Chart::Math::Axis implements in a generic way an algorithm for finding a
set of ideal values for an axis. That is, for any given set of data,
what should the top and bottom of the axis scale be, and what should the
interval between the ticks be.
The terms top and bottom are used throughout this module, as it's
primary use is for determining the Y axis. For calculating the X axis,
you should think of 'top' as 'right', and 'bottom' as 'left'.
The "Statistics::Contingency" class helps you calculate several useful
statistical measures based on 2x2 "contingency tables". I use these measures
to help judge the results of automatic text categorization experiments, but
they are useful in other situations as well.
The general usage flow is to tally a whole bunch of results in the
"Statistics::Contingency" object, then query that object to obtain the
measures you are interested in. When all results have been collected, you
can get a report on accuracy, precision, recall, F1, and so on, with both
macro-averaging and micro-averaging over categories.
Ree stands for ROM extension extractor. Ree will scan your system memory,
address c0000 - f0000 in 512 steps for identification of ROM extensions
(55,aa), if found it will calculate its size (byte after id, multiplied by
512byte steps) and save the output to a .rom file.
This package also comes with fontdump, a program to extract the fonts from your
video BIOS ROMs.
You might ask yourself why collect x86 ROM extensions? It's like collecting
butterflies.
A collection of various .rom files can be found on the project page. Please
submit your ROMs there.
Find paths between two keys in the OpenPGP Web of Trust, and get statistics
about a key or the whole web.
Observe:
* We only search the largest strongly connected set.
* No attempt is made to verify the signatures. For you to be able to trust
a path, you must verify all signatures yourself.
* Even if there exists a path between you and another key, you have to
trust the other people in at least one path in the graph to trust the key.
Keys can be specified as normal key IDs (0x12345678 or 12345678), or a number
of space-separated case-insensitive search terms (i.e. "rms@gnu.org" or
"@gnu Stallman").
libdvdcss is a simple library designed for accessing DVDs like a block device
without having to bother about the decryption. The important features are:
- Portability. Currently supported platforms are GNU/Linux, FreeBSD, BeOS
and Windows.
- The MacOS X version is being worked on as well.
- Simplicity. There are currently 7 functions in the API, and we intend to
keep this number low.
- Freedom. libdvdcss is released under the General Public License, ensuring
it will stay free, and used only for free software products.
- Just better. Unlike most similar projects, libdvdcss doesn't require the
region of your drive to be set.
SEND is the implementation of RFC3971 Secure Neighbor Discovery
(SEND). SEND cryptographically secures the IPv6 neighbor discovery
protocol, countering the threats discussed in RFC3756 (IPv6 Neighbor
Discovery (ND) Trust Models and Threats).
The implementation is a new version of DoCoMo's SEND (send_0.2) that
was implemented completely in user space. Novelty in send_0.3 is the
native SEND API that avoids the need for the use of netgraph and BPF,
which makes send_0.3 portable over different BSD platforms and
significantlly more efficient.
Also included in the distribution are implementations of RFC3972
Cryptographically Generated Addresses (CGAs) and RFC3779 X.509
Extensions for IP Addresses and AS Identifiers.
Bitflu is a free BitTorrent client. The client was written in Perl and
is designed to run as a daemon (7x24h , like mlnet) on Linux, *BSD and
maybe even OSX.
* Multiple downloads
* Designed to run as a daemon/No GUI: You can connect to the client
using the telnet or HTTP interface
* Security: The client can chroot itself and drop privileges
* Bandwith shaping (currently only upload)
* Crash-Proof design: Crashes or a full filesystem will never corrupt
your downloads again :-)
* Non-Threading/(almost)Non-Forking design: All connections are handled
in non-blocking state using a dynamic select loop
CVSup is a software package for distributing and updating collections
of files across a network. It can efficiently and accurately mirror
all types of files, including sources, binaries, hard links, symbolic
links, and even device nodes. CVSup's streaming communication
protocol and multithreaded architecture make it most likely the
fastest mirroring tool in existence today. In addition to being
a great general-purpose mirroring tool, CVSup includes special
features and optimizations specifically tailored to CVS repositories.
This is a package that is statically compiled for FreeBSD 7.x omits
the GUI.
AFS is a distributed filesystem product, pioneered at Carnegie Mellon
University and supported and developed as a product by Transarc Corporation
(now IBM Pittsburgh Labs). It offers a client-server architecture for
federated file sharing and replicated read-only content distribution,
providing location independence, scalability, security, and transparent
migration capabilities. AFS is available for a broad range of heterogeneous
systems including UNIX, Linux, MacOS X, and Microsoft Windows.
IBM branched the source of the AFS product, and made a copy of the source
available for community development and maintenance. They called the
release OpenAFS.
The Foreman Smart Proxy is a daemon written in Ruby which provides a restful
API to various sub-systems.
Its goal is to provide API for a higher level orchestration tools (such as
Foreman). The Smart proxy provides an easy way to add or extended existing
subsystems and API's.
Currently supported are:
DHCP - ISC DHCP and MS DHCP Servers
DNS - Bind and MS DNS Servers
TFTP - any UNIX based tftp server
Puppet - Any Puppet server from 0.24.x
Puppet CA - Manage certificate signing, cleaning and autosign on a Puppet CA
server
BMC - BMC management etc