1 |
#!/usr/bin/perl |
2 |
|
3 |
umask 022; |
4 |
|
5 |
mkdir "software.schmorp.de", 0755; |
6 |
mkdir "software.schmorp.de/pkg", 0755; |
7 |
mkdir "software.schmorp.de/img", 0755; |
8 |
system "rsync -av *.jpg software.schmorp.de/img/"; |
9 |
|
10 |
our %IRC = ( |
11 |
# anyevent => ["irc.perl.org", "#anyevent", "http://mibbit.com/chat/#anyevent\@irc.perl.org"], |
12 |
# freenode => ["irc.freenode.org", "#schmorp", "http://webchat.freenode.net/?randomnick=1&channels=schmorp&prompt=1", ", users <tt>schmorp</tt> and <tt>elmex</tt>"], |
13 |
anyevent => ["irc.schmorp.de", "#schmorpforge", "http://chat.schmorp.de/?channels=schmorpforge", ", user <tt>schmorp</tt>"], |
14 |
schmorp => ["irc.schmorp.de", "#schmorpforge", "http://chat.schmorp.de/?channels=schmorpforge", ", user <tt>schmorp</tt>"], |
15 |
rxvt => ["irc.freenode.org", "#rxvt-unicode", "http://webchat.freenode.net/?randomnick=1&channels=rxvt-unicode&prompt=1", ""], |
16 |
rxvtdev => ["irc.freenode.org", "#rxvt-unicode-dev", "http://webchat.freenode.net/?randomnick=1&channels=rxvt-unicode-dev&prompt=1", " <b>(no support, development only)</b>"], |
17 |
); |
18 |
|
19 |
sub hdr($$) { |
20 |
print <<EOF; |
21 |
<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?> |
22 |
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd"> |
23 |
<html xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml' xml:lang='en'> |
24 |
<head> |
25 |
<title>$_[0]</title> |
26 |
<style type='text/css'> |
27 |
body { |
28 |
background: white; |
29 |
color: black; |
30 |
font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; |
31 |
font-size: 12pt; |
32 |
margin: 0; |
33 |
padding: 0; |
34 |
} |
35 |
|
36 |
.bg-ede { background: url(/img/ede.jpg) no-repeat; padding: 20px; width: 100%; height: 82px; } |
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.bg-perl { background: url(/img/perl.jpg) no-repeat; padding: 20px; width: 100%; height: 194px; } |
38 |
.bg-bluete { background: url(/img/bluete.jpg) no-repeat; padding: 20px; width: 100%; height: 148px; } |
39 |
|
40 |
a:link { color: #00f; } |
41 |
a:visited { color: #008; } |
42 |
a:hover { color: #800; } |
43 |
a:active { color: #f00; } |
44 |
|
45 |
.back { |
46 |
margin: 0; |
47 |
font-size: 8pt; |
48 |
} |
49 |
|
50 |
h1 { |
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color: #034; |
52 |
} |
53 |
.short-desc { |
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font-weight: bold; |
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padding: 3px 3px 3px 8px; |
56 |
margin: 0 1px 0 13px; |
57 |
} |
58 |
h2 { |
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color: #069; |
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font-weight: bold; |
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border: solid red; |
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border-width: 0 0 0 12px; |
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padding: 3px 3px 3px 8px; |
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margin: 0 1px 0 1px; |
65 |
} |
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p { |
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padding: 3px 3px 3px 8px; |
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margin: 0 1px 0 13px; |
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} |
70 |
h3 { color: #034; } |
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h4 { color: #034; } |
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|
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img { display: block; } |
74 |
|
75 |
.resources { |
76 |
margin-left: 13px; |
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margin-right: 13px; |
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padding: 3px 3px 3px 8px; |
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border-spacing: 1px 2px; |
80 |
} |
81 |
|
82 |
.rr { |
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background: #eef; |
84 |
padding: 1px 1em 1px 1ex; |
85 |
} |
86 |
|
87 |
tt.icon { |
88 |
display: block; |
89 |
font-family: "Andale Mono", "Lettergothic", monospace; |
90 |
border: 1px solid #88f; |
91 |
background: #ccf; |
92 |
padding: 1px 1em 1px 1em; |
93 |
margin-right: 0; |
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text-align: center; |
95 |
width: 4en; |
96 |
} |
97 |
|
98 |
tt { font-family: "Andale Mono", "Lettergothic", monospace; } |
99 |
|
100 |
.overview { |
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margin-top: 1em; |
102 |
margin-left: 13px; |
103 |
margin-right: 13px; |
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padding: 3px 3px 3px 8px; |
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border-spacing: 1px 2px; |
106 |
} |
107 |
|
108 |
.overview th { border-top: 1px dashed #aaa; vertical-align: top; text-align: left; padding: 0.2ex; } |
109 |
.overview td { border-top: 1px dashed #aaa; vertical-align: top; text-align: left; padding: 0.2ex; } |
110 |
|
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hr { display: none; } |
112 |
.footer { font-size: 8pt; border-top: 1px solid red; } |
113 |
|
114 |
.section { margin: 0; padding: 0.5em 4px 0.5em 4px; } |
115 |
.section-topnav { background: #f0ef8b; padding: 0px 4px 1px 4px; } |
116 |
.section-header { background: white ; padding-top: 0; } |
117 |
.section-footer { background: #f0ef8b; } |
118 |
.section-overview { background: white ; } |
119 |
|
120 |
.section-short-desc { background: white ; } |
121 |
.section-blurb { background: white ; } |
122 |
.section-resources { background: white ; } |
123 |
.section-documents { background: white ; } |
124 |
.section-about { background: white ; } |
125 |
|
126 |
</style> |
127 |
</head> |
128 |
<body> |
129 |
<div class='section section-topnav'> |
130 |
<p class='back'><a href='/'>Schmorpforge Software Repository</a></p> |
131 |
</div> |
132 |
<div class='section section-header'> |
133 |
<h1 class="$_[1]">$_[0]</h1> |
134 |
<div style="text-align: center; float: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em"> |
135 |
<!-- |
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<a title="Mach mit!" href="http://www.piratenpartei.de/unsere_ziele"> |
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<img src="http://res.tst.eu/denke_selbst.gif" alt="Werde Pirat!" width="468" height="60" border="0" /> |
138 |
</a> |
139 |
<br /> |
140 |
--> |
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<a href="http://www.piratenpartei.de/unsere_ziele"> |
142 |
<img src="http://res.tst.eu/piraten1.png" alt="Piratenpartei" width="468" height="60" border="0" /> |
143 |
</a> |
144 |
<br /> |
145 |
<a href="http://www.deliantra.net/"> |
146 |
<img src="http://www.deliantra.net/images/deliantra.png" border="0" alt="Deliantra Free MMORPG" style="display: inline"/> |
147 |
<br /> |
148 |
The free as in beer, liberal, code & content retro-style graphical MMORPG :) |
149 |
</a> |
150 |
</div> |
151 |
</div> |
152 |
EOF |
153 |
} |
154 |
|
155 |
sub ftr { |
156 |
print <<EOF; |
157 |
<div class='section section-footer'> |
158 |
<hr class='footer'/> |
159 |
<p class='footer'> |
160 |
Contact for this page: <a href="mailto:schmorpforge\@schmorp.de">Marc Lehmann <schmorpforge\@schmorp.de></a>. |
161 |
</p> |
162 |
</div> |
163 |
</body> |
164 |
</html> |
165 |
EOF |
166 |
} |
167 |
|
168 |
$_ = <DATA>; |
169 |
for (;defined $_;) { |
170 |
my ($name, @args) = split /\s+/; |
171 |
|
172 |
next unless $name; |
173 |
|
174 |
my $desc = ""; |
175 |
$desc .= $_ while (defined ($_ = <DATA>) and !/^\S/); |
176 |
$desc =~ s/^(.*?)\n\s*\n//s |
177 |
or die "malformed desc in $name: $desc"; |
178 |
|
179 |
my $short = $1; |
180 |
|
181 |
(my $id = $name) =~ y%/%-%; |
182 |
$index{$name} = "<tr><th id='$id' style='white-space:nowrap'><a href='pkg/$name.html'>$name</a></th><td>$short</td></tr>"; |
183 |
|
184 |
open STDOUT, ">", "software.schmorp.de/pkg/$name.html" |
185 |
or die "software.schmorp.de/pkg/$name.html: $!"; |
186 |
|
187 |
my $bg = (grep /cpan/, @args) ? "bg-perl" : "bg-ede"; |
188 |
hdr $name, $bg; |
189 |
|
190 |
print <<EOF; |
191 |
<div class='section section-short-desc'> |
192 |
<h2>$name</h2> |
193 |
<p class='short-desc'>$short</p> |
194 |
</div> |
195 |
|
196 |
<div class='section section-blurb'> |
197 |
<h2>Blurb</h2> |
198 |
<p class='blurb'>$desc</p> |
199 |
</div> |
200 |
|
201 |
<div class='section section-resources'> |
202 |
<h2>Resources</h2> |
203 |
<table class='resources'> |
204 |
EOF |
205 |
|
206 |
for (grep /^res/, @args) { |
207 |
/^resource\(([^,]+),{{(.*?)}}\)$/ or die "$_: no resource\n"; |
208 |
print <<EOF; |
209 |
<tr><td><tt class="icon">$1</tt></td><td class='rr'>$2</li></tr> |
210 |
EOF |
211 |
} |
212 |
|
213 |
print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>FILE</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='https://ftpmirror.gnu.org/gnu/$name/'>File Releases (GNU)</a></td></tr>\n" |
214 |
if grep /dist-gnu/, @args; |
215 |
print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>FILE</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://dist.schmorp.de/$name/'>File Releases</a></td></tr>\n" |
216 |
if grep /dist(?!-)/, @args; |
217 |
print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>CPAN</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-authors/id/M/ML/MLEHMANN/'>File Releases (CPAN)</a></td></tr>\n" |
218 |
