`slibtool` is an independent reimplementation of the widely used libtool,
written in C. `slibtool` is designed to be a clean, fast, easy-to-use
libtool drop-in replacement, and is accordingly aimed at package authors,
distro developers, and system integrators. `slibtool` maintains compatibility
with libtool in nearly every aspect of the tool's functionality as well as
semantics, leaving out (or turning into a no-op) only a small number of
features that are no longer needed on modern systems.
Being a compiled binary, and although not primarily written for the sake of
performance, building a package with `slibtool` is often faster than with its
script-based counterpart. The resulting performance gain would normally vary
between packages, and is most noticeable in builds that invoke libtool a large
number of times, and which are characterized by the short compilation duration
of individual translation units.
SOPE is an extensive set of frameworks which form a complete Web
application server environment. Besides the Apple WebObjects
compatible appserver extended with Zope concepts, it contains a large
set of reusable classes: XML processing (SAX, DOM, XML-RPC),
MIME/IMAP4 processing, LDAP connectivity, RDBMS connectivity, and
iCalendar parsing.
spdict is a library of dictionary algorithms written in C++.
Initial release with support for sorted array, binary search tree,
red-black tree, skip list and balanced tree algorithms.
Stack is a cross-platform program for developing Haskell projects.
It is aimed at Haskellers both new and experienced.
The StormLib library is a pack of modules, written in C++,
which are able to read and also to write files from/to the MPQ archives.
QuickCheck++ is a tool for testing C++ programs automatically,
inspired by QuickCheck, a similar library for Haskell programs.
In QuickCheck++, the application programmer provides a specification
of parts of its code in the form of properties which this code must
satisfy. Then, the QuickCheck++ utilities can check that these
properties holds in a large number of randomly generated test cases.
Specifications, i.e. properties, are written in C++ by deriving
from the quickcheck::Property class. This class contains members
not only to express the specification but also to observe the
distribution of test data and to write custom test data generators.
The framework also allows the specification of fixed test data, as
can be done with more traditional unit testing frameworks.
quilt is a collection of bash scripts to manage a series of patches by
keeping track of the changes each patch makes. Patches can be applied,
un-applied, refreshed, etc.
The key philosophical concept is that your primary output is
patches. Not ".c" files, not ".h" files. But patches. So patches are
the first-class object here.
Quilt was originally based on Andrew Morton's patch scripts published
on the Linux kernel mailing list.
Opensource tools to disasm, debug, analyze and manipulate binary files.
* Multi-architecture multi-platform
* Highly scriptable
* Hexadecimal editor
* IO is wrapped
* Filesystems support
* Debugger support
* Diffing between two functions or binaries
* Code analysis at opcode, basicblock, function levels
* And More...
Ragel compiles finite state machines from regular languages into runnable C
code. Ragel state machines can not only recognize byte sequences as regular
expression machines do, but can also execute code at arbitrary points in the
recognition of a regular language.
When you wish to write down a regular language you start with some simple
regular language and build a bigger one using the regular language operators
union, concatenation, kleene star, intersection and subtraction. This is
precisely the way you describe to Ragel how to compile your finite state
machines. Ragel also understands operators that insert function calls into
machines and operators that control any non-determinism in machines.