Replex was created to remultiplex transport stream (TS) data taken from a DVB
source. The result is supposed to be a program stream (PS) that can be
used to be burned to a DVD (with dvdauthor).
Replex can also remultiplex other PSs and AVIs with MPEG2 content.
This is Bruce Evans' C compiler and binutils package.
Either the compiler as the assembler are able to generate 16-bit code.
Hence it's possible to compile BIOS and DOS code under Unix.
The C compiler does understand K&R1 syntax, with a few restrictions
regarding bit fields. See the file work/bcc/bcc-cc1/bcc.bugs for
Bruce's bug list.
The binutils (assembler and loader) have been renamed to as86 and ld86
to not conflict with the system's assembler and loader, but they are
also available in the regular BINDIR (normally /usr/local/bin).
It's also possible to generate MC 6809 code with bcc/as. (This is a
compile-time option however, and not supported by the binary package
as it comes with FreeBSD.)
radsecproxy is a generic RADIUS proxy that in addition to usual RADIUS
UDP transport, also supports TLS (RadSec), as well as RADIUS over TCP and
DTLS. The aim is for the proxy to have sufficient features to be flexible,
while at the same time to be small, efficient and easy to configure.
This is a port of the cdeploy utility, a tool which can be used to deploy a
directory sub-tree into another directory tree. cdeploy is currently
maintained by the RootForum.org community.
Coco/R combines the functionality of the well-known UNIX tools lex and yacc,
to form an extremely easy to use compiler generator that generates recursive
descent parsers, their associated scanners, and (in some versions) a driver
program, from attributed grammars (written using EBNF syntax with attributes
and semantic actions) which conform to the restrictions imposed by LL(1)
parsing (rather than LALR parsing, as allowed by yacc). The user has to add
modules for symbol table handling, optimization, and code generation in
order to get a running compiler. Coco/R can also be used to construct other
syntax-based applications that have less of a "compiler" flavour.
Coco/R is available in Oberon, Modula-2, Pascal, Delphi, C, Java and C#
versions. This port only builds the C/C++ version.
The Excel::Writer::XLSX module can be used to create an Excel file in the 2007+
XLSX format. The XLSX format is the Office Open XML (OOXML) format used by Excel
2007 and later. Multiple worksheets can be added to a workbook and formatting
can be applied to cells. Text, numbers, and formulas can be written to the
cells. This module cannot, as yet, be used to write to an existing Excel XLSX
file.
Data::Dumper and other modules do a great job at dumping data structures.
Their output, however, often takes more brain power to understand than the
data itself. When dumping large amounts of data, the output can be overwhelming
and it's difficult to see the relationship between each piece of the dumped
data. Data::TreeDumper also dumps data in a tree-like fashion but hopefully
in a format more easily understood.
Data::TreeDumper also gives one extraordinary control over output and
provides for custom filtering of and iteration over data structures.
Return::Type allows you to specify a return type for your subs. Type constraints
from any Type::Tiny, MooseX::Types or MouseX::Types type library are supported.
The simple syntax for specifying a type constraint is shown in the "SYNOPSIS"
[1]. If the attribute is passed a single type constraint as shown, this will be
applied to the return value if called in scalar context, and to each item in the
returned list if called in list context. (If the sub is called in void context,
type constraints are simply ignored.)
[1] http://search.cpan.org/dist/Return-Type/lib/Return/Type.pm#SYNOPSIS
scim-array is an SCIM IMEngine module for array 30. It supports
array 6.0 Unicode CJK Extension B and special input code.
Tumble is a utility to construct PDF files from one or more image
files. Supported input image file formats are JPEG, and black and
white TIFF (single- or multi-page). Black and white images will be
encoded in the PDF output using lossless Group 4 fax compression
(ITU-T recommendation T.6). This provides a very good compression
ratio for text and line art. JPEG images will be preserved with the
original coding.
The current version of Tumble will only work on little-endian systems,
such as x86, VAX, and Alpha. The byte order dependencies will be fixed
in a later release.