Mapnik is a Free Toolkit for developing mapping applications. It's
written in C++ and there are Python bindings to facilitate fast-paced
agile development. It can comfortably be used for both desktop and web
development, which was something wanted from the beginning.
Mapnik is about making beautiful maps. It uses the AGG library and
offers world class anti-aliasing rendering with subpixel accuracy for
geographic data. It is written from scratch in modern C++ and doesn't
suffer from design decisions made a decade ago. When it comes to
handling common software tasks such as memory management, filesystem
access, regular expressions, parsing and so on, Mapnik doesn't re-invent
the wheel, but utilizes best of breed industry standard libraries from
boost.org.
This module implements the W3C's XSLT specification. The goal
is full implementation of this spec, but it isn't yet. However,
it already works well. Below is given the set of working xslt
commands.
Gruftistats is a program which reads your IRC logs and turns them into
a web page. This has a mixture of statistics (like who talked most),
and amusing facts (like who got kicked most).
It supports a variety of log formats already, and can be extended to
support other log formats by writing a spec file describing the
format.
xdgagrab is to capture an X server screen with a mouse pointer. It
uses the XFree86-DGA Extention.
Note that (1) xdgagrab should be run by Super User (2) X is run on
16bpp, 24bpp and 32bpp (NOT 8bpp), and (3) you need add the next line
into Section "Device" of XF86Config.
Option "sw_cursor"
Supported cards:
Millennium, MGA G200, #9 Motion 771, NeoMagic NM2160
ATI 264VT3, ATI 3D Rage Pro AGP 2X/IIC VGA,
Canopus PowerWindow 864 S3 864, NeoMagic 2070,
NeoMagic 2093
Not supported cards:
STB nVidia Riva 128
Authen::Ticket provides the framework for implementing a ticketing system
for web authentication. Both the client website and ticket server code
can be constructed from Authen::Ticket. The framework allows for customization
at all phases in the process. This includes not only the login screens, but
the cookie creation and optional digital signature algorithm as well. Consult
the README for more details on this module.
Term::Clui offers a high-level user interface to give the user of command-line
applications a consistent "look and feel". Its metaphor for the computer is as
a human-like conversation-partner, and as each question/response is completed
it is summarised onto one line, and remains on screen, so that the history of
the session gradually accumulates on the screen and is available for review, or
for cut/paste. This user interface can therefore be intermixed with standard
applications which write to STDOUT or STDERR, such as make, pgp, rcs etc.
The fetchlog utility displays the last new messages of a logfile.
It is similar like tail (1) but offers some extra functionality like
pattern matching with regular expressions or output formatting. To show
only the new messages appeared since the last call fetchlog uses a
bookmark to remember which messages have been fetched.
fetchlog works on syslog generated logfiles as well as other logfiles.
fetchlog can be used standalone or as a Nagios (TM) plugin. Together
with Net-SNMP one can look at/monitor new messages in remote logfiles.
-Alexander Haderer
alexander.haderer@loescap.de
The LLVM Project is a collection of modular and reusable compiler and
toolchain technologies.
This port includes Clang (a C/C++/Objective-C compiler), LLD (a linker),
LLDB (a debugger), an OpenMP runtime library, and the LLVM infrastructure
these are built on.
The LLVM Project is a collection of modular and reusable compiler and
toolchain technologies.
This port includes Clang (a C/C++/Objective-C compiler), LLD (a linker),
LLDB (a debugger), an OpenMP runtime library, and the LLVM infrastructure
these are built on.
The LLVM Project is a collection of modular and reusable compiler and
toolchain technologies.
This port includes Clang (a C/C++/Objective-C compiler), LLD (a linker),
LLDB (a debugger), an OpenMP runtime library, and the LLVM infrastructure
these are built on.