Nomad is a cluster manager and schedular that provides a common workflow
to deploy applications across an infrastructure. Deploy virtualized,
containerized, or standalone application workloads across a fleet of
servers to maximize resource utilization.
https://www.nomadproject.io/
This utility is used to split up huge files into smaller pieces without
compression. It is fully compatible with HJSplit. HJSplit is a program
written by Freebyte!. See http://www.freebyte.com for more information
about HJSplit.
HTML::Entities::ImodePictogram handles HTML entities for i-mode
pictogram (emoji), which are assigned in Shift_JIS private area.
See http://www.nttdocomo.co.jp/i/tag/emoji/index.html for details
about i-mode pictogram.
MARC-XML is an extension to the MARC-Record distribution for working with
XML data encoded using the MARC21slim XML schema from the Library of Congress.
For more details see: http://www.loc.gov/standards/marcxml/
pyXLWriter is a Python library for generating Excel-compatible spreadsheets.
It's a port of John McNamara's Perl Spreadsheet::WriteExcel module (see
http://www.cpan.org) to Python.
This is a port the wonderful Mac OS X theme Aluminum Alloy. Original theme
created by Max Rudberg (http://www.maxrudberg.com/).
Theme comes in several flavors: volcanic, smog, cryogenic, toxic.
The Jakarta-ORO Java classes are a set of text-processing Java classes
that provide Perl5 compatible regular expressions, AWK-like regular
expressions, glob expressions, and utility classes for performing
substitutions, splits, filtering filenames, etc. This library is
the successor to the OROMatcher, AwkTools, PerlTools, and TextTools
libraries from ORO, Inc. (www.oroinc.com). They have been donated to
the Jakarta Project by Daniel Savarese (www.savarese.org), the
copyright holder of the ORO libraries.
This library provides an engine to interpret compiled KMFL keyboard
tables (textproc/kmflcomp) written in Keyman keyboard language.
The current implementation of KMFL uses either the IBus framework (via
textproc/ibus-kmfl) or the older SCIM framework (via
textproc/scim-kmfl-imengine) to handle the input method interface to X.
KMFL aims to bring Tavultesoft Keyman functionality to *nix operating
systems. KMFL is being jointly developed by SIL International
(http://www.sil.org) and Tavultesoft (http://www.tavultesoft.com).
This package contains regular expressions for the following XML tokens:
BaseChar, Ideographic, Letter, Digit, Extender, CombiningChar, NameChar,
EntityRef, CharRef, Reference, Name, NmToken, and AttValue.
The definitions of these tokens were taken from the XML spec
(Extensible Markup Language 1.0) at http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml.
Also contains the regular expressions for the following tokens from the
XML Namespaces spec at http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml-names:
NCNameChar, NCName, QName, Prefix and LocalPart.
A user may now build a list of rules that will be used to determine if unsafe
images (that are linked to remote sites) will be shown in HTML messages. If a
message matches any of the rules and contains images that would normally be
initially hidden, then they are now shown by default.
The user may choose to always show unsafe images, for all message. This is
obviously not recommended by the core SquirrelMail Project Team - or they
wouldn't have built this functionality to begin with ( See the following:
http://www.squirrelmail.org/wiki/UnsafeImages ).
A new section is added to the options page titled, 'Unsafe Image Rules'. Within
this page the user may define a number of rules to determine when messages are
from a trusted source.
These options are very similar to the core message filters plugin. A message
field (To, From, CC, Subject) can be matched either against a regular
expression, or simply searched to see if the given string is within the field.
If a match is found then unsafe images are always shown for this source.