if grep /cpan$/, @args; |
219 |
|
220 |
if (grep /git/, @args) { |
221 |
print <<EOF; |
222 |
<tr><td><tt class="icon">GIT</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://git.ta-sa.org/git/$name/'>Browsable GIT repository '$name'</a></li></tr> |
223 |
<tr><td><tt class="icon">GIT</tt></td><td class='rr'>Read-only GIT checkout: <tt> git-clone http://git.ta-sa.org/$name.git</tt> |
224 |
</td></tr> |
225 |
<!-- <tr><td><tt class="icon">CVS</tt></td><td class='rr'>Contributor CVS access (command requires CVS version >= 1.12.11):<br /> |
226 |
<tt>cvs -d ":ext;CVS_SERVER=git-cvsserver:USER\@ruth.plan9.de/gitroot/$name.git" co -d $name master</tt> |
227 |
</td></tr> --> |
228 |
EOF |
229 |
} else { |
230 |
my $modules = $name; |
231 |
|
232 |
for (@args) { |
233 |
$modules = "$1" if /modules\((.*)\)/; |
234 |
} |
235 |
|
236 |
if (length $modules) { |
237 |
print <<EOF; |
238 |
<tr><td><tt class="icon">CVS</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://cvs.schmorp.de/$name'>Browsable CVS module '$name'</a></td></tr> |
239 |
<tr><td><tt class="icon">CVS</tt></td><td class='rr'>Anonymous CVS: |
240 |
<tt> cvs -z3 -d :pserver:anonymous\@cvs.schmorp.de/schmorpforge co $modules</tt> |
241 |
|
242 |
</td></tr> |
243 |
EOF |
244 |
} |
245 |
} |
246 |
|
247 |
my @irc; |
248 |
|
249 |
my $perlname = $name =~ s/-/::/gr; |
250 |
|
251 |
print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>METACPAN</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='https://metacpan.org/pod/$perlname'>MetaCPAN page</a></td></tr>\n" |
252 |
if grep /cpan$/, @args; |
253 |
for (@args) { |
254 |
if (/list\((.*?)\)/) { |
255 |
print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>LIST</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://lists.schmorp.de/mailman/listinfo/" . ($1 || $name) . "'>Mailing List '" . ($1 || $name) . "'</a></td></tr>\n"; |
256 |
} |
257 |
if (/irc\((.*?)\)/) { |
258 |
push @irc, $1; |
259 |
} |
260 |
} |
261 |
push @irc, "schmorp" unless @irc; |
262 |
for (@irc) { |
263 |
my ($server, $channel, $url, $comment) = @{ $IRC{$_} or die }; |
264 |
print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>IRC</tt></td><td class='rr'>Server <a href='$url'><tt><b>$server</b></tt>, channel <tt>$channel</tt></a>$comment <b>(say hi and <i>wait a few minutes or hours</i>)</b></td></tr>\n"; |
265 |
} |
266 |
|
267 |
print "</table>"; |
268 |
|
269 |
if (my @files = grep $_, map /(cvs-co|cvs-pod|git-pod|git-co)\((\S+)\)/ && [$1, $2], @args) { |
270 |
print "</div><div class='section section-documents'><h2>Package Documention</h2><table class='resources'>"; |
271 |
|
272 |
for (@files) { |
273 |
my ($type, $arg) = @$_; |
274 |
|
275 |
if ($type eq "cvs-co") { |
276 |
print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>FILE</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://cvs.schmorp.de/$name/$arg'>$arg</a></td></tr>"; |
277 |
|
278 |
} elsif ($type eq "cvs-pod") { |
279 |
my ($file, $desc) = $arg =~ /(.*),(.*)/ ? ($1, $2) : ($arg, $arg); |
280 |
$desc ||= "<b>Main Manual Page</b>"; |
281 |
print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>POD</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/$name/$file'>$desc</a></td></tr>"; |
282 |
|
283 |
} elsif ($type eq 'git-co') { |
284 |
print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>FILE</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://git.ta-sa.org/$name/$arg'>$arg</a></td>"; |
285 |
|
286 |
} elsif ($type eq "git-pod") { |
287 |
my ($file, $desc) = $arg =~ /(.*),(.*)/ ? ($1, $2) : ($arg, $arg); |
288 |
$desc ||= "<b>Main Manual Page</b>"; |
289 |
print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>POD</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://pod.tst.eu/http://git.ta-sa.org/$name/$file'>$desc</a></td></tr>"; |
290 |
|
291 |
} |
292 |
} |
293 |
|
294 |
print "</table>"; |
295 |
} |
296 |
print "</div>"; |
297 |
|
298 |
ftr; |
299 |
} |
300 |
|
301 |
open STDOUT, ">software.schmorp.de/index.html"; |
302 |
|
303 |
hdr "Project List", "bg-bluete"; |
304 |
|
305 |
print <<EOF; |
306 |
|
307 |
<div class='section section-about'> |
308 |
<h2>About</h2> |
309 |
<p class='blurb'>This page briefly documents the Schmorpforge Software Repository and |
310 |
lists all projects available here.</p> |
311 |
</div> |
312 |
|
313 |
<div class='section section-resources'> |
314 |
<table class='resources'> |
315 |
<tr><td><tt class='icon'>BUGS</tt></td><td class='rr'>Do not use rt.cpan.org to report bugs, use an appropriate mailinglist or mail the author directly.</td></tr> |
316 |
<tr><td><tt class='icon'>CVS</tt></td><td class='rr'>All CVS modules can be browsed <a href="http://cvs.schmorp.de/">here</a></td></tr> |
317 |
<!--<tr><td><tt class='icon'>GIT</tt></td><td class='rr'>All GIT repositories can be found <a href="http://git.ta-sa.org/">here</a></td></tr>--> |
318 |
<tr><td><tt class='icon'>FILE</tt></td><td class='rr'>Most file releases can be found <a href="http://dist.schmorp.de/">here</a> or on CPAN (for Perl modules)</td></tr> |
319 |
<tr><td><tt class='icon'>LIST</tt></td><td class='rr'>All mailinglists can be found <a href="http://lists.schmorp.de/mailman/listinfo">here</a></td></tr> |
320 |
<!--<tr><td><tt class='icon'>WIKI</tt></td><td class='rr'>The Wiki can be found <a href="http://wiki.schmorp.de/">here</a></td></tr>--> |
321 |
|
322 |
<!--<tr><td><tt class='icon'>IRC</tt></td><td class='rr'>Server <a href='http://webchat.freenode.net/?randomnick=1&channels=schmorp&prompt=1'><tt><b>irc.freenode.net</b></tt>, channel <tt>#schmorp</tt></a>, user <tt>schmorp</tt> <b>(say hi and <i>wait a few minutes or hours</i>)</b><br/>Other project-specific IRC servers are listed on their respective project page.</td></tr>--> |
323 |
<tr><td><tt class='icon'>IRC</tt></td><td class='rr'>Server <a href='http://chat.schmorp.de/?channels=schmorpforge'><tt><b>irc.schmorp.de</b></tt>, channel <tt>#schmorpforge</tt></a>, user <tt>schmorp</tt> <b>(say hi and <i>wait a few minutes or hours</i>)</b><br/>Other project-specific IRC servers are listed on their respective project page.</td></tr> |
324 |
</table> |
325 |
</div> |
326 |
|
327 |
<div class='section section-overview'> |
328 |
<h2>Project List</h2> |
329 |
<table class='overview'> |
330 |
EOF |
331 |
|
332 |
print $index{$_} for sort { (lc $a) cmp (lc $b) } keys %index; |
333 |
|
334 |
print "</table></div>"; |
335 |
ftr; |
336 |
|
337 |
__DATA__ |
338 |
stableperl list(perl) modules() |
339 |
Stableperl is a fork, or a branch, of the official perl with the goal |
340 |
of providing stability and compatibility. See <a |
341 |
href="http://stableperl.schmorp.de/">stableperl.schmorp.de</a> for |
342 |
details. |
343 |
|
344 |
You can also look at the <a href="http://schplog.schmorp.de/2015-06-06-stableperl-faq.html">Canary::Stability and Stableperl FAQ</a>, and you can download |
345 |
releases at <a href="http://stableperl.schmorp.de/dist/">http://stableperl.schmorp.de/dist/</a>. |
346 |
|
347 |
Canary-Stability cpan cvs-pod(Stability.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(perl) |
348 |
A little bird that doubles as an early warning system. |
349 |
|
350 |
Wasn't early but rather late, but at least it is warning now. |
351 |
|
352 |
rxvt-unicode dist list(rxvt-unicode) cvs-pod(doc/rxvt.1.pod,) cvs-pod(doc/rxvt.7.pod,FAQ) cvs-pod(src/urxvt.pm,Perl) cvs-co(Changes) irc(rxvt) irc(rxvtdev) |
353 |
rxvt-unicode is a fork of the well known terminal emulator rxvt. |
354 |
|
355 |
<p>If you have a problem, please have a look at the |
356 |
<a href="http://cvs.schmorp.de/rxvt-unicode/doc/rxvt.7.html">FAQ</a> |
357 |
<em>first</em>.</p> |
358 |
|
359 |
Its main features (many of them unique) over rxvt are: |
360 |
|
361 |
<ul> |
362 |
<li>Stores text in Unicode (either UCS-2 or UCS-4).</li> |
363 |
<li>Uses locale-correct input, output and width: as long as your system supports the locale, |
364 |
rxvt-unicode will display correctly.</li> |
365 |
<li>Daemon mode: one daemon can open multiple windows on multiple displays, which |
366 |
improves memory usage and startup time considerably.</li> |
367 |
<li>Embedded perl, for endless customization and improvement opportunities, such as: |
368 |
<ul> |
369 |
<li>Tabbed terminal support.</li> |
370 |
<li>Regex-driven customisable selection that can properly select shell arguments, urls etc.</li> |
371 |
<li>Selection-transformation and option popup menus.</li> |
372 |
<li>Automatically transforming the selection once made.</li> |
373 |
<li>Incremental scrollback buffer search.</li> |
374 |
<li>Automatic URL-underlining and launching.</li> |
375 |
<li>Remote pastebin, digital clock, block graphics to ascii filter and |
376 |
whatever you like to implement for yourself.</li> |
377 |
</ul> |
378 |
</li> |
379 |
<li>Crash-free. At least I try, but rxvt-unicode certainly crashes much less often than |
380 |
rxvt and its many forks, and reproducible bugs get fixed immediately.</li> |
381 |
<li>Completely flicker-free.</li> |
382 |
<li>Re-wraps long lines instead of splitting or cutting them on resizes.</li> |
383 |
<li>Full combining character support (unlike xterm :).</li> |
384 |
<li>Multiple fonts supported at the same time: No need to choose between |
385 |
nice japanese and ugly latin, or no japanese and nice latin characters :).</li> |
386 |
