Perforce is a commercial revision control system that can be used
gratis for developing free software. (see the WWW page for details).
Perforce is a commercial revision control system that can be used
gratis for developing free software. (see the WWW page for details).
Perforce is a commercial revision control system that can be used
gratis for developing free software. (see the WWW page for details).
Perforce is a commercial revision control system that can be used
gratis for developing free software. (see the WWW page for details).
GINI is a lightweight, mostly Icecast/Shoutcast compatible streaming
server for broadcasting Ogg Vorbis, MP3, RIFF AVI, ASF/WMV, QuickTime
and RealMedia format files.
XIM server for SKK input method
XIM server for Anthy input method
HTTP-WebTest tests remote URLs or local web files.
This module runs tests on remote URLs or local web files containing
Perl/JSP/HTML/JavaScript/etc. and generates a detailed test report.
PyGopherd is a modern dynamic multi-protocol hierarchical information server
with a pluggable modularized extension system, full flexible caching, virtual
files and folders, and autodetection of file types -- all with support for
standardized yet extensible per-document metadata.
PyGopherd is designed to serve up files using the Gopher Internet protocol.
With Gopher, you can mount a filesystem (viewing files and folders as if they
were local), browse Gopherspace with a web browser, download files, and be
interactive with searching.
But this is only part of the story. The world of Gopher is more expansive than
this. There are two major gopher protocols: Gopher0 (also known as RFC1436)
and Gopher+. PyGopherd supports both.
PyGopherd also fully natively supports HTTP, the protocol used on the Internet
for most Web transactions. So, you can access a PyGopherd server using anything
from a small, 20-line client in mobile phone to a massive 50-MB web browser.
Perl script to find fastest CVSup server:
* uses socket connections not just 'pings'
* takes notice of server responses
* connects to servers in countries specified on the command line
- or -
connects to the 'local' servers defined in the script
- or -
connects to ALL the servers in ALL the countries
* returns either fastest server or top 3 (useful for scripts)
* returns exit codes (useful for scripts)
* can re-write itself to update the CVSup server list, obtained
from the online FreeBSD Handbook
* can easily add other CVSup servers (NetBSD/OpenBSD...etc)