gqlplus is a drop-in replacement for sqlplus, an Oracle SQL client, for
UNIX platforms. The difference between gqlplus and sqlplus is command-line
editing and history, plus tablename completion. As you know if you have
used sqlplus, it is notoriously difficult to correct typing errors and
other mistakes in your SQL statements. sqlplus does give you ability to
use external editor to edit a statement, but only the last statement you
typed. gqlplus solves this problem by providing the familiar command-line
editing and history as in tcsh or bash shells, and tablename completion,
while otherwise retaining compatibility with sqlplus. Thus, no user training
is needed - simply use gqlplus instead of sqlplus. In addition,
configuration/installation is trivial: gqlplus is a single binary compiled
executable (written in C), so all you need is download it and put it anywhere
in your PATH. After that, you'll be ready to use it.
Hiredis is a minimalistic C client library for the Redis database.
It is minimalistic because it just adds minimal support for the protocol,
but at the same time it uses an high level printf-alike API in order to make
it much higher level than otherwise suggested by its minimal code base and
the lack of explicit bindings for every Redis command.
Apart from supporting sending commands and receiving replies, it comes with
a reply parser that is decoupled from the I/O layer. It is a stream parser
designed for easy reusability, which can for instance be used in higher
level language bindings for efficient reply parsing.
Hiredis only supports the binary-safe Redis protocol, so you can use it with
any Redis version >= 1.2.0.
The library comes with multiple APIs. There is the synchronous API, the
asynchronous API and the reply parsing API.
MariaDB is a database server that offers drop-in replacement functionality
for MySQL. MariaDB is built by some of the original authors of MySQL, with
assistance from the broader community of Free and open source software
developers. In addition to the core functionality of MySQL, MariaDB offers
a rich set of feature enhancements including alternate storage engines,
server optimizations, and patches.
MariaDB is primarily driven by developers at Monty Program, a company
founded by Michael "Monty" Widenius, the original author of MySQL, but
this is not the whole story about MariaDB. On the "About MariaDB" page you
will find more information about all participants in the MariaDB community,
including storage engines XtraDB and PBXT.
PEAR::DB is a database abstraction layer providing:
* an OO-style query API
* portability features that make programs written for one DBMS work
with other DBMS's
* a DSN (data source name) format for specifying database servers
* prepare/execute (bind) emulation for databases that don't support
it natively
* a result object for each query response
* portable error codes
* sequence emulation
* sequential and non-sequential row fetching as well as bulk fetching
* formats fetched rows as associative arrays, ordered arrays or objects
* row limit support
* transactions support
* table information interface
* DocBook and phpDocumentor API documentation
Drivers for the following extensions pass the complete test suite and
provide interchangeability when all of DB's portability options are
enabled: fbsql, ibase, informix, msql, mssql, mysql, mysqli, oci8,
odbc, pgsql, sqlite and sybase.
MariaDB is a database server that offers drop-in replacement functionality for
MySQL1. MariaDB is built by some of the original authors of MySQL, with
assistance from the broader community of Free and open source software
developers. In addition to the core functionality of MySQL, MariaDB offers a
rich set of feature enhancements including alternate storage engines, server
optimizations, and patches.
MariaDB is primarily driven by developers at Monty Program, a company founded by
Michael "Monty" Widenius, the original author of MySQL, but this is not the
whole story about MariaDB. On the "About MariaDB" page you will find more
information about all participants in the MariaDB community, including storage
engines XtraDB and PBXT.
LeoFS is a highly scalable, fault-tolerant distributed file system
for the Web.
LeoFS provides High Cost Performance Ratio. It allows you to build
LeoFS clusters using commodity hardware. LeoFS will require a smaller
cluster than other storage to achieve the same performance. LeoFS is
also very easy to setup and to operate.
LeoFS provides High Reliability thanks to its great design on top of
the Erlang/OTP capabilities. LeoFS system will stay up regardless of
software errors or hardware failures happening inside the cluster.
LeoFS provides High Scalability. Adding and removing nodes is simple
and quick, allowing you to react swiftly when your needs change. A
LeoFS cluster can be thought as elastic storage that you can stretch
as much and as often as you need.
MariaDB is a database server that offers drop-in replacement functionality
for MySQL. MariaDB is built by some of the original authors of MySQL, with
assistance from the broader community of Free and open source software
developers. In addition to the core functionality of MySQL, MariaDB offers
a rich set of feature enhancements including alternate storage engines,
server optimizations, and patches.
MariaDB is primarily driven by developers at Monty Program, a company
founded by Michael "Monty" Widenius, the original author of MySQL, but
this is not the whole story about MariaDB. On the "About MariaDB" page you
will find more information about all participants in the MariaDB community,
including storage engines XtraDB and PBXT.
Charm is a program for OS X, Linux and Windows that helps to keep track
of time. It is built around two major ideas - tasks and events. Tasks
are the things time is spend on, repeatedly. For example, ironing
laundry is a task. The laundry done for two hours on last Tuesday is an
event in that task. When doing laundry multiple times, the events will
be accumulated, and can later be printed in activity reports or weekly
time sheets. So in case laundry would be done for three hours on
Wednesday again, the activity report for the "Ironing Laundry" task
would list the event on tuesday, the event on wednesday and a total of
five hours.
This is teapot (Table Editor And Planner, Or: Teapot), a new spread sheet
program for UNIX.
The current release has the following features:
o curses based user interface with easy to understand menues
o portable sheet file format uses XDR or ASCII format
o tbl, LaTeX, HTML, CSV or formatted text files can be generated and
simple SC and WK1 sheets can be imported
o typed expression evaluator with the types int, float, string, error,
pointer to cell and empty
o iterative expressions
o powerful cell addressing
o three-dimensional sheets
o new expression evaluator functions can be added very easy
o English, Dutch or German builtin messages or X/OPEN message catalogues
o a user guide, available as pdf and html
o It is still a small and simple program!
NOTE: the GUI interface is not yet supported on FreeBSD
The Boehm-Weiser garbage collection package, for C and C++ -
garbage collection and memory leak detection libraries.
A garbage collector is something which automatically frees malloc'd
memory for you by working out what parts of memory your program
no longer has pointers to. As a result, garbage collectors can also
inform you of memory leaks (if they find memory they can free, it means
you have lost all of your pointers to it, but you didn't free it).
C programs may be linked against either of these, and should run (with
GC or leak detection) without change. C++ programs must include a header
to use garbage collection, though leak detection should work without
such source code modifications. See the man page and header files.
This package only brings Boehm-GC libraries with malloc redirection.
ps: garbage collection is addictive.