<li>Supports Xft and core fonts in any combination.</li> |
387 |
<li>Can easily be embedded into other applications.</li> |
388 |
<li>All documentation accessible through manpages.</li> |
389 |
<li>Locale-independent XIM support.</li> |
390 |
<li>Many small improvements, such as improved and corrected terminfo, improved secondary screen modes, |
391 |
italic and bold font support, tinting and shading.</li> |
392 |
<li>Encapsulation of privileged operations in a separate process (improves security).</li> |
393 |
<li>Optimised for local <i>and</i> remote connections.</li> |
394 |
</ul> |
395 |
|
396 |
<br /> |
397 |
And its main <em>missing</em> features (which users request but are not (yet?) implemented) are: |
398 |
|
399 |
<ul> |
400 |
<li>Complex script support, such as arabic or tibetian - more info is needed. (use mlterm)</li> |
401 |
<li>Right-to-Left rendering - more info is needed. (use mlterm)</li> |
402 |
<li>IIIMF (Intranet/Internet Input Method Framework) support. (use scim)</li> |
403 |
</ul> |
404 |
|
405 |
<br /> |
406 |
|
407 |
There is an IRC channel for discussion on <a |
408 |
href='irc://irc.freenode.net/rxvt-unicode'><tt>irc.freenode.net |
409 |
#rxvt-unicode</tt></a>. |
410 |
|
411 |
libptytty dist list(rxvt-unicode) cvs-pod(doc/libptytty.3.pod) cvs-co(Changes) |
412 |
libptytty is an offspring of rxvt-unicode that handles pty/tty/utmp/wtmp/lastlog handling |
413 |
in mostly OS-independent ways, so it's less of a hassle for you :) |
414 |
|
415 |
vt102 list(perl) cvs-co(vt102) |
416 |
<code>vt102</code> is a vt100/102/131 hardware simulator, implementing |
417 |
practical and 100% compatible DEC VT terminal "emulation". |
418 |
|
419 |
Most terminal emulators nowadays strive to emulate a DEC VT102 |
420 |
terminal (even those claiming to emulate a VT100 usually mean |
421 |
VT102). Unfortunately, even though there are some VT100 simulators, |
422 |
there haven't been any DEC VT102 ones, so it was very hard to test |
423 |
compatibility with the real device. |
424 |
|
425 |
Thanks to this simulator, one can now test how the "real" VT102 behaves, |
426 |
and as free extra, it also simulates DEC VT100 and DEC VT131 terminals. |
427 |
|
428 |
ROMs are included - a standard Perl 5.10+ installation, the |
429 |
<code>stty</code> utility and the <code>IO::Pty</code> module are |
430 |
required to run the script, and rxvt-unicode, xterm or a similar terminal |
431 |
emulation is required to have display/keyboard support. |
432 |
|
433 |
gtkbfc cvs-pod(README) |
434 |
Gtk+ bash file chooser replacement. |
435 |
|
436 |
<b>gtkbfc</b> is a hack that replaces the dreaded, slow and hard-to-use GTK+ |
437 |
file chooser by a rxvt-unicode window with a little script that lets you use |
438 |
readline tab-completion to enter filenames. |
439 |
|
440 |
Again, its a dire hack and will not work with all programs. It does work |
441 |
for gimp, firefox, gedit at least, though. |
442 |
|
443 |
Async-Interrupt cpan cvs-pod(Interrupt.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
444 |
Allow C/XS libraries to interrupt perl asynchronously. |
445 |
|
446 |
This is a module implementing a rarely-needed, very advanced technique |
447 |
to interrupt a running perl interpreter from another thread, or similar, |
448 |
context, at very low overhead. |
449 |
|
450 |
CV cpan cvs-pod(bin/cv,) cvs-co(Changes) |
451 |
Gtk2::CV is a perl module that implements an image viewer. |
452 |
|
453 |
It comes with its own demo app, named <tt>cv</tt>, which is loosely |
454 |
modeled after the classic <tt>xv</tt>, although it displays images much |
455 |
faster than the great original. Stable releases are also found on CPAN. |
456 |
|
457 |
kgsueme cpan list(kgsueme) cvs-co(Changes) |
458 |
This perl module is about reverse engineering the |
459 |
<a href="http://cvs.schmorp.de/kgsueme/doc/protocol.html">protocol</a> |
460 |
(<a href="http://cvs.schmorp.de/kgsueme/doc/protocol.xml">xml source</a>) |
461 |
of the popular <a href="http://kgs.kiseido.com">Kiseido Go Server</a>. |
462 |
|
463 |
It features a sample Gtk+2 client (<a |
464 |
href="http://kgsueme.schmorp.de/screenshot.jpg">screenshot</a>), a gtp |
465 |
and a igs interface. It mostly focuses on documenting the protocol and |
466 |
delivering a stable reference implementation which makes it easy to write |
467 |
your own clients, bots and so on. It also contains Gtk2 modules for |
468 |
KGS-independent rendering of beautiful Go boards. For a introduction to |
469 |
the game of go, look <a href="http://playgo.to/interactive/">here</a>. |
470 |
|
471 |
App-Staticperl cpan cvs-pod(bin/staticperl,) cvs-co(Changes) |
472 |
Perl, libc, 100 modules - all in one self-contained 500kb executable. |
473 |
|
474 |
App::Staticperl installs a helper script that allows you to install a |
475 |
statically linked (or linkable) perl distribution, install additional |
476 |
modules, and create new perl interpreters with just the selection of |
477 |
modules you need. It is also possible to just create the C source files |
478 |
needed to embed this custom interpreter into your own programs.<p /> |
479 |
|
480 |
Two pre-built perl binaries (for Linux on x86 or amd64) which |
481 |
include some highly subjective package selections are available as |
482 |
<a href="http://staticperl.schmorp.de/smallperl.html">smallperl</a> |
483 |
and |
484 |
<a href="http://staticperl.schmorp.de/bigperl.html">bigperl</a>. |
485 |
|
486 |
Net-Knuddels cvs-pod(Net/Knuddels.pm,) |
487 |
This perl module provides an API for group communications using the |
488 |
<a href="http://www.knuddels.de/">www.knuddels.de</a> protocol. It is outdated |
489 |
and only provided as reference. |
490 |
|
491 |
This module implements the knuddels.de chat protocol. Since it was created |
492 |
the protocol changed in unknown ways, so this module no longer works. It is |
493 |
provided as reference, though, in case the protocol didn't change much, |
494 |
so one can learn about the protocol. |
495 |
It could be used to write Knuddels clients, bots and even servers |
496 |
(although the latter doesn't make much sense, the protocol is rather |
497 |
ugly. If you want to implement your own group communication server, use |
498 |
IRC instead). |
499 |
|
500 |
AnyEvent-ReadLine-Gnu cpan cvs-pod(Gnu.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
501 |
This is a small interface to Term::ReadLine::Gnu for event-based programs. |
502 |
|
503 |
This module has event-based readline, as well as asynchronous message printing |
504 |
with readline figured out for you. |
505 |
|
506 |
IO-FDPass cpan cvs-pod(FDPass.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
507 |
Pass a file descriptor over a socket. |
508 |
|
509 |
This small low-level module only has one purpose: pass a file descriptor |
510 |
to another process, using a (streaming) unix domain socket (on POSIX |
511 |
systems) or any (streaming) socket (on WIN32 systems). |
512 |
|
513 |
Proc-FastSpawn cpan cvs-pod(FastSpawn.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
514 |
fork+exec, or spawn, a subprocess as quickly as possible |
515 |
|
516 |
The purpose of this small (in scope and footprint) module is simple: |
517 |
spawn a subprocess asynchronously as efficiently and/or fast as |
518 |
possible. Basically the same as calling fork+exec (on POSIX), but |
519 |
hopefully faster than those two syscalls. |
520 |
|
521 |
Apart from fork overhead, this module also allows you to fork+exec |
522 |
programs when otherwise you couldn't - for example, when you use POSIX |
523 |
threads in your perl process then it generally isn't safe to call |
524 |
fork from perl, but it is safe to use this module to execute external |
525 |
processes. |
526 |
|
527 |
AnyEvent-Fork cpan cvs-pod(Fork.pm,) cvs-pod(Fork/Early.pm) cvs-pod(Fork/Template.pm) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
528 |
Everything you wanted to use fork() for, but couldn't. |
529 |
|
530 |
This module allows you to create new processes, without actually forking |
531 |
them from your current process (avoiding the problems of forking), but |
532 |
preserving most of the advantages of fork. |
533 |
|
534 |
It can be used to create new worker processes or new independent |
535 |
subprocesses for short- and long-running jobs, process pools (e.g. for |
536 |
use in pre-forked servers) but also to spawn new external processes (such |
537 |
as CGI scripts from a webserver), which can be faster (and more well |
538 |
behaved) than using fork+exec in big processes. |
539 |
|
540 |
AnyEvent-Fork-Remote cpan cvs-pod(Remote.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
541 |
Remote processes with AnyEvent::Fork interface |
542 |
|
543 |
Despite what the name of this module might suggest, it doesn't actually |
544 |
create remote processes for you. But it does make it easy to use them, |
545 |
once you have started them. |
546 |
|
547 |
This module implements a very similar API as AnyEvent::Fork. In fact, |
548 |
similar enough to require at most minor modifications to support both |
549 |
at the same time. For example, it works with AnyEvent::Fork::RPC and |
550 |
AnyEvent::Fork::Pool. |
551 |
|
552 |
AnyEvent-Fork-RPC cpan cvs-pod(RPC.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
553 |
Simple RPC extension for AnyEvent::Fork |
554 |
|
555 |
