connects to each one directly.
XMX is more like mail than news.
XMX connects to N servers like an X client, then accepts connections from
M clients like an X server. One of those servers is designated the "master"
from which input is directed to the clients. The other servers are "slaves."
Slave servers receive only those protocol requests that are necessary for
them to maintain a visual look-alike of the master server's display.
This software was developed at Brown University for use in our electronic
classroom. Some version of it has been in use here since 1988.
DeaDBeeF (as in 0xDEADBEEF) is an audio player.
Main features:
- mp3, ogg vorbis, flac, ape, wv, wav, m4a, mpc, cd audio (and many more)
- sid, nsf and lots of other popular chiptune formats
- ID3v1, ID3v2.2, ID3v2.3, ID3v2.4, APEv2, xing/info tags support
- character set detection for non-unicode id3 tags - supports cp1251 and
iso8859-1
- unicode tags are fully supported as well (both utf8 and ucs2)
- cuesheet (.cue files) support, with charset detection (utf8/cp1251/iso8859-1)
- tracker modules like mod, s3m, it, xm, etc
- HVSC song length database support for sid
- minimize to tray, with scrollwheel volume control
- drag and drop, both inside of playlist, and from filemanagers and such
- control playback from command line
- plugin support; bundled with lots of plugins, such as global hotkeys and
last.fm scrobbler; sdk is included
- duration calculation is as precise as possible for vbr mp3 files (with and
without xing/info tags)
- and etc...
This Audio File Library is an implementation of the SGI Audio File
library. Since the latter is specified ambiguously in places, I've
taken some liberties in interpreting certain such ambiguities. At the
present, not all features of the SGI Audio File library are
implemented. I feel, though, that this implementation of the Audio
File Library offers enough functionality to be useful for general
tasks.
This library allows the processing of audio data to and from audio files.
Support file formats:
AIFF/AIFF-C (.aiff, .aifc)
WAVE (.wav)
NeXT .snd/Sun .au (.snd, .au)
Berkeley/IRCAM/CARL Sound File (.sf)
Audio Visual Research (.avr)
Amiga IFF/8SVX (.iff)
Sample Vision (.smp)
Creative Voice File (.voc)
NIST SPHERE (.wav)
Core Audio Format (.caf)
FLAC (.flac)
Supported compression formats:
G.711 mu-law and A-law
IMA ADPCM
Microsoft ADPCM
FLAC
ALAC (Apple Lossless Audio Codec)