pkpgcounter is a generic Page Description Language parser which can
either count the number of pages or compute the percent of ink coverage
needed to print various types of documents.
It currently supports the following file types:
- PostScript (both DSC compliant and binary)
- PDF
- PCL3/4/5
- PCLXL (aka PCL6)
- DVI
- TIFF
- ESC/P2
- OpenDocument (ISO/IEC DIS 26300)
- Zenographics ZjStream
- Samsung QPDL (aka SPL2)
- Samsung SPL1
The five latter ones, as well as some TIFF documents, are currently
only supported in page counting mode.
This is a crypto library for Ada with a nice API and is written for the
i386 and x86_64 hardware architecture.
Symmetric cryptography supported:
* Blockciphers: AES, Twofish, 3DES, Serpent
* Hash functions: SHA-1, SHA-256, SHA-384, SHA-512, Whirlpool
* MACs: RMAC, HMAC, CMAC
* Modes of operation: BPS, CFB, Ctr, OFB
* Authenticated Encryption Schemes: OCB, SIV, McOE
Assymmetric cryptography supported:
* DSA signature scheme
* OEAP-RSA
* ECDSA, ECDH
Unsigned big number library features:
* Primary cyclic group arithmetic (Z_p)
* Binary Field arithmetic support
* Elliptic Curve arithmetic
From the p5-PDF-Create README:
PDF::Create allows you to create PDF documents using a large
number of primitives, and emit the result as a PDF file or
stream. PDF stands for Portable Document Format.
Documents can have several pages, a table of content, an
information section and many other PDF elements. More
functionnalities will be added as needs arise.
For more details, type 'perldoc PDF::Create' or see the CPAN homepage:
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/.
WMII is a small, dynamic window manager for X11. It supports both classic
and tiling (acme-like) window management with extended keyboard, mouse, and
9p filesystem based remote control. It replaces the workspace paradigm with
a new tagging approach and is highly scriptable (with plain shell or Python
and even Chicken).
Its minimalist philosophy attempts to not exceed 10.000 lines of code
(including all shipped utilities and libraries), to enforce simplicity and
clarity (read: it is hackable and beautiful).
Captcha::reCAPTCHA::Mailhide - A Perl implementation of
the reCAPTCHA Mailhide API
reCAPTCHA is a hybrid mechanical turk and captcha that allows visitors who
complete the captcha to assist in the digitization of books.
reCAPTCHA improves the process of digitizing books by sending words that
cannot be read by computers to the Web in the form of CAPTCHAs for
humans to decipher. More specifically, each word that cannot be read
correctly by OCR is placed on an image and used as a CAPTCHA. This is
possible because most OCR programs alert you when a word cannot be read
correctly.
http://recaptcha.net/learnmore.html
The SNMP-Persist module is a backend for pass_persist feature of
net-snmp.
It simplifies the process of sharing user-specified data via SNMP and
development of persistent net-snmp applications controlling a chosen MIB
subtree.
It is particularly useful if data gathering process takes too long. The
responder is a separate thread, which is not influenced by updates of
MIB subtree data. The answer to a snmp request is fast and doesn't rely
on potentially slow source of data.
This program is a command-line utility to catalog and verify torrent files.
Run with only the -t option, it displays the metadata, name, and size of
each file in the torrent. Run with the -t and -p options, it computes the
hashes of all files in the torrent, compares them against the hashes stored
in the metadata, and warns of any errors.
Torrentcheck also verifies the length of each file, and flags an error if
the length is wrong even if the hash codes match. It is designed to handle
files over 4GB on a 32-bit machine.
If torrentcheck returns "torrent is good" at the end of its output, every
byte of every file in the torrent is present and correct, to a high degree
of certainty (as explained in the README file).
This module is a complete, RFC 821 compliant, SMTP server
implementation written entirely in Perl. It has powerful extensively
and customization facilities that allow for a variety of potential
uses.