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Revision: 1.135
Committed: Sun Nov 28 19:00:08 2021 UTC (2 years, 5 months ago) by root
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: HEAD
Changes since 1.134: +9 -110 lines
Log Message:
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File Contents

# Content
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 #rxvt => ["irc.schmorp.de", "#schmorpforge", "http://chat.schmorp.de/?channels=schmorpforge", ", user <tt>schmorp</tt>"],
17 rxvt => ["irc.libera.chat", "#rxvt-unicode" , "https://kiwiirc.com/client/irc.libera.chat/?&theme=cli#rxvt-unicode", ", user <tt>schmorp</tt>"],
18 rxvtdev => ["irc.libera.chat", "#rxvt-unicode-dev", "https://kiwiirc.com/client/irc.libera.chat/?&theme=cli#rxvt-unicode-dev", ", <b>(no support, development only)</b>"],
19 # 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>"],
20 );
21
22 sub hdr($$) {
23 print <<EOF;
24 <?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
25 <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml11/DTD/xhtml11.dtd">
26 <html xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml' xml:lang='en'>
27 <head>
28 <title>$_[0]</title>
29 <link rel="stylesheet" href="/schmorpforge.css">
30 </head>
31 <body>
32 <div class='section section-topnav'>
33 <p class='back'><a href='/'>Schmorpforge Software Repository</a></p>
34 </div>
35 <div class='section section-header'>
36 <h1 class="$_[1]">$_[0]</h1>
37 <div style="text-align: center; float: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em">
38 <!--
39 <a title="Mach mit!" href="http://www.piratenpartei.de/unsere_ziele">
40 <img src="http://res.tst.eu/denke_selbst.gif" alt="Werde Pirat!" width="468" height="60" border="0" />
41 </a>
42 <br />
43 -->
44 <a href="http://www.piratenpartei.de/unsere_ziele">
45 <img src="http://res.tst.eu/piraten1.png" alt="Piratenpartei" width="468" height="60" border="0" />
46 </a>
47 <br />
48 <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">
49 <img src="http://www.deliantra.net/images/deliantra.png" border="0" alt="Deliantra Free MMORPG" style="display: inline"/>
50 <br />
51 The free as in beer, liberal, code &amp; content retro-style graphical MMORPG :)
52 </a>
53 </div>
54 </div>
55 EOF
56 }
57
58 sub ftr {
59 print <<EOF;
60 <div class='section section-footer'>
61 <hr class='footer'/>
62 <p class='footer'>
63 Contact for this page: <a href="mailto:schmorpforge\@schmorp.de">Marc Lehmann &lt;schmorpforge\@schmorp.de&gt;</a>.
64 </p>
65 </div>
66 </body>
67 </html>
68 EOF
69 }
70
71 $_ = <DATA>;
72 for (;defined $_;) {
73 my ($name, @args) = split /\s+/;
74
75 next unless $name;
76
77 my $desc = "";
78 $desc .= $_ while (defined ($_ = <DATA>) and !/^\S/);
79 $desc =~ s/^(.*?)\n\s*\n//s
80 or die "malformed desc in $name: $desc";
81
82 my $short = $1;
83
84 (my $id = $name) =~ y%/%-%;
85 $index{$name} = "<tr><th id='$id' style='white-space:nowrap'><a href='pkg/$name.html'>$name</a></th><td>$short</td></tr>";
86
87 open STDOUT, ">", "software.schmorp.de/pkg/$name.html"
88 or die "software.schmorp.de/pkg/$name.html: $!";
89
90 my $bg = (grep /cpan/, @args) ? "bg-perl" : "bg-ede";
91 hdr $name, $bg;
92
93 print <<EOF;
94 <div class='section section-short-desc'>
95 <h2>$name</h2>
96 <p class='short-desc'>$short</p>
97 </div>
98
99 <div class='section section-blurb'>
100 <h2>Blurb</h2>
101 <p class='blurb'>$desc</p>
102 </div>
103
104 <div class='section section-resources'>
105 <h2>Resources</h2>
106 <table class='resources'>
107 EOF
108
109 for (grep /^res/, @args) {
110 /^resource\(([^,]+),\{\{(.*?)\}\}\)$/ or die "$_: no resource\n";
111 print <<EOF;
112 <tr><td><tt class="icon">$1</tt></td><td class='rr'>$2</li></tr>
113 EOF
114 }
115
116 print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>FILE</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='https://ftpmirror.gnu.org/gnu/$name/'>File Releases (GNU)</a></td></tr>\n"
117 if grep /dist-gnu/, @args;
118 print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>FILE</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://dist.schmorp.de/$name/'>File Releases</a></td></tr>\n"
119 if grep /dist(?!-)/, @args;
120 print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>CPAN</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://www.cpan.org/modules/by-authors/id/M/ML/MLEHMANN/'>File Releases (CPAN)</a></td></tr>\n"
121 if grep /cpan$/, @args;
122
123 if (grep /git/, @args) {
124 print <<EOF;
125 <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>
126 <tr><td><tt class="icon">GIT</tt></td><td class='rr'>Read-only GIT checkout: <tt>&#160;git-clone http://git.ta-sa.org/$name.git</tt>
127 </td></tr>
128 <!-- <tr><td><tt class="icon">CVS</tt></td><td class='rr'>Contributor CVS access (command requires CVS version &gt;= 1.12.11):<br />
129 <tt>cvs -d ":ext;CVS_SERVER=git-cvsserver:USER\@ruth.plan9.de/gitroot/$name.git" co -d $name master</tt>
130 </td></tr> -->
131 EOF
132 } else {
133 my $modules = $name;
134
135 for (@args) {
136 $modules = "$1" if /modules\((.*)\)/;
137 }
138
139 if (length $modules) {
140 print <<EOF;
141 <tr><td><tt class="icon">CVS</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://cvs.schmorp.de/$name'>Browsable CVS module '$name'</a></td></tr>
142 <tr><td><tt class="icon">CVS</tt></td><td class='rr'>Anonymous CVS:
143 <tt>&#160;cvs -z3 -d :pserver:anonymous\@cvs.schmorp.de/schmorpforge co $modules</tt>
144
145 </td></tr>
146 EOF
147 }
148 }
149
150 my @irc;
151
152 my $perlname = $name =~ s/-/::/gr;
153
154 print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>METACPAN</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='https://metacpan.org/pod/$perlname'>MetaCPAN page</a></td></tr>\n"
155 if grep /cpan$/, @args;
156 for (@args) {
157 if (/list\((.*?)\)/) {
158 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";
159 }
160 if (/irc\((.*?)\)/) {
161 push @irc, $1;
162 }
163 }
164 push @irc, "schmorp" unless @irc;
165 for (@irc) {
166 my ($server, $channel, $url, $comment) = @{ $IRC{$_} or die };
167 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, or /msg schmorp directly)</i>)</b></td></tr>\n";
168 }
169
170 print "</table>";
171
172 if (my @files = grep $_, map /(cvs-co|cvs-pod|git-pod|git-co)\((\S+)\)/ && [$1, $2], @args) {
173 print "</div><div class='section section-documents'><h2>Package Documention</h2><table class='resources'>";
174
175 for (@files) {
176 my ($type, $arg) = @$_;
177
178 if ($type eq "cvs-co") {
179 print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>FILE</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://cvs.schmorp.de/$name/$arg'>$arg</a></td></tr>";
180
181 } elsif ($type eq "cvs-pod") {
182 my ($file, $desc) = $arg =~ /(.*),(.*)/ ? ($1, $2) : ($arg, $arg);
183 $desc ||= "<b>Main Manual Page</b>";
184 print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>POD</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/$name/$file'>$desc</a></td></tr>";
185
186 } elsif ($type eq 'git-co') {
187 print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>FILE</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://git.ta-sa.org/$name/$arg'>$arg</a></td>";
188
189 } elsif ($type eq "git-pod") {
