This photo gallery software makes web albums of your digital images.
JAlbum aims to be the easiest to use and most powerful tool in this
category - and free!
JAlbum is written after numerous disappointments with existing photo
gallery software. With JAlbum you have full control of the look of
the generated album, not just color theme and basic layout, still
making an album is just a matter of drag and drop + a button click
if you prefer to use one of the many existing looks. JAlbum will
process your images, make index pages and slide show pages and even
upload the final album to the Internet for your friends to see. No
extra software is needed to view the albums, -just your web browser.
Unlike "server side" album scripts, JAlbum albums can be served
from a plain web server without scripting support. You can also
share your albums on CD-ROM.
This is a port of the ircd-ratbox IRC daemon.
ircd-ratbox is the primary ircd used on EFnet; it combines the stability
of an ircd required for a large production network together with a rich
set of features, making it also suitable for use on smaller networks.
Changes Include:
o Optional SSL support to enable encrypted connections between clients
and servers, as well as server to server links.
o Add support for SSL only channels, channel mode +S.
o sqlite3 for handling and storing k/x/d lines.
o Support for global CIDR limits.
o Added adminwall allowing admins to broadcast messages to each other.
o Creation of new library archive 'libratbox'.
o Support for forced nick changes (instead of collision kills).
o New ssld and bandb processes for SSL connections and ban checking;
these allow ratbox-3 to make better use of multi-processor systems.
msmtp -- An SMTP client
msmtp is an SMTP client that can be used as an "SMTP plugin" for Mutt and
probably other MUAs (mail user agents). It forwards mails to an SMTP server
(for example at a free mail provider) which does the delivery.
To use this program, create a configuration file with your mail account(s) and
tell your MUA to call msmtp instead of /usr/sbin/sendmail.
Features include:
* SMTP AUTH methods PLAIN, LOGIN and CRAM-MD5
(and DIGEST-MD5 and NTLM when compiled with GSASL support)
* TLS encrypted connections
(including server certificate verification and the possibility to send
a client certificate)
* DSN (Delivery Status Notification) support
* IPv6 support (on systems that support it)
* support for multiple accounts
* sendmail compatible exit codes (which most MUAs understand).
Note: you may want to install mail/msmtpqueue - queuing support for msmtp.
Fetchmail is a full-featured IMAP/POP2/POP3/APOP/KPOP/ETRN/ODMR client with
easy configuration, daemon mode, forwarding via SMTP or local MDA, and
superior reply handling. It is used to handle intermittent email connections
by acting as a coupling that seamlessly batch forwards fetched mail from your
mail server to your local delivery system, allowing you to read it with your
favourite mail user agent. Fetchmail also includes useful spam filtering and
multi-user functions.
A typical use of fetchmail is to connect to your ISP's POP3 server,
downloading your mail into the INBOX on your local computer. You may then
read the mail, offline if you want, using pine, mutt, or any standard mail
user agent.
Spamd is a fake sendmail(8)-like daemon which rejects false mail. It is
designed to be very efficient so that it does not slow down the receiving
machine.
spamd considers sending hosts to be of three types:
blacklisted hosts are redirected to spamd and tarpitted i.e. they are
communicated with very slowly to consume the sender's resources. Mail is
rejected with either a 450 or 550 error message. A blacklisted host will not
be allowed to talk to a real mail server.
whitelisted hosts do not talk to spamd. Their connections are instead sent to
a real mail server, such as sendmail(8).
greylisted hosts are redirected to spamd, but spamd has not yet decided if
they are likely spammers. They are given a temporary failure message by spamd
when they try to deliver mail.
The Zillion Project is a distributed computing project reminiscent of the good
old Zilla.app of NeXTstep days. It is based on GNUstep, the most promising
OPENSTEP replacement as of today. Jobs can be created from simple template
projects and can be submitted with a single command to the Zillion Server
which in turn will distribute the job amongst the registered clients. No other
network resources than the distributed objects (DO) port of the server machine
has to be available. The key features are as follows:
* Rapid turn around cycles for job submission
* Dynamic addition/removal of client nodes
* Full OO-design
* No need for shared network resources
* Real-time capabilities
* Lean and clean
* Open and free
LICENSE: BSD
Apache JMeter is a 100% pure Java desktop application designed to
load test functional behavior and measure performance. It was
originally designed for testing Web Applications but has since
expanded to other test functions.
Apache JMeter may be used to test performance both on static and
dynamic resources (files, Servlets, Perl scripts, Java Objects,
Data Bases and Queries, FTP Servers and more). It can be used to
simulate a heavy load on a server, network or object to test its
strength or to analyze overall performance under different load
types. You can use it to make a graphical analysis of performance
or to test your server/script/object behavior under heavy
concurrent load.
In addition to load-testing, the tool can also be used to verify
correctness of your web-applications.
PulseAudio Volume Control (pavucontrol) is a simple GTK based volume control
tool ("mixer") for the PulseAudio sound server. In contrast to classic mixer
tools this one allows you to control both the volume of hardware devices and of
each playback stream separately.
Music Player Minion is a client for the Music Player Daemon network
music player. The purpose of MPD and it's clients is to allow music
playback on one PC (such as a home media server) to be controlled
from another over the network.
Blogbench is a portable filesystem benchmark that tries to reproduce the
load of a real-world busy file server.
It stresses the filesystem with multiple threads performing random reads,
writes and rewrites in order to get a realistic idea of the scalability
and the concurrency a system can handle.