PEAR Log framework provides an abstracted logging system.
It supports logging to console, file, syslog, SQL, Sqlite, mail and
mcal targets. It also provides a subject - observer mechanism.
Toshctl is a command-line tool to allow access to much of the
Toshiba hardware interface developed by Jonathan Buzzard and
Linux toshset by Charles D. Schwieters.
It can do things linke set the LCD brightness, set CPU speed and set
fan speed.
Unix domain socket client and server programs that conform to UCSPI, the
Unix Client-Server Program Interface.
Tool for converting the UIF files (Universal Image Format, used by
MagicISO) to ISO9660.
USBHotkey allows you to catch USB keyboard events (key press and release
events) and transform them into X11 keyboard events using a Ruby script.
This provides mechanism for creating keymaps that can be more complicated
than the standard table-based keymap approach of X11.
uschedule is not cron and uschedule is not at - it does offer similar
functionality but is not intended to be a drop-in replacement. It works
differently. It's designed to be different.
Videogen calculates XFree86 modelines.
vmdktool converts raw filesystems to VMDK files and vice versa.
VMDK files can be imported directly into most Virtual Machine servers
as guest filesystems. Automatic machine deployments into products
such as VMware's ESXi and VirtualBox requires the ability to construct
VMDK files as the initial filesystem images for the created guests.
vmdktool is free.
Contact the author with any questions or comments.
ua is a simple command-line tool that finds sets of identical files.
The name ua is derived from the Hungarian word ugyanaz meaning the same.
The development of ua was motivated by the disturbingly often recurring
event of waiting too long for a shell script using sorts, md5sums, diffs
and the like to finish finding identical files. While there are many tools
out there, we needed a tool that can ignore white spaces and runs quite fast.
LICENSE: GPL2 or later
whatpix is a GPL Perl console application which finds and optionally moves or
deletes duplicate files.
whatpix was originally written by codex@bogus.net. The original web site for
whatpix is http://www.bogus.net/~codex/ You can find versions prior to 1.0
there.
whatpix is currently being developed and maintained by 3Jane Tessier-Ashpool
and Gerard Lanois.