190 my ($file, $desc) = $arg =~ /(.*),(.*)/ ? ($1, $2) : ($arg, $arg);
191 $desc ||= "<b>Main Manual Page</b>";
192 print "<tr><td><tt class='icon'>POD</tt></td><td class='rr'><a href='http://pod.tst.eu/http://git.ta-sa.org/$name/$file'>$desc</a></td></tr>";
193
194 }
195 }
196
197 print "</table>";
198 }
199 print "</div>";
200
201 ftr;
202 }
203
204 open STDOUT, ">software.schmorp.de/index.html";
205
206 hdr "Project List", "bg-bluete";
207
208 print <<EOF;
209
210 <div class='section section-about'>
211 <h2>About</h2>
212 <p class='blurb'>This page briefly documents the Schmorpforge Software Repository and
213 lists all projects available here.</p>
214 </div>
215
216 <div class='section section-resources'>
217 <table class='resources'>
218 <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>
219 <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>
220 <!--<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>-->
221 <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>
222 <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>
223 <!--<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>-->
224
225 <!--<tr><td><tt class='icon'>IRC</tt></td><td class='rr'>Server <a href='http://webchat.freenode.net/?randomnick=1&amp;channels=schmorp&amp;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, or /msg schmorp directly</i>)</b><br/>Other project-specific IRC servers are listed on their respective project page.</td></tr>-->
226 <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>
227 </table>
228 </div>
229
230 <div class='section section-overview'>
231 <h2>Project List</h2>
232 <table class='overview'>
233 EOF
234
235 print $index{$_} for sort { (lc $a) cmp (lc $b) } keys %index;
236
237 print "</table></div>";
238 ftr;
239
240 __DATA__
241 stableperl list(perl) modules()
242 Stableperl is a fork, or a branch, of the official perl with the goal
243 of providing stability and compatibility. See <a
244 href="http://stableperl.schmorp.de/">stableperl.schmorp.de</a> for
245 details.
246
247 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
248 releases at <a href="http://stableperl.schmorp.de/dist/">http://stableperl.schmorp.de/dist/</a>.
249
250 Canary-Stability cpan cvs-pod(Stability.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(perl)
251 A little bird that doubles as an early warning system.
252
253 Wasn't early but rather late, but at least it is warning now.
254
255 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)
256 rxvt-unicode is a fork of the well known terminal emulator rxvt.
257
258 <p>If you have a problem, please have a look at the
259 <a href="http://cvs.schmorp.de/rxvt-unicode/doc/rxvt.7.html">FAQ</a>
260 <em>first</em>.</p>
261
262 Its main features (many of them unique) over rxvt are:
263
264 <ul>
265 <li>Stores text in Unicode (either UCS-2 or UCS-4).</li>
266 <li>Uses locale-correct input, output and width: as long as your system supports the locale,
267 rxvt-unicode will display correctly.</li>
268 <li>Daemon mode: one daemon can open multiple windows on multiple displays, which
269 improves memory usage and startup time considerably.</li>
270 <li>Embedded perl, for endless customization and improvement opportunities, such as:
271 <ul>
272 <li>Tabbed terminal support.</li>
273 <li>Regex-driven customisable selection that can properly select shell arguments, urls etc.</li>
274 <li>Selection-transformation and option popup menus.</li>
275 <li>Automatically transforming the selection once made.</li>
276 <li>Incremental scrollback buffer search.</li>
277 <li>Automatic URL-underlining and launching.</li>
278 <li>Remote pastebin, digital clock, block graphics to ascii filter and
279 whatever you like to implement for yourself.</li>
280 </ul>
281 </li>
282 <li>Crash-free. At least I try, but rxvt-unicode certainly crashes much less often than
283 rxvt and its many forks, and reproducible bugs get fixed immediately.</li>
284 <li>Completely flicker-free.</li>
285 <li>Re-wraps long lines instead of splitting or cutting them on resizes.</li>
286 <li>Full combining character support (unlike xterm :).</li>
287 <li>Multiple fonts supported at the same time: No need to choose between
288 nice japanese and ugly latin, or no japanese and nice latin characters :).</li>
289 <li>Supports Xft and core fonts in any combination.</li>
290 <li>Can easily be embedded into other applications.</li>
291 <li>All documentation accessible through manpages.</li>
292 <li>Locale-independent XIM support.</li>
293 <li>Many small improvements, such as improved and corrected terminfo, improved secondary screen modes,
294 italic and bold font support, tinting and shading.</li>
295 <li>Encapsulation of privileged operations in a separate process (improves security).</li>
296 <li>Optimised for local <i>and</i> remote connections.</li>
297 </ul>
298
299 <br />
300 And its main <em>missing</em> features (which users request but are not (yet?) implemented) are:
301
302 <ul>
303 <li>Complex script support, such as arabic or tibetian - more info is needed. (use mlterm)</li>
304 <li>Right-to-Left rendering - more info is needed. (use mlterm)</li>
305 <li>IIIMF (Intranet/Internet Input Method Framework) support. (use scim)</li>
306 </ul>
307
308 <br />
309
310 libptytty dist list(rxvt-unicode) cvs-pod(doc/libptytty.3.pod) cvs-co(Changes)
311 libptytty is an offspring of rxvt-unicode that handles pty/tty/utmp/wtmp/lastlog handling
312 in mostly OS-independent ways, so it's less of a hassle for you :)
313
314 vt102 list(perl) cvs-co(vt102)
315 <code>vt102</code> is a vt100/102/131 hardware simulator, implementing
316 practical and 100% compatible DEC VT terminal "emulation".
317
318 Most terminal emulators nowadays strive to emulate a DEC VT102
319 terminal (even those claiming to emulate a VT100 usually mean
320 VT102). Unfortunately, even though there are some VT100 simulators,
321 there haven't been any DEC VT102 ones, so it was very hard to test
322 compatibility with the real device.
323
324 Thanks to this simulator, one can now test how the "real" VT102 behaves,
325 and as free extra, it also simulates DEC VT100 and DEC VT131 terminals.
326
327 ROMs are included - a standard Perl 5.10+ installation, the
328 <code>stty</code> utility and the <code>IO::Pty</code> module are
329 required to run the script, and rxvt-unicode, xterm or a similar terminal
330 emulation is required to have display/keyboard support.
331
332 gtkbfc cvs-pod(README)
333 Gtk+ bash file chooser replacement.
334
335 <b>gtkbfc</b> is a hack that replaces the dreaded, slow and hard-to-use GTK+
336 file chooser by a rxvt-unicode window with a little script that lets you use
337 readline tab-completion to enter filenames.
338
339 Again, its a dire hack and will not work with all programs. It does work
340 for gimp, firefox, gedit at least, though.
341
342 Async-Interrupt cpan cvs-pod(Interrupt.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
343 Allow C/XS libraries to interrupt perl asynchronously.
344
345 This is a module implementing a rarely-needed, very advanced technique
346 to interrupt a running perl interpreter from another thread, or similar,
347 context, at very low overhead.
