ssss is an implementation of Shamir's secret sharing scheme for
UNIX/Linux machines. It is free software, the code is licensed under
the GNU GPL. ssss does both: the generation of shares for a known
secret and the reconstruction of a secret using user provided shares.
The software was written in 2006 by B. Poettering, it links against
the GNU libgmp multiprecision library (version 4.1.4 works well)
and requires the /dev/random entropy source.
Xinetd is a replacement for inetd, the internet services daemon.
Xinetd is not just an inetd replacement. Anybody can use it to
start servers that don't require privileged ports because xinetd
does not require that the services in its configuration file be
listed in /etc/services.
Its configuration file has a different format than inetd's one
and it understands different signals. However the signal-to-action
assignment can be changed.
CFEngine 3 is a popular open source configuration management system.
Its primary function is to provide automated configuration and
maintenance of large-scale computer systems.
The repository is intended to provide a stable base policy for
installations and upgrades, and is used by CFEngine 3.6 and newer.
The port installs the repository as examples which should be copied by
the user to the masterfiles directory (usually /var/cfengine/masterfiles).
CFEngine 3 is a popular open source configuration management system.
Its primary function is to provide automated configuration and
maintenance of large-scale computer systems.
The repository is intended to provide a stable base policy for
installations and upgrades, and is used by CFEngine 3.6 and newer.
The port installs the repository as examples which should be copied by
the user to the masterfiles directory (usually /var/cfengine/masterfiles).
CFEngine 3 is a popular open source configuration management system.
Its primary function is to provide automated configuration and
maintenance of large-scale computer systems.
The repository is intended to provide a stable base policy for
installations and upgrades, and is used by CFEngine 3.6 and newer.
The port installs the repository as examples which should be copied by
the user to the masterfiles directory (usually /var/cfengine/masterfiles).
debhelper is a collection of programs that can be used in a debian/rules file to
automate common tasks related to building binary debian packages. Programs are
included to install various files into your package, compress files, fix file
permissions, integrate your package with the debian menu system, etc. This will
be of use only to debian developers or others who wish to build debian packages.
The fileschanged utility is a client to the FAM (File Alteration Monitor)
server that is now available in some distributions. Here's how the fileschanged
FAM client works: you give it some filenames on the command line and then it
monitors those files for changes. When it discovers that a file has changed
(or has been altered), it displays the filename on the standard-output.
GSTFS is a filesystem for on-demand transcoding of music files
between different formats. It utilizes the gstreamer library for
conversion so any formats supported by gstreamer should also be
supported by gstfs. The filesystem's only requirement is that the
gstreamer pipeline begin with a filesrc with the name "_source"
and end with an fdsink with the name "_dest". The filesystem will
automatically substitute the filename and fd number in these
pipelines.
Ganglia provides a complete real-time monitoring and execution
environment that is in use by hundreds of universities, private and
government laboratories and commercial cluster implementors around the
world. Whether you want to monitor hundreds of computers in real-time
across a university campus or around the world, ganglia is for you.
The ganglia web frontend provides access to the data collected by the
monitoring core.
WikipediaFS is a mountable Linux virtual file system that allows to
read and edit articles from Wikipedia (or any Mediawiki-based site) as
if they were real files.
It is thus possible to view and edit articles using your favourite
text-editor. Text-editors tend to be more convenient than a simple
browser form when it comes to editing large texts and they generally
include useful features such as Mediawiki syntax highlighting and spell
checking.