cparser is a recursive descent C99 parser written in C99. It contains lexer,
parser, constructs an AST and does semantic analysis. It is currently used as
a frontend to the libFirm intermediate representation, but can be used
independently. cparser is able to bootstrap itself. It currently uses an
external preprocessor.
* fast recursive descent parser, parses C90 and C99
* handles most GCC extensions, e.g. __attribute__, inline assembler,
computed goto, statement expressions
* handles some MSVC extensions (like declspec)
* provides many useful warnings
* format string checker for char and wchar_t
* unreachable code analysis
* missing return statement check, which pinpoints exact location(s)
* write-only/-self variables detection
* missing and redundant forward declarations
* most warnings switches, which are available for GCC
* provides concise messages in case of error, for example when encountering
misspelled typenames
* compiler driver compatible with GCC (-fxxx, -Wxxx, -M, ...)
* uses libFIRM for optimization and code generation (devel/libfirm)
Rsyslog is an enhanced multi-threaded syslogd with a focus on
security and reliability.
Among others, it offers support for on-demand disk buffering,
reliable syslog over TCP, SSL, TLS and RELP, writing to databases
(MySQL, PostgreSQL, Oracle, and many more), email alerting, fully
configurable output formats (including high-precision timestamps),
the ability to filter on any part of the syslog message, on-the-wire
message compression, and the ability to convert text files to syslog.
It is a drop-in replacement for stock syslogd and able to work with
the same configuration file syntax. Its advanced features make it
suitable for enterprise-class, encryption protected syslog relay
chains while at the same time being very easy to setup for the
novice user.
Tracking v7-devel
This is tidy-devel, built with a shared lib.
When editing HTML it's easy to make mistakes. Wouldn't it be nice if
there was a simple way to fix these mistakes automatically and tidy up
sloppy editing into nicely layed out markup? Well now there is thanks
to Hewlett Packard's Dave Raggett. HTML TIDY is a free utility for
doing just that. It also works great on the attrociously hard to read
markup generated by specialized HTML editors and conversion tools, and
can help you identify where you need to pay further attention on
making your pages more accessible to people with disabilities.
Tidy is able to fix up a wide range of problems and to bring to your
attention things that you need to work on yourself. Each item found is
listed with the line number and column so that you can see where the
problem lies in your markup. Tidy won't generate a cleaned up version
when there are problems that it can't be sure of how to handle. These
are logged as "errors" rather than "warnings".