scan_ffs(8) recovers accidential lost or deleted disklabels.
This is the life-saver of typos. If you have ever been working too long,
and just happened to type 'disklabel -rw da0 floppy', instead of 'diskla-
bel -rw fd0 floppy', you know what I am talking about.
This little program will take a raw disk device (which you might have to
create) that covers the whole disk, and finds all probable UFS/FFS parti-
tions on the disk. It has various options to make it go faster, and to
print out information to help in the reconstruction of the disklabel.
Ported from OpenBSD to FreeBSD 4/5 with support for UFS1 and UFS2.
wemux enhances tmux to make multi-user terminal multiplexing both easier and
more powerful. It allows users to host a wemux server and have clients join in
either:
* Mirror Mode gives clients (another SSH user on your machine) read-only access
to the session, allowing them to see you work, or
* Pair Mode allows the client and yourself to work in the same terminal (shared
cursor)
* Rogue Mode allows the client to pair or work independently in another window
(separate cursors) in the same tmux session.
It features multi-server support as well as user listing and notifications when
users attach/detach.
syslog-ng is an enhanced log daemon, supporting a wide range of input and
output methods: syslog, unstructured text, message queues, databases (SQL
and NoSQL alike) and more.
Key features:
* receive and send RFC3164 and RFC5424 style syslog messages
* work with any kind of unstructured data
* receive and send JSON formatted messages
* classify and structure logs with builtin parsers (csv-parser(),
db-parser(), ...)
* normalize, crunch and process logs as they flow through the system
* hand on messages for further processing using message queues (like
AMQP), files or databases (like PostgreSQL or MongoDB).
The official home page of syslog-ng is:
http://www.balabit.com/network-security/syslog-ng/
syslog-ng is an enhanced log daemon, supporting a wide range of input and
output methods: syslog, unstructured text, message queues, databases (SQL
and NoSQL alike) and more.
Key features:
* receive and send RFC3164 and RFC5424 style syslog messages
* work with any kind of unstructured data
* receive and send JSON formatted messages
* classify and structure logs with builtin parsers (csv-parser(),
db-parser(), ...)
* normalize, crunch and process logs as they flow through the system
* hand on messages for further processing using message queues (like
AMQP), files or databases (like PostgreSQL or MongoDB).
The official home page of syslog-ng is:
http://www.balabit.com/network-security/syslog-ng/
Full-text search system. You can search lots of documents for some documents
including specified words. If you run a web site, it is useful as your own
search engine for pages in your site. Also, it is useful as search utilities
of mail boxes and file servers.
The characteristic of Hyper Estraier is the following.
* High performance of search
* High scalability of target documents
* Perfect recall ratio by N-gram method
* Phrase search, attribute search, and similarity search
* Multilingualism with Unicode
* Independent of file format and repository
* Simple and powerful API
* Supporting P2P architecture
mdocml is a suite of tools compiling mdoc, the roff macro package of
choice for BSD manual pages, and man, the predominant historical
package for UNIX manuals. The mission of mdocml is to deprecate groff,
the GNU troff implementation, for displaying mdoc pages whilst
providing token support for man.
mdocml consists of the libmandoc validating compiler and mandoc, which
interfaces with the compiler library to format output for UNIX
terminals (with support for wide-character locales), XHTML, HTML,
PostScript, and PDF.
Disambiguation: mdocml is often referred to by its installed binary,
"mandoc".
How does Pod::WSDL work? If you instantiate a Pod::WSDL object with the
name of the module (or the path of the file, or an open filehandle)
providing the web service like this
my $pwsdl = new Pod::WSDL(source => 'My::Module',
location => 'http://my.services.location/on/the/web');
Pod::WSDL will try to find "My::Module" in @INC, open the file, parse it
for WSDL directives and prepare the information for WSDL output. By
calling
$pwsdl->WSDL;
Pod::WSDL will output the WSDL document. That's it.
Text::German - German grundform reduction
This is a rather incomplete implementaion of work done by Gudrun Putze-Meier
<gudrun.pm@t-online.de>. I have to confess that I never read her original
paper. So all credit belongs to her, all bugs are mine. I tried to get some
insight from an implementation of two students of mine. They remain anonymous
because their work was the wost piece of code I ever saw. My code behaves
mostly as their implementation did except it is about 75 times faster.
This experimental module is designed to allow for easy creation and
manipulation of OPML files. OPML files are most commonly used for the sharing
of blogrolls or subscriptions - an outlined list of what other blogs an
Internet blogger reads.
This is purely experimental at this point and has a few limitations. This
module may now support attributes in the <outline> element of an embedded
hierarchy, but these are limited to the following attributes: date_added,
date_downloaded, description, email, filename, htmlurl, keywords, text,
title, type, version, and xmlurl. Additionally, the following alternate
spellings are also supported: dateAdded, dateDownloaded, htmlUrl, and xmlUrl.
Popup is an interactive learning aid for pairs of words. It behaves much like
a stack of flashcards, but handles one-to-many and many-to-one word
relationships better, and includes an integrated scheduler for efficient use
of your 'cards'. Popup was written by Bjorn Ghola and Rob Burns.
Features:
* An editor for cardstack files with support for copying and pasting groups
of words, as well as drag and drop.
* Three quiz styles: multiple choice, spelling, and flashcard.
* Supports quizes and practice
* Graduated time interval scheduler.
* Localized for Thai and German.
LICENSE: GPL2 or later