Virt Viewer provides a graphical viewer for the guest OS
display. At this time is supports guest OS using the VNC
protocol. Further protocols may be supported in the future
as user demand dictates. The viewer can connect directly
to both local and remotely hosted guest OS, optionally
using SSL/TLS encryption.
hnb is a program to organize many kinds of data in one place,
including addresses, TODO lists, ideas, book reviews, brainstorming,
speech outlines, etc. It stores data in XML format, and is capable
of native export to ASCII and HTML.
This module implements a single function, tchomp, which will remove all known
line separators.
The regular chomp() works only on the value in $/, which can be difficult if
working in multi-platform environments.
This is mnemonic keyboard that covers entire IPA (International
Phonetic Alphabet) Unicode 5 range, written in Keyman keyboard
language. The keyboard is developed by SIL Non-Roman Script Initiative
(NRSI).
This port installs the keyboard so that it can be used through SCIM or
IBus KMFL IMEngine (textproc/scim-kmfl-imengine, textproc/ibus-kmfl).
This keyboard is provided under SIL International X11-style License
(http://scripts.sil.org/X11License).
S10sh is a USB/serial userspace driver for the Canon PowerShot digital cameras.
Using S10sh you can download, upload and explore the images captured with your
PowerShot camera. The interface is quite similar to DOS's command.com.
S10sh supports the following PowerShot models:
G1 (works with USB, not reported if works with the serial interface)
G3 (from local patches, perhaps needs further testing/debug)
S10 (serial and USB)
S20 (serial and USB)
S100 aka Digital Ixus (USB only, since it lacks the serial interface)
A20 (needs testing)
A50 (serial only, supported with problems)
Pro70 (serial only, supported with problems)
Other models are reported to work as well: Elph S400, Digital Ixus V3, S30,
A60, EOS-10D.
With the release of libusb 0.1.3b (http://sourceforge.net/projects/libusb/),
S10sh gained USB support under FreeBSD.
The original author's web page is http://www.kyuzz.org/antirez/s10sh.html
socklog in cooperation with the runit package is a small and secure replacement
for syslogd. There are three main features, syslogd provides:
- receiving syslog messages from an Unix domain socket (/dev/log) or UDP socket
(0.0.0.0:514) and writing them to various files on disk depending on facility
and priority.
- writing received syslog messages to an UDP socket (a.b.c.d:514)
socklog provides these features with the help of runit's runsvdir,
runsv, and svlogd, provides a different network logging concept, and
additionally does log event notification.
svlogd has a built in log file rotation based on file size, so there is no
need for any cron jobs or similar to rotate the logs. Log partitions can be
calculated properly.
Moagg stands for "Mother of all gravity games".
In this game you are pilot of a small space ship and have to navigate it
through different caves by using the thrusters and rotating the ship.
But besides gravity there are many other difficulties you have to master.
The game is strongly influenced by some classical cave flyers from
the C64 and Amiga era such as "Space Taxi" or "Gravity Force".
But Moagg is supposed to be more than just a clone of these games.
This module is a wrapper around Net::Jabber that allows you to do one
thing simply - send Jabber messages. It is useful for daemon
processes, cron jobs or in any program that you want to be able to get
your attention via Jabber.
This module allows you to tie a filehandle (output only) to
syslog. This becomes useful in general when you want to
capture any activity that happens on STDERR and see that it
is syslogged for later perusal. You can also create an arbitrary
filehandle, say LOG, and send stuff to syslog by printing to
this filehandle.
Tools for the conversion to and from UTF-8 Unicode encoding. Note that
RFC-2277 mandates that all "protocols" MUST handle UTF-8 properly.
- utrans converts text files created using any 8-bit character
map into UTF-8;
- uhtrans converts UTF-8 files into 7-bit ASCII with anything
else formatted as an HTML-style tags, e.g. Ӓ (decimal);
- hutrans converts 7-bit ASCII files with HTML-style tags, to UTF-8,
thus complementing the functionality of hutrans;
- ptrans converts UTF-8 files into 8-bit text using any
8-bit character map, thus complementing utrans.
Additionally, tuc is installed if not found. Tuc converts text files
between the DOS/Windows and the Unix formats.
This port depends on ports/converters/libutf-8.
Further details: RFC 2277, and RFC 2279.