dt is a generic data test program used to verify proper operation of
peripherals, file systems, device drivers, or any data stream supported
by the operating system. In its simplest mode of operation, dt writes
and then verifies its default data pattern, then displays performance
statistics and other test parameters before exiting. Since verification
of data is performed, dt can be thought of as a generic diagnostic tool.
dt has been used to successfully test disks, tapes, serial lines,
parallel lines, pipes, and memory mapped files. In fact, dt can be used
for any device that allows the standard open, read, write, and close
system calls. Special support is necessary for some devices, such as
serial lines, for setting up the speed, parity, data bits, etc.
Asterisk-Stat is providing different reports & Graph to allow
the Asterisk-admin to analyse quickly
and easily the traffic on their Asterisk server.
All the graphic & reports are based over the CDR database.
An installer created by the InstallShield software stores the files it will
install inside of InstallShield Cabinet Files. It would thus be desirable
to be able to extract the Microsoft Cabinet Files from the InstallShield
Cabinet Files in order to be able to install the applications without access
to Microsoft Windows.
- Use a well known open source license (MIT)
- Work on both little-endian and big-endian systems
- Separate the implementation in a tool and a library
- Support InstallShield versions 5 and later
- Be able to list contents of InstallShield Cabinet Files
- Be able to extract files from InstallShield Cabinet Files
SVN: https://synce.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/synce/trunk/unshield/
http://www.synce.org/moin/ComponentOverview
spatialite-tools is a collection of open source Command Line Interface (CLI)
tools supporting SpatiaLite.
* spatialite: a complete CLI front-end, more or less equivalent to the well
known sqlite3 front-end, but fully supporting SpatiaLite
* spatialite_tool: a tool supporting import/export of Shapefiles and DBF-files
* shp_doctor: a diagnostic tool to check anomalous shapefiles
* exif_loader: an import tool for EXIF or EXIF-GPS (JPEG) pictures
* spatialite_network: a tool creating a VirtualNetwork (supporting
shortest path / routing SQL queries)
* spatialite_gml: a tool importing GML files
* spatialite_convert: a tool converting DB-files from different versions
of SpatiaLite
* spatialite_dxf: an tool importing DXF files
* OSM-tools: spatialite_osm_raw, spatialite_osm_filter, spatialite_osm_map,
spatialite_osm_net, spatialite_osm_overpass: tools supporting
OpenStreetMap datasets
* XML-tools: spatialite_xml_load, spatialite_xml_collapse,
spatialite_xml_print, spatialite_xml_validator: tools supporting XML files
processing
The App::Cache module lets an application cache data locally. There are a
few times an application would need to cache data: when it is retrieving
information from the network or when it has to complete a large
calculation.
For example, the Parse::BACKPAN::Packages module downloads a file off the
net and parses it, creating a data structure. Only then can it actually
provide any useful information for the programmer.
Parse::BACKPAN::Packages uses App::Cache to cache both the file download
and data structures, providing much faster use when the data is cached.
This module stores data in the home directory of the user, in a dot
directory. For example, the Parse::BACKPAN::Packages cache is actually
stored underneath "~/.parse_backpan_packages/cache/". This is so that
permissions are not a problem - it is a per-user, per-application cache.
The C++ Portable Components currently consist of four libraries.
The Foundation library contains a platform abstraction layer
(including classes for multithreading, file system access, logging,
etc.), as well as a large number of useful utility classes, such
various stream buffer and stream classes, URI handling, and many
more. The remaining libraries include:
o Crypto - Encrypt/decrypt data or I/O streams
o Data - database access ODBC, SQLite, MySQL client
o Net - network classes (sockets, HTTP, etc.)
o NetSSL - SSL/TLS protocol sockets based on OpenSSL
o PageCompiler - C++ Server Page Compiler, for dynamic HTML in C++ apps
o XML - parser with SAX2 and DOM interfaces and an XMLWriter
o Util - config files and command line arguments, various utility classes
o Zip classes for (de)compressing data or I/O streams
This is now known as the '-all' distribution by the Poco project,
but the FreeBSD port remains named -ssl for hysterical raisins.
iMaze is a multi-player network action game for TCP/IP with 3D graphics
under X11 (XView, Motif or Athena). You run through a labyrinth and shoot
everything that is round without being hit by other round anythings.
Of course anything round is one of the following:
* other players playing over the net
* computer controlled ninjas
* deadly shots (except your own)
Features:
* sophisticated, reliable network protocol, works even with SLIP connections
via modem; modular, portable source code
* windows can be freely scaled to avoid speed drawbacks due to poor display
performance
* sound and joystick support
* scores; camera mode; labyrinth generator and interactive labyrinth editor
Audio support is somewhat flaky on FreeBSD (synchronization problems).
It works better with the old Voxware driver than with the current pcm driver.
The Independent JPEG Group's JPEG software
==========================================
This distribution contains the eighth public release of the Independent JPEG
Group's free JPEG software. You are welcome to redistribute this software and
to use it for any purpose, subject to the conditions under LEGAL ISSUES, below.
This software is the work of Tom Lane, Guido Vollbeding, Philip Gladstone,
Bill Allombert, Jim Boucher, Lee Crocker, Bob Friesenhahn, Ben Jackson,
Julian Minguillon, Luis Ortiz, George Phillips, Davide Rossi, Ge' Weijers,
and other members of the Independent JPEG Group.
IJG is not affiliated with the official ISO JPEG standards committee.
Includes EXIF patches from:
http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=106060
http://sylvana.net/jpegcrop/exifpatch.html
S10sh is a USB/serial userspace driver for the Canon PowerShot digital cameras.
Using S10sh you can download, upload and explore the images captured with your
PowerShot camera. The interface is quite similar to DOS's command.com.
S10sh supports the following PowerShot models:
G1 (works with USB, not reported if works with the serial interface)
G3 (from local patches, perhaps needs further testing/debug)
S10 (serial and USB)
S20 (serial and USB)
S100 aka Digital Ixus (USB only, since it lacks the serial interface)
A20 (needs testing)
A50 (serial only, supported with problems)
Pro70 (serial only, supported with problems)
Other models are reported to work as well: Elph S400, Digital Ixus V3, S30,
A60, EOS-10D.
With the release of libusb 0.1.3b (http://sourceforge.net/projects/libusb/),
S10sh gained USB support under FreeBSD.
The original author's web page is http://www.kyuzz.org/antirez/s10sh.html
I could not find a client with the features I was looking for, so yes,
here is yet another IRC client. Here's what makes it different from
others:
* absolutely NO scripting ability.
* termcap based (e.g. fast!).
* emacs-style key bindings
* full ircd 2.9+ support.
* virtual windows a la screen(1).
* multi server support.
* non blocking TCP connections.
* basic support for multi-homed systems.
* everything goes and stays in the lastlog.
* convenient scrolling (with searching abilities) in the lastlog.
* 10 display filters! (2 ignore features are based on this).
* highly customizable. (format strings, filters..)
* customization possible at every level (channel, window, server..).
* non blocking DNS lookups (A and PTR records).
* "tabkey" style completion for /msg, /squery and public discussion.
* DCC support.
* CTCP support.
-- Christophe Kalt <kalt@stealth.net>