This module implements a simple RPC protocol and backend for processes |
556 |
created via AnyEvent::Fork, allowing you to call a function in the |
557 |
child process and receive its return values (up to 4GB serialised). |
558 |
|
559 |
It implements two different backends: a synchronous one that works like a |
560 |
normal function call, and an asynchronous one that can run multiple jobs |
561 |
concurrently in the child, using AnyEvent. |
562 |
|
563 |
It also implements an asynchronous event mechanism from the child to the |
564 |
parent, that could be used for progress indications or other information. |
565 |
|
566 |
AnyEvent-Fork-Pool cpan cvs-pod(Pool.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
567 |
Simple process pool manager on top of AnyEvent::Fork and AnyEvent::Fork::RPC. |
568 |
|
569 |
This module uses processes created via AnyEvent::Fork and the RPC |
570 |
protocol implement in AnyEvent::Fork::RPC to create a load-balanced pool |
571 |
of processes that handles jobs. |
572 |
|
573 |
Understanding of AnyEvent::Fork is helpful but not critical to be able |
574 |
to use this module, but a thorough understanding of AnyEvent::Fork::RPC |
575 |
is, as it defines the actual API that needs to be implemented in the |
576 |
children. |
577 |
|
578 |
Guard cpan cvs-pod(Guard.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
579 |
This small module implements scope and object guards, that is, code blocks |
580 |
that are executed when a scope is being exited (or an object is destroyed). |
581 |
|
582 |
Much effort was invested into these guards behaving "sensibly" in the |
583 |
presence of thrown exceptions, errors and other adverse conditions, as |
584 |
well as into good performance. |
585 |
|
586 |
OpenCL cpan cvs-pod(OpenCL.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
587 |
An interface to OpenCL (the Open Computing Language) for Perl. |
588 |
|
589 |
Perlized (not C-ish) OpenCL interface. |
590 |
|
591 |
common-sense cpan cvs-pod(sense.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
592 |
This module implements some sane defaults for Perl programs, as defined |
593 |
by two typical (or not so typical - use your common sense) specimens of |
594 |
Perl coders. |
595 |
|
596 |
Net-IRC-Server cvs-pod(Net/IRC/Server.pm,) |
597 |
This module provides a simple API for handling the IRC Protocol |
598 |
aiming at implementing lightweight IRC-Servers. |
599 |
|
600 |
PApp-SQL cpan cvs-pod(SQL.pm,) |
601 |
Absolutely easy yet fast and powerful SQL access. |
602 |
|
603 |
This module wraps the DBI prepare/bind/execute calls into a single "sql_exec" call, |
604 |
complete with statement caching, so you get the efficiency of prepare, the safety |
605 |
of using placeholders and the speed of bound result values in a simple call. |
606 |
|
607 |
Example: |
608 |
|
609 |
<pre> |
610 |
my $st = sql_exec \my ($id, $name), |
611 |
"select id, name from db where name like %", |
612 |
"pfx%"; |
613 |
while ($st->fetch) { |
614 |
print "$id $name\n"; |
615 |
} |
616 |
</pre> |
617 |
|
618 |
libcoro cvs-co(README) cvs-co(coro.h) |
619 |
This C-library implements coroutines (cooperative multitasking) in a |
620 |
portable fashion. |
621 |
|
622 |
As long as your system implements the <tt>ucontext</tt> (Unix) or the |
623 |
older <tt>sigaltstack</tt> interfaces it should work out of the box, |
624 |
with minimal configuration (it consists of only a single <tt>.h</tt> and |
625 |
a single <tt>.c</tt> file). For the broken systems, it also supports |
626 |
a slow pthreads-based system and (optional) assembly backends for |
627 |
higher speed on some systems. It is known to run on a wide variety of |
628 |
unix systems (SunOS, IRIX, GNU/Linux, HP-UX, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD) |
629 |
and also on Windows, does not require any assembly language and is |
630 |
architecture-independent. |
631 |
|
632 |
deliantra/server cvs-co(README) cvs-co(Changes) cvs-co(COPYING.Affero) |
633 |
The <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> game server. |
634 |
|
635 |
Follow the link to <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> for background info. |
636 |
|
637 |
deliantra/maps cvs-co(Changes) cvs-co(COPYING.Affero) |
638 |
The <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> game maps. |
639 |
|
640 |
Follow the link to <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> for background info. |
641 |
|
642 |
deliantra/arch cvs-co(Changes) cvs-co(COPYING.Affero) |
643 |
The <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> game resources. |
644 |
|
645 |
Follow the link to <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> for background info. |
646 |
|
647 |
deliantra/Deliantra-Client cvs-pod(bin/deliantra,) cvs-co(Changes) |
648 |
A modern, fullscreen client for <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a>, written using Perl |
649 |
and leveraging only OpenGL for display and thus being easily portable. |
650 |
See its <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/client.html">homepage</a>. |
651 |
|
652 |
To install it, you need <a href="http://www.libsdl.org">SDL</a>, <a href="http://www.libsdl.org/projects/SDL_mixer/">SDL_mixer</a>, |
653 |
<a href="http://www.libsdl.org/projects/SDL_image/">SDL_image</a>, <a href="http://www.pango.org">PanGo</a> (with freetype2 and |
654 |
cairo backends at the moment), and the BDB, AnyEvent, Pod::POM, EV and |
655 |
<a href="http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/deliantra/Deliantra.html">Deliantra</a> perl modules. |
656 |
|
657 |
deliantra/Deliantra |
658 |
Perl module family for the <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> game. |
659 |
|
660 |
They can be used to read/write/cache archetypes, image packs and map files. |
661 |
Follow the link to <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> for background info. |
662 |
|
663 |
deliantra/gde cvs-pod(bin/gde,) |
664 |
The <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> editor, written in Perl + Gtk2. |
665 |
|
666 |
The editor for the game Deliantra, written in Perl. |
667 |
Follow the link to <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> for background info. |
668 |
|
669 |
deliantra |
670 |
<a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> server, archetypes, maps, |
671 |
editor, client and support modules distribution. |
672 |
|
673 |
Follow the link to <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> for background info. |
674 |
|
675 |
cfmaps |
676 |
This is a collection of scripts that I use to create the <a |
677 |
href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> maps at <a |
678 |
href="http://maps.deliantra.net/">maps.deliantra.net</a>. |
679 |
|
680 |
They are not documented and somewhat specialised, but the scripts might |
681 |
be of some use. |
682 |
|
683 |
Faster cpan cvs-pod(Faster.pm,) |
684 |
A perl module that makes perl run, well, faster, using a very primitive just in time compiler. |
685 |
|
686 |
As the name implies, using this module makes your perl program run |
687 |
faster. Actually, much slower initially, as it compiles every function |
688 |
to C and later to a shared object, but then you can expect a performance |
689 |
increase by 10-50%, depending on what your program does. |
690 |
|
691 |
liblzf cvs-co(README) cvs-co(lzf.h) dist |
692 |
LibLZF is a very small data compression library. |
693 |
|
694 |
It consists of only two .c and two .h files and is very easy to |
695 |
incorporate into your own programs. The compression algorithm is very, |
696 |
very fast, yet still written in portable C. More info and the latest |
697 |
release can be found at the <a href="http://liblzf.plan9.de">LibLZF |
698 |
Homepage</a>. |
699 |
|
700 |
root-tail cvs-co(README) cvs-co(Changes) |
701 |
Full-featured program to print text directly to the X11 root window. |
702 |
|
703 |
More info, screenshots, documentation and current releases can be found |
704 |
at the <a href="http://root-tail.plan9.de">root-tail homepage</a>. |
705 |
|
706 |
xcb cvs-co(README) cvs-co(Changes) |
707 |
A fork of the unmaintained xcb (x cut buffers) program implementing better i18n. |
708 |
|
709 |
lmainit cvs-co(NEWS) |
710 |
A sysvinit replacement that can even be configured to be sysvinit-compliant. |
711 |
|
712 |
See <a href="http://home.schmorp.de/marc/lmainit.html">its homepage</a> for more info. |
713 |
|
714 |
Algorithm-FEC cpan cvs-pod(FEC.pm,) cvs-co(README.fec) cvs-co(Changes) |
715 |
Perl module implementing forward error correction using Vandermonde matrices |
716 |
|
717 |
