Kst is a fast real-time large-dataset viewing and plotting tool
with basic data analysis functionality. Kst contains many powerful
built-in features and is expandable with plugins and extensions.
Features of Kst include:
- Robust plotting of live "streaming" data.
- Powerful keyboard and mouse plot manipulation.
- Large selection of built-in plotting and data manipulation functions,
such as histograms, equations, and power spectra.
- Color mapping and contour mapping capabilities for three-dimensional
data, as well as matrix and image support.
- Monitoring of events and notifications support.
- Built-in filtering and curve fitting capabilities.
- Convenient command-line interface.
- Powerful graphical user interface.
- Support for several popular data formats.
- Extended annotation objects similar to vector graphics applications.
This port provide Kst 2, which is based on Qt4. It still lacks scripting
support and backward compatibility with Kst 1.x series (you can't open
kst-1 files in Kst 2).
TinyCA is a simple graphical userinterface written in Perl/Tk to manage a
small CA (Certification Authority).
Currently TinyCA supports the following features:
* unlimited number of CAs
* support for creating and managing SubCAs
* Creation and Revocation of x509 - S/MIME certificates
* PKCS#10 Requests can be imported and signed
* RSA and DSA keys can be generated and used
* Servercertificates
o Certificates can be exported as: PEM, DER, TXT and PKCS#12
o Certificates may be used with e.g. Apache, Postfix, OpenLDAP,
Cyrus and FreeS/WAN
* Clientcertificates
o Certificates can be exported as: PEM, DER, TXT and PKCS#12
o Certificates may be used with e.g. Netscape, Konqueror, Opera,
Internet Explorer, Outlook (Express) and FreeS/WAN
* Certificate Revocation List
o CRLs can be exported as: PEM, DER and TXT
viewglob is an utility designed to complement the Unix shell in
graphical environments. It has two parts:
1. A tool that sits as a layer between the shell and X terminal,
keeping track of the user's current directory and command line.
2. A graphical display which shows the layouts of directories
referenced on the command line (including pwd).
The display reveals the results of file globs and expansions as they
are typed (hence the name), highlighting selected files and potential
name completions.
It can also be used as a surrogate terminal, where keystrokes typed in
the display are passed to the shell. Files and directories can be
double-clicked to insert their names and/or paths into the terminal.
clone is a file tree cloning tool which runs 3 threads - a scheduler (main), a
reader, and a writer thread. Reading and writing occurs in parallel. While this
is most beneficial for copying data from one physical disk to another, clone is
also very well suited for cloning a file tree to any place on the same disk.
Cloning includes the whole directory hierarchy, i.e. sub-directories, files,
hard links, symbolic links, attributes (modes, flags, times), extended
attributes and access control lists.
clone is useful for cloning (thus backing-up) live file systems, and it can
also be used in incremental and synchronization mode.
clone works on FreeBSD and Mac OS X.
clone is very fast, for example, cloning a whole UFS2 file hierarchy on
FreeBSD 9.1 of in total 2.3 TBytes of data from one hard disk to another
took 7.5 h, so the average transfer rate for all kind of files (very small
up to very big ones) was about 89 MByte/s.
powerman is free Unix/Linux software that controls (remotely and in
parallel) switched power distribution units. It was designed for remote
power control of Linux systems in a data center or cluster environment, but
has been used in other environments such as embedded management appliances,
home automation, and high availability service management.
powerman can be extended to support new devices using an expect-like
scripting language. It communicates with devices natively using telnet,
raw socket, and serial protocols. It also can drive virtual power control
devices via a coprocess interface. The coprocess mechanism has been used
to extend powerman to communicate with devices using other protocols such
as SNMP, IPMI, Insteon, X-10, and VXI-11.
powerman can control equipment connected using any combination of the above
methods and provide unified naming for the equipment and parallel execution
of control actions.
U-Boot loader for Banana Pi.
To install this bootloader, follow the instructions in
http://linux-sunxi.org/Bootable_SD_card#Bootloader
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled.
* The default environment is trimmed to just what's needed to boot.
* The saveenv command writes to the file u-boot.env on the FAT partition.
* The DTB file name is chosen based on the board model and passed to ubldr
using the fdtfile env variable. ubldr loads the DTB from /boot/dtb/ on
the FreeBSD partition.
* By default, it loads ELF ubldr from file ubldr on the FAT partition
to address 0x42000000, and launches it.
For information about running FreeBSD on Banana Pi, see
https://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/arm/Allwinner
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
U-Boot loader for Cubieboard2.
To install this bootloader, follow the instructions in
http://linux-sunxi.org/Bootable_SD_card#Bootloader
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled.
* The default environment is trimmed to just what's needed to boot.
* The saveenv command writes to the file u-boot.env on the FAT partition.
* The DTB file name is chosen based on the board model and passed to ubldr
using the fdtfile env variable. ubldr loads the DTB from /boot/dtb/ on
the FreeBSD partition.
* By default, it loads ELF ubldr from file ubldr on the FAT partition
to address 0x42000000, and launches it.
For information about running FreeBSD on Cubieboard, see
https://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/arm/Allwinner
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
U-Boot loader for Banana Pi M2.
To install this bootloader, follow the instructions in
http://linux-sunxi.org/Bootable_SD_card#Bootloader
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled.
* The default environment is trimmed to just what's needed to boot.
* The saveenv command writes to the file u-boot.env on the FAT partition.
* The DTB file name is chosen based on the board model and passed to ubldr
using the fdtfile env variable. ubldr loads the DTB from /boot/dtb/ on
the FreeBSD partition.
* By default, it loads PIE ubldr.bin from file ubldr.bin on the FAT partition
to address 0x42000000, and launches it.
For information about running FreeBSD on Banana Pi, see
https://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/arm/Allwinner
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
U-Boot loader for Cubieboard.
To install this bootloader, follow the instructions in
http://linux-sunxi.org/Bootable_SD_card#Bootloader
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled.
* The default environment is trimmed to just what's needed to boot.
* The saveenv command writes to the file u-boot.env on the FAT partition.
* The DTB file name is chosen based on the board model and passed to ubldr
using the fdtfile env variable. ubldr loads the DTB from /boot/dtb/ on
the FreeBSD partition.
* By default, it loads ELF ubldr from file ubldr on the FAT partition
to address 0x42000000, and launches it.
For information about running FreeBSD on Cubieboard, see
https://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/arm/Allwinner
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
U-Boot loader for PandaBoard.
To install this bootloader, copy the files MLO and u-boot.img to the FAT
partition on an SD card. Normally this is partition 1, but different
partitions can be set with U-Boot environment variables.
This version is patched so that:
* ELF and API features are enabled.
* The default environment is trimmed to just what's needed to boot.
* The saveenv command writes to the file uboot.env on the FAT partition.
* The DTB file name is passed to ubldr using the fdtfile env variable.
It defaults to omap4-panda.dtb unless you override it. ubldr loads
the DTB from /boot/dtb/ on the FreeBSD partition.
(Not tested)
* By default, it loads ELF ubldr from file ubldr on the FAT partition
to address 0x88000000, and launches it.
For information about running FreeBSD on the PandaBoard, see
https://wiki.freebsd.org/FreeBSD/arm/PandaBoard
For general information about U-Boot see WWW: http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot