The Listen gem listens to file modifications and notifies you about the changes.
Features:
- Works everywhere!
- Supports watching multiple directories from a single listener.
- OS-specific adapters for Mac OS X 10.6+, Linux and Windows.
- Automatic fallback to polling if OS-specific adapter doesn't work.
- Detects files modification, addidation and removal.
- Checksum comparaison for modifications made under the same second.
- Allows supplying regexp-patterns to ignore and filter paths for better
results.
- Tested on all Ruby environments via travis-ci.
ViewVC is a browser interface for CVS and Subversion version control
repositories. It generates templatized HTML to present navigable directory,
revision, and change log listings. It can display specific versions of files as
well as diffs between those versions. Basically, ViewVC provides the bulk of the
report-like functionality you expect out of your version control tool, but much
more prettily than the average textual command-line program output.
Knot DNS is a high-performance authoritative-only DNS server which
supports all key features of the domain name system including zone
AXFR and IXFR, DDNS and DNSSEC. Its key features:
* Open source
* High-performance, multi-threaded, and mostly lock-free
implementation which scales well on SMPs
* Object-oriented design
* Support for all important DNS protocols:
- Full and incremental zone transfers
- EDNS0 and DNSSEC extensions, including NSEC3
- NSID
Knot DNS is a high-performance authoritative-only DNS server which
supports all key features of the domain name system including zone
AXFR and IXFR, DDNS and DNSSEC. Its key features:
* Open source
* High-performance, multi-threaded, and mostly lock-free
implementation which scales well on SMPs
* Object-oriented design
* Support for all important DNS protocols:
- Full and incremental zone transfers
- EDNS0 and DNSSEC extensions, including NSEC3
- NSID
The nss_resinit is a module for the nsswitch subsystem which makes
resolver(3) reread /etc/resolv.conf when it is updated. In the
traditional implementation of resolver(3) it is initialized by the
application once and never reread /etc/resolv.conf after that even if
the file is updated. This module is useful especially when name
servers in /etc/resolv.conf are changed frequently as seen in mobile
environment.
BIEW is multiplatform portable viewer of binary files with built-in editor
with binary, hexadecimal, and disassembler modes. It uses native Intel
syntax for disassembly and offers many useful features such as highlighting
for AVR/Java/x86-AMD64/ARM-XScale/PPC-64 code, Russian codepage converter,
full preview of formats MZ, NE, PE, NLM, COFF32, ELF (and partially a.out,
LE, LX, PharLap), code navigator, and much more.
Cream is a vim extension supports pull-down menus and/or keyboard shortcuts.
Features:
- Standard and intuitive menus.
- Syntax highlighting colors, supporting more than 350 languages.
- Intuitive status line.
- Automatic text indention.
- Word wrap.
- Multiple documents opening.
- Find and Find/Replace dialogs.
- Spell check with error highlighting.
- Text justification.
- Conversion of and between Unix, Windows and Apple platform format files.
- Macro record and playback.
- File browser.
- Ctags navigation and searching.
- Plus lots of addons.
Lfhex - Large file hex editor.
Features:
- Low memory usage with respect to filesize. Opening a 2gig file requires
only ~1.4megs of additional memory.
- Fast load times.
- Fast save times.
- Infinite undo/redo.
- Conversion dialog
- Search function.
- Shows modified regions in alternate color.
- Scalable working area. Resize can use as much screen as you give it.
- Multiple editing modes (can switch on the fly)
- Runtime configurable bytes per column.
- binary comparison user interface
Tetradraw is a fully featured ANSI art editor for Unix operating systems.
ANSI art is only made up of the ASCII characters with 16 colours. ANSI art is
mainly used in text mode interfaces. Tetradraw is the first completly usable
ANSI art editor for Unix operating systems. Tetradraw does not just emulate
the ANSI editors for DOS: it also allows two artists to edit the same image
simultaneously over the Internet.
MESS is an acronym that stands for Multi Emulator Super System. MESS will
more or less faithfully reproduce computer and console systems on a PC.
MESS can currently emulate over 250 systems from the last 5 decades.
MESS emulates the hardware of the systems and sometimes utilizes ROM
images to load programs and games. Therefore, these systems are NOT
simulations, but the actual emulations of the hardware.