Currently phpMyAdmin can:
* browse and drop databases, tables, views, columns and indexes
* display multiple results sets through stored procedures or queries
* create, copy, drop, rename and alter databases, tables, columns
and indexes
* maintain server, databases and tables, with proposals on server
configuration
* execute, edit and bookmark any SQL-statement, even batch-queries
* load text files into tables
* create and read dumps of tables
* export data to various formats: CSV, XML, PDF, ISO/IEC 26300 -
OpenDocument Text and Spreadsheet, Microsoft Word 2000, and
LATEX formats
* import data and MySQL structures from OpenDocument spreadsheets,
as well as XML, CSV, and SQL files
* administer multiple servers
* manage MySQL users and privileges
* check referential integrity in MyISAM tables
* using Query-by-example (QBE), create complex queries
automatically connecting required tables
* create PDF graphics of your database layout
* search globally in a database or a subset of it
* transform stored data into any format using a set of predefined
functions, like displaying BLOB-data as image or download-link
* track changes on databases, tables and views
* support InnoDB tables and foreign keys
* support mysqli, the improved MySQL extension
* create, edit, call, export and drop stored procedures and
functions
* create, edit, export and drop events and triggers
* communicate in 62 different languages
Freemind is an incredible thought organization tool
FROM THE AUTHORS:
FreeMind is a premier free mind-mapping software written in Java. The recent
development has hopefully turned it into high productivity tool. We are proud
that the operation and navigation of FreeMind is faster than that of Mind
Manager because of one-click "fold / unfold" and "follow link" operations.
So you want to write a completely new metaphysics? Why don't you use FreeMind?
You have a tool at hand that remarkably resembles the tray slips of Robert
Pirsig, described in his sequel to Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
called Lila. Do you want to refactor your essays in a similar way you would
refactor software? Or do you want to keep personal knowledge base, which is
easy to manage? Why don't you try FreeMind?
FROM THE PORTER (me):
Freemind is usable for many different things. I'm using it to plan
projects, document servers and systems, plan and do html presentations
guides, record and mantain progress of tasks and many other things.
This module implements asynchronous I/O using whatever means your
operating system supports.
Asynchronous means that operations that can normally block your
program (e.g. reading from disk) will be done asynchronously: the
operation will still block, but you can do something else in the
meantime. This is extremely useful for programs that need to stay
interactive even when doing heavy I/O (GUI programs, high performance
network servers etc.), but can also be used to easily do operations in
parallel that are normally done sequentially, e.g. stat'ing many files,
which is much faster on a RAID volume or over NFS when you do a number
of stat operations concurrently.
While most of this works on all types of file descriptors (for example
sockets), using these functions on file descriptors that support
nonblocking operation (again, sockets, pipes etc.) is very inefficient
or might not work (aio_read fails on sockets/pipes/fifos). Use an
event loop for that (such as the Event module): IO::AIO will naturally
fit into such an event loop itself.
The ResourcePool is a generic connection caching and pooling management
facility. It might be used in an Apache/mod_perl environment to support
connection caching like Apache::DBI for non-DBI resources
(e.g. Net::LDAP). It's also useful in a stand alone perl application
to handle connection pools.
The key benefit of ResourcePool is the generic design which makes it
easily extensible to new resource types.
The ResourcePool has a simple check mechanism to detect and close broken
connections (e.g. if the database server was restarted) and opens new
connections if possible.
If you are new to ResourcePool you should go to the ResourcePool::BigPicture
documentation which provides the best entry point to this module.
The ResourcePool itself handles always exactly equivalent connections
(e.g. connections to the same server with the same user-name and password)
and is therefore not able to do a load balancing. The
ResourcePool::LoadBalancer is able to do a advanced load balancing across
different servers and increases the overall availability by applying a
failover policy if there is a server breakdown.
DJBDNS is a collection of Domain Name System tools. It includes
several components:
* The dnscache program is a local DNS cache. It accepts recursive DNS
queries from local clients such as web browsers. It collects
responses from remote DNS servers.
* The tinydns program is a fast, UDP-only DNS server. It makes local
DNS information available to the Internet.
* The pickdns program is a load-balancing DNS server. It points
clients to a dynamic selection of IP addresses.
* The walldns program is a reverse DNS wall. It provides matching
reverse and forward records while hiding local host information.
* The dns library handles outgoing and incoming DNS packets. It can be
used by clients such as web browsers to look up host addresses, host
names, MX records, etc. It supports asynchronous resolution.
* The dnsfilter program is a parallel IP-address-to-host-name
converter.
* The dnsip, dnsipq, dnsname, dnstxt, and dnsmx programs are simple
command-line interfaces to DNS.
* The dnsq and dnstrace programs are DNS debugging tools.
