NIS (formerly called Yellow Pages) allows network management of important
administrative files (e.g. the password file).
pdixtract converts Pinnacle Disk Images (i.e. .pdi file sets) to ISO9660 files
or extracts files from the file sets.
Tools like clfmerge, clfsplit etc to simplify working with access
log files e.g. with virtual hosts.
Template::Plugin::Clickable::Email converts any e-mail addresses
found in the filtered text into HTML mailto: links.
Server Spy indicates what brand of HTTP server (e.g. Apache, IIS, etc.)
runs on the visited sites.
Qpsmtpd started as a replacement daemon for the SMTP receiver (qmail-smtpd)
from the qmail mail transport agent (MTA). qmail-smtpd has a number of
shortcomings (e.g. being unable to check the validity of a recipient mail
address) and is written in C which makes it burdensome to modify and extend.
Qpsmtpd, on the other hand, is written in pure perl and can be customized
easily. It consists of a core that implements a complete SMTP server, and a
number of plugins/modules which control the operations. Such plugins
include plugins to check the recipient and sender as well as plugins for
virus scanning, spam checking, blocking lists (dns and rhs), AUTH and TLS.
Qpsmtpd can not only be used with qmail but also with e.g. postfix and
exim. It can also write messages to a Maildir or forward it to a remote
host without buffering.
The purpose of DBIx::Safe is to give controlled, limited access to an
application, rather than simply passing it a raw database handle through DBI.
DBIx::Safe acts as a wrapper to the database, by only allowing through the
commands you tell it to. It filters all things related to the database handle -
methods and attributes.
The typical usage is for your application to create a database handle via a
normal DBI call to new(), then pass that to DBIx::Safe->new(), which will return
you a DBIx::Safe object. After specifying exactly what is and what is not
allowed, you can pass the object to the untrusted application. The object will
act very similar to a DBI database handle, and in most cases can be used
interchangeably.
By default, nothing is allowed to run at all. There are many things you can
control. You can specify which SQL commands are allowed, by indicating the first
word in the SQL statement (e.g. 'SELECT'). You can specify which database
methods are allowed to run (e.g. 'ping'). You can specify a regular expression
that allows matching SQL statements to run (e.g. 'qr{SET TIMEZONE}'). You can
specify a regular expression that is NOT allowed to run (e.g. qr(UPDATE xxx}).
Finally, you can indicate which database attributes are allowed to be read and
changed (e.g. 'PrintError'). For all of the above, there are matching methods to
remove them as well.
DavMail POP/IMAP/SMTP/Caldav/Carddav/LDAP Exchange Gateway
DavMail is a POP/IMAP/SMTP/Caldav/Carddav/LDAP exchange gateway
allowing users to use any mail/calendar client (e.g. Thunderbird
with Lightning or Apple iCal) with an Exchange server, even from
the internet or behind a firewall through Outlook Web Access.
This package provides an API for querying the distutils metadata written in
the PKG-INFO file inside a source distribution (an sdist) or a binary
distribution (e.g., created by running bdist_egg). It can also query the
EGG-INFO directory of an installed distribution, and the *.egg-info stored in
a "development checkout" (e.g, created by running setup.py develop).
OpenCart is an open source PHP-based online shopping
cart system. A robust e-commerce solution for Internet
merchants with the ability to create their own online
business and participate in e-commerce at a minimal cost.
OpenCart is designed feature rich, easy to use, search
engine friendly and with a visually appealing interface.