GNU Zebra is a free software (distributed under GNU Generic Public
License) which manages TCP/IP based routing protocols.
It supports BGP-4 protocol as described in RFC1771 (A Border Gateway
Protocol 4) and RIPv1, RIPv2 and OSPFv2.
Zebra uses multithread technology under multithread supported UNIX
kernels. However it can be run under not-multithread supported
UNIX kernels.
Zebra is intended to be used as a Route Server and a Route Reflector.
Zebra is not a toolkit, it provides full routing power under a new
architecture.
A window-matching utility, inspired by Sawfish's "Matched Windows"
option and the lack of the functionality in Metacity. Metacity lacking
window matching is not a bad thing -- Metacity is a lean window
manager, and window manipulation does not have to be a window manager
task.
Devil's Pie can be configured to detect windows as they are created,
and match the window to a set of rules. If the window matches the
rules, it can perform a series of actions on that window. For example,
I make all windows created by X-Chat appear on all workspaces, and the
main Gkrellm1 window does not appear in the pager or task list.
This set of C (Cython) extensions provides acceleration of common
operations for slow points in PyOpenGL 3.x.
RcppArmadillo provides an interface from R to and from Armadillo
by utilising the Rcpp R/C++ interface library.
PySNMP is fully functional SNMP v1, v2c and v3 engine (agent and manager)
written entirely in Python.
This extension uses rabbitmq-c library to provide API for
communicating with AMQP compliant servers, and writing
producers and consumers.
DCL is scientific graphic library for geoscience, written in Fortran.
DCL-C is converted from Fortran version of DCL.
The Tree::Suffix module provides an interface to the C library
libstree, which implements generic suffix trees.
Hubbub is an HTML5 compliant parsing library, written in C. It was developed
as part of the NetSurf project.
Yell is a little command line utility playing a short tune on your speaker
device. I mainly use it to yell the "sysop" on a remote machine. It could also
be used as a notification for finished tasks (eg. make buildworld && yell).