Miscellaneous programming items which are mainly used in many
GNU sources.
reviewboard extension for mercurial
This extension adds a new command 'postreview' to post changesets for
review to a reviewboard server.
This set of scripts allows to work locally on Subversion-managed
projects using the Mercurial distributed version control system.
Why use Mercurial? You can do local (disconnected) work, pull the
latest changes from the SVN server, manage private branches, submit
patches to project maintainers, etc. And of course you have fast
local operations like "hg log", "hg annotate"...
Three scripts are provided:
* hgimportsvn initializes an SVN checkout which is also a
Mercurial repository.
* hgpullsvn pulls the latest changes from the SVN repository,
and updates the Mercurial repository accordingly. It can
be run multiple times.
* hgpushsvn pushes your local Mercurial commits back to the SVN repository.
A faster implementation of hgk using pyqt4. Its primary purpose
was to be able to browse the Linux kernel mercurial repository.
Framework needed by Project Manager.
LICENSE: MIT / FDL
The Apache Hive data warehouse software facilitates querying and managing
large datasets residing in distributed storage. Hive provides a mechanism
to project structure onto this data and query the data using a SQL-like
language called HiveQL. At the same time this language also allows
traditional map/reduce programmers to plug in their custom mappers and
reducers when it is inconvenient or inefficient to express this logic in HiveQL.
This application provides tagging support for the other Horde applications.
The timeobjects application doesn't have an interface but provides streams
of events to any applications that can consume them, notably the Horde
calendar application. It contains drivers for facebook events and weather
forecasts and can easily be extended by custom drivers.
Whups is Horde's ticket-tracking application. It is very flexible in design,
and can be used for help-desk requests, tracking sofware development, and
anything else that needs to track a set of requests and their status.
DrIFT is a type sensitive preprocessor for Haskell. It extracts type
declarations and directives from modules. The directives cause rules to
be fired on the parsed type declarations, generating new code which is
then appended to the bottom of the input file. The rules are expressed
as Haskell code, and it is intended that the user can add new rules as
required. DrIFT automates instance derivation for classes that aren't
supported by the standard compilers. In addition, instances can be
produced in separate modules to that containing the type declaration.
This allows instances to be derived for a type after the original module
has been compiled. As a bonus, simple utility functions can also be
produced from a type.