348
349 CV cpan cvs-pod(bin/cv,) cvs-co(Changes)
350 Gtk2::CV is a perl module that implements an image viewer.
351
352 It comes with its own demo app, named <tt>cv</tt>, which is loosely
353 modeled after the classic <tt>xv</tt>, although it displays images much
354 faster than the great original. Stable releases are also found on CPAN.
355
356 kgsueme cpan list(kgsueme) cvs-co(Changes)
357 This perl module is about reverse engineering the
358 <a href="http://cvs.schmorp.de/kgsueme/doc/protocol.html">protocol</a>
359 (<a href="http://cvs.schmorp.de/kgsueme/doc/protocol.xml">xml source</a>)
360 of the popular <a href="http://kgs.kiseido.com">Kiseido Go Server</a>.
361
362 It features a sample Gtk+2 client (<a
363 href="http://kgsueme.schmorp.de/screenshot.jpg">screenshot</a>), a gtp
364 and a igs interface. It mostly focuses on documenting the protocol and
365 delivering a stable reference implementation which makes it easy to write
366 your own clients, bots and so on. It also contains Gtk2 modules for
367 KGS-independent rendering of beautiful Go boards. For a introduction to
368 the game of go, look <a href="http://playgo.to/interactive/">here</a>.
369
370 App-Staticperl cpan cvs-pod(bin/staticperl,) cvs-co(Changes)
371 Perl, libc, 100 modules - all in one self-contained 500kb executable.
372
373 App::Staticperl installs a helper script that allows you to install a
374 statically linked (or linkable) perl distribution, install additional
375 modules, and create new perl interpreters with just the selection of
376 modules you need. It is also possible to just create the C source files
377 needed to embed this custom interpreter into your own programs.<p />
378
379 Two pre-built perl binaries (for Linux on x86 or amd64) which
380 include some highly subjective package selections are available as
381 <a href="http://staticperl.schmorp.de/smallperl.html">smallperl</a>
382 and
383 <a href="http://staticperl.schmorp.de/bigperl.html">bigperl</a>.
384
385 Net-Knuddels cvs-pod(Net/Knuddels.pm,)
386 This perl module provides an API for group communications using the
387 <a href="http://www.knuddels.de/">www.knuddels.de</a> protocol. It is outdated
388 and only provided as reference.
389
390 This module implements the knuddels.de chat protocol. Since it was created
391 the protocol changed in unknown ways, so this module no longer works. It is
392 provided as reference, though, in case the protocol didn't change much,
393 so one can learn about the protocol.
394 It could be used to write Knuddels clients, bots and even servers
395 (although the latter doesn't make much sense, the protocol is rather
396 ugly. If you want to implement your own group communication server, use
397 IRC instead).
398
399 AnyEvent-ReadLine-Gnu cpan cvs-pod(Gnu.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
400 This is a small interface to Term::ReadLine::Gnu for event-based programs.
401
402 This module has event-based readline, as well as asynchronous message printing
403 with readline figured out for you.
404
405 IO-FDPass cpan cvs-pod(FDPass.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
406 Pass a file descriptor over a socket.
407
408 This small low-level module only has one purpose: pass a file descriptor
409 to another process, using a (streaming) unix domain socket (on POSIX
410 systems) or any (streaming) socket (on WIN32 systems).
411
412 Proc-FastSpawn cpan cvs-pod(FastSpawn.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
413 fork+exec, or spawn, a subprocess as quickly as possible
414
415 The purpose of this small (in scope and footprint) module is simple:
416 spawn a subprocess asynchronously as efficiently and/or fast as
417 possible. Basically the same as calling fork+exec (on POSIX), but
418 hopefully faster than those two syscalls.
419
420 Apart from fork overhead, this module also allows you to fork+exec
421 programs when otherwise you couldn't - for example, when you use POSIX
422 threads in your perl process then it generally isn't safe to call
423 fork from perl, but it is safe to use this module to execute external
424 processes.
425
426 AnyEvent-Fork cpan cvs-pod(Fork.pm,) cvs-pod(Fork/Early.pm) cvs-pod(Fork/Template.pm) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
427 Everything you wanted to use fork() for, but couldn't.
428
429 This module allows you to create new processes, without actually forking
430 them from your current process (avoiding the problems of forking), but
431 preserving most of the advantages of fork.
432
433 It can be used to create new worker processes or new independent
434 subprocesses for short- and long-running jobs, process pools (e.g. for
435 use in pre-forked servers) but also to spawn new external processes (such
436 as CGI scripts from a webserver), which can be faster (and more well
437 behaved) than using fork+exec in big processes.
438
439 AnyEvent-Fork-Remote cpan cvs-pod(Remote.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
440 Remote processes with AnyEvent::Fork interface
441
442 Despite what the name of this module might suggest, it doesn't actually
443 create remote processes for you. But it does make it easy to use them,
444 once you have started them.
445
446 This module implements a very similar API as AnyEvent::Fork. In fact,
447 similar enough to require at most minor modifications to support both
448 at the same time. For example, it works with AnyEvent::Fork::RPC and
449 AnyEvent::Fork::Pool.
450
451 AnyEvent-Fork-RPC cpan cvs-pod(RPC.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
452 Simple RPC extension for AnyEvent::Fork
453
454 This module implements a simple RPC protocol and backend for processes
455 created via AnyEvent::Fork, allowing you to call a function in the
456 child process and receive its return values (up to 4GB serialised).
457
458 It implements two different backends: a synchronous one that works like a
459 normal function call, and an asynchronous one that can run multiple jobs
460 concurrently in the child, using AnyEvent.
461
462 It also implements an asynchronous event mechanism from the child to the
463 parent, that could be used for progress indications or other information.
464
465 AnyEvent-Fork-Pool cpan cvs-pod(Pool.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
466 Simple process pool manager on top of AnyEvent::Fork and AnyEvent::Fork::RPC.
467
468 This module uses processes created via AnyEvent::Fork and the RPC
469 protocol implement in AnyEvent::Fork::RPC to create a load-balanced pool
470 of processes that handles jobs.
471
472 Understanding of AnyEvent::Fork is helpful but not critical to be able
473 to use this module, but a thorough understanding of AnyEvent::Fork::RPC
474 is, as it defines the actual API that needs to be implemented in the
475 children.
476
477 Guard cpan cvs-pod(Guard.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
478 This small module implements scope and object guards, that is, code blocks
479 that are executed when a scope is being exited (or an object is destroyed).
480
481 Much effort was invested into these guards behaving "sensibly" in the
482 presence of thrown exceptions, errors and other adverse conditions, as
483 well as into good performance.
484
485 OpenCL cpan cvs-pod(OpenCL.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
486 An interface to OpenCL (the Open Computing Language) for Perl.
487
488 Perlized (not C-ish) OpenCL interface.
489
490 common-sense cpan cvs-pod(sense.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
491 This module implements some sane defaults for Perl programs, as defined
492 by two typical (or not so typical - use your common sense) specimens of
493 Perl coders.
494
495 Net-IRC-Server cvs-pod(Net/IRC/Server.pm,)
496 This module provides a simple API for handling the IRC Protocol
497 aiming at implementing lightweight IRC-Servers.
