HEYU is a text-based console program for remotely controlling lights and
appliances in the home or office. It is made available under a free and open
source license.
Heyu uses the CM11A computer interface to send and receive X10 control signals
over the AC power lines to modules which can turn On, Off, or Dim attached
lamps or appliances. It can store a schedule of timed events in the CM11A
memory for execution when the computer is turned off or disconnected.
Heyu now supports an optional W800RF32A or MR26A RF receiver connected to a
second port as an auxiliary input device for X10 RF signals.
Heyu can also use an optional CM17A interface to transmit X10 RF signals.
Gnatsweb is a web interface to GNATS, the GNU Problem Report
Management System. It is a Perl CGI script which runs on your
web server.
This module merely sub-classes YAPE::Regex, and produces a rather verbose
explanation of a regex, suitable for demonstration and tutorial purposes.
ExifTool is a highly customizable Perl script and module for reading and
writing meta information in images.
ExifTool reads EXIF, GPS, IPTC, XMP, GeoTIFF, ICC Profile and Photoshop
IRB and ID3 meta information from JPG, JP2, TIFF, GIF, BMP, PICT, QTIF,
PNG, MNG, JNG, MIFF, PPM, PGM, PBM, XMP, EPS, PS, AI, PDF, PSD, DCM,
ACR, THM, CRW, CR2, MRW, NEF, PEF, ORF, RAF, RAW, SRF, MOS, X3F and DNG
images, MP3 and WAV audio files, and AVI, MOV and MP4 videos. ExifTool
also extracts information from the maker notes of many digital cameras
by various manufacturers including Canon, Casio, FujiFilm, JVC/Victor,
Kodak, Leaf, Minolta/Konica-Minolta, Nikon, Olympus/Epson,
Panasonic/Leica, Pentax/Asahi, Ricoh, Sanyo and Sigma/Foveon.
ExifTool writes EXIF, GPS, IPTC, XMP and MakerNotes meta information to
JPEG, TIFF, GIF, CRW, THM, CR2, NEF, PEF and DNG images.
ExifTool is a highly customizable Perl script and module for reading and
writing meta information in images.
ExifTool reads EXIF, GPS, IPTC, XMP, GeoTIFF, ICC Profile and Photoshop
IRB and ID3 meta information from JPG, JP2, TIFF, GIF, BMP, PICT, QTIF,
PNG, MNG, JNG, MIFF, PPM, PGM, PBM, XMP, EPS, PS, AI, PDF, PSD, DCM,
ACR, THM, CRW, CR2, MRW, NEF, PEF, ORF, RAF, RAW, SRF, MOS, X3F and DNG
images, MP3 and WAV audio files, and AVI, MOV and MP4 videos. ExifTool
also extracts information from the maker notes of many digital cameras
by various manufacturers including Canon, Casio, FujiFilm, JVC/Victor,
Kodak, Leaf, Minolta/Konica-Minolta, Nikon, Olympus/Epson,
Panasonic/Leica, Pentax/Asahi, Ricoh, Sanyo and Sigma/Foveon.
ExifTool writes EXIF, GPS, IPTC, XMP and MakerNotes meta information to
JPEG, TIFF, GIF, CRW, THM, CR2, NEF, PEF and DNG images.
COPYRIGHT ISSUES:
This version of 'libident' is hereby released into the
Public Domain. It may be distributed for a fee or without
a fee. We only ask you not to pretend you wrote it.
If you make any changes, please send sources or a diff of it to
us (pen@lysator.liu.se or pell@lysator.liu.se), so we can keep
_one_ unified version of libident available...
COMMENTS:
This is the second stab at a small library to interface to the Ident
protocol server. Maybe this will work correctly on some machines.. :-)
The ident-tester.c file is a small daemon (to be started from Inetd)
that does an ident lookup on you if you telnet into it. Can be used
to verify that your Ident server is working correctly.
I'm currently running this "ident-tester" on port 114 at lysator.liu.se
(130.236.254.1) if you wish to test your server.
It is stupidly complicated to detect whether a given scalar is a filehandle (or
something filehandle like) in Perl. This module attempts to do so, but probably
falls short in some cases. The primary advantage of using this module is that it
gives you somebody to blame (me) if your code can't detect a filehandle.
The main use case for IO::Detect is for when you are writing functions and you
want to allow the caller to pass a file as an argument without being fussy as to
whether they pass a file name or a file handle.
liblastfm is a collection of libraries to help you integrate Last.fm services
into your rich desktop software. It is officially supported software developed
by Last.fm staff.
This module implements asynchronous notifications that enable you
to signal running perl code from another thread, asynchronously,
and sometimes even without using a single syscall.
This module finds a DateTime::Format::* class that is suitable for the use with
a given DBI connection (and DBD::* driver).
It currently supports the following drivers: MySQL, PostgreSQL (Pg).