pkg_cleanup finds packages that are not requested by any other installed
package and lets you decide for each one if you want to keep it or delete it.
It also allows viewing the package comment and description.
This program is essentially a clone of pkg_rmleaves except that it shows
the comment and description of packages and does not support GUI dialog(1)
implementations.
pkg_rmleaves finds packages that are not required (depended on) by any
other installed package and lets you decide (in a beautiful dialog interface)
for each one if you want to keep it or deinstall it.
Portal is a front-end to FreeBSD's package manipulation tool pkg(8).
Currently, the application is a MVP (Minimum Viable Product) which
provides only the following features: packages listing and searching,
installation and deinstallation of packages, and filtering based on
the package state.
A little script for removing leaf packages (requires pkgng).
Manage your own packages build on a dedicated build system.
The build system does the update of the ports tree,
moving old packages out of the way, fetch and rebuild
the packages you need. Its ports tree with packages
is served to the production systems and desktops.
On a system you can update installed ports with
the clean build packages from the build system.
The pkg-config program retrieves information about installed libraries,
usually for the purposes of compiling against and linking to them.
ExtUtils::PkgConfig is a very simplistic interface to this utility,
intended for use in the Makefile.PL of perl extensions which bind
libraries that pkg-config knows. It is really just boilerplate code
that you would've written yourself.
OctoPkg is a graphical front-end to the pkg-ng package manager. OctoPkg enables
users to search for, install, remove and upgrade pkg-ng packages through a
simple GUI interface.
PkgConfig provides a pure-perl, core-only replacement for the pkg-config
utility.
This is not a description of the uses of pkg-config but rather a description of
the differences between the C version and the Perl one.
While pkg-config is a compiled binary linked with glib, the pure-perl version
has no such requirement, and will run wherever Perl ( >= 5.6 ) does.
The main supported options are the common --libs, --cflags, --static, --exists
and --modversion.
pkgconfig is a Python module to interface with the pkg-config command line tool.
Libeio is a full-featured asynchronous I/O library for C, modelled in
similar style and spirit as libev.
Features include: asynchronous read, write, open, close, stat, unlink,
fdatasync, mknod, readdir etc. (basically the full POSIX API), sendfile
(native on Solaris, Linux, HP-UX, FreeBSD, emulated everywhere else),
read-ahead (emulated where not available). It is fully event-library
agnostic and can easily be integrated into any event-library (or used
standalone, even in polling mode).