498
499 PApp-SQL cpan cvs-pod(SQL.pm,)
500 Absolutely easy yet fast and powerful SQL access.
501
502 This module wraps the DBI prepare/bind/execute calls into a single "sql_exec" call,
503 complete with statement caching, so you get the efficiency of prepare, the safety
504 of using placeholders and the speed of bound result values in a simple call.
505
506 Example:
507
508 <pre>
509 my $st = sql_exec \my ($id, $name),
510 "select id, name from db where name like %",
511 "pfx%";
512 while ($st->fetch) {
513 print "$id $name\n";
514 }
515 </pre>
516
517 libcoro cvs-co(README) cvs-co(coro.h)
518 This C-library implements coroutines (cooperative multitasking) in a
519 portable fashion.
520
521 As long as your system implements the <tt>ucontext</tt> (Unix) or the
522 older <tt>sigaltstack</tt> interfaces it should work out of the box,
523 with minimal configuration (it consists of only a single <tt>.h</tt> and
524 a single <tt>.c</tt> file). For the broken systems, it also supports
525 a slow pthreads-based system and (optional) assembly backends for
526 higher speed on some systems. It is known to run on a wide variety of
527 unix systems (SunOS, IRIX, GNU/Linux, HP-UX, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD)
528 and also on Windows, does not require any assembly language and is
529 architecture-independent.
530
531 deliantra/server cvs-co(README) cvs-co(Changes) cvs-co(COPYING.Affero)
532 The <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> game server.
533
534 Follow the link to <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> for background info.
535
536 deliantra/maps cvs-co(Changes) cvs-co(COPYING.Affero)
537 The <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> game maps.
538
539 Follow the link to <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> for background info.
540
541 deliantra/arch cvs-co(Changes) cvs-co(COPYING.Affero)
542 The <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> game resources.
543
544 Follow the link to <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> for background info.
545
546 deliantra/Deliantra-Client cvs-pod(bin/deliantra,) cvs-co(Changes)
547 A modern, fullscreen client for <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a>, written using Perl
548 and leveraging only OpenGL for display and thus being easily portable.
549 See its <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/client.html">homepage</a>.
550
551 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>,
552 <a href="http://www.libsdl.org/projects/SDL_image/">SDL_image</a>, <a href="http://www.pango.org">PanGo</a> (with freetype2 and
553 cairo backends at the moment), and the BDB, AnyEvent, Pod::POM, EV and
554 <a href="http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/deliantra/Deliantra.html">Deliantra</a> perl modules.
555
556 deliantra/Deliantra
557 Perl module family for the <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> game.
558
559 They can be used to read/write/cache archetypes, image packs and map files.
560 Follow the link to <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> for background info.
561
562 deliantra/gde cvs-pod(bin/gde,)
563 The <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> editor, written in Perl + Gtk2.
564
565 The editor for the game Deliantra, written in Perl.
566 Follow the link to <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> for background info.
567
568 deliantra
569 <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> server, archetypes, maps,
570 editor, client and support modules distribution.
571
572 Follow the link to <a href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> for background info.
573
574 cfmaps
575 This is a collection of scripts that I use to create the <a
576 href="http://www.deliantra.net/">Deliantra</a> maps at <a
577 href="http://maps.deliantra.net/">maps.deliantra.net</a>.
578
579 They are not documented and somewhat specialised, but the scripts might
580 be of some use.
581
582 Faster cpan cvs-pod(Faster.pm,)
583 A perl module that makes perl run, well, faster, using a very primitive just in time compiler.
584
585 As the name implies, using this module makes your perl program run
586 faster. Actually, much slower initially, as it compiles every function
587 to C and later to a shared object, but then you can expect a performance
588 increase by 10-50%, depending on what your program does.
589
590 liblzf cvs-co(README) cvs-co(lzf.h) dist
591 LibLZF is a very small data compression library.
592
593 It consists of only two .c and two .h files and is very easy to
594 incorporate into your own programs. The compression algorithm is very,
595 very fast, yet still written in portable C. More info and the latest
596 release can be found at the <a href="http://liblzf.plan9.de">LibLZF
597 Homepage</a>.
598
599 xcb cvs-co(README) cvs-co(Changes)
600 A fork of the unmaintained xcb (x cut buffers) program implementing better i18n.
601
602 root-tail cvs-co(root-tail.man.html) cvs-co(Changes) dist
603 Root-tail displays log files in the screen background -
604 basically a graphical <tt>tail -f</tt>.
605
606 Root-tail displays log files in the X root window or another window. It
607 can use different colours for different files, match log entries by
608 regular expressions and more.
609
610 <p>Some history about this fork: some time before the Cebit00, I got my
611 hands on a program named root-tail. Its purpose is to display logfiles in
612 different colours on your root-window. That is, it works just like tail
613 -f.</p>
614
615 <p>Unfortunately, root-tail was thoroughly broken, so I fixed it and
616 contacted its author. I never received a reply, so I decided to
617 publish my modified version of root-tail here.</p>
618
619 lmainit cvs-co(NEWS)
620 A sysvinit replacement that can even be configured to be sysvinit-compliant.
621
622 See <a href="http://home.schmorp.de/marc/lmainit.html">its homepage</a> for more info.
623
624 Algorithm-FEC cpan cvs-pod(FEC.pm,) cvs-co(README.fec) cvs-co(Changes)
625 Perl module implementing forward error correction using Vandermonde matrices
626
627 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/Log.pm,AnyEvent::Log) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Strict.pm,AnyEvent::Strict) 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/TLS.pm,AnyEvent::TLS) 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) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Loop.pm,AnyEvent::Loop) cvs-pod(lib/AnyEvent/Debug.pm,AnyEvent::Debug) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
628 This module offers a simple API for I/O, timer, signal, child process
629 and completion events, independent of a specific event loop.
630
631 <p>This module allows module authors to use those events internally
632 without forcing users of the module to use a specific event loop, without
633 adding noticable overhead. Currently supported event loops are EV, Event,
634 Glib/Gtk2, Tk, Qt, Event::Lib, Irssi, IO::Async and POE (and thus also
635 WxWidgets and Prima). It also comes with a very fast (see benchmarks in
636 the main manual page) Pure Perl event loop and doesn't rely on XS, which
637 ensures that your program will always run even when no C-based event loop
638 is available.</p>
639
640 <p>In addition to the event core (which might be all you need), AnyEvent
641 comes with an optional, fully asynchronous, pure-perl DNS resolver
642 library supporting UDP, TCP and EDNS0, with many utility functions to
643 "just resolve" stuff without having to instantiate even a resolver object
644 (and including an equivalent of C<getaddrinfo>).</p>
645
646 <p>The AnyEvent::Socket offers utility functions to make handling TCP
647 connections (100% non-blocking, including DNS resolution, with both IPv4
648 and IPv6) and addresses as easy as possible, to the point of making IPv6
649 completely transparent.</p>
650
651 <p>Lastly, AnyEvent::Handle offers a powerful framework for asynchronous and
652 buffered protocol handling. You can push multiple read event handlers
653 to parse your protocol and start TLS/SSL negotiation transparently (and
654 fully non-blocking) at any time, in both server and client mode.</p>
655
656 AnyEvent-FastPing cpan cvs-pod(FastPing.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
657 This module implements a very fast and relatively flexible
658 ping (ping as in icmp echo request).
659
660 This module allows you to quickly send ipv4 and ipv6 pings at a defined
661 rate to whole address ranges. It is fully event-driven (doesn't block
662 the perl interpreter) and can easily generate hundreds of thousands of
663 pings per second. Target specification is done by specifying one or
664 more address ranges, to which pings will be distributed according to a
665 least-load principle.