AnyEvent cpan cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent.pm,) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Intro.pod,Introduction/Tutorial) cvs-pod(lib/AE.pm,AE) cvs-co(Changes) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/IO.pm,AnyEvent::IO) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Util.pm,AnyEvent::Util) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Handle.pm,AnyEvent::Handle) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Socket.pm,AnyEvent::Socket) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/DNS.pm,AnyEvent::DNS) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Impl/EV.pm,AnyEvent::Impl::EV) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Impl/Event.pm,AnyEvent::Impl::Event) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Impl/Glib.pm,AnyEvent::Impl::Glib) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Impl/Tk.pm,AnyEvent::Impl::Tk) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Impl/Perl.pm,AnyEvent::Impl::Perl) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Impl/Qt.pm,AnyEvent::Impl::Qt) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Impl/EventLib.pm,AnyEvent::Impl::EventLib) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Impl/Irssi.pm,AnyEvent::Impl::Irssi) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Impl/IOAsync.pm,AnyEvent::Impl::IOAsync) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Impl/POE.pm,AnyEvent::Impl::POE) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
718 |
This module offers a simple API for I/O, timer, signal, child process |
719 |
and completion events, independent of a specific event loop. |
720 |
|
721 |
<p>This module allows module authors to use those events internally |
722 |
without forcing users of the module to use a specific event loop, without |
723 |
adding noticable overhead. Currently supported event loops are EV, Event, |
724 |
Glib/Gtk2, Tk, Qt, Event::Lib, Irssi, IO::Async and POE (and thus also |
725 |
WxWidgets and Prima). It also comes with a very fast (see benchmarks in |
726 |
the main manual page) Pure Perl event loop and doesn't rely on XS, which |
727 |
ensures that your program will always run even when no C-based event loop |
728 |
is available.</p> |
729 |
|
730 |
<p>In addition to the event core (which might be all you need), AnyEvent |
731 |
comes with an optional, fully asynchronous, pure-perl DNS resolver |
732 |
library supporting UDP, TCP and EDNS0, with many utility functions to |
733 |
"just resolve" stuff without having to instantiate even a resolver object |
734 |
(and including an equivalent of C<getaddrinfo>).</p> |
735 |
|
736 |
<p>The AnyEvent::Socket offers utility functions to make handling TCP |
737 |
connections (100% non-blocking, including DNS resolution, with both IPv4 |
738 |
and IPv6) and addresses as easy as possible, to the point of making IPv6 |
739 |
completely transparent.</p> |
740 |
|
741 |
<p>Lastly, AnyEvent::Handle offers a powerful framework for asynchronous and |
742 |
buffered protocol handling. You can push multiple read event handlers |
743 |
to parse your protocol and start TLS/SSL negotiation transparently (and |
744 |
fully non-blocking) at any time, in both server and client mode.</p> |
745 |
|
746 |
AnyEvent-FastPing cpan cvs-pod(FastPing.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
747 |
This module implements a very fast and relatively flexible |
748 |
ping (ping as in icmp echo request). |
749 |
|
750 |
This module allows you to quickly send ipv4 and ipv6 pings at a defined |
751 |
rate to whole address ranges. It is fully event-driven (doesn't block |
752 |
the perl interpreter) and can easily generate hundreds of thousands of |
753 |
pings per second. Target specification is done by specifying one or |
754 |
more address ranges, to which pings will be distributed according to a |
755 |
least-load principle. |
756 |
|
757 |
A command line utility (<tt>fastping</tt>) is included. |
758 |
|
759 |
AnyEvent-AIO cpan cvs-pod(AIO.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
760 |
A perl module providing transparent integration of IO::AIO into AnyEvent. |
761 |
|
762 |
AnyEvent-BDB cpan cvs-pod(BDB.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
763 |
A perl module providing transparent integration of BDB into AnyEvent. |
764 |
|
765 |
AnyEvent-DBus cpan cvs-pod(DBus.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
766 |
A perl module providing mostly transparent integration of Net::DBus into AnyEvent. |
767 |
|
768 |
AnyEvent-DBI cpan cvs-pod(DBI.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
769 |
A perl module providing an asynchronous DBI interface for AnyEvent. |
770 |
|
771 |
This module provides an asynchronous DBI interface for AnyEvent by |
772 |
starting one or more proxy processes that handle trhe actual sql |
773 |
commands. |
774 |
|
775 |
AnyEvent-FCP cpan cvs-pod(FCP.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
776 |
A perl module implementing a Freenet Client Protocol 2.0 client. |
777 |
|
778 |
AnyEvent-GPSD cpan cvs-pod(GPSD.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
779 |
A perl module implementing an AnyEvent client for the (pre-xml) GPSD protocol. |
780 |
|
781 |
AnyEvent-Porttracker cpan cvs-pod(Porttracker.pm,) cvs-pod(Porttracker/protocol.pod,api-protocol) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
782 |
A perl module implementing a client for the Porttracker/PortIQ API protocol. |
783 |
|
784 |
AnyEvent-ZabbixSender cpan cvs-pod(ZabbixSender.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
785 |
A perl module implementing an AnyEvent client for the zabbix_sender protocol, used to submit |
786 |
monitoring data items to a zabbix server or proxy. |
787 |
|
788 |
AnyEvent-SNMP cpan cvs-pod(SNMP.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
789 |
A perl module that transparently integrates Net::SNMP into AnyEvent. |
790 |
|
791 |
In addition to making Net::SNMP AnyEvent-aware, this module also |
792 |
implements advanced rate-limiting that enables you to query many devices |
793 |
in parallel without running into timeouts due to high CPU usage. |
794 |
|
795 |
AnyEvent-Watchdog cpan cvs-pod(Watchdog.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
796 |
A perl module implementing a watchdog for Perl processes. |
797 |
|
798 |
This module forks your Perl process early during it's startup. It can |
799 |
automatically restart the program on crashes, provide clean restarts |
800 |
requested by the watched program and a number of other small feats. |
801 |
|
802 |
AnyEvent-HTTP cpan cvs-pod(HTTP.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
803 |
A simple and plain event based http and https client. |
804 |
|
805 |
This module implements a simple, stateless and non-blocking HTTP |
806 |
client. It supports GET, POST and other request methods, cookies and more, |
807 |
all on a very low level. It can follow redirects supports proxies and |
808 |
automatically limits the number of connections to the values specified in |
809 |
the RFC. |
810 |
|
811 |
It should generally be a "good client" that is enough for most HTTP |
812 |
tasks. Simple tasks should be simple, but complex tasks should still be |
813 |
possible as the user retains control over request and response headers. |
814 |
|
815 |
The caller is responsible for authentication management, cookies (if |
816 |
the simplistic implementation in this module doesn't suffice), referer |
817 |
and other high-level protocol details for which this module offers only |
818 |
limited support. |
819 |
|
820 |
AnyEvent-WebDriver cpan cvs-pod(WebDriver.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
821 |
A thin wrapper around the <a href="https://www.w3.org/TR/webdriver1/">W3C WebDriver</a> protocol |
822 |
(<a href="https://www.seleniumhq.org/">"Selenium"</a> browser remote control) |
823 |
|
824 |
This module implements a relatively thin but easy to use wrapper around the |
825 |
raw <a href="https://www.w3.org/TR/webdriver1/">W3C WebDriver</a> protocol |
826 |
(think <a href="https://www.seleniumhq.org/">"Selenium"</a>, that let's you remote control |
827 |
popular browsers such as Firefox, Chromium, Safari, IE and the like. |
828 |
|
829 |
AnyEvent-MP cpan cvs-pod(MP.pm,) cvs-pod(MP/Intro.pod,Introduction/Tutorial) cvs-pod(bin/aemp,Config-Uility) cvs-pod(MP/Kernel.pm) cvs-pod(MP/Global.pm) cvs-pod(MP/Transport.pm) cvs-pod(MP/DataConn.pm) cvs-pod(MP/LogCatcher.pm) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
830 |
This Perl module (-family) implements a simple message passing framework for Perl. |
831 |
|
832 |
Despite its simplicity, you can securely message other processes running |
833 |
on the same or other hosts. |
834 |
|
835 |
For an introduction to this module family, see the Intro manual page. |
836 |
|
837 |
Coro-MP cpan cvs-pod(MP.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
838 |
This Perl module extends the AnyEvent::MP API with a thread-like/erlang-style API. |
839 |
|
840 |
This module implements a thread-like API to AnyEvent::MP that is closer |
841 |
to Erlang than the event-based AnyEvent::MP API. It integrates well into |
842 |
AnyEvent::MP. |
843 |
|
844 |
See the AnyEvent::MP module and tutorial for info about the concepts used |
845 |
in AnyEvent::MP. |
846 |
|
847 |
AnyEvent-DBI cpan cvs-pod(DBI.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
848 |
A relatively simple wrapper around DBI to make asynchronous |
849 |
SQL requests. |
850 |
|
851 |
This module implements asynchronous DBI access my forking or executing |
852 |
separate "DBI-Server" processes and sending them requests. |
853 |
|
854 |
It means that you can run DBI requests in parallel to other tasks. |
855 |
|
856 |
Array-Heap cpan cvs-pod(Heap.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
857 |
A Perl module that implements C++ STL-like binary heap operations. |
858 |
|
859 |
Audio-Play-MPG123 cpan cvs-pod(MPG123.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
860 |
A Perl module implementing an interface to mpg123. |
