The Embedded Multicore Building Blocks (EMBB) are an easy to use yet
powerful and efficient C/C++ library for the development of parallel
applications. EMBB has been specifically designed for embedded systems and
the typical requirements that accompany them, such as real-time capability
and constraints on memory consumption. As a major advantage, low-level
operations are hidden in the library which relieves software developers
from the burden of thread management and synchronization. This not only
improves productivity of parallel software development, but also results
in increased reliability and performance of the applications.
EPL provides a convenient high-level API for various package.el versions, and
aims to overcome its most striking idiocies.
EPM is a free UNIX software/file packaging program that generates
distribution archives from a list of files.
EPM Can:
o Generate portable script-based distribution packages complete with
installation and removal scripts and standard install/uninstall GUIs.
o Generate "native" distributions in AIX, BSD, Debian, HP-UX, IRIX, MacOS X,
Red Hat, Slackware, Solaris, and Tru64 UNIX formats.
o Provide a complete, cross-platform software distribution solution for
your applications.
Epydoc is a tool for generating API documentation for Python modules, based on
their docstrings. For an example of epydoc's output, see the API documentation
for epydoc itself. A lightweight markup language called epytext can be used to
format docstrings, and to add information about specific fields, such as
parameters and instance variables. Epydoc also understands docstrings written in
ReStructuredText, Javadoc and plaintext.
Backoff is an Erlang library to deal with exponential backoffs and
timers to be used within OTP processes when dealing with cyclical
events, such as reconnections, or generally retrying things.
Library and tools to access the Microsoft Internet Explorer (MSIE) Cache File
(index.dat) files
DateTime is a class for the representation of date/time combinations, and is
part of the Perl DateTime project. For details on this project please see
CVSU: CVS Utilites
The idea of CVS Utilities is to facilitate working with the files in
the working directory of a developer using CVS.
cvsu: cvs update offline
cvsco: cruel checkout
cvsdiscard: discard local changes
cvsdo: simulates some of the CVS commands
cvspurge: make maintainer-clean
cvsdiff: cvs diff offline
cvschroot: change CVS/Root recursively
The original author of CVSU is:
Tom Tromey <tromey@cygnus.com>
Currently CVSU is maintained by:
Pavel Roskin <proski@gnu.org>
FreeBSD-CVSweb is a WWW CGI script that allows remote users to browse
a CVS repository tree via web. It can display the revision history of
a file, as well as diffs between revisions and downloading the whole
file.
The cvsweb script has been written by Bill Fenner <fenner@FreeBSD.org>
for the FreeBSD project, improved visually and functionally by Henner
Zeller <zeller@think.de>, Henrik Nordstrom <hno@hem.passagen.se>, and
Ken Coar <Ken.Coar@Golux.Com>, then Akinori MUSHA <knu@FreeBSD.org>
brought it back to the FreeBSD community and made further
improvements.
Cvswrap is a program that you install to help manage multiple CVS
repositories. What it does is sit in front of CVS, determines
the CVSROOT and runs a program before running CVS. This allows one
to protect each CVS repository without special groups and setuid
programs.