666
667 A command line utility (<tt>fastping</tt>) is included.
668
669 AnyEvent-AIO cpan cvs-pod(AIO.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
670 A perl module providing transparent integration of IO::AIO into AnyEvent.
671
672 AnyEvent-BDB cpan cvs-pod(BDB.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
673 A perl module providing transparent integration of BDB into AnyEvent.
674
675 AnyEvent-DBus cpan cvs-pod(DBus.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
676 A perl module providing mostly transparent integration of Net::DBus into AnyEvent.
677
678 AnyEvent-DBI cpan cvs-pod(DBI.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
679 A perl module providing an asynchronous DBI interface for AnyEvent.
680
681 This module provides an asynchronous DBI interface for AnyEvent by
682 starting one or more proxy processes that handle trhe actual sql
683 commands.
684
685 AnyEvent-FCP cpan cvs-pod(FCP.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
686 A perl module implementing a Freenet Client Protocol 2.0 client.
687
688 AnyEvent-GPSD cpan cvs-pod(GPSD.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
689 A perl module implementing an AnyEvent client for the (pre-xml) GPSD protocol.
690
691 AnyEvent-Porttracker cpan cvs-pod(Porttracker.pm,) cvs-pod(Porttracker/protocol.pod,api-protocol) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
692 A perl module implementing a client for the Porttracker/PortIQ API protocol.
693
694 AnyEvent-ZabbixSender cpan cvs-pod(ZabbixSender.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
695 A perl module implementing an AnyEvent client for the zabbix_sender protocol, used to submit
696 monitoring data items to a zabbix server or proxy.
697
698 AnyEvent-SNMP cpan cvs-pod(SNMP.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
699 A perl module that transparently integrates Net::SNMP into AnyEvent.
700
701 In addition to making Net::SNMP AnyEvent-aware, this module also
702 implements advanced rate-limiting that enables you to query many devices
703 in parallel without running into timeouts due to high CPU usage.
704
705 AnyEvent-Watchdog cpan cvs-pod(Watchdog.pm,) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
706 A perl module implementing a watchdog for Perl processes.
707
708 This module forks your Perl process early during it's startup. It can
709 automatically restart the program on crashes, provide clean restarts
710 requested by the watched program and a number of other small feats.
711
712 AnyEvent-HTTP cpan cvs-pod(HTTP.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
713 A simple and plain event based http and https client.
714
715 This module implements a simple, stateless and non-blocking HTTP
716 client. It supports GET, POST and other request methods, cookies and more,
717 all on a very low level. It can follow redirects supports proxies and
718 automatically limits the number of connections to the values specified in
719 the RFC.
720
721 It should generally be a "good client" that is enough for most HTTP
722 tasks. Simple tasks should be simple, but complex tasks should still be
723 possible as the user retains control over request and response headers.
724
725 The caller is responsible for authentication management, cookies (if
726 the simplistic implementation in this module doesn't suffice), referer
727 and other high-level protocol details for which this module offers only
728 limited support.
729
730 AnyEvent-WebDriver cpan cvs-pod(WebDriver.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
731 A thin wrapper around the <a href="https://www.w3.org/TR/webdriver1/">W3C WebDriver</a> protocol
732 (<a href="https://www.seleniumhq.org/">"Selenium"</a> browser remote control)
733
734 This module implements a relatively thin but easy to use wrapper around the
735 raw <a href="https://www.w3.org/TR/webdriver1/">W3C WebDriver</a> protocol
736 (think <a href="https://www.seleniumhq.org/">"Selenium"</a>, that let's you remote control
737 popular browsers such as Firefox, Chromium, Safari, IE and the like.
738
739 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)
740 This Perl module (-family) implements a simple message passing framework for Perl.
741
742 Despite its simplicity, you can securely message other processes running
743 on the same or other hosts.
744
745 For an introduction to this module family, see the Intro manual page.
746
747 Coro-MP cpan cvs-pod(MP.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
748 This Perl module extends the AnyEvent::MP API with a thread-like/erlang-style API.
749
750 This module implements a thread-like API to AnyEvent::MP that is closer
751 to Erlang than the event-based AnyEvent::MP API. It integrates well into
752 AnyEvent::MP.
753
754 See the AnyEvent::MP module and tutorial for info about the concepts used
755 in AnyEvent::MP.
756
757 AnyEvent-DBI cpan cvs-pod(DBI.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
758 A relatively simple wrapper around DBI to make asynchronous
759 SQL requests.
760
761 This module implements asynchronous DBI access my forking or executing
762 separate "DBI-Server" processes and sending them requests.
763
764 It means that you can run DBI requests in parallel to other tasks.
765
766 Array-Heap cpan cvs-pod(Heap.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
767 A Perl module that implements C++ STL-like binary heap operations.
768
769 Audio-Play-MPG123 cpan cvs-pod(MPG123.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
770 A Perl module implementing an interface to mpg123.
771
772 Compress-LZV1 cpan cvs-pod(LZV1.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
773 A Perl module implementing the LZV1 compression algorithm. See
774 <tt>Compress::LZF</tt> for a better algorithm and module.
775
776 Compress-LZF cpan cvs-pod(LZF.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
777 A Perl module implementing the LZF compression algorithm, and simple
778 to use data structure serialising.
779
780 Convert-CD cvs-pod(lib/Convert/CD.pm,) cvs-pod(bin/cvtiso,cvtiso) cvs-co(doc/) cvs-co(Changes)
781 Unfinished Perl project implementing CD image formats. Extracting ISO images
782 already works.
783
784 Convert-Scalar cpan cvs-pod(Scalar.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
785 Perl module to convert between different representations of Perl scalars.
786
787 Convert-UUlib cpan cvs-pod(UUlib.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
788 Perl interface to the uulib library (a.k.a. uudeview/uuenview), which
789 allows easy decoding of multipart mime, uuencode and a whole lot of
790 differently encoded messages. You basically throw files at it, and
791 it extracts the files in them. This module is used by the popular <a
792 href="www.amavis.org">amavis virus scanner</a>.
793
794 Convert-BER-XS cpan cvs-pod(XS.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
795 A <em>very</em> low level BER/DER decoder and encoder library.
796
797 This BER en-/decoder is tuned for speed and low memory usage,
798 representing all BER values as tuples (perl-arrays) consisting of (class,
799 tag, constructed, data).
800
801 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)
802 A large Perl module family that implements cooperative multitasking in
803 Perl. It supports filehandle and event abstraction and also implements
804 continuations as well as the necessary directives to implement a slightly
805 limited call/cc in Perl.
806
807 Coro-Mysql cpan cvs-co(Changes) cvs-pod(Mysql.pm,)
808 Lets other threads run while doing mysql requests via DBD::mysql.
809
810 This perl module patches libmysqlclient/DBD::mysql at runtime to allow
811 multiple Coro-based threads to make database accesses concurrently,
812 instead of blocking the whole process.
813
814 Coro-Multicore cpan cvs-co(Changes) cvs-pod(Multicore.pm,) cvs-pod(perlmulticore.h) list(anyevent) irc(anyevent)
815 Runs XS functions transparently in their own XS level thread,
816 running other Coro threads in parallel.
