Server Spy indicates what brand of HTTP server (e.g. Apache, IIS, etc.)
runs on the visited sites.
http://www.linuxtv.org/vdrwiki/index.php/Remote-plugin
This plugin extends the remote control capabilities of vdr.
The following remote control devices are supported:
(a) Linux input device driver ('/dev/input/eventX', X=0,1,2,...)
(currently not supported on FreeBSD)
(b) keyboard (tty driver): /dev/console, /dev/ttyX
(c) TCP connection (telnet)
(d) LIRC
(e) some(?) FreeBSD uhid(4) devices (experimental support added by this port)
To use, add something like this to vdr_flags: '-Premote -h /dev/uhid0',
(re)start vdr, then the osd should ask you to configure the
remote by pressing the buttons you want to assign.
Note: If your remote is detected as a keyboard you'll have to
tell ukbd(4) to ignore it first by doing (as root) something like:
usbconfig add_dev_quirk_vplh 0x1241 0xe000 0 0xffff UQ_KBD_IGNORE
(and possibly unplug it for a moment or reset it via usbconfig,
0x1241 there is the vendor id, 0xe000 the product id of the
device, you can get yours by doing
usbconfig -d 1.2 dump_device_desc
and looking for idVendor and idProduct, -d 1.2 there corresponds
to ugen1.2 listed by usbconfig w/o args.)
You can check with:
usbconfig show_ifdrv
if the device is then listed as ugen...: uhid... you're good to go.
2nd note: If vdr cannot open your uhid device check it is not claimed
by xorg:
fstat |grep uhid
If it is you may need an xorg.conf(5) with manually defined
InputDevice sections for mouse and keyboard and
Option "AutoAddDevices" "False"
in the ServerFlags section.
And if for some reason you want to reassign the buttons on the
remote you can stop vdr and do:
touch /usr/local/etc/vdr/channels.conf
and/or remove uhid entries from
/usr/local/etc/vdr/remote.conf .
When you then start vdr again it should ask to configure the
remote again.
Log4sh is a logging framework for shell scripts that works similar to
the other wonderful logging products available from the Apache Software
Foundation (eg. log4j, log4perl). Although not as powerful as the
others, it can make the task of adding advanced logging to shell scripts
easier. It has much more power than just using simple "echo" commands
throughout. In addition, it can be configured from a properties file so
that scripts in a production environment do not need to be altered to
change the amount of logging they produce.
Poe: A Pugnacious Ogg Editor. Poe is a vorbis comment editor. It tries to
follow the vorbis comment header specification closely, while being convenient
and flexible to use. Towards that end, it doesn't have a static 'form' style
interface. Instead, it has an editable table of comments. The contents of the
table change dependent upon preference settings, and what comments are in the
ogg file you are editing.
LICENSE: GPL2 or later
pdnsd is a proxy dns server with permanent caching (the cache contents are
written to hard disk on exit) that is designed to cope with unreachable or
down dns servers (for example in dial-in networking).
pdnsd can be used with applications that do dns lookups, eg on startup, and
can't be configured to change that behavior, to prevent the often minute-long
hangs (or even crashes) that result from stalled dns queries. Some Netscape
Navigator versions for Unix, for example, expose this behavior.
pdnsd is configurable via a file and supports run-time configuration using the
program pdnsd-ctl that comes with pdnsd. This allows you to set the status
flags of servers that pdnsd knows (to influence which servers pdnsd will
query), and the addition, deletion and invalidation of DNS records in pdnsd's
cache.
Parallel name server queries are supported. This is a technique that allows
querying several servers at the same time so that very slow or unavailable
servers will not block the answer for one timeout interval.
Since version 1.0.0, pdnsd has full IPv6 support.
X-12-ARIMA is seasonal adjustment software produced, distributed,
and maintained by the U.S. Census Bureau, where it is used for
all official seasonal adjustments.
Catalyst View class for XML::Simple.
Mixi is most famous as SNS of Japan.
Originally, PQIV was written as a drop-in replacement for QIV. The first
release was not more than a Python script, hence the name. Now, PQIV is
a (modulo some small extras) full featured clone of QIV written in C
using GTK-2 and GLIB-2.
Features include:
* Command line image viewer
* Directory traversing to view whole directories
* Watch files and directories for changes
* Natural order sorting of the images
* A status bar showing information on the current image
* Transparency and animation support
* Moving, zooming, rotation, flipping
* Slideshows
* Highly customizable
* Supports external image filters (e.g. convert)
* Preloads the next image in the background
* Fade between images
* Optional PDF/eps/ps support (useful e.g. for scientific plots)
* Optional video format support (e.g. for webm animations)