Tarsnap is an online encrypted backup service. It presents a tar-like
command-line interface, but stores data online rather than locally;
using ideas taken from the author's FreeBSD Update and Portsnap
utilities, it maximizes performance by recognizing duplicate data and
only storing it once, and cryptographically encrypts and signs archives
using locally-held keys in order to guarantee that nobody without access
to the key file (including the author) can read or modify archives.
TORQUE is an open source resource manager providing control over
batch jobs and distributed compute nodes. It is a community effort
based on the original *PBS project and, with more than 1,200 patches,
has incorporated significant advances in the areas of scalability,
fault tolerance, and feature extensions contributed by NCSA, OSC,
USC , the U.S. Dept of Energy, Sandia, PNNL, U of Buffalo, TeraGrid,
and many other leading edge HPC organizations.
Libisoburn is a front-end for libraries libburn and libisofs of
the libburnia project.
Xorriso copies file objects from POSIX compliant filesystems into
Rock Ridge enhanced ISO 9660 filesystems and allows session-wise
manipulation of such filesystems. It can load the management
information of existing ISO images and it writes the session results
to optical media or to filesystem objects. Vice versa xorriso is
able to restore file objects from ISO 9660 filesystems.
This class knows how to read two treebank formats, the Penn format
and the Chomsky Normal Form (CNF) format. These formats differ in
how they handle terminal nodes. The Penn format places pre-terminal
part of speech tags in the left-hand position of a
parenthesis-delimited pair, just like it does non-terminal nodes.
The CNF format attaches pre-terminal tags to the word with an
underscore.
Artha is a free cross-platform English thesaurus that works completely
off-line and is based on WordNet. Stable releases for download are
currently available for GNU/Linux and Microsoft Windows; it is tested
on major Desktop Environments like GNOME, KDE, Xfce, etc and on Microsoft
Windows XP, Vista and 7. Artha is released under the GNU General Public
Licence version 2; hence you are free to copy/redistribute it.
This provides a simple interface to Plucene. Plucene is large and multi-
featured, and it expected that users will subclass it, and tie all the
pieces together to suit their own needs. Plucene::Simple is, therefore,
just one way to use Plucene. It's not expected that it will do exactly
what *you* want, but you can always use it as an example of how to
build your own interface.
Set of modules:
* Pod::Parser - base class for creating POD filters and translators
* Pod::Select - extract selected sections of POD from input
* Pod::Usage - print a usage message from embedded pod documentation
* Pod::PlainText - convert POD data to formatted ASCII text
* Pod::InputObjects - objects representing POD input paragraphs, commands, etc.
* Pod::Checker - check pod documents for syntax errors
* Pod::ParseUtils - helpers for POD parsing and conversion
* Pod::Find - find POD documents in directory trees
Regexp::Copy allows you to copy the contents of one Regexp object to another.
A problem that I have found with the qr// operator is that the Regexp objects
that it creates are is impossible to dereference.
This causes problems if you want to change the data in the regexp without
losing the reference to it. Its impossible.
Regexp::Copy allows you to change the Regexp by copying one object created
through qr// to another.
KDiff3 is a program that:
* compares or merges two or three text input files or directories,
* shows the differences line by line and character by character (!),
* provides an automatic merge-facility and
* an integrated editor for comfortable solving of merge-conflicts,
* supports KIO on KDE (allows accessing ftp, sftp, fish, smb etc.),
* Printing of differences,
* Manual alignment of lines,
* Automatic merging of version control history (cvs Log keyword),
* and has an intuitive graphical user interface.
This is an XS wrapper around some Unicode Consortium code to check if
a string is valid UTF-8, revised to conform to what expat/Mozilla
think is valid UTF-8, especially with regard to low-ASCII characters.
Note that this module has NOTHING to do with Perl's internal UTF8 flag
on scalars.
This module is for use when you're getting input from users and want
to make sure it's valid UTF-8 before continuing.