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misc/i18n-man-1.1 (Score: 0.007709594)
Browse I18N capable UNIX manual pages with Mule, Emacs, and XEmacs
This code provides a function, `i18n-man', with which you can browse UNIX manual pages. Formatting is done in background so that you can continue to use your Emacs while processing is going on. The mode also supports hypertext-like following of manual page SEE ALSO references, and other features. See below or do `?' in a manual page buffer for details. For working with Japanese, English and German, put your dot.emacs file following: (autoload 'jman "i18n-man-ja" nil t) (autoload 'eman "i18n-man-en" nil t) (autoload 'dman "i18n-man-de" nil t) then M-x jman to get a Japanese manual page thru jman(1) and put it in a buffer. M-x eman to get a English manual page thru man(1) and put it in a buffer. M-x dman to get a German manual page thru man(1) and put it in a buffer. If you want byte-compile with your favorite "Emacs", use "byte-comile" script as: # cd /usr/local/share/emacs/site-lisp # /usr/local/share/doc/prom-mew/byte-compile xemacs-mule i18n-man-ja i18n-man-ja.el i18n-man.el For usage of byte_compile scripts, run byte_compile with -h option.
net/Radiator-4.14 (Score: 0.007709594)
Radiator Radius Server by Open System Consultants
Radiator is a highly configurable and flexible Radius server that supports authentication by a huge range of authentication methods such as Flat files, DBM files, Unix password files, SQL databases, remote Radius servers (proxying), external programs, NT User Manager, Active Directory, LDAP, PAM, iPASS, GRIC, NIS+, Tacacs+, a wide range of ISP billing packages such as Emerald, Platypus, Rodopi, Hawk-i, Interbiller98, Freeside etc, your legacy user database etc, etc. Radiator now supports more 802.1x secure wireless and LAN authentication methods than any other Radius server giving a wide choice of 802.1x network clients. Radiator also includes many features not found in other Radius servers such as double-login prevention, username rewriting, full vendor-specific attributes, time-of-day blocking and a GUI for running user tests. Full list of technical features. Runs on all Unix, Linux, Windows 95, 98, NT, 2000, Mac OS-9 and Mac OS-X, VMS. Due to license restrictions, this package must be purchased and manually downloaded from the Open System Consultants web site.
ports-mgmt/tinderbox-4.2.0 (Score: 0.007709594)
Port build tinderbox system
Tinderbox is a package building system for FreeBSD ports, based on official Portbuild scripts used on pointyhat building cluster. Tinderbox was written by Joe Marcus Clarke. You can define multiple jails (base system versions) and multiple portstrees. The combination of jail and portstree is called a build. A Tinderbox jail is not what is understood as a jail in FreeBSD, it is in fact a given world in a chroot. Tinderbox supports automatic tracking of dependencies and only rebuilds packages that changed since last run. Tinderbox has support for email notification of failed builds. Tinderbox also integrates well with ccache. Tinderbox is designed to easily provide package sets of ports you need, for platforms and architectures you need. Tinderbox is also excellent tool for testing new ports and port upgrades, especially for testing dependencies and packing lists. It's also useful for testing ports on various releases of FreeBSD, since you can run FreeBSD 6.X world as a jail on FreeBSD 7.X/8.X host.
shells/v7sh-1.0 (Score: 0.007709594)
Implementation of the UNIX 7th Edition shell
The original Steve R. Bourne shell from the 7th edition Unix including System III, 4.3BSD-Reno, Ultrix 3.1 and ``home made'' fixes and enhancements : * `--' end of options added (sysIII). `set +x' and such added (sysIII). `/etc/bsh_profile' (sysIII) and `$HOME/.bsh_profile' (unsw) are sourced at login time if they exist. Initially, only the `.profile' located in the current directory was sourced at login time if it exists. They have been `bsh_' prefixed to avoid conflicts w/ the standards `profiles' which can contains unsupported expressions such as shell functions. negation (! or ^) in `[]' added (sysIII). `${x:-x}' and similar expressions added (sysIII). '<<-' (aka strip leading tab in here document) added (sysIII). `#' comments are allowed in shell scripts (sysIII/reno), but not on the command line (reno) ! `break N' and `continue N' fixed (sysIII/ultrix). `if... then... [elif... [else...]] fi' fixed (reno). `test' (sysIII) and `ulimit' (ultrix) builtins added. * ANSI-fication to permit an almost warning free compilation (home made). `union trenod' taken from 4.3BSD-Reno. better signal handling and error recovery (sysIII/reno). better restricted shell (sysIII) and IFS protection (reno). * functions aren't supported and command line input is not 8 bit clean.
