Syncmail is a CVS notification tool which can provide a diff for every
change to a CVS repository, mailed to specified email addresses.
This tool is useful for large communities to monitor activity,
and is used for Python and many other active projects.
cvslines extends the capability of the cvs commit command, to provide
extra support in managing multiple concurrent lines of development.
cvslines is a "wrapper" facility that helps out with merging changes
between various cvs branches, where the branches represent different
lines of development.
cx_Freeze is a set of utilities for freezing Python scripts
into executables using many of techniques found in
Thomas Heller's py2exe, Godon McMillan's Installer and
the Freeze utility that ships with Python itself.
The libdisasm library provides basic disassembly of Intel x86
instructions from a binary stream. The intent is to provide an easy to
use disassembler which can be called from any application; the
disassembly can be produced in AT&T syntax and Intel syntax, as well as
in an intermediate format which includes detailed instruction and
operand type information.
As a project Alexandria's goal is to reduce duplication of effort
and improve portability of Common Lisp code according to its own
idiosyncratic and rather conservative aesthetic. What this actually
means is open to debate, but each project member has a veto on all
project activities, so a degree of conservatism is inevitable.
split-sequence is a small library to split sequences in to a list of
subsequences delimited by an object satisfying a test function. It is
a member of the Common Lisp Utilities family of programs, designed by
community consensus.
trivial-features ensures consistent *FEATURES* across multiple
Common Lisp implementations.
For example, on MacOS X platforms, while most Lisps push :DARWIN
to *FEATURES*, CLISP and Allegro push :MACOS and :MACOSX instead,
respectively. Some Lisps might not push any feature suggesting MacOS
X at all. trivial-features will make sure all Lisps will have :DARWIN
in the *FEATURES* list when running on MacOS X.
trivial-gray-streams is a trivial library which provides an extremely
thin compatibility layer for Gray streams.
From David N. Gray's STREAM-DEFINITION-BY-USER proposal:
"Common Lisp does not provide a standard way for users to define
their own streams for use by the standard I/O functions. This impedes
the development of window systems for Common Lisp because, while
there are standard Common Lisp I/O functions and there are beginning
to be standard window systems, there is no portable way to connect
them together to make a portable Common Lisp window system. There
are also many applications where users might want to define their
own filter streams for doing things like printer device control,
report formatting, character code translation, or encryption/decryption."
The dwarfdump tool prints the various elements of DWARF debugging
information found in ELF object files.
Fast CRC routines written in assembly language, callable using the C and Pascal
calling conventions, as well as directly from assembly language programs.
This Unix port contains routines for the calculation of traditional CRC-32
used by Zmodem, Opus, Ethernet, and many other protocols.
It also contains routines for the POSIX 1003.2 32-bit CRC calculation.
See ${PREFIX}/share/doc/fastcrc/index.html for reference.
This port requires ELF. It creates libfcrc.so.1, and includes <fastcrc.h> for
C programmers.
Dependencies: nasm