Documentation is at the website below,
Netrek is a multiplayer (up to 16 players) network space battle/conquest
game, with a Star Trek theme. Players can command one of several ship
types (Federation/Romulan/Klingon/Orion) and can band up in teams. The
object of the game is, basically, to control the Universe, by capturing
enemy planets, killing the enemy, etc.
NOTE: This is the "BRMH" client. It is optimized for speed, and so is
well suited to you if you have a slowish system. However, you don't get
any of the fancy extras, like colors, sound, etc.
NOTE 2: This client is distributed in binary form, because it is a
"Blessed" client, meaning that it has been approved by the "Gods of Netrek"
and has had an RSA key embedded in it. You can, of course, compile your
own client if you wish, but keep in mind that, if you do so, your client
will be "Un-Blessed" and will probably be kicked out of the official
servers. This is to prevent some unscrupulous player from hacking his/her
client to give him/her superhuman powers ("cyborgs", or "borgs").
Ur is a programming language in the tradition of ML and Haskell, but featuring
a significantly richer type system. Ur is functional, pure, statically-typed,
and strict. Ur supports a powerful kind of metaprogramming based on row types.
Ur/Web is Ur plus a special standard library and associated rules for parsing
and optimization. Ur/Web supports construction of dynamic web applications
backed by SQL databases. The signature of the standard library is such that
well-typed Ur/Web programs "don't go wrong" in a very broad sense. Not only do
they not crash during particular page generations, but they also may not:
* Suffer from any kinds of code-injection attacks
* Return invalid HTML
* Contain dead intra-application links
* Have mismatches between HTML forms and the fields expected by their
handlers
* Include client-side code that makes incorrect assumptions about the
"AJAX"-style services that the remote web server provides
* Attempt invalid SQL queries
* Use improper marshaling or unmarshaling in communication with SQL databases
or between browsers and web servers
Dbmail is the name of a group of programs that enable the possibility of
storing and retrieving mail messages from a database (currently MySQL,
PostgreSQL or SQLite).
* Scalability.
Dbmail is as scalable as the database system that is used for the mail
storage. In theory millions of accounts can be managed using dbmail. One
could, for example, run 4 different servers with the pop3 daemon each
connecting to the same database (cluster) server.
* Manageability.
Dbmail is based upon a database. Dbmail can be managed by changing settings
in the database (f.e. using PHP/Perl/SQL), without needing shell access.
* Speed.
Dbmail uses very efficient, database specific queries for retrieving mail
information. This is much faster then parsing a filesystem.
* Security.
Dbmail has got nothing to do with the filesystem or interaction with other
programs in the Unix environment which need special permissions. Dbmail is
as secure as the database it's based upon.
* Flexibility.
Changes on a Dbmail system (adding of users, changing passwords etc.) are
effective immediately.
Dbmail is the name of a group of programs that enable the possibility of
storing and retrieving mail messages from a database (currently MySQL,
PostgreSQL or SQLite).
* Scalability.
Dbmail is as scalable as the database system that is used for the mail
storage. In theory millions of accounts can be managed using dbmail. One
could, for example, run 4 different servers with the pop3 daemon each
connecting to the same database (cluster) server.
* Manageability.
Dbmail is based upon a database. Dbmail can be managed by changing settings
in the database (f.e. using PHP/Perl/SQL), without needing shell access.
* Speed.
Dbmail uses very efficient, database specific queries for retrieving mail
information. This is much faster then parsing a filesystem.
* Security.
Dbmail has got nothing to do with the filesystem or interaction with other
programs in the Unix environment which need special permissions. Dbmail is
as secure as the database it's based upon.
* Flexibility.
Changes on a Dbmail system (adding of users, changing passwords etc.) are
effective immediately.
This module communicates with an IMAP server. Each IMAP server command is mapped
to a method of this object. Although other IMAP modules exist on CPAN, this has
several advantages over other modules:
- It parses the more complex IMAP structures like envelopes and body structures
into nice Perl data structures.
- It correctly supports atoms, quoted strings and literals at any point. Some
parsers in other modules aren't fully IMAP compatiable and may break at odd
times with certain messages on some servers.
- It allows large return values (eg. attachments on a message) to be read
directly into a file, rather than into memory.
- It includes some helper functions to find the actual text/plain or text/html
part of a message out of a complex MIME structure. It also can find a list of
attachements, and CID links for HTML messages with attached images.
- It supports decoding of MIME headers to Perl utf-8 strings automatically, so
you don't have to deal with MIME encoded headers (enabled optionally).
While the IMAP protocol does allow for asynchronous running of commands, this
module is designed to be used in a synchronous manner. That is, you issue a
command by calling a method, and the command will block until the appropriate
response is returned. The method will then return the parsed results from the
given command.