GNU cgicc is an ANSI C++ compliant class library that greatly simplifies
the creation of CGI applications for the World Wide Web.
cgicc performs the following functions:
- Parses both GET and POST form data transparently.
- Provides string, integer, floating-point and single- and multiple-choice
retrieval methods for form data.
- Provides methods for saving and restoring CGI environments to aid in
application debugging.
- Provides full on-the-fly HTML generation capabilities, with support for
cookies.
- Supports HTTP file upload.
- Compatible with FastCGI.
This the FCGI module for perl5 which enables CGI scripts to take
advantage of servers that are FastCGI-enabled. This module does not abstract
the writing of CGIs themselves, for that you should refer to the p5-CGI
module. For more information about FastCGI, the performance enhancements it
offers, and how to write scripts using it, visit their web site at
http://www.fastcgi.com/
This is an unofficial API for plurk.com. It uses the same interfaces that
plurk itself uses internally which are not published and not necessarily
stable. When Plurk publish a stable API this module will be updated to take
advantage of it. In the mean time use with caution.
Ryan Lim did the heavy lifting of reverse engineering the API. His PHP
implementation can be found at http://code.google.com/p/rlplurkapi/.
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 )
The Biopython Project is an international association of developers who are
providing freely available Python tools for use in areas of computational
molecular biology such as bioinformatics and genomics.
Biopython is a collection of Python packages and modules created by the
Biopython Project, intended to provide the basis for building bioinformatics
applications in the Python language.
Note that the current release is alpha quality, and not yet deemed to be
stable.
This port includes optional support for Biopython-CORBA, a CORBA interface
built to the BioCorba standard (http://biocorba.org/).
(excerpt from HylaFAX FAQ, http://www.hylafax.org/content/About_HylaFAX)
HylaFAX is a facsimile system for UNIX systems. It supports:
o sending facsimile
o receiving facsimile
o polled retrieval of facsimile
o transparent shared data use of the modem
o sending messages to pagers
Facsimile can be any size (e.g. A4, B4), either 98 or 196 lpi, and
transmitted/received as either 1D-encoded or 2D-encoded facsimile data
(2D-encoded data is frequently more compact and hence takes a shorter
time to communicate). Any modem that supports one of the standard
interfaces for facsimile operation can be used; i.e. any Class 1, Class
2, or Class 2.0 modem.
The C++ Portable Components currently consist of four libraries.
The Foundation library contains a platform abstraction layer
(including classes for multithreading, file system access, logging,
etc.), as well as a large number of useful utility classes, such
various stream buffer and stream classes, URI handling, and many
more.
The Net library contains network classes (sockets, HTTP, etc.)
The XML library contains an XML parser with SAX2 and DOM interfaces,
as well as an XMLWriter.
The Util library contains classes for working with configuration
files and command line arguments, as well as various utility classes.
This is the LIBEPP-NICBR C++ library that partially implements the
Extensible Provisioning Protocol (EPP), as described in the Internet
Drafts RFC3730bis to RFC3734bis and RFC3735.
RFC3731bis - EPP Domain Name Mapping - was implemented with hosts as
attributes of the Domain Object.
In order to conform to the .BR model, extensions to the EPP Domain Name
and Contact Mapping were made (draft-neves-epp-brdomain and
draft-neves-epp-brorg), supported since version 0.2. The documentation
for these extensions is available at EPP References [1].
[1]
http://registro.br/epp/rfc-EN.html
Valgrind is a system for debugging and profiling un*x programs. With the tools
that come with Valgrind, you can automatically detect many memory management
and threading bugs, avoiding hours of frustrating bug-hunting, making your
programs more stable. You can also perform detailed profiling, to speed up and
reduce memory use of your programs.
The Valgrind distribution includes five tools: two memory error detectors, a
thread error detector, a cache profiler and a heap profiler. Several other
tools have been built with Valgrind.
Valgrind was initially ported to FreeBSD by
Doug Rabson (http://www.rabson.org/).
Valgrind is a system for debugging and profiling un*x programs. With the tools
that come with Valgrind, you can automatically detect many memory management
and threading bugs, avoiding hours of frustrating bug-hunting, making your
programs more stable. You can also perform detailed profiling, to speed up and
reduce memory use of your programs.
The Valgrind distribution includes five tools: two memory error detectors, a
thread error detector, a cache profiler and a heap profiler. Several other
tools have been built with Valgrind.
Valgrind was initially ported to FreeBSD by
Doug Rabson (http://www.rabson.org/).