861 |
|
862 |
Compress-LZV1 cpan cvs-pod(LZV1.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
863 |
A Perl module implementing the LZV1 compression algorithm. See |
864 |
<tt>Compress::LZF</tt> for a better algorithm and module. |
865 |
|
866 |
Compress-LZF cpan cvs-pod(LZF.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
867 |
A Perl module implementing the LZF compression algorithm, and simple |
868 |
to use data structure serialising. |
869 |
|
870 |
Convert-CD cvs-pod(lib/Convert/CD.pm,) cvs-pod(bin/cvtiso,cvtiso) cvs-co(doc/) cvs-co(Changes) |
871 |
Unfinished Perl project implementing CD image formats. Extracting ISO images |
872 |
already works. |
873 |
|
874 |
Convert-Scalar cpan cvs-pod(Scalar.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
875 |
Perl module to convert between different representations of Perl scalars. |
876 |
|
877 |
Convert-UUlib cpan cvs-pod(UUlib.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
878 |
Perl interface to the uulib library (a.k.a. uudeview/uuenview), which |
879 |
allows easy decoding of multipart mime, uuencode and a whole lot of |
880 |
differently encoded messages. You basically throw files at it, and |
881 |
it extracts the files in them. This module is used by the popular <a |
882 |
href="www.amavis.org">amavis virus scanner</a>. |
883 |
|
884 |
Convert-BER-XS cpan cvs-pod(XS.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
885 |
A <em>very</em> low level BER/DER decoder and encoder library. |
886 |
|
887 |
This BER en-/decoder is tuned for speed and low memory usage, |
888 |
representing all BER values as tuples (perl-arrays) consisting of (class, |
889 |
tag, constructed, data). |
890 |
|
891 |
Coro cpan cvs-co(Changes) cvs-pod(Coro.pm,) cvs-pod(Coro/AIO.pm,Coro::AIO) cvs-pod(Coro/AnyEvent.pm,Coro::AnyEvent) cvs-pod(Coro/BDB.pm,Coro::BDB) cvs-pod(Coro/Channel.pm,Coro::Channel) cvs-pod(Coro/Debug.pm,Coro::Debug) cvs-pod(Coro/EV.pm,Coro::EV) cvs-pod(Coro/Event.pm,Coro::Event) cvs-pod(Coro/Handle.pm,Coro::Handle) cvs-pod(Coro/LWP.pm,Coro::LWP) cvs-pod(Coro/MakeMaker.pm,Coro::MakeMaker) cvs-pod(Coro/RWLock.pm,Coro::RWLock) cvs-pod(Coro/Select.pm,Coro::Select) cvs-pod(Coro/Semaphore.pm,Coro::Semaphore) cvs-pod(Coro/SemaphoreSet.pm,Coro::SemaphoreSet) cvs-pod(Coro/Signal.pm,Coro::Signal) cvs-pod(Coro/Socket.pm,Coro::Socket) cvs-pod(Coro/Specific.pm,Coro::Specific) cvs-pod(Coro/State.pm,Coro::State) cvs-pod(Coro/Storable.pm,Coro::Storable) cvs-pod(Coro/Timer.pm,Coro::Timer) cvs-pod(Coro/Util.pm,Coro::Util) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
892 |
A large Perl module family that implements cooperative multitasking in |
893 |
Perl. It supports filehandle and event abstraction and also implements |
894 |
continuations as well as the necessary directives to implement a slightly |
895 |
limited call/cc in Perl. |
896 |
|
897 |
Coro-Mysql cpan cvs-co(Changes) cvs-pod(Mysql.pm,) |
898 |
Lets other threads run while doing mysql requests via DBD::mysql. |
899 |
|
900 |
This perl module patches libmysqlclient/DBD::mysql at runtime to allow |
901 |
multiple Coro-based threads to make database accesses concurrently, |
902 |
instead of blocking the whole process. |
903 |
|
904 |
Coro-Multicore cpan cvs-co(Changes) cvs-pod(Multicore.pm,) cvs-pod(perlmulticore.h) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent) |
905 |
Runs XS functions transparently in their own XS level thread, |
906 |
running other Coro threads in parallel. |
907 |
|
908 |
This perl module allows XS functions that have been properly prepared |
909 |
(see the <a href="http://perlmulticore.schmorp.de">Perl Multicore |
910 |
Specification</a>) to run in parallel to other Coro threads, in their own |
911 |
OS level thread. |
912 |
|
913 |
Crypt-Ed25519 cpan cvs-pod(Ed25519.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
914 |
A Perl module implementing Ed25519 public key signing and verification. |
915 |
|
916 |
Crypt-Spritz cpan cvs-pod(Spritz.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
917 |
A Perl module implementing the Spritz family of cryptographic algorithms, |
918 |
giving you a stream cipher, a hash, a mac, authenticated encryption |
919 |
with associated data (AEAD) and a cryptographically secure random |
920 |
number generator, at reasonable speed and with very small code size, making |
921 |
Spritz an attractive algorithm for resource-constrained environments |
922 |
such as javascript in your browser, or microcontrollers. |
923 |
|
924 |
Crypt-Twofish2 cpan cvs-pod(Twofish2.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
925 |
A Perl module implementing the twofish encryption algorithm in Perl. It has |
926 |
mostly been superceded by the Crypt::Twofish module. However, it supports |
927 |
an easy and fast CBC mode natively. |
928 |
|
929 |
Digest-Hashcash cpan cvs-pod(Hashcash.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
930 |
Perl module to generate and parse <a href="http://www.hashcash.org">hashcashes</a>. |
931 |
Follow the link to learn more. This module is currently faster than |
932 |
the hashcash reference library. |
933 |
|
934 |
Digest-FNV-XS cpan cvs-pod(XS.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
935 |
Perl module to generate FNV hashes (FNV-0, FNV-1, FNV-1a in 32 and 64 bit) |
936 |
plus utiilities for xor folding and retry mapping. The main selling |
937 |
point over Digest::FNV is that it works with binary data. |
938 |
|
939 |
EV cpan cvs-pod(EV.pm,) cvs-pod(../libev/ev.pod,libev-documentation) cvs-pod(EV/MakeMaker.pm) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev) |
940 |
A thin wrapper around <a href="/pkg/libev.html">libev</a>, a |
941 |
high-performance event loop. Intended as a faster and less buggy |
942 |
replacement for the Event perl module. Efficiently supports very high |
943 |
number of timers, scalable operating system APIs such as epoll, kqueue, |
944 |
solaris's ports, inotify, eventfd, signalfd, child/pid watchers and much |
945 |
more. |
946 |
|
947 |
A <a href="http://lists.schmorp.de/mailman/listinfo/libev">mailing |
948 |
list</a> for discussion and support is now available. |
949 |
|
950 |
EV-ADNS cpan cvs-pod(ADNS.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev) |
951 |
An asynchronous stub resolver that integrates efficiently into |
952 |
the EV event loop. Uses adns/libadns as backend. |
953 |
|
954 |
EV-Loop-Async cpan cvs-pod(Async.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev) |
955 |
Small module that runs an EV event loop in another thread |
956 |
and uses an Async-Interrupt object to signal new events |
957 |
to perl. |
958 |
|
959 |
Net-SNMP-EV cpan cvs-pod(EV.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev) |
960 |
An adaptor that integrates the Net-SNMP Perl module into the EV event loop. |
961 |
Loading it suffices to make background requests in EV programs. |
962 |
|
963 |
libev cvs-co(README) cvs-pod(ev.pod) dist list(libev) |
964 |
A full-featured and high-performance (<a |
965 |
href="http://libev.schmorp.de/bench.html">see benchmark</a>) |
966 |
event loop that is loosely modelled after libevent, but without |
967 |
its limitations and bugs. It is used in |
968 |
<a href="/pkg/gvpe.html">GNU Virtual Private Ethernet</a>, |
969 |
<a href="/pkg/rxvt-unicode.html">rxvt-unicode</a>, <a |
970 |
href="http://people.redhat.com/sgrubb/audit/">auditd</a>, the |
971 |
<a href="http://www.deliantra.net">Deliantra MORPG</a> Server and Client, |
972 |
and many other programs. |
973 |
|
974 |
Features include child/pid watchers, periodic timers based on wallclock |
975 |
(absolute) time (in addition to timers using relative timeouts), as well |
976 |
as epoll/kqueue/event ports/inotify/eventfd/signalfd support, fast timer |
977 |
management, time jump detection and correction, and ease-of-use. |
978 |
<p /> |
979 |
|
980 |
It can be used as a libevent replacement using its emulation API or |
981 |
directly embedded into your programs without the need for complex |
982 |
configuration support. A full-featured and well-documented |
983 |
<a href="EV.html">perl interface</a> is also available. |
984 |
<p /> |
985 |
A <a href="http://lists.schmorp.de/mailman/listinfo/libev">mailing |
986 |
list</a> for discussion and support is now available. |
987 |
|
988 |
libecb cvs-co(README) cvs-pod(ecb.pod) cvs-co(ecb.h) dist list(libev) |
989 |
The e compiler builtins header/library. |
990 |
|
991 |
This project delivers you many gcc builtins, attributes and a number of |
992 |
generally useful low-level functions, such as popcount, expect, prefetch, |
993 |
noinline, assume, unreachable and so on. |
994 |
|
995 |
gvpe dist-gnu cvs-pod(doc/gvpe.5.pod,) cvs-pod(doc/gvpe.conf.5.pod) cvs-pod(doc/gvpectrl.8.pod) cvs-pod(doc/gvpe.8.pod) cvs-pod(doc/gvpe.protocol.7.pod) cvs-pod(doc/gvpe.osdep.5.pod) |
996 |
GVPE creates a virtual ethernet network with multiple nodes using a |
997 |
variety of transport protocols. Participating nodes do not need to trust |
998 |
each other. |
999 |
|
1000 |
GVPE creates a virtual ethernet (broadcasts supported, any protocol that |
1001 |
works with a normal ethernet should work with GVPE) by creating encrypted |
1002 |
host-to-host tunnels between multiple endpoints. |
1003 |
<p /> |
1004 |
Unlike other virtual private "network" solutions which merely create a |
