This is the distribution of "less", a paginator similar to "more" or "pg",
but much more powerful.
LMon is a package for near real-time monitoring of logs, sending email alerts
upon known (rule hits) or unknown data (rule misses). It features buffering of
multiple rule hits within a given interval, cap at a given maximum number of
lines, wait for a given interval before sending next alert, and auto- discovery
of log rotation. It can be run from the command line without configuration, or
be controlled from a central configuration file with multiple instances
monitoring different log files/sending alerts to different people.
minirsyslogd is a minimalistic, fast and secure (through lack of bloat)
remote-only syslog receiver suitable for hardened log receiver hosts
and/or central log receivers that receive several gigabyte of logs each day.
It will not deal with local syslog data. It does not have a multitude
of configuration, alerting or scripting options. It will however
automatically split inbound syslog data according to IP address,
date and current hour, and do so as rapidly and (I hope) securely as
possible.
NVClock is a small utility that allows users to overclock NVidia based
video cards running on *nix platforms. The original code used in building
this application was borrowed from the nvcs application. That code has
been extensively reworked in order to make the utility much more user
friendly and to make it play nice with current distributions and drivers.
Oak is a program that can be used to monitor syslogs from a collection
of servers and notify operators when problem conditions arise. In
addition to providing immediate notification of critical problems oak
will also batch less critical problems into summary messages that can
be sent less often and via any medium. For example you may wish to
have oak page you on critical events while sending a summary of less
important messages to your terminal once an hour. In addition you
could send a daily email message summarizing all events.
most is a pager (like less) that displays, one windowful at a time,
the contents of a file on a terminal. It pauses after each windowful
and prints the following on the window status line: the screen, the
file name, current line number, and the percentage of the file so far
displayed.
In addition to displaying ordinary text files, most can also display
binary files as well as files with arbitrary ascii characters. As an
option, autosensing of binary files can be disabled (via the -k
option), thereby allowing one to browse files encoded in a different
language (Japanese, Korean, Chinese, etc).
FTP: ftp://ftp.jedsoft.org/pub/davis/most
This set of scripts allows you to imitate Windows feature to automount some
network shares at login time. It is relatively difficult in setup - you should
understand, what you do, know how to install SMB/CIFS support into a kernel,
how to setup /etc/nsmb.conf and .nsmbrc files, etc.
Script are written on Shell. Uses nbtscan and host utilites to locate Windows
boxes when generated .nsmbrc file in semi-automated mode with smb2nsmbrc helper
script. Also uses their own file .mssmbrc to describe any share, mounted with
mountsmb2.
MTPFS is a FUSE filesystem that supports reading and writing from any
MTP device (as supported by libmtp)
MultiTail lets you view one or multiple files like the original tail program.
The difference is that it creates multiple windows on your console (with
ncurses). It can also monitor wildcards: if another file matching the wildcard
has a more recent modification date, it will automatically switch to that file.
That way you can, for example, monitor a complete directory of files. Merging
of 2 or even more logfiles is possible. It can also use colors while displaying
the logfiles (through regular expressions), for faster recognition of what is
important and what not. It can also filter lines (again with regular
expressions). It has interactive menus for editing given regular expressions
and deleting and adding windows. One can also have windows with the output of
shell scripts and other software. When viewing the output of external software,
MultiTail can mimic the functionality of tools like 'watch' and such.
From aaareadme.txt:
Say, what is this?
ODS2 is a program to read VMS disk volumes written in VMS
ODS2 format.
What can it do?
Basically ODS2 provides cut down DIRECTORY, COPY and
SEARCH commands for VMS volumes on non-VMS systems. These
can be used to find out what is on a VMS volume, and copy
files onto the local file sytem.
See aaareadme.txt and aaareadme.too for more information.