This module will parse a Zone File and put all the Resource Records (RRs) into
an anonymous hash structure. At the moment, the following types of RRs are
supported: SOA, NS, MX, A, CNAME, TXT, PTR. It could be useful for maintaining
DNS zones, or for transferring DNS zones to other servers. If you want to
generate an XML-friendly version of your zone files, it is easy to use
XML::Simple with this module once you have parsed the zonefile.
DNS::ZoneParse scans the DNS zonefile - removes comments and separates the file
into it's constituent records. It then parses each record and stores the
records internally. See below for information on the accessor methods.
You've found David Firth's Atari 800 emulator which can emulate the
8-bit Atari 800 and XL series of home computers.
Please refer to /usr/local/share/doc/atari800 (or equivalent on your
system) for the distribution documents. A man page has also been
installed. The system wide configuration file can be found at
/usr/local/share/atari800/atari800.cfg (or similar) which you will probably
want to copy to your home directory, at some stage, to personalise the
settings.
The ROM's for the Atari computers are, unfortunately, copyright. This
port will attempt to down-load another freeware Atari emulator for DOS
called PC Xformer 2.5 which contains copies of these ROM files. If you
would like to take a further look at XF2.5 you should find it in your
distfiles directory (if it successfully down-loaded :->).
=======================================
The GGZ Gaming Zone - GTK+ Game Modules
=======================================
GGZ Gaming Zone GTK+ Game Modules provide the game executables,
graphics, and data for a number of popular (and unique) network games.
These games are coded for version 2.X of GTK+, but many of them are also
available using different graphical interfaces.
This version of the GTK+ Game Modules (0.0.13) requires version 0.0.13
of the ggz-client-libs.
The GTK+ Game Modules are only one part of the GGZ Gaming Zone
client setup. The following additional modules are required:
* libggz - provides commonly used functions and low-level
communications between client modules and the GGZ servers
* ggz-client-libs - provides common procedures and utilites required
to run the GGZ client and games
* gtk-client/kde-client - one or more of the GGZ clients will be
required in order to login to a server, chat and launch games
iMaze is a multi-player network action game for TCP/IP with 3D graphics
under X11 (XView, Motif or Athena). You run through a labyrinth and shoot
everything that is round without being hit by other round anythings.
Of course anything round is one of the following:
* other players playing over the net
* computer controlled ninjas
* deadly shots (except your own)
Features:
* sophisticated, reliable network protocol, works even with SLIP connections
via modem; modular, portable source code
* windows can be freely scaled to avoid speed drawbacks due to poor display
performance
* sound and joystick support
* scores; camera mode; labyrinth generator and interactive labyrinth editor
Audio support is somewhat flaky on FreeBSD (synchronization problems).
It works better with the old Voxware driver than with the current pcm driver.
Aview is powerful graphics viewer which utilize the aalib API and allows
viewing netpbm format (and others in the presence of netpbm or ImageMagick)
on console (using slang) and X.
There are three programs.
aview: the main program which could used to view pnm, ppm, pgm and pbm
files. It runs under X or slang.
asciiview: a shell script wraps around aview to allow wider range of image
formats to be viewed. Netpbm package is required for the conversion.
aaflip: a program to view flip animation using ascii text. Works under X
and slang.
You could press h to get help. You may also save the pics in various text
format. Thanks to aalib!
pngcheck verifies the integrity of PNG, JNG and MNG files
(by checking the internal 32-bit CRCs [checksums] and decompressing
the image data); it can optionally dump almost all of the chunk-level
information in the image in human-readable form.
For example, it can be used to print the basic statistics about an image
(dimensions, bit depth, etc.); to list the color and transparency info
in its palette (assuming it has one); or to extract the embedded text
annotations. This is a command-line program with batch capabilities.
pngsplit - break a PNG, MNG or JNG image into constituent chunks
(numbered for easy reassembly)
png-fix-IDAT-windowsize - fix minor zlib-header breakage caused by
older libpng
This port implements support for loading and using PNG images with
Tcl/Tk. Although other extensions such as Img also add support for PNG
images, I wanted something that was lightweight, did not depend on libpng,
and which would be suitable for inclusion in the Tk core, as Tk does not
currently support any image formats natively that take advantage of its
internal support for alpha blending, and alpha antialiasing and drop shadows
really go a long way toward beautifying Tk applications.
At this time, the package supports reading images from files or binary
data. Base64 decoding is supported as of version 0.6. Exporting images
to PNG format is not supported yet.
The package supports the full range of color types, channels and bit
depths from 1 bit black & white to 16 bit per channel full color
with alpha (64 bit RGBA) and interlacing. Ancillary "chunks" such
as gamma, color profile, and text fields are ignored, although they
are checked at a minimum for correct CRC.
dircproxy is an IRC proxy server designed for people who use IRC
from lots of different workstations or clients, but wish to remain
connected and see what they missed while they were away. You connect
to IRC through dircproxy, and it keeps you connected to the server,
even after you detach your client from it. While you're detached,
it logs channel and private messages as well as important events,
and when you re-attach it'll let you know what you missed.
This can be used to give you roughly the same functionality as
using ircII and screen together, except you can use whatever IRC
client you like, including X ones!
dircproxy has a whole host of features. Please read the file README in
the source distribution for a list.
[ excerpt from developer's web site with modifications ]
Mircryption is a free encryption add-on for the popular irc clients
mIRC and XChat. Features:
- Channel text, Private query windows, DCC Chats, Actions, Topics can
all be encrypted. All crypto-related algorithms used are taken from
published, common, trusted sources. Encryption algorithm is Blowfish
(no known vulnerabilities); encryption keys are themselves stored
in encrypted form.
- Supports CBC mode encryption.
- No need to modify the way you work - text is encrypted and decrypted
automatically; encryption status of conversations is clear but
unobtrusive.
- User-friendly key management routines; menu driven and easy to
temporarily disable & re-enable encryption on a channel, send plain
text quicky, etc.
LICENSE: free without any limitation
Munger is a simplified, statically-scoped, interpreted lisp specialized for
writing text processors for 8-bit text. With Munger the programmer may
write line-by-line filters, if serial access to the text is sufficient, or
the programmer may load text into buffers and have line-oriented random
access to those lines, if that is more convenient.
Munger makes it easy to write simple text editors, shells, utility filters,
CGI scripts, and simple network client and server programs. Mung (or
munge) is computer jargon for, "to make repeated changes which individually
may be reversible, yet which ultimately result in an unintentional
irreversible destruction of large portions of the original item." Laugh,
it's a joke.