1005 |
single tunnel, GVPE creates a real network with multiple endpoints. |
1006 |
<p /> |
1007 |
It is designed to be very simple and robust (cipher selection done at |
1008 |
compiletime etc.), and easy to setup (only a single config file shared |
1009 |
unmodified between all hosts). |
1010 |
<p /> |
1011 |
VPN hosts can neither sniff nor fake packets, that is, you can use |
1012 |
MAC-based filtering to ensure authenticity of packets even from member |
1013 |
nodes. |
1014 |
<p /> |
1015 |
GVPE can also be used to tunnel into some vpn network using a variety of |
1016 |
protocols (raw IP, UDP, TCP, HTTPS-proxy-connect, ICMP and DNS). It is, |
1017 |
however, primarily designed to sit on the gateway machines of company |
1018 |
branches to connect them together. |
1019 |
|
1020 |
libeio dist cvs-pod(eio.pod,) cvs-co(eio.h) cvs-co(demo.c) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev) |
1021 |
Event-based fully asynchronous I/O library for C (used by IO::AIO). |
1022 |
Currently in BETA! |
1023 |
|
1024 |
<p>Libeio is a full-featured asynchronous I/O library |
1025 |
for C, modelled in similar style and spirit as <a |
1026 |
href="http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/libev.html">libev</a>. Features |
1027 |
include: asynchronous read, write, open, close, stat, unlink, fdatasync, |
1028 |
mknod, readdir etc. (basically the full POSIX API). sendfile (native on |
1029 |
solaris, linux, hp-ux, freebsd, emulated everywehere else), readahead |
1030 |
(emulated where not available).</p> |
1031 |
|
1032 |
<p>It is fully event-library agnostic and can easily be integrated into any |
1033 |
event-library (or used standalone, even in polling mode). It is very |
1034 |
portable and relies only on POSIX threads.</p> |
1035 |
|
1036 |
<p>Its code, documentation, integration and portability quality is |
1037 |
currently below that of libev, but should soon be ready for use in |
1038 |
production environments.</p> |
1039 |
|
1040 |
libspf cvs-co(README) |
1041 |
Libspf is a C library that implements the <a |
1042 |
href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sender_Policy_Framework"> Sender |
1043 |
Policy Framework</a>. It allows software to identify and reject forged |
1044 |
envelope-from addresses, a typical nuisance in e-mail spam. SPF is |
1045 |
defined in Experimental RFC 4408. |
1046 |
|
1047 |
This is not the original home of libspf, but its author (apparently) |
1048 |
has vanished for a few years now, and this place took over as a central |
1049 |
place to collect patches and possibly make releases. |
1050 |
<p /> |
1051 |
James Couzens, if you read this and want to take over, feel free to |
1052 |
contact <a href="mailto:libspf@schmorp.de">me</a>, I'd be thrilled :) |
1053 |
|
1054 |
File-Rdiff cpan cvs-pod(Rdiff.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1055 |
A Perl module that generates remote signatures and patches files using |
1056 |
librsync: basically your interface to librsync. |
1057 |
|
1058 |
EV-Glib cpan cvs-pod(Glib.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev) |
1059 |
This perl module embeds the default Glib mainloop into the EV event loop. This makes it |
1060 |
possible to use callbacks or modules using the Glib module (e.g. Gtk2 programs) within EV programs. Just |
1061 |
loading it suffices. See the <a href="/pkg/Glib-EV.html">Glib::EV</a> module for the reverse approach. |
1062 |
|
1063 |
Glib-EV cpan cvs-pod(EV.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev) |
1064 |
This perl module patches the default libglib main loop context to use the EV module. This makes |
1065 |
it possible to use callbacks or modules using the EV module within Glib and Gtk2 programs. Just |
1066 |
loading it suffices. See the <a href="/pkg/EV-Glib.html">EV::Glib</a> module for the reverse approach. |
1067 |
|
1068 |
Glib-Event cpan cvs-pod(Event.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev) |
1069 |
This perl module patches the default libglib main loop context to use the Event module. This makes |
1070 |
it possible to use callbacks or modules using the Event module within Glib and Gtk2 programs. Just |
1071 |
loading it suffices. |
1072 |
|
1073 |
GPS |
1074 |
Undocumented, unreleased and unfinished-but-working interface to some GPS |
1075 |
devices in Perl. |
1076 |
|
1077 |
Linux-DVB cpan cvs-pod(DVB.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1078 |
A perl module that implements a very direct interface to the Linux DVB |
1079 |
API. Also contains utility functions to decode SI data. |
1080 |
|
1081 |
Devel-FindRef cpan cvs-pod(FindRef.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1082 |
A Perl module that tries to track down references to perl values. Can |
1083 |
be a great aid in debugging leak problems by showing where a value |
1084 |
is still being referenced. |
1085 |
|
1086 |
BDB cpan cvs-pod(BDB.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1087 |
A Perl module implementing an interface to BerkeleyDB versions 4.4 and later. |
1088 |
Unlike the BerkeleyDB and DB_File modules, this module has a much more |
1089 |
C-like interface exposing all the features of the underlying library |
1090 |
and also executes all database changes asynchronously using a thread pool. |
1091 |
|
1092 |
IO-AIO cpan cvs-pod(AIO.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1093 |
A Perl module that implements asynchronous I/O using pthreads. Apart |
1094 |
from AIO reading and writing, this module also allows asynchronous |
1095 |
<tt>stat</tt>, <tt>open</tt>, <tt>unlink</tt> (and more) calls, |
1096 |
which often are a substantial blocking problem. See also its (outdated) |
1097 |
brother <tt>Linux-AIO</tt>. |
1098 |
|
1099 |
JSON-XS cpan cvs-pod(XS.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1100 |
JSON::XS implements JSON (http://www.json.org) for Perl. Unlike other |
1101 |
modules, its primary goal is to encode to syntactically correct JSON and |
1102 |
flag invalid JSON while decoding. It ensures round-trip integrity of |
1103 |
datatypes while being intuitive to use. Currently being the fastest of the |
1104 |
JSON encoders available for Perl, it supports a variety of format options, |
1105 |
such as single-line, ASCII-only or pretty-printed and can be tuned for |
1106 |
speed or memory usage. It comes with a wealth of documentation describing |
1107 |
usage and implementation details. |
1108 |
|
1109 |
CBOR-XS cpan cvs-pod(XS.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1110 |
CBOR::XS implements the Concise Binary Object Representation (RFC 7049), |
1111 |
which is a kind of "binary JSON" that also has the ability to cleanly |
1112 |
serialise objects. Unlike other binary formats, CBOR is actually capable |
1113 |
of representing all JSON texts, not just a subset of them. |
1114 |
|
1115 |
Types-Serialiser cpan cvs-pod(Serialiser.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1116 |
This module is an utility module that provides a few simple datatypes, |
1117 |
constants and a serialisation protocol for CBOR::XS. It could be used |
1118 |
for other, similar, serialisation modules (such as JSON::XS), and would |
1119 |
improve interoperability between those modules. |
1120 |
|
1121 |
Games-Go-SimpleBoard cpan cvs-pod(SimpleBoard.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1122 |
A Perl module representing a go board. |
1123 |
|
1124 |
This Perl module represents a Go game. It can check for valid moves, |
1125 |
capture stones, stores move history and can represent a variety of |
1126 |
additional annotations (circles, labels, grayed-out stones etc.). |
1127 |
|
1128 |
Games-Sokoban cpan cvs-pod(Sokoban.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1129 |
A perl module to load/transform/save sokoban levels in various formats. |
1130 |
|
1131 |
Supports xsb (text), rle, sokevo and a small "binpack" format for input and |
1132 |
output and can normalise levels as well as calculate unique IDs. |
1133 |
|
1134 |
Gtk2-GoBoard cpan cvs-pod(GoBoard.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1135 |
A Perl module implementing a go board widget. |
1136 |
|
1137 |
This Perl module implements a beautiful go board (see <a |
1138 |
href="http://data.plan9.de/kgsuemel.jpg">example</a>), implemented as a |
1139 |
Gtk2 widget. |
1140 |
|
1141 |
Linux-AIO cpan cvs-pod(AIO.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1142 |
A Perl module that implements asynchronous I/O using <tt>clone</tt> |
1143 |
on Linux. Apart from AIO reading and writing, this module also allows |
1144 |
asynchronous <tt>stat</tt>, <tt>open</tt> and <tt>close</tt> (and more) |
1145 |
calls, which often are a substantial problem. See also its (newer) brother |
1146 |
<tt>IO-AIO</tt>. |
1147 |
|
1148 |
Linux-Inotify2 cpan cvs-pod(Inotify2.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1149 |
A better/less buggy/more portable interface to the Linux Inotify |
1150 |
subsystem then what Linux::Inotify has to offer. Inotify lets you receive |
1151 |
file change, create, move etc. events for directories in files in a more |
1152 |
scalable fashion than dnotify, the older mechanism. |
1153 |
|
1154 |
Linux-NBD cpan cvs-pod(lib/Linux/NBD.pm) cvs-pod(lib/Linux/NBD/Client.pm) cvs-pod(lib/Linux/NBD/Server.pm) cvs-co(Changes) |
1155 |
