Icmake is a hybrid between a 'make' utility and a 'shell script'
language. Originally, it was concocted to provide a useful tool for
automatic program maintenance and system administrative tasks on MS-DOS
platforms. Later on, Icmake was eventually ported to Unix platforms
(SCO and Linux). By now Icmake also runs on a HP-Unix platform.
The Saxon-B 9.1 package is a collection of tools for processing XML documents.
The main components are:
- An XSLT 2.0 processor, that can be used from the command line, or invoked
from a Java application by use of the standard JAXP API. Saxon can be
integrated with Java applications using the JAXP API, which means it is
possible for a Java application to switch between different XSLT processors
without changing the application code. As well as conforming closely with the
XSLT 2.0 specification, Saxon offers a number of powerful extensions.
- An XPath 2.0 processor accessible via an API to Java applications.
- An XQuery 1.0 processor that can be used from the command line, or invoked
from a Java application by use of an API.
- An XML Schema 1.0 processor. This can be used on its own to validate a schema
for correctness, or to validate a source document against the definitions in
a schema. It is also used to support the schema-aware functionality of the
XSLT and XQuery processors.
So you can use Saxon to process XML by writing XSLT stylesheets, by writing
XQuery queries, by writing Java applications, or by combinations of the
approaches.
Implements MurmurHash2, a good, fast, general-purpose, non-cryptographic
hashing function. See <http://murmurhash.googlepages.com/> for details.
This implementation is pure Haskell, so it might be a bit slower than a C
FFI binding.
CrackLib is a library containing a C function (well, lots of functions
really, but you only need to use one of them) which may be used in a
"passwd"-like program.
Task::Tiny may be used to install a selection of tiny Perl extensions from CPAN.
SCSS is a Scheme module for parsing, querying, and emitting style information
compatible with the W3C Cascading Stylesheets recommendation. While SCSS does
not itself provide any rendering functionality, it can provide style
information to applications and libraries that do. If used with XML documents
produced by SXML or SDOM, SCSS can accommodate the full range of selector types
described in the W3C recommendation; it can also match simple selectors against
strings when structured document information is not available.
The Automated Testing Framework (ATF) is a collection of libraries to
implement test programs in a variety of languages. At the moment, ATF
offers C, C++ and POSIX shell bindings with which to implement tests.
These bindings all offer a similar set of functionality and any test
program written with them exposes a consistent user interface.
ATF-based test programs rely on a separate runtime engine to execute them.
The runtime engine is in charge of isolating the test programs from the
rest of the system to ensure that their results are deterministic and that
they cannot affect the running system. The runtime engine is also
responsible for gathering the results of all tests and composing reports.
The current runtime of choice is Kyua.
The module can be used to republish a DAAP share. You'll probably
want to use Net::DAV::Server or POE::Component::Server::FTP to
re-export it in a browseable form.
Skstream is an iostream based C++ socket library. It is ideally suited for use
as the underlying transport for Atlas-C++, and has been well tested and
debugged. It was first discovered for WorldForge when it was used in UClient
and has since been packaged up as its own library for use on other WorldForge
projects. The code was originally written by Rafael Guterres Jeffman who is
not involved with the project but we have extensively rewritten it, and added
new features such as IPv6 support and Unix domain sockets. It now maintained
for WorldForge by Al Riddoch and others.
CTPL is a template engine library. It allows fast and easy parsing
of templates and fine control over template parsing environment.