817
818 This perl module allows XS functions that have been properly prepared
819 (see the <a href="http://perlmulticore.schmorp.de">Perl Multicore
820 Specification</a>) to run in parallel to other Coro threads, in their own
821 OS level thread.
822
823 Crypt-Ed25519 cpan cvs-pod(Ed25519.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
824 A Perl module implementing Ed25519 public key signing and verification.
825
826 Crypt-Spritz cpan cvs-pod(Spritz.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
827 A Perl module implementing the Spritz family of cryptographic algorithms,
828 giving you a stream cipher, a hash, a mac, authenticated encryption
829 with associated data (AEAD) and a cryptographically secure random
830 number generator, at reasonable speed and with very small code size, making
831 Spritz an attractive algorithm for resource-constrained environments
832 such as javascript in your browser, or microcontrollers.
833
834 Crypt-Twofish2 cpan cvs-pod(Twofish2.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
835 A Perl module implementing the twofish encryption algorithm in Perl. It has
836 mostly been superceded by the Crypt::Twofish module. However, it supports
837 an easy and fast CBC mode natively.
838
839 Digest-Hashcash cpan cvs-pod(Hashcash.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
840 Perl module to generate and parse <a href="http://www.hashcash.org">hashcashes</a>.
841 Follow the link to learn more. This module is currently faster than
842 the hashcash reference library.
843
844 Digest-FNV-XS cpan cvs-pod(XS.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
845 Perl module to generate FNV hashes (FNV-0, FNV-1, FNV-1a in 32 and 64 bit)
846 plus utiilities for xor folding and retry mapping. The main selling
847 point over Digest::FNV is that it works with binary data.
848
849 EV cpan cvs-pod(EV.pm,) cvs-pod(../libev/ev.pod,libev-documentation) cvs-pod(EV/MakeMaker.pm) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev)
850 A thin wrapper around <a href="/pkg/libev.html">libev</a>, a
851 high-performance event loop. Intended as a faster and less buggy
852 replacement for the Event perl module. Efficiently supports very high
853 number of timers, scalable operating system APIs such as epoll, kqueue,
854 solaris's ports, inotify, eventfd, signalfd, child/pid watchers and much
855 more.
856
857 A <a href="http://lists.schmorp.de/mailman/listinfo/libev">mailing
858 list</a> for discussion and support is now available.
859
860 EV-ADNS cpan cvs-pod(ADNS.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev)
861 An asynchronous stub resolver that integrates efficiently into
862 the EV event loop. Uses adns/libadns as backend.
863
864 EV-Loop-Async cpan cvs-pod(Async.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev)
865 Small module that runs an EV event loop in another thread
866 and uses an Async-Interrupt object to signal new events
867 to perl.
868
869 Net-SNMP-EV cpan cvs-pod(EV.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev)
870 An adaptor that integrates the Net-SNMP Perl module into the EV event loop.
871 Loading it suffices to make background requests in EV programs.
872
873 libev cvs-co(README) cvs-pod(ev.pod) dist list(libev)
874 A full-featured and high-performance (<a
875 href="http://libev.schmorp.de/bench.html">see benchmark</a>)
876 event loop that is loosely modelled after libevent, but without
877 its limitations and bugs. It is used in
878 <a href="/pkg/gvpe.html">GNU Virtual Private Ethernet</a>,
879 <a href="/pkg/rxvt-unicode.html">rxvt-unicode</a>, <a
880 href="http://people.redhat.com/sgrubb/audit/">auditd</a>, the
881 <a href="http://www.deliantra.net">Deliantra MORPG</a> Server and Client,
882 and many other programs.
883
884 Features include child/pid watchers, periodic timers based on wallclock
885 (absolute) time (in addition to timers using relative timeouts), as well
886 as epoll/kqueue/event ports/inotify/eventfd/signalfd support, fast timer
887 management, time jump detection and correction, and ease-of-use.
888 <p />
889
890 It can be used as a libevent replacement using its emulation API or
891 directly embedded into your programs without the need for complex
892 configuration support. A full-featured and well-documented
893 <a href="EV.html">perl interface</a> is also available.
894 <p />
895 A <a href="http://lists.schmorp.de/mailman/listinfo/libev">mailing
896 list</a> for discussion and support is now available.
897
898 libecb cvs-co(README) cvs-pod(ecb.pod) cvs-co(ecb.h) dist list(libev)
899 The e compiler builtins header/library.
900
901 This project delivers you many gcc builtins, attributes and a number of
902 generally useful low-level functions, such as popcount, expect, prefetch,
903 noinline, assume, unreachable and so on.
904
905 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)
906 GVPE creates a virtual ethernet network with multiple nodes using a
907 variety of transport protocols. Participating nodes do not need to trust
908 each other.
909
910 GVPE creates a virtual ethernet (broadcasts supported, any protocol that
911 works with a normal ethernet should work with GVPE) by creating encrypted
912 host-to-host tunnels between multiple endpoints.
913 <p />
914 Unlike other virtual private "network" solutions which merely create a
915 single tunnel, GVPE creates a real network with multiple endpoints.
916 <p />
917 It is designed to be very simple and robust (cipher selection done at
918 compiletime etc.), and easy to setup (only a single config file shared
919 unmodified between all hosts).
920 <p />
921 VPN hosts can neither sniff nor fake packets, that is, you can use
922 MAC-based filtering to ensure authenticity of packets even from member
923 nodes.
924 <p />
925 GVPE can also be used to tunnel into some vpn network using a variety of
926 protocols (raw IP, UDP, TCP, HTTPS-proxy-connect, ICMP and DNS). It is,
927 however, primarily designed to sit on the gateway machines of company
928 branches to connect them together.
929
930 libeio dist cvs-pod(eio.pod,) cvs-co(eio.h) cvs-co(demo.c) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev)
931 Event-based fully asynchronous I/O library for C (used by IO::AIO).
932 Currently in BETA!
933
934 <p>Libeio is a full-featured asynchronous I/O library
935 for C, modelled in similar style and spirit as <a
936 href="http://software.schmorp.de/pkg/libev.html">libev</a>. Features
937 include: asynchronous read, write, open, close, stat, unlink, fdatasync,
938 mknod, readdir etc. (basically the full POSIX API). sendfile (native on
939 solaris, linux, hp-ux, freebsd, emulated everywehere else), readahead
940 (emulated where not available).</p>
941
942 <p>It is fully event-library agnostic and can easily be integrated into any
943 event-library (or used standalone, even in polling mode). It is very
944 portable and relies only on POSIX threads.</p>
945
946 <p>Its code, documentation, integration and portability quality is
947 currently below that of libev, but should soon be ready for use in
948 production environments.</p>
949
950 libspf cvs-co(README)
951 Libspf is a C library that implements the <a
952 href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sender_Policy_Framework"> Sender
953 Policy Framework</a>. It allows software to identify and reject forged
954 envelope-from addresses, a typical nuisance in e-mail spam. SPF is
955 defined in Experimental RFC 4408.
956
957 This is not the original home of libspf, but its author (apparently)
958 has vanished for a few years now, and this place took over as a central
959 place to collect patches and possibly make releases.
960 <p />
961 James Couzens, if you read this and want to take over, feel free to
962 contact <a href="mailto:libspf@schmorp.de">me</a>, I'd be thrilled :)
963
964 File-Rdiff cpan cvs-pod(Rdiff.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
965 A Perl module that generates remote signatures and patches files using
966 librsync: basically your interface to librsync.
