nxtvepg - Decoder, Browser and Analyzer for the Nextview
Electronic Programme Guide
nxtvepg is an X11 application to decode, analyze and browse TV programme
schedules transmitted on analog TV channels as defined in ETS 300 707:
"Protocol for a TV Guide using electronic data transmission" by the European
Telecommunications Standards Institute.
nxtvepg enables you to obtain free TV programme listings for all of the major
networks in Germany, Austria, France and Switzerland.
Currently Nextview EPG is transmitted by the following TV networks (note that
each of these EPGs cover not only the provider's programme but also that of many
other networks): Kabel1, 3Sat, RTL-II (Germany and Austria), SF1, TSR1, TSI1,
EuroNews (Switzerland), Canal+, M6 (France), TRT-1 (Turkey).
You will need a bktr(4) compatible tv tuner card with teletext support in order
to use nxtvepg.
It is recommended to check the card's setup before using nxtvepg, e.g. with the
following applications from the ports collection:
multimedia/fxtv for tv tuner and misc/alevtv for Teletext support.
Torrus is designed to be the universal data series processing framework.
Although most users deploy Torrus for SNMP monitoring, it might be useful for
data series of any nature. Tobi Oetiker's RRDtool is used for data storage.
* Configuration compiler and validator. It processes the XML configuration
files and saves the configuration into a database.
* View renderer and the web interface. They generate HTML and the graphical
representation of the datasources and provide user authentication and
authorization. All generated output is controlled by the configuration
parameters and templates. The users can easily create their own
presentation of data series.
* SNMP Collector. Modular collector core architecture allows further
extension with new collector and storage types. Any datasource can have
its own polling schedule.
* SNMP Device Discovery Tool. Devdiscover is a new, modular, flexible, and
expandable tool for automatic generation of Torrus configuration files.
New device types and MIBs are easily added as independent Perl modules.
* Threshold monitor. All data, regardless of their type and nature, can be
monitored according to the user-defined rules. The rules can also include
the datasource-specific parameters, e.g. boundary values etc. The
thresholds are specified by RPN expressions.
XAnim is a program that can display animations of various
formats on systems running X11. XAnim currently supports
the following animation types:
+ FLI animations.
+ FLC animations.
+ IFF animations. The following features are sup-
ported:
-> Compressions 3,5,7,J(movies) and l(small
L).
-> Color cycling during single images and
anims.
-> Display Modes: depth 1-8, EHB, HAM and
HAM8.
+ GIF87a and GIF89a files.
-> single and multiple images supported.
-> GIF89a animation extensions supported.
+ GIF89a animation extension support.
+ a kludgy text file listing gifs and what order
to show them in.
+ DL animations. Formats 1, 2 and partial 3.
+ Amiga PFX(PageFlipper Plus F/X) animations. TEMP
DISABLED
+ Amiga MovieSetter animations(For those Eric
Schwartz fans).
+ Utah Raster Toolkit RLE images and anims.
+ AVI animations. Currently supported are
-> IBM Ultimotion (ULTI) depth 16.
-> JPEG (JPEG) depth 24.
images.
+ MPEG animations. Currently only Type I Frames
are displayed. Type B and Type P frames are cur-
rently ignored, but will be added in future
revs.
+ WAV audio files may have their sound added to
any animation type that doesn't already have
audio, by specifying the .wav file after the
animation file on the command line. Currently
only the PCM audio codec is supported.
+ any combination of the above on the same command
line.
XAnim also provides various options that allow the user to
alter colormaps, playback speeds, looping modes and can
provide on-the-fly scaling of animations with the mouse.
LICENSE: freely used, copied and redistributed without fee for non-commerical purposes
( http://xanim.va.pubnix.com/home.html )
( http://xanim.resnet.gatech.edu/home.html )
( http://smurfland.cit.buffalo.edu/xanim/home.html )
QDBM is a library of routines for managing a database. The database
is a simple data file containing records, each is a pair of a key and
a value. Every key and value is serial bytes with variable length.
