GPT fdisk (aka gdisk) by Roderick W. Smith, rodsmith@rodsbooks.com
This software is intended as a (somewhat) fdisk-workalike program for
GPT-partitioned disks. Specific advantages of gdisk, cgdisk and
sgdisk include:
* Edit GUID partition table (GPT) definitions in Linux, FreeBSD, MacOS X,
or Windows
* Convert MBR to GPT or back without data loss
* Convert BSD disklabels to GPT without data loss
* Create hybrid MBR, which permits GPT-unaware
OSes to access up to three GPT partitions on the disk
* Repair damaged GPT data structures
* The ability to specify sector-exact partition sizes
* Clear identification of the number of unallocated sectors on a disk
http://www.rodsbooks.com/fixparts/
A user-space utility for testing the memory subsystem for faults. It is
portable and should compile and work on any 32- or 64-bit Unix-like system.
(Yes, even weird, proprietary Unices, and even Mac OS X.) For hardware
developers, memtester can be told to test memory starting at a particular
physical address as of memtester version 4.1.0.
The original source was by Simon Kirby <sim@stormix.com>. The program has
been rewritten by Charles Cazabon and many additional tests were added to
help catch borderline memory. He also rewrote the original tests (which
catch mainly memory bits which are stuck permanently high or low) so that
they run approximately an order of magnitude faster.
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/.
mcelog processes machine checks (in particular memory and CPU
hardware errors) on modern x86-based Unix systems and
produces human-readable output.
This software is heavily patched to work on FreeBSD systems,
and thus provides an extremely limited subset of features as
of this writing (for example, daemon mode is not currently
supported).
The primary purpose is to provide a way to decode MCE output
from the FreeBSD kernel into something more human-readable
using the command 'mcelog --no-dmi --ascii'.
FreeBSD conversion patches were originally written by John
Baldwin <jhb@freebsd.org> and later incorporated into this
port.
volman is a FreeBSD specific volume manager. It acts
as a translator of devd(8) events, probing storage
devices for their file system information, and serving
this over a FIFO based API to which clients can
subscribe. In addition to notifying clients of new
or lost volumes, it will mount and unmount such
volumes at the command of subscribing clients.
It runs as root and allows any local clients the
ability to mount and unmount volumes which are
detected, regardless of any user privileges. This
is intended for single user X11 systems needing
an easy way of accessing USB flash disks on the fly.
Eqe is a simple clone of the excellent LaTeX equation editor you can find on
MacOS X. There's a zone to type LaTeX input, and it generates an image to
represent it (color, font, and size are customisable). You can drag the
image to other applications (like OpenOffice.org Impress, Mozilla, the
Gimp). It also exports to almost any image format, including PNG, JPEG,
PDF...). It is free software, released under the GPL.
It is composed of two parts: eqedit, which is a command line tool that
generates images from LaTeX input, and eqe which wraps eqedit into a
graphical user interface.
This is mgdiff, a graphical front end to the UNIX diff command based
upon X11R[456] and the Motif widget set. It allows the user to select
two files for comparison, runs the diff command, parses the output, and
presents the results graphically. This presentation can also be used
to generate a user-specified merge of the two files into a third file.
This program's appearance is based upon a program called gdiff, which
runs only on Silicon Graphics workstations and for which source code
is not provided.
AsmXml is a very fast XML parser and decoder for x86 platforms. It
achieves high speed by using the following features:
* Support of an XML subset only
* Written in pure assembler
* Optimized memory accesses
* Parsing and decoding at the same time
This parser is intended for applications that need intensive processing
of XML. This project will likely appeal you if XML parsing is a
bottleneck in your data-flow. It is expecially designed for bulk loads
into databases.
This is not an all-purpose library, it is not designed to be used with
DOM, SAX, XPath and so on. Here, XML is just considered as an
interchange format, not as a working format.
Markdown is a text-to-HTML filter; it translates an easy-to-read and
easy-to-write structured text format into HTML. Markdown's text format
is most similar to that of plain text email, and supports features such
as headers, *emphasis*, code blocks, blockquotes, and links.
Markdown's syntax is designed not as a generic markup language, but
specifically to serve as a front-end to (X)HTML. You can use span-level
HTML tags anywhere in a Markdown document, and you can use block level
HTML tags (like <div> and <table> as well).
OpenVanilla (OV) is an input method (IM)/output filter (OF) framework
designed for better end-user text processing experiences. For example,
OpenVanilla provides a comprehensive set of Traditional Chinese input
methods that are lacking or of which counterparts are functionally
deficient/unsatisfactory in Apple's Mac OS X. Many Simplified Chinese
users also find this framework useful. A Tibetan IM module is also
available.
scim-openvanilla is an OpenVanilla loader as a SCIM IM engine that
enables the input method modules of OpenVanilla to be used through
SCIM.