trivial-features ensures consistent *FEATURES* across multiple
Common Lisp implementations.
For example, on MacOS X platforms, while most Lisps push :DARWIN
to *FEATURES*, CLISP and Allegro push :MACOS and :MACOSX instead,
respectively. Some Lisps might not push any feature suggesting MacOS
X at all. trivial-features will make sure all Lisps will have :DARWIN
in the *FEATURES* list when running on MacOS X.
DITrack is a free, open source, lightweight, distributed issue (bug,
defect, ticket) tracking system using a Subversion repository instead
of a backend database. It is written in Python and runs in UNIX
environment (*BSD, Linux, MacOS X).
trivial-gray-streams is a trivial library which provides an extremely
thin compatibility layer for Gray streams.
From David N. Gray's STREAM-DEFINITION-BY-USER proposal:
"Common Lisp does not provide a standard way for users to define
their own streams for use by the standard I/O functions. This impedes
the development of window systems for Common Lisp because, while
there are standard Common Lisp I/O functions and there are beginning
to be standard window systems, there is no portable way to connect
them together to make a portable Common Lisp window system. There
are also many applications where users might want to define their
own filter streams for doing things like printer device control,
report formatting, character code translation, or encryption/decryption."
Dmake is a make utility similar to GNU make or the Workshop dmake.
dmake is different from other versions of Make in that it supports
significant enhancements.
The original author(s) were WTICorp.com, but they appear to have lost
interest in maintaining the code.
This port installs the version previously maintained by the Apache
OpenOffice project.
The debug memory allocation or dmalloc library has been designed as a
portable drop in replacement for the system's memory management
routines while providing powerful debugging facilities configurable at
runtime. These facilities include such things as memory-leak
tracking, fence-post write detection, file/line number reporting, and
general logging of statistics. Online documentation is available at:
DMUCS is a system that allows a group of users to share a compilation farm.
Each compilation request from each user will be sent to the fastest available
machine, every time. The system has these fine qualities:
* Supports multiple users compiling simultaneously, and scales well to handle
the new loads.
* Supports multiple operating systems in the compilation farm.
* Uses all processors of a multi-processor compilation host.
* Makes best use of compilation hosts with widely differing CPU speeds.
* Guarantees that a compilation host will not be overloaded by compilations.
* Takes into account the load on a host caused by non-compilation tasks.
* Supports the dynamic addition and removal of hosts to the compilation farm.
* Works with distcc, which need not be altered in any way.
The Linux kernel.
This port is a building block for creating custom Linux appliances in
FreeBSD as part of your regular package build without a Linux VM or
jail.
Provide your own Linux kernel configuration file via the LINUX_KCONFIG
make variable, or create your own via support of Linux' config tools.
The default configuration comes with QEMU/KVM guest support.
dot.conf is a simple configuration-file parser library written in C.
The configuration files created for dot.conf look very similar to
those used by the Apache Webserver. Even Container-Directives known
from httpd.conf can easily be used in the exact same manner as for
Apache-Modules. It supports various types of arguments, dynamically
loadable modules that create their own configuration options
on-the-fly, a here-documents feature to pass very long ARG_STR data
to your app, ${NAME:-default} style environment variable
substitution for arguments, and on-the-fly inclusion of additional
config files. Some behaviour can be toggled with flags at runtime.
To keep dotconf from printing out warnings, you can install your
own customized error handler.
The LLVM Project is a collection of modular and reusable compiler and
toolchain technologies.
This port includes Clang (a C/C++/Objective-C compiler), LLD (a linker),
LLDB (a debugger), an OpenMP runtime library, and the LLVM infrastructure
these are built on.