Both binary data and character string can be used as a key and a
value. There is neither concept of data tables nor data types.
Records are organized in hash table or B+ tree.
Tokyo Cabinet is a library of routines for managing a database. The
database is a simple data file containing records, each is a pair of a
key and a value. Every key and value is serial bytes with variable
length. Both binary data and character string can be used as a key and
a value. There is neither concept of data tables nor data types.
Records are organized in hash table or B+ tree.
stagit is a static Git web page generator with the following features:
- Log of all commits from HEAD.
- Log and diffstat per commit.
- Show file tree with linkable line numbers.
- Show references: local branches and tags.
- Detect README and LICENSE file from HEAD and link it as a webpage.
- Detect submodules (.gitmodules file) from HEAD and link it as a
webpage.
- Atom feed log (atom.xml).
- Make index page for multiple repositories with stagit-index.
- After generating the pages (relatively slow) serving the files is
very fast, simple and requires little resources (because the content
is static), only a HTTP file server is required.
pfm is a terminal (curses)-based file manager written in Perl, based on the
PFM.COM for MS-DOS (originally by Paul Culley and Henk de Heer). Permission
to use the original name was kindly granted by the original authors.
Some of its features:
* Commands are invoked with only one or two keypresses
* Colored filenames according to extension or type
* Support for executing user-defined commands (including wildcards)
with only two keystrokes
* A single-file and multiple-file mode
* Multilevel sorting
* Use of oldmarks and newmarks for executing multiple commands on
the same group of files
* Supports bookmarks for directories
* Highly configurable through its config file
* Supports commandline history and completion through use of the
GNU readline library
* Integration with versioning tools like Subversion, CVS, Bazaar,
Mercurial, and Git
U-Boot loader for SolidRun Cubox-i and Hummingboard.
Install the u-boot.imx file onto the boot disk using:
dd if=u-boot.imx of=/dev/whatever bs=1k oseek=1 conv=sync
The U-Boot built by this port expects the first 1MB of the boot media to
be reserved for the U-Boot executable and saved environment. The u-boot.imx
file begins at an offset of 1K from the start of the boot disk. The U-Boot
environment area begins at an offset of 512K.
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled to support ubldr.
The sources for this port were originally obtained from commit e4bc4c3ebe
at https://github.com/SolidRun/u-boot-imx6 which appears to be a highly
modified fork of the stock U-Boot 2013.10 release. As of this writing,
the changes in this fork have not been rolled back into upstream U-Boot.
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
Sort::Versions allows easy sorting of mixed non-numeric
and numeric strings, like the "version numbers" that many
shared library systems and revision control packages use.
This is quite useful if you are trying to deal with shared
libraries. It can also be applied to applications that
intersperse variable-width numeric fields within text.
Other applications can undoubtedly be found.
For an explanation of the algorithm, it's simplest to look
at these examples:
1.1 < 1.2
1.1a < 1.2
1.1 < 1.1.1
1.1 < 1.1a
1.1.a < 1.1a
1 < a
a < b
1 < 2
1 < 0002
1.5 < 1.06
This is eispack from research.att.com. I've cleaned up the Makefile, but
it is otherwise the same. The package is described in:
1. Smith, B.T, Boyle, J.M, Dongerra, J.J., Garbow, B.S., Ikebe, Y.,
Klema, V.C., and Moler, C.B., Matrix Eigensystem Routines -- EISPACK
Guide, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Vol. 6, Second Edition,
Springer-Verlag, New York, Heidelberg, Berlin, 1976
2. Garbow, B.S., Boyle J.M., Dongerra, J.J, and Moler C.B., Matrix
Eigensystem Routines -- EISPACK Guide Extension, Lecture Notes in
Computer Science, Vol. 51, Springer-Verlag, New York, Heidelberg,
Berlin, 1977
As the package is in FORTRAN there are no include files for the library,
and the only thing to install is the library itself.