Host-setup is a dialog(1) (or Xdialog(1)) based utility for configuring your
system. Built on the same safety and reliability of sysrc(8) to manage changes
to rc.conf(5), host-setup(1) can also activate changes to the system in a safe
and effective manner. Functionality includes (but may not be limited to):
- Configure Time Zone
- Configure Hostname/Domain
- Configure Network Interfaces
- Confgure Default Router/Gateway
- Configure DNS nameservers
From aaareadme.txt:
Say, what is this?
ODS2 is a program to read VMS disk volumes written in VMS
ODS2 format.
What can it do?
Basically ODS2 provides cut down DIRECTORY, COPY and
SEARCH commands for VMS volumes on non-VMS systems. These
can be used to find out what is on a VMS volume, and copy
files onto the local file sytem.
See aaareadme.txt and aaareadme.too for more information.
'userneu' is a Perl script that parses a list of usernames and additional
information (such as the real name or other information to be put in the
GECOS field in /etc/passwd) and creates Unix accounts and (if desired)
Samba accounts as well. If the script stumbles upon duplicate user names
it can append random characters to the username until it fits.
-Andreas Fehlner
fehlner@gmx.de
The XSL Cache extension is a modification of PHP's standard XSL extension
that caches the parsed XSL stylesheet representation between sessions for
2.5x boost in performance for sites that repeatedly apply the same
transform.
Although there is still some further work that could be done on
the extension, this code is already proving beneficial in production use for
a few applications on the New York Times' website.
Localize is an application to aid in the translation of .strings files.
.strings files must be distributed in ASCII encoding, which generally
isn't a convenient encoding to do translation in. As an example, its rather
difficult to enter Chinese characters into an ASCII encoded text file.
Localize will, with any luck, help out with this. Currently its just a
shell of an application, but sometime in the future I hope to complete it.
LICENSE: GPL2 or later
Number::Format is a library for formatting numbers. Functions are
provided for converting numbers to strings in a variety of ways, and to
convert strings that contain numbers back into numeric form. The output
formats may include thousands separators - characters inserted between
each group of three characters counting right to left from the decimal
point. The characters used for the decimal point and the thousands
separator come from the locale information or can be specified by the
user.
Seamus Venasse <svenasse@polaris.ca>
This module is for generating documents in Rich Text Format.
This module is a class; an object belonging to this class
acts like an output filehandle, and calling methods on it
causes RTF text to be written.
Incidentally, this module also exports a few useful functions,
upon request.
The following documentation assumes some familiarity with
the RTF Specification. Users not already intimately
familiar with RTF should look at RTF::Cookbook.
Text-Ngram
n-Gram analysis is a field in textual analysis which uses sliding
window character sequences in order to aid topic analysis, language
determination and so on. The n-gram spectrum of a document can be
used to compare and filter documents in multiple languages, prepare
word prediction networks, and perform spelling correction.
This module provides an efficient XS-based implementation of n-gram
spectrum analysis.
RTF::Tokenizer is an object-orientated low-level RTF reader. If
you're looking to render RTF, or want a higher-level RTF processor,
this is not the module for you - you want RTF::Reader. This is the
sixth release of RTF::Tokenizer - it's faster, higher quality, and
implements the RTF standard better than any previous release.
It's also philosophically a better module, and conforms more
strictly to Object Orientated guidelines - it can be sub-classed
and the interface is cleaner.
dbacl is a digramic Bayesian text classifier. Given some text,
it calculates the posterior probabilities that the input resembles
one of any number of previously learned document collections.
It can be used to sort incoming email into arbitrary categories
such as spam, work, and play, or simply to distinguish an English text
from a French text. It fully supports international character sets,
and uses sophisticated statistical models based on the
Maximum Entropy Principle.