WMMemFree shows system memory usage. It runs as a dockapp for window
manager like WindowMaker or some other which supports dockapps. On
the top side you have your physical memory usage and on the bottom there
is your swap space usage.
Superiotool is a GPL'd user-space helper tool for coreboot development
purposes (but may also be useful for other things). It allows you to
detect which Super I/O you have on your mainboard, and it can provide
detailed information about the register contents of the Super I/O.
Tools for generating IP based Geo-block-ing and Geo-routing tables in
order to configure the system's firewall and/or routing facilities
In general, routing is determined by destination IP addresses, and access
control by the firewall is established by selectors that can be attrib-
uted to incoming and outgoing IP packets, like physical interfaces on
which the packets are going, source and target IP addresses, protocol
types, port numbers, content types and content, etc. The Geo-location
would be just another selector, but this information is not carried
explicitly with IP packets, however, it can be obtained using an IP
address as a key for looking-up the location in an IP database.
Online databases do exist, but these are usually limited to single queries
and in addition the look-up in an online database is by far too slow for
even thinking about being utilized at the firewall level, where IP packets
need to be processed in a microsecond time scale. Therefore, a locally
maintained Geo-location database is indispensable in the given respect.
The System's own routing and filtering tables can be configured to do
these tasks if there is a source of the appropriate data. The ipdbtools(1)
are designed to provide this data and to assist managing and using it.
XStow is a replacement of GNU Stow written in C++. It supports all features
of Stow with some extensions.
XStow as GNU Stow, are programs for managing the installation of software
packages, keeping them separate (/usr/local/stow/emacs
vs. /usr/local/stow/perl, for example) while making them appear to be
installed in the same place (/usr/local).
KRename is a powerful batch renamer for KDE. It allows you to easily
rename hundreds or even more files in one go. The filenames can be
created by parts of the original filename, numbering the files or
accessing hundreds of informations about the file, like creation
date or Exif informations of an image.
Tcplist makes a list of TCP connections to and from the local machine,
displaying the user name associated with the local end, and making use of
Ident services if available to determine the "user" at the other end.
Tcplist uses LSOF to do its low level work on 4.4BSD machines.
TimeMon gives a graphical representation of where the CPU cycles
are going. It's coarse, but better than nothing. The best feature
is that it runs in an icon on your dock, so that you never lose it.
LICENSE: Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute without fee
Toshctl is a command-line tool to allow access to much of the
Toshiba hardware interface developed by Jonathan Buzzard and
Linux toshset by Charles D. Schwieters.
It can do things linke set the LCD brightness, set CPU speed and set
fan speed.
Terminal ScreenSaver (or tss for short) is an attempt to clone and enhance
FreeBSD's text-mode screen saver. Although intended for GNU/Linux, it works
fine under FreeBSD and probably a lot of other Unix-based operating systems.
Unlike the daemonsaver in FreeBSD, you may choose ASCII art of your own liking
or make your own.
Conky is an advanced, highly configurable system monitor.
This port configures conky for use with the Awesome window manager
from x11-wm/awesome. Unless you're using Awesome or some other system
with a client pipe, you probably want the main version of Conky in
sysutils/conky.