multimedia/vdr-plugin-remote-0.4.0 (Score: 0.006745895)
Video Disk Recorder - remote control plugin
http://www.linuxtv.org/vdrwiki/index.php/Remote-plugin This plugin extends the remote control capabilities of vdr. The following remote control devices are supported: (a) Linux input device driver ('/dev/input/eventX', X=0,1,2,...) (currently not supported on FreeBSD) (b) keyboard (tty driver): /dev/console, /dev/ttyX (c) TCP connection (telnet) (d) LIRC (e) some(?) FreeBSD uhid(4) devices (experimental support added by this port) To use, add something like this to vdr_flags: '-Premote -h /dev/uhid0', (re)start vdr, then the osd should ask you to configure the remote by pressing the buttons you want to assign. Note: If your remote is detected as a keyboard you'll have to tell ukbd(4) to ignore it first by doing (as root) something like: usbconfig add_dev_quirk_vplh 0x1241 0xe000 0 0xffff UQ_KBD_IGNORE (and possibly unplug it for a moment or reset it via usbconfig, 0x1241 there is the vendor id, 0xe000 the product id of the device, you can get yours by doing usbconfig -d 1.2 dump_device_desc and looking for idVendor and idProduct, -d 1.2 there corresponds to ugen1.2 listed by usbconfig w/o args.) You can check with: usbconfig show_ifdrv if the device is then listed as ugen...: uhid... you're good to go. 2nd note: If vdr cannot open your uhid device check it is not claimed by xorg: fstat |grep uhid If it is you may need an xorg.conf(5) with manually defined InputDevice sections for mouse and keyboard and Option "AutoAddDevices" "False" in the ServerFlags section. And if for some reason you want to reassign the buttons on the remote you can stop vdr and do: touch /usr/local/etc/vdr/channels.conf and/or remove uhid entries from /usr/local/etc/vdr/remote.conf . When you then start vdr again it should ask to configure the remote again.
archivers/unar-1.10 (Score: 0.006676704)
Unarchiver for a vast variety of file formats
The Unarchiver is an archive unpacker program with support for the lots of popular ZIP, RAR, 7z, tar, gzip, bzip2, LZMA, XZ, CAB, MSI, NSIS, EXE, ISO, BIN, split file formats, as well as the old Stuffit, Stuffit X, DiskDouble, Compact Pro, Packit, cpio, compress (.Z), ARJ, ARC, PAK, ACE, ZOO, LZH, ADF, DMS, LZX, PowerPacker, LBR, Squeeze, Crunch, and other old/obscure formats. It can also handle filenames in foreign character sets, created with non- English versions of some operating systems, and is particularly useful for processing CJK archives correctly.
audio/ghostess-20120105 (Score: 0.006676704)
Graphical DSSI host with JACK MIDI support
Ghostess is a graphical DSSI host, based on jack-dssi-host, but capable of saving and restoring plugin configuration, as well as specifying MIDI channels and layering synths. ghostess includes three MIDI drivers: an ALSA sequencer MIDI driver, a (clumsy but functional) CoreMIDI driver (which allows ghostess to be used on Mac OS X), and a JACK MIDI driver for use with the MIDI transport in recent versions (>=0.102.27) of JACK. ghostess also comes with a universal DSSI GUI, which attempts to provide GUI services for any DSSI or LADSPA plugin, and may be used with any DSSI host.
audio/portaudio-19.20140130 (Score: 0.006676704)
Portable cross-platform Audio API
PortAudio is a free, cross-platform, open-source, audio I/O library. It lets you write simple audio programs in 'C' or C++ that will compile and run on many platforms including Windows, Macintosh OS X, and Unix (OSS/ALSA). It is intended to promote the exchange of audio software between developers on different platforms. Many applications use PortAudio for Audio I/O. PortAudio provides a very simple API for recording and/or playing sound using a simple callback function or a blocking read/write interface. Example programs are included that play sine waves, process audio input (guitar fuzz), record and playback audio, list available audio devices, etc.
audio/Audio-Ecasound-1.01 (Score: 0.006676704)
Perl extension for ecasound sampler, recorder, fx-processor
Audio::Ecasound provides perl bindings to the ecasound control interface of the ecasound program. You can use perl to automate or interact with ecasound so you don't have to turn you back on the adoring masses packed into Wembly Stadium. Ecasound is a software package designed for multitrack audio processing. It can be used for audio playback, recording, format conversions, effects processing, mixing, as a LADSPA plugin host and JACK node. Version >= 2.2.X must be installed to use this package. "SEE ALSO" for more info.
audio/xmcd-3.3.2 (Score: 0.006676704)
Motif CD player
Xmcd is a program that allows the use of the CD-ROM drive as a full-featured stereo compact-disc player for the X Window System. Most of the features found on real CD players are available in xmcd, such as shuffle and repeat, track programming functions, a numeric keypad, and track warp slider for direct track access. Additional functions include sample play, A to B segment play, volume control, balance control, etc. Several automation options are also available on CD load, eject, play completion, and program exit. A Channel Routing feature allows you to select from several stereo or mono routing options. The volume control slider taper characteristics can also be altered.