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.
This module provides a single command for generating random password
that is close enough to a real word that it is easy to remember. It
does this by using the frequency of letter combinations in a language
(the frequency table is generated during installation although multiple
tables can be generated and used for different languages).
This module should not be used for high security applications (such as
user accounts) since it returns passwords that are not mixed case, have
no punctuation and no letters. This word can be used as a basis for a
more secure password.
The language of the password depends on the language used to construct
the frequency table.
inilib is a C++ library which provides a method of saving the "state"
of a program. inilib provides a means of storing a number of arbitrary
settings in memory with an easy access interface, as well providing
means for saving the information to and loading it from disk. Data is
stored in an easy to read format, allowing the user to modify any of the
information with a simple text editor.
inilib benefits the programmer by providing a simple, intuitive means to
store any data that can be expressed in std::string, int, double, or bool
types. In addition, inilib handles any conversion that may be necessary
to convert from one type to the other. Saving all information stored in
inilib to disk or loading information from disk requires only one command.
This module returns a hash containing basic information about a FLAC file,
a representation of the embedded cue sheet if one exists, as well as tag
information contained in the FLAC file's Vorbis tags. There is no complete
list of tag keys for Vorbis tags, as they can be defined by the user; the
basic set of tags used for FLAC files include:
* ALBUM
* ARTIST
* TITLE
* DATE
* GENRE
* TRACKNUMBER
* COMMENT
In a recent fit of madness, hacker Joel Holveck has released Vigor, a version
of the popular Unix editor vi featuring the Vigor Assistant. Holveck declined
to comment on his true motives for creating the program, although it has been
confirmed that he was inspired by Pitr of User Friendly the Comic Strip.
Holveck denies rumors that he created the program as part of a plot to
encourage the use of Emacs.
The libopencm3 project aims to create an open-source firmware library for
various ARM Cortex-M3 microcontrollers.
Currently (at least partly) supported microcontrollers:
- ST STM32F1 series
- ST STM32F2 series
- ST STM32F4 series
- NXP LPC1311/13/42/43
The library is written completely from scratch based on the vendor datasheets,
programming manuals, and application notes. The code is meant to be used
with a GCC toolchain for ARM (arm-elf or arm-none-eabi), flashing of the
code to a microcontroller can be done using the OpenOCD ARM JTAG software.
This port depends on devel/gcc-arm-embedded toolchain.
File-HStore is a very minimalist perl library to store files on a
filesystem using a very simple hash-based storage.
File-HStore is nothing more than a simple wrapper interface to a
storage containing a specific directory structure where files are hold
based on their hashes. The name of the directories is based on the
first two bytes of the hexadecimal form of the digest. The file is
stored and named with its full hexadecimal form in the corresponding
prefixed directory.
The current version is supporting the SHA-1 and SHA-2 (256 bits)
algorithm. The FAT (Free Archive Toolkit) format is also supported and
it is composed of the date of submission plus the SHA-2 real digest
part.
dvdrip is a Command Line Tool to make a copy from a Video DVD for private Use.
It automates the process of Ripping, Authoring, Preview and Burning of a DVD.
Features:
- Automatic Selection of the longest Title
- Automatic Calculation of Factor to Requant
- Automatic Read of Volume-ID
- Automatic Chapter Separation from Original
- Ripping of Audiotracks in every Language
- Selection of dts-Audiotracks as Default
- Selection of two Subpicture-Tracks possible
- Ripping and Re-Authoring
- Preview of VOB-Files with mplayer or xine
- Burning with growisofs or cdrecord-prodvd
- All Program Parameters could be stored in a Config File as Program Defaults
- All Paramaters can be overwritten on the fly at the Command Line
- Program with english, french or german Messages
- Rip of Subpicture-Tracks
- Copy DVD < 4.7 GB with Menus; > 4.7 GB with vamps, without Menus.
- Partial Copy: Copy selected Titles from a DVD (dvdunauthor/vamps)
- High Quality Backup (1 DVD9 => 2 DVD5)
- DVD with Menus for Title-, Audio- and Chapter Selection (dvdwizard)