These are Steve Baker <sjbaker1@airmail.net>'s portability libraries. They
are licensed under the LGPL.
The following libraries are provided:
JS -- A Joystick interface.
PUI -- A simple GUI built on top of OpenGL.
SG -- Some Standard Geometry functions (vector and
matrix math, spheres, boxes, frustra, etc)
SL -- A Games-oriented Sound Library.
SSG -- A Simple Scene Graph API built on top of OpenGL.
Esmtp is a wrapper for SMTP client library based on the libESMTP library
(http://www.stafford.uklinux.net/libesmtp/). You can use it to send messages
using internal SASL, and external/openssl SSL support.
TorrentZip creates byte-for-byte exact zip files on any machine. This allows
people to join a torrent (after they have converted their zip files) with a
particular set of files, thus preventing them from having to download the
entire set of files again. Because of the way TorrentZip creates identical
zips, the file hashes will always match those in the original torrent.
https://sourceforge.net/projects/trrntzip
GeographicLib is a small set of C++ classes for performing conversions
between geographic, UTM, UPS, MGRS, geocentric, and local cartesian
coordinates, for gravity (e.g., EGM2008), geoid height, and geomagnetic
field (e.g., WMM2010) calculations, and for solving geodesic problems.
The library may be used from .NET applications using the NETGeographicLib
wrapper library. It is a suitable replacement for the core functionality
provided by geotrans.
Tcllib is a collection of utility modules for Tcl. The intent is to
collect commonly used function into a single library, which users can
rely on to be available and stable.
There are too many modules now to list here. Browse the on-line
documentation at
http://tcllib.sourceforge.net/doc/
to get the idea.
This port installs pure-Tcl versions of the modules only.
C-implementations -- for some of the modules -- can be added by
installing devel/tcllibc port.
MLDonkey is an OCAML/GTK client for a number of
peer-to-peer networks.
It is separated into a core with telnet and web
interfaces, and a GTK GUI.
The following protocols are supported:
- eDonkey (http://www.edonkey2000.com/)
- Overnet (http://www.overnet.com/)
- Bittorrent (http://www.bittorrent.com/)
- Gnutella (http://www.gnutella.org/)
- Gnutella2 (http://www.shareaza.com/)
- Fasttrack (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fasttrack)
- FileTP [http/ftp/ssh] (http://mldonkey.sourceforge.net/FileTP)
- Kademlia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kad_Network)
This is the doinkd - user activity monitor project ("idled")
This project was registered on SourceForge.net on May 25, 2006, and is
described by the project team as follows:
The idle daemon (doinkd) monitors user activity and logs them off when
predefined rules are met. These include session time, multiple logins,
tty, idletime and group limits. Similar to the Unix idleout command,
but much more configurable. Formerly idled.
dotProject is a PHP web-based project management framework that includes modules
for companies, projects, tasks (with Gantt charts), forums, files, calendar,
contacts, tickets/helpdesk, multi-language support, user/module permissions and
themes.
Features Include
* User Management
* Email based trouble Ticket System, (Integrated voxel.net's ticketsmith)
* Client/Company Management
* Project listings
* Hierarchical Task List
* File Repository
* Contact List
* Calendar
* Discussion Forum
* Resource Based Permissions
DictEm is a dict client for GNU Emacs.
It uses a console dict client (http://sf.net/projects/dict) and
implements all functions of the client part of DICT protocol
(RFC-2229, www.dict.org), i.e. looking up words and definitions,
obtaining information about available strategies, provided databases,
information about DICT server etc.
EFlite is a speech server for Emacspeak and other screen readers that allows
them to interface with Festival Lite, a free text-to-speech engine developed at
the CMU Speech Center as an off-shoot of Festival. EFlite is still in beta,
but I have been using it successfully with Yasr to get speech on my notebook
under Linux without having to lug my Speak-out around. It uses Festival Lite's
code to interface with the sound driver and, therefore, should work with some
versions of ALSA, but I have only tested it with the OSS sound drivers so far.
Michael P. Gorse
mgorse@alum.wpi.edu
mgorse@users.sf.net