A Perl module that helps implementing netblock block device servers and |
1156 |
set up NBD instances. A sample application allowing you to mount most CD |
1157 |
images is included. |
1158 |
|
1159 |
Linux-Clone cpan cvs-pod(Clone.pm) cvs-co(Changes) |
1160 |
A Perl interface to the clone(2) and unshare(2) syscalls. |
1161 |
|
1162 |
Urlader cpan cvs-pod(Urlader.pm) cvs-co(Changes) |
1163 |
A self-unpacking archive that can be used for program deployment and upgrades. |
1164 |
|
1165 |
Much like PAR, this module provides a simple way to build (silently) self-extracting |
1166 |
executables that can contain perl, modules and shared libraries. Unlike PAR it is not |
1167 |
restricted to perl programs, works transparently, without any magic and can cache |
1168 |
unpacked archives for extra speed. Also unlike PAR, it leaves you out in the cold |
1169 |
on the problem of how to atcually gather your files into the distribution. |
1170 |
|
1171 |
Mozilla-Plugin |
1172 |
Undocumented, unreleased and unfinished-but-somewhat-working Perl plug-in |
1173 |
for Mozilla (Netscape, Opera, IE...), that allows embedding Tk, Gtk etc. |
1174 |
plugins directly in the browser. |
1175 |
|
1176 |
Net-FCP cpan cvs-pod(FCP.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1177 |
Perl module implementing the <a href="http://www.freenetproject.org">Freenet</a> |
1178 |
client protocol, including client-side Metadata handling and CHK Key generation. |
1179 |
Includes a mass downloader (similar to fuqid) as sample application. |
1180 |
|
1181 |
Net-Whois-IP |
1182 |
Undocumented, unreleased and unfinished-but-somewhat-working Perl module |
1183 |
that tries to find the corresponding whois entry for a given IP, by querying |
1184 |
various registries. |
1185 |
|
1186 |
OpenSSL |
1187 |
Undocumented, unreleased and unfinished-but-somewhat-working Perl module |
1188 |
interfacing to libssl. |
1189 |
|
1190 |
PDL-Audio cpan cvs-pod(audio.pd,) cvs-co(Changes) |
1191 |
Perl module extending PDL with all sorts of audio functions for generating, analyzing, |
1192 |
loading and saving sounds. Ever so popular is the "birds" demo script :) |
1193 |
|
1194 |
Tree-M cpan |
1195 |
Perl interface to the broken M-Tree library by these italian guys... |
1196 |
|
1197 |
Video-Capture-V4l cpan cvs-co(README) cvs-co(Changes) |
1198 |
Full-featured interface to Video for Linux, including real-time grabbing |
1199 |
and jpeg compression, VPS etc. decoding and many sample scripts that |
1200 |
facilitate automatica sender search and detection, EPG decoding and |
1201 |
viewing and video grabbing. |
1202 |
|
1203 |
XML-DB |
1204 |
Undocumented, unreleased and unfinished Perl module implementing an "XML |
1205 |
database", i.e. a tree-based database, on top of a conventional SQL |
1206 |
database. |
1207 |
|
1208 |
basex |
1209 |
Very old, very portable ANSI-C program that implements something |
1210 |
that is similar to yencode. yencode is more "standard", so don't use this. |
1211 |
|
1212 |
dinfo |
1213 |
Undocumented and working tools to extract the data from the D-Info CD. |
1214 |
|
1215 |
syncmail |
1216 |
Unfinished, undocumented and not working. |
1217 |
|
1218 |
thttpd |
1219 |
A personally hacked version of thttpd, suitable for lots of file |
1220 |
transfers (normal thttpd has problems with this). |
1221 |
|
1222 |
wvsniff |
1223 |
Undocumented but nicely working wavelan sniffer that I wrote for use |
1224 |
with my cisco aironet card. If you get it working, praise yourself. |
1225 |
|
1226 |
dhcpping cvs-pod(dhcping.pod,) |
1227 |
A version of dhcpping enhanced by <a href="mailto:marco@nethype.de">Marco Maisenhelder</a> |
1228 |
to support passing dhcp options. Intended to test dhcp server implementations. |
1229 |
|
1230 |
fcrackzip cvs-co(fcrackzip.html) |
1231 |
<b>fcrackzip</b> is a zip password cracker, similar to fzc, zipcrack and others. |
1232 |
|
1233 |
<h3>Why, the hell, another zip cracker?</h3> |
1234 |
|
1235 |
Naturally, programs are born out of an actual need. The situation with |
1236 |
fcrackzip was no different... I'm not using zip very much, but recently |
1237 |
I needed a password cracker. "Sure", I thought, "there are hundreds of |
1238 |
them out there, I'll just gonna get one!". This wasn't so easy, in fact, |
1239 |
none of the zipcrackers I found were able to find the passwords, either |
1240 |
they didn't accept more than one zipfile, were awfully slow, or didn't do |
1241 |
brute force attacks (which I needed). The worst thing was: no source!. |
1242 |
|
1243 |
<h3>Why is <i>no source</i> such a bad thing?</h3> |
1244 |
|
1245 |
[insert big chapter about the free software spirit here ;)], anyway |
1246 |
people will never learn... You will find reasons why it's much better to |
1247 |
provide source to your programs here, at opensource.org, and here, at the |
1248 |
Free Software Foundation. Now, what are the features of fcrackzip? |
1249 |
|
1250 |
<ul><li> |
1251 |
<p>FREE</p> |
1252 |
|
1253 |
<p>It doesn't cost anything, it will run on many architectures, and |
1254 |
the source is freely available, so you can customise it to your |
1255 |
needs. If you make improvements, don't hesitate to mail them to me, |
1256 |
and I will include them in fcrackzip!</p> |
1257 |
|
1258 |
<p>One goal of fcrackzip was to provide a free but still fast |
1259 |
zipcracker, so that other people can improve and contribute it |
1260 |
further, in an open developement style.</p> |
1261 |
|
1262 |
<p>Other programs, like fzc, come not only without source, but the |
1263 |
executable is even encrypted, so improving it or customizing it is |
1264 |
difficult at best. (Maybe the programmers of other crackers don't |
1265 |
want that people see how crappy their code actually is? Nobody |
1266 |
knows for sure, but I see no other reason for this strange, but |
1267 |
common, behaviour)</p> |
1268 |
|
1269 |
</li><li> |
1270 |
<p>FAST</p> |
1271 |
|
1272 |
<p>On my old machine (a pentium-90), the portable C version is 12% |
1273 |
slower than fzc, the fastest cracker I could find. Small parts of |
1274 |
fcrackzip have been converted to x86 assembly, so it performs a bit |
1275 |
faster (around 4%) than fzc now, on the same hardware (note: this |
1276 |
is highly os/compiler dependent). Since the author of fzc claims |
1277 |
that it is written fully in assembler, further improvements might |
1278 |
well be possible. Incidently, on my new P-II machine, fcrackzip is |
1279 |
almost twice as fast as fzc ;)</p> |
1280 |
|
1281 |
</li><li> |
1282 |
<p>PORTABLE</p> |
1283 |
|
1284 |
<p>fcrackzip was written in ISO-C, and should run on most platforms, |
1285 |
even 64 bit ones (maybe after some tweaking). I'll be glad to hear |
1286 |
about portability problems so I can fix them.</p> |
1287 |
|
1288 |
</li><li> |
1289 |
<p>FEATUREFUL</p> |
1290 |
|
1291 |
<p>fcrackzip will, at some later stage at least, support many more |
1292 |
useful operation modes than other crackers. It already supports |
1293 |
multiple zip files with multiple files. Remember that the code is |
1294 |
only a few hours old!</p> |
1295 |
|
1296 |
<p>However, since version 0.2.0 fcrackzip also includes a mode to |
1297 |
brute force cpmask'ed images, something no other program (that I |
1298 |
know of) can do, so at least there is one feature other crackers |
1299 |
don't have.</p> |
1300 |
|
1301 |
<p>And you can always implement your own modes.</p> |
1302 |
|
1303 |
</li></ul> |
1304 |
|
1305 |
<h3>Caveat, Imperator!</h3> |
1306 |
|
1307 |
<p>Naturally, there are also some drawbacks. At the moment, fcrackzip |
1308 |
is a bit slower than necessary, and lacks some important (or nice) |
1309 |
features, like automatic unzip-testing and others. On the other hand, |
1310 |
fcrackzip-0.0.1 was hacked together in under ten hours, and you can |
1311 |
always modify the source (and send me patches!!!) (I hope I've made it |
1312 |
clear now ;)</p> |
1313 |
|
1314 |
lsys cvs-co(README) cvs-co(NEWS) |
1315 |
lsys is a program that interprets lindenmeyer-systems. |
1316 |
|
1317 |
<p>lsys is a full-featured program that understands most of the syntax |
1318 |
of the original l-systems language, which is far more complex and |
1319 |
powerful than most available l-system interpreters.</p> |
1320 |
|
1321 |
<p>See <a href="http://home.schmorp.de/marc/lsys.html">the original homepage</a> |
1322 |
for more explanations and some images. |
1323 |
|
1324 |
ermyth cvs-pod(doc/poddoc/documentation.pod) cvs-co(Changes) |
1325 |
This is a fork of Atheme IRC Services. |
1326 |
|
1327 |
Ermyth IRC Services is a set of Services for IRC networks that allows |
1328 |
users to manage their channels in a secure and efficient way and |
1329 |
allows operators to manage various things about their networks. |
1330 |
Ermyth has been ported to C++ and goes its way using modern concepts |
1331 |
and the object oriented paradigm. |
1332 |
|
1333 |
ExtUtils-CXX cpan cvs-pod(CXX.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(perl) irc(schmorp) |
1334 |
Try to treat .xs files as C++ rather than C in your module. |
1335 |
|
1336 |
This module can be used to compile C++ XS files. It might not be perfect, |
1337 |
but is meant aa single point that needs patching, so other modules who rely on |
1338 |
it do not have to be pqatched every single time. |
1339 |
|