967
968 EV-Glib cpan cvs-pod(Glib.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev)
969 This perl module embeds the default Glib mainloop into the EV event loop. This makes it
970 possible to use callbacks or modules using the Glib module (e.g. Gtk2 programs) within EV programs. Just
971 loading it suffices. See the <a href="/pkg/Glib-EV.html">Glib::EV</a> module for the reverse approach.
972
973 Glib-EV cpan cvs-pod(EV.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev)
974 This perl module patches the default libglib main loop context to use the EV module. This makes
975 it possible to use callbacks or modules using the EV module within Glib and Gtk2 programs. Just
976 loading it suffices. See the <a href="/pkg/EV-Glib.html">EV::Glib</a> module for the reverse approach.
977
978 Glib-Event cpan cvs-pod(Event.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(libev)
979 This perl module patches the default libglib main loop context to use the Event module. This makes
980 it possible to use callbacks or modules using the Event module within Glib and Gtk2 programs. Just
981 loading it suffices.
982
983 GPS
984 Undocumented, unreleased and unfinished-but-working interface to some GPS
985 devices in Perl.
986
987 Linux-DVB cpan cvs-pod(DVB.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
988 A perl module that implements a very direct interface to the Linux DVB
989 API. Also contains utility functions to decode SI data.
990
991 Devel-FindRef cpan cvs-pod(FindRef.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
992 A Perl module that tries to track down references to perl values. Can
993 be a great aid in debugging leak problems by showing where a value
994 is still being referenced.
995
996 BDB cpan cvs-pod(BDB.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
997 A Perl module implementing an interface to BerkeleyDB versions 4.4 and later.
998 Unlike the BerkeleyDB and DB_File modules, this module has a much more
999 C-like interface exposing all the features of the underlying library
1000 and also executes all database changes asynchronously using a thread pool.
1001
1002 IO-AIO cpan cvs-pod(AIO.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
1003 A Perl module that implements asynchronous I/O using pthreads. Apart
1004 from AIO reading and writing, this module also allows asynchronous
1005 <tt>stat</tt>, <tt>open</tt>, <tt>unlink</tt> (and more) calls,
1006 which often are a substantial blocking problem. See also its (outdated)
1007 brother <tt>Linux-AIO</tt>.
1008
1009 JSON-XS cpan cvs-pod(XS.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
1010 JSON::XS implements JSON (http://www.json.org) for Perl. Unlike other
1011 modules, its primary goal is to encode to syntactically correct JSON and
1012 flag invalid JSON while decoding. It ensures round-trip integrity of
1013 datatypes while being intuitive to use. Currently being the fastest of the
1014 JSON encoders available for Perl, it supports a variety of format options,
1015 such as single-line, ASCII-only or pretty-printed and can be tuned for
1016 speed or memory usage. It comes with a wealth of documentation describing
1017 usage and implementation details.
1018
1019 CBOR-XS cpan cvs-pod(XS.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
1020 CBOR::XS implements the Concise Binary Object Representation (RFC 7049),
1021 which is a kind of "binary JSON" that also has the ability to cleanly
1022 serialise objects. Unlike other binary formats, CBOR is actually capable
1023 of representing all JSON texts, not just a subset of them.
1024
1025 Types-Serialiser cpan cvs-pod(Serialiser.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
1026 This module is an utility module that provides a few simple datatypes,
1027 constants and a serialisation protocol for CBOR::XS. It could be used
1028 for other, similar, serialisation modules (such as JSON::XS), and would
1029 improve interoperability between those modules.
1030
1031 Games-Go-SimpleBoard cpan cvs-pod(SimpleBoard.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
1032 A Perl module representing a go board.
1033
1034 This Perl module represents a Go game. It can check for valid moves,
1035 capture stones, stores move history and can represent a variety of
1036 additional annotations (circles, labels, grayed-out stones etc.).
1037
1038 Games-Sokoban cpan cvs-pod(Sokoban.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
1039 A perl module to load/transform/save sokoban levels in various formats.
1040
1041 Supports xsb (text), rle, sokevo and a small "binpack" format for input and
1042 output and can normalise levels as well as calculate unique IDs.
1043
1044 Gtk2-GoBoard cpan cvs-pod(GoBoard.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
1045 A Perl module implementing a go board widget.
1046
1047 This Perl module implements a beautiful go board (see <a
1048 href="http://data.plan9.de/kgsuemel.jpg">example</a>), implemented as a
1049 Gtk2 widget.
1050
1051 Linux-AIO cpan cvs-pod(AIO.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
1052 A Perl module that implements asynchronous I/O using <tt>clone</tt>
1053 on Linux. Apart from AIO reading and writing, this module also allows
1054 asynchronous <tt>stat</tt>, <tt>open</tt> and <tt>close</tt> (and more)
1055 calls, which often are a substantial problem. See also its (newer) brother
1056 <tt>IO-AIO</tt>.
1057
1058 Linux-Inotify2 cpan cvs-pod(Inotify2.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
1059 A better/less buggy/more portable interface to the Linux Inotify
1060 subsystem then what Linux::Inotify has to offer. Inotify lets you receive
1061 file change, create, move etc. events for directories in files in a more
1062 scalable fashion than dnotify, the older mechanism.
1063
1064 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)
1065 A Perl module that helps implementing netblock block device servers and
1066 set up NBD instances. A sample application allowing you to mount most CD
1067 images is included.
1068
1069 Linux-Clone cpan cvs-pod(Clone.pm) cvs-co(Changes)
1070 A Perl interface to the clone(2) and unshare(2) syscalls.
1071
1072 Urlader cpan cvs-pod(Urlader.pm) cvs-co(Changes)
1073 A self-unpacking archive that can be used for program deployment and upgrades.
1074
1075 Much like PAR, this module provides a simple way to build (silently) self-extracting
1076 executables that can contain perl, modules and shared libraries. Unlike PAR it is not
1077 restricted to perl programs, works transparently, without any magic and can cache
1078 unpacked archives for extra speed. Also unlike PAR, it leaves you out in the cold
1079 on the problem of how to atcually gather your files into the distribution.
1080
1081 Mozilla-Plugin
1082 Undocumented, unreleased and unfinished-but-somewhat-working Perl plug-in
1083 for Mozilla (Netscape, Opera, IE...), that allows embedding Tk, Gtk etc.
1084 plugins directly in the browser.
1085
1086 Net-FCP cpan cvs-pod(FCP.pm,) cvs-co(Changes)
1087 Perl module implementing the <a href="http://www.freenetproject.org">Freenet</a>
1088 client protocol, including client-side Metadata handling and CHK Key generation.
1089 Includes a mass downloader (similar to fuqid) as sample application.
1090
1091 Net-Whois-IP
1092 Undocumented, unreleased and unfinished-but-somewhat-working Perl module
1093 that tries to find the corresponding whois entry for a given IP, by querying
1094 various registries.
1095
1096 OpenSSL
1097 Undocumented, unreleased and unfinished-but-somewhat-working Perl module
1098 interfacing to libssl.
1099
1100 PDL-Audio cpan cvs-pod(audio.pd,) cvs-co(Changes)
1101 Perl module extending PDL with all sorts of audio functions for generating, analyzing,
1102 loading and saving sounds. Ever so popular is the "birds" demo script :)
1103
1104 Tree-M cpan
1105 Perl interface to the broken M-Tree library by these italian guys...
1106
1107 Video-Capture-V4l cpan cvs-co(README) cvs-co(Changes)
1108 Full-featured interface to Video for Linux, including real-time grabbing
1109 and jpeg compression, VPS etc. decoding and many sample scripts that
1110 facilitate automatica sender search and detection, EPG decoding and
1111 viewing and video grabbing.
