This is a perl wrapper to "jexec" with more feature.
Script takes system jail id, rc.conf order id, full hostname of jail or
rc.conf name of jail. If no command for jail is given - run default
('bash' or other).
No additional software or tools like "jailer" are needed.
Bundler is a tool that manages gem dependencies for your ruby application. It
takes a gem manifest file and is able to fetch, download, and install the gems
and all child dependencies specified in this manifest. It can manage any update
to the gem manifest file and update the bundled gems accordingly. It also
letsyou run any ruby code in context of the bundled gem environment.
The Environment Modules package provides for the dynamic modification
of a user's environment via modulefiles.
Shutdowns a running jail and all its processes.
No additional software or tools like "jailer(8)" needed.
LinEAK is a utility designed to enable the use and configuration
of those special keys on Internet, Easy Access and Multimedia
keyboards in Linux (and other unices, like now FreeBSD).
Default plugins for lineakd. Mainly contains some macros
(e.g. for volumedecrease etc.). mediadetect plugin is not
functional at the moment since there is some more work to
do (we need a new port for it).
Xosd-plugin for lineak to display some nice information about the commands
being executed by lineakd.
The Heirloom Toolchest is a collection of standard Unix utilities.
Highlights are:
* Derived from original Unix material released as open source by Caldera
* Up to four versions of each utility corresponding to SVID3/SVR4,
SVID4/SVR4.2MP, POSIX.2/SUSV2, and 4BSD (SVR4 /usr/ucb)
* Support for lines of arbitrary length and in many cases binary input data
* Support for multibyte character sets, especially UTF-8
* More than 100 individual utilities including bc, cpio, diff, ed, file,
find, grep, man, nawk, oawk, pax, ps, sed, sort, spell, and tar
* The cpio utility can read and write zip files, GNU tar files, and
the cpio formats of Cray UNICOS, SGI IRIX (-K), SCO UnixWare (-c)
and Tru64 UNIX (-e). It is also available with the pax interface
* Extensive documentation including a manual page for any utility
* Runs on Linux, Solaris, Open UNIX, and FreeBSD
The FreeBSD LiveCD Tool Set main goal is allowing one to generate
custom FreeBSD Live CDs. FreeBSD LiveCD was born as a Brazilian
FreeBSD User Group (www.fugspbr.org) project. The objective was to
create a tool that would allow us a safe diagnostic method under
emergency enviroments and specially as a rescue disk where FreeBSD
partitions could only be accessed (mounted) externally.
What is LiveCD? Its such a simple answer, it is nothing but a set
of patches applied to the FreeBSD Initialization files allowing the
system to run from a CDROM, setting the best way to either mount
under Memory File System (MFS) or Virtual Nodes (vnodes) those
filesystems that need Write and Read access. Slices that just need
Read access are still run from the CD.
Can I use it to install FreeBSD? Yes, with recent revision 1.2, it
can install a FreeBSD system without any other disks. It also support
batch operation mode for automated installation processes.
Is LiveCD any different from an ordinarily installed FreeBSD system?
It is a completely functional FreeBSD system just like any ordinarily
installed one. You will be able to both run any applications and
mount any filesystems as any FreeBSD system would allow you.
Edson Brandi <ebrandi@fugspbr.org>
cf is a filter that reads files or stdin and replaces numeric
timestamps found at the beginning of each line with a formated time
and date time and date.