xmms-curses is a simple application for controlling XMMS from the command line.
It is designed to make common, simple tasks fast and easy to do. It is operated
using arrow keys and standard XMMS keys, to make it easy and intuitive to learn.
Sexypsf is an XMMS plugin for playing .psf files.
The PSF format brings the functionality of NSF, SID, SPC, and GBS to next-
generation consoles. PSF utilizes the original music driver code from each
game to replay sequenced music in a perfectly authentic, and size-efficient,
way.
The general idea is that a PSF file contains a zlib-compressed program which,
if executed on the real console, would simply play the music.
This is a XMMS input plugin for playing .nsf and .hes audio files.
It supports all internal sound channels and the extra sound channels found in
the Konami VRC6, Konami VRC7, Namco 106, Nintendo MMC5, and Sunsoft FME-07
chips.
The extra sound channel present in the Famicom Disk System is also emulated.
XymMS is an XMMS input plugin capable of playing Sega Genesis GYM files by
rendering FM, DAC, and PSG signals through emulation of the YM2612 and SN76496
sound chips found in the video game console. It supports zlib compression and
decompression, and other various settings for output quality, etc. You can
compress and decompress files along with updating ID tags using the File Info
window.
iperf is a tool for measuring the maximum TCP and UDP bandwidth along
a path between two hosts. It allows the tuning of various
parameters and UDP characteristics, and reports bandwidth, delay
jitter, datagram loss. iperf was originally developed by NLANR/DAST.
iperf3 is a new implementation from scratch, with the goal of a
smaller, simpler code base, and a library version of the functionality
that can be used in other programs. iperf3 also a number of features
found in other tools such as nuttcp and netperf, but were missing from
iperf 2.x. iperf3 is not backwards compatible with iperf 2.x.
This is lmbench-3.0-a9, a (sometimes controversial) system performance
measurement tool. lmbench is a suite of simple, portable, ANSI/C
microbenchmarks for UNIX/POSIX. In general, it measures two key features:
latency and bandwidth. lmbench is intended to give system developers insight
into basic costs of key operations. You can go to /usr/local/lib/lmbench and
do one of the following:
make results (to run the benchmarks)
make rerun (to rerun the benchmarks)
make see (to see how you did)
mdtest is an MPI-coordinated metadata filesystem benchmark test that
performs open/stat/close operations on files and directories and then
reports achieved performance.
Fast indexing and retrieval of FASTA records from flat file data bases.
Slclust is a utility that performs single-linkage clustering with the option of
applying a Jaccard similarity coefficient to break weakly bound clusters into
distinct clusters.
ADMS is a code generator that converts electrical compact device models
specified in high-level description language into ready-to-compile C
code for the API of spice simulators.