1112
1113 XML-DB
1114 Undocumented, unreleased and unfinished Perl module implementing an "XML
1115 database", i.e. a tree-based database, on top of a conventional SQL
1116 database.
1117
1118 basex
1119 Very old, very portable ANSI-C program that implements something
1120 that is similar to yencode. yencode is more "standard", so don't use this.
1121
1122 pbcdedit cvs-pod(pbcdedit) cvs-co(pbcdedit)
1123 This is "a small hack grown properly out of proportion" that implements
1124 a portable version of the Microsoft Windows BCDEDIT program. It is pretty
1125 unique in that it does run on non-windows platforms, can create BCD hives
1126 from scratch and parses and edits BCD device elements. it is also
1127 self-contained and only needs a perl 5.16 (or above) installation.
1128
1129 <p>It doesn't implement the same syntax as BCDEDIT, but in turn
1130 can do a lot more complex modifications. Check out its <a
1131 href="http://pod.tst.eu/http://cvs.schmorp.de/pbcdedit/pbcdedit">
1132 documentation</a> for details.
1133
1134 You can download the executable perl script directly using the FILE link
1135 below, or using <a href="http://cvs.schmorp.de/pbcdedit/pbcdedit">direct
1136 link</a>.
1137
1138 dinfo
1139 Undocumented and working tools to extract the data from the D-Info CD.
1140
1141 syncmail
1142 Unfinished, undocumented and not working.
1143
1144 thttpd
1145 A personally hacked version of thttpd, suitable for lots of file
1146 transfers (normal thttpd has problems with this).
1147
1148 wvsniff
1149 Undocumented but nicely working wavelan sniffer that I wrote for use
1150 with my cisco aironet card. If you get it working, praise yourself.
1151
1152 dhcpping cvs-pod(dhcping.pod,)
1153 A version of dhcpping enhanced by <a href="mailto:marco@nethype.de">Marco Maisenhelder</a>
1154 to support passing dhcp options. Intended to test dhcp server implementations.
1155
1156 fcrackzip cvs-co(fcrackzip.html)
1157 <b>fcrackzip</b> is a zip password cracker, similar to fzc, zipcrack and others.
1158
1159 <h3>Why, the hell, another zip cracker?</h3>
1160
1161 Naturally, programs are born out of an actual need. The situation with
1162 fcrackzip was no different... I'm not using zip very much, but recently
1163 I needed a password cracker. "Sure", I thought, "there are hundreds of
1164 them out there, I'll just gonna get one!". This wasn't so easy, in fact,
1165 none of the zipcrackers I found were able to find the passwords, either
1166 they didn't accept more than one zipfile, were awfully slow, or didn't do
1167 brute force attacks (which I needed). The worst thing was: no source!.
1168
1169 <h3>Why is <i>no source</i> such a bad thing?</h3>
1170
1171 [insert big chapter about the free software spirit here ;)], anyway
1172 people will never learn... You will find reasons why it's much better to
1173 provide source to your programs here, at opensource.org, and here, at the
1174 Free Software Foundation. Now, what are the features of fcrackzip?
1175
1176 <ul><li>
1177 <p>FREE</p>
1178
1179 <p>It doesn't cost anything, it will run on many architectures, and
1180 the source is freely available, so you can customise it to your
1181 needs. If you make improvements, don't hesitate to mail them to me,
1182 and I will include them in fcrackzip!</p>
1183
1184 <p>One goal of fcrackzip was to provide a free but still fast
1185 zipcracker, so that other people can improve and contribute it
1186 further, in an open developement style.</p>
1187
1188 <p>Other programs, like fzc, come not only without source, but the
1189 executable is even encrypted, so improving it or customizing it is
1190 difficult at best. (Maybe the programmers of other crackers don't
1191 want that people see how crappy their code actually is? Nobody
1192 knows for sure, but I see no other reason for this strange, but
1193 common, behaviour)</p>
1194
1195 </li><li>
1196 <p>FAST</p>
1197
1198 <p>On my old machine (a pentium-90), the portable C version is 12%
1199 slower than fzc, the fastest cracker I could find. Small parts of
1200 fcrackzip have been converted to x86 assembly, so it performs a bit
1201 faster (around 4%) than fzc now, on the same hardware (note: this
1202 is highly os/compiler dependent). Since the author of fzc claims
1203 that it is written fully in assembler, further improvements might
1204 well be possible. Incidently, on my new P-II machine, fcrackzip is
1205 almost twice as fast as fzc ;)</p>
1206
1207 </li><li>
1208 <p>PORTABLE</p>
1209
1210 <p>fcrackzip was written in ISO-C, and should run on most platforms,
1211 even 64 bit ones (maybe after some tweaking). I'll be glad to hear
1212 about portability problems so I can fix them.</p>
1213
1214 </li><li>
1215 <p>FEATUREFUL</p>
1216
1217 <p>fcrackzip will, at some later stage at least, support many more
1218 useful operation modes than other crackers. It already supports
1219 multiple zip files with multiple files. Remember that the code is
1220 only a few hours old!</p>
1221
1222 <p>However, since version 0.2.0 fcrackzip also includes a mode to
1223 brute force cpmask'ed images, something no other program (that I
1224 know of) can do, so at least there is one feature other crackers
1225 don't have.</p>
1226
1227 <p>And you can always implement your own modes.</p>
1228
1229 </li></ul>
1230
1231 <h3>Caveat, Imperator!</h3>
1232
1233 <p>Naturally, there are also some drawbacks. At the moment, fcrackzip
1234 is a bit slower than necessary, and lacks some important (or nice)
1235 features, like automatic unzip-testing and others. On the other hand,
1236 fcrackzip-0.0.1 was hacked together in under ten hours, and you can
1237 always modify the source (and send me patches!!!) (I hope I've made it
1238 clear now ;)</p>
1239
1240 lsys cvs-co(README) cvs-co(NEWS)
1241 lsys is a program that interprets lindenmeyer-systems.
1242
1243 <p>lsys is a full-featured program that understands most of the syntax
1244 of the original l-systems language, which is far more complex and
1245 powerful than most available l-system interpreters.</p>
1246
1247 <p>See <a href="http://home.schmorp.de/marc/lsys.html">the original homepage</a>
1248 for more explanations and some images.
1249
1250 ermyth cvs-pod(doc/poddoc/documentation.pod) cvs-co(Changes)
1251 This is a fork of Atheme IRC Services.
1252
1253 Ermyth IRC Services is a set of Services for IRC networks that allows
1254 users to manage their channels in a secure and efficient way and
1255 allows operators to manage various things about their networks.
1256 Ermyth has been ported to C++ and goes its way using modern concepts
1257 and the object oriented paradigm.
1258
1259 ExtUtils-CXX cpan cvs-pod(CXX.pm,) cvs-co(Changes) list(perl) irc(schmorp)
1260 Try to treat .xs files as C++ rather than C in your module.
1261
1262 This module can be used to compile C++ XS files. It might not be perfect,
1263 but is meant aa single point that needs patching, so other modules who rely on
1264 it do not have to be pqatched every single time.
1265