NVClock is a small utility that allows users to overclock NVidia based
video cards running on *nix platforms. The original code used in building
this application was borrowed from the nvcs application. That code has
been extensively reworked in order to make the utility much more user
friendly and to make it play nice with current distributions and drivers.
nvramtool is a utility for reading/writing coreboot parameters and
displaying information from the coreboot table. It is intended for x86-based
systems (both 32-bit and 64-bit) that use coreboot.
The coreboot table resides in low physical memory, and may be accessed
through the /dev/mem interface. It is created at boot time by coreboot, and
contains various system information such as the type of mainboard in use. It
specifies locations in the CMOS (nonvolatile RAM) where the coreboot
parameters are stored.
For information about coreboot, see http://www.coreboot.org/.
Oak is a program that can be used to monitor syslogs from a collection
of servers and notify operators when problem conditions arise. In
addition to providing immediate notification of critical problems oak
will also batch less critical problems into summary messages that can
be sent less often and via any medium. For example you may wish to
have oak page you on critical events while sending a summary of less
important messages to your terminal once an hour. In addition you
could send a daily email message summarizing all events.
Obliterate overwrites the named file[s] with a pattern designed to
securely remove the data from the surface of most modern disk drives.
odo is an atomic odometer for the command line
Open opens a new vt and runs a command on it. It can be used as a simple
way to start several console logins without having to type your passwd
on each VT in turn. open can be used as a simpler to use replacement for
the doshell(8) command.
open is similar in functionality to the AIX/RS6000 command of the same name.
Autojump is a tool that acts as a complement to cd: it makes navigating your
filesystem a lot faster. It works by automagically maintaining a database of
the directories you use the most from the command line, and allows you to jump
back and forth between them, by typing just a few letters of the name of the
directory you want to jump to.
OpenUPSd is a UPS daemon, pretty specific to those Belkin
serial-connected UPS's that speak the "regulator pro smart protocol".
This daemon is monitoring only, at the moment anyway.
automount is a devd(8) based automounter for FreeBSD.
It supports most popular file systems:
NTFS/MSDOS/exFAT/EXT2/EXT3/EXT4/UFS
A script to dynamically configure amd(8) and populate /media with appropriate
symlinks, when storage devices appear.
It can also apply geli(8) keys from portable media to images and devices,