915resolution 915resolution is a tool to modify the video BIOS of the 800 and 900 series Intel graphics chipsets. This includes the 845G, 855G, and 865G chipsets, as well as 915G, 915GM, and 945G chipsets. This modification is necessary to allow the display of certain graphics resolutions for an Xorg or XFree86 graphics server. 915resolution's modifications of the BIOS are transient. There is no risk of permanent modification of the BIOS. This also means that 915resolution must be run every time the computer boots inorder for it's changes to take effect. 915resolution is derived from the tool 855resolution. However, the code differs substantially. 915resolution's code base is much simpler. 915resolution also allows the modification of bits per pixel. a2ps GNU a2ps is an Any to PostScript filter. Of course it processes plain text files, but also pretty prints quite a few popular languages. GNU a2ps http://www.gnu.org/software/a2ps/ aalib AAlib is an portable ascii art GFX library. If you wish to see some examples of AAlib technology, please browse AA-project homepage. AA-project http://aa-project.sourceforge.net/index.html aalib-dev AAlib is an portable ascii art GFX library. If you wish to see some examples of AAlib technology, please browse AA-project homepage. AA-project http://aa-project.sourceforge.net/index.html aaphoto Auto Adjust Photo tries to give a solution for the automatic color correction of photos. This means setting the contrast, color balance, saturation and gamma levels of the image by analization. This can be a solution for those kind of users who are not able to manage and correct images with complicated graphical softwares, or just simply don't intend to spend a lot of time with manually correcting the images one-by-one. The program handles the following image formats: mif, pnm / pgm / ppm, bmp, ras, jp2, jpc, jpg, png aaphoto http://log69.com/aaphoto_en.html abiword AbiWord is a free word processing program similar to Microsoft Word. It is suitable for a wide variety of word processing tasks. abiword-plugins AbiWord Plugins extend AbiWord in various ways. For a cursory overview of functionality provided by the various AbiWord plugins, see the AbiWord Plugin Matrix. Note that some of these plugins are not available on all platforms that AbiWord supports. AbiWord Plugins http://www.abisource.com/download/plugins/ AbiWord Plugin Matrix. http://www.abisource.com/wiki/PluginMatrix acct This is a set of utilities which report and summarize data about user connect times and process execution statistics under GNU/Linux. Accounting Utilities Manual http://www.gnu.org/software/acct/manual/accounting.html acl This package contains commands for Manipulating POSIX Access Control Lists. acme **ACME** is a free cross assembler released under the GNU GPL. It can produce code for the following processors: 6502, 6510 (including illegal opcodes), 65c02 and 65816. ACME supports the standard assembler stuff like: global/local/anonymous labels, offset assembly, conditional assembly and looping assembly. It can include other source files as well as binaries while assembling. Calculations can be done in integer or float mode. Oh, and it is fast. acpid In recent linux kernels, the /proc/acpi/event interface has been deprecated. The same information (and more) is available via netlink (a way for the kernel to communicate with userspace that is usually used for networking) and the input layer (mouse, keyboard, power button, etc...). This version of acpid supports netlink and the input layer. The ACPI Daemon v2 https://sourceforge.net/projects/acpid2/ adeskbar A lightweight application launcher for Openbox written in Python and GTK. Adeskbar On GitHub https://github.com/adcomp/adeskbar-0.5 Adeskbar Website http://adeskbar.tuxfamily.org/ adie The Adie Text Editor is a nice little program for editing and viewing files; it comes standard with the FOX distribution. Adie - FOXTOOLKIT http://www.fox-toolkit.org/adie.html adminer Adminer (formerly phpMinAdmin) is a full-featured database management tool written in PHP. Conversely to phpMyAdmin, it consist of a single file ready to deploy to the target server. Adminer is available for MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQLite, MS SQL, Oracle, Firebird, SimpleDB, Elasticsearch and MongoDB. Adminer Website https://www.adminer.org/ advancecomp AdvanceCOMP contains recompression utilities for your .zip archives, .png images, .mng video clips and .gz files. This package contains: * `advzip` - recompression and test utility for zip files * `advpng` - recompression utility for png files * `advmng` - recompression utility for mng files * `advdef` - recompression utility for deflate streams in .png, .mng and .gz files aescrypt AES Crypt is a file encryption software available on several operating systems that uses the industry standard Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) to easily and securely encrypt files. aespipe aespipe program is AES encrypting or decrypting pipe. It reads from standard input and writes to standard output. It can be used to create and restore encrypted tar or cpio archives. It can be used to encrypt and decrypt loop-AES compatible encrypted disk images. afio Afio makes cpio-format archives. It deals somewhat gracefully with input data corruption, supports multi-volume archives during interactive operation, and can make compressed archives that are much safer than compressed tar or cpio archives. Afio is best used as an `archive engine' in a backup script. aiksaurus Aiksaurus is a set of libraries and applications which provide a thesaurus (currently English only, based on Guttenburg's Moby thesaurus) using native GUI on several platforms: UNIX (GTK+ & Qt), Win32 & MacOSX (Cocoa). The core library itself is platform-independent. The principal language is C++, with some use of Cocoa/ObjC++; wrappers are provided for C and Cocoa/ObjC. airsnort AirSnort is a wireless LAN (WLAN) tool which recovers encryption keys. It operates by passively monitoring transmissions, computing the encryption key when enough packets have been gathered. ajaxterm Ajaxterm is a web based terminal. It is a simple solution for those who wish to run a terminal on web. Ajaxterm is fully written in python and Ajax. alien Alien allows you to convert LSB, Red Hat, Stampede and Slackware Packages into Debian packages, which can be installed with tazpkg. TAZPKG can also convert packages, for more information use: "tazpkg usage" in a terminal. alsa-lib The Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (ALSA) provides audio and MIDI functionality to the Linux operating system. This package provides the ALSA libraries. alsaplayer AlsaPlayer is a new PCM player written with the ALSA sound system in mind. It also includes support for JACK, OSS, NAS, and ESD. It makes extensive use of multi-threading and supports OGG, MP3, WAV, CDDA (CD Digital Audio), MOD, S3M, IT, and many other input types. Features include a real- time effects stream, variable speed/pitch control, SHOUTcast/icecast streaming support, multiple active visual scopes, command line mode, playlists, plugin architecture, low-latency mode, and more. anacron Anacron is a periodic command scheduler. It executes commands at intervals specified in days. Unlike cron, it does not assume that the system is running continuously. It can therefore be used to control the execution of daily, weekly and monthly jobs (or anything with a period of n days), on systems that don't run 24 hours a day. When installed and configured properly, Anacron will make sure that the commands are run at the specified intervals as closely as machine-uptime permits. Every time Anacron is run, it reads a configuration file that specifies the jobs Anacron controls, and their periods in days. If a job wasn't executed in the last n days, where n is the period of that job, Anacron executes it. Anacron then records the date in a special timestamp file that it keeps for each job, so it can know when to run it again. When all the executed commands terminate, Anacron exits. android-build-tools Android SDK Build-Tools is a component of the Android SDK required for building Android apps. It's installed in the /build-tools/ directory. You should always keep your Build Tools component updated by downloading the latest version using the Android SDK Manager. By default, the Android SDK uses the most recent downloaded version of the Build Tools. If your projects depend on older versions of the Build Tools, the SDK Manager allows you to download and maintain separate versions of the tools for use with those projects. android-platform-tools Android SDK Platform-Tools is a component for the Android SDK. It includes tools that interface with the Android platform, such as adb, fastboot, and systrace. These tools are required for Android app development. They're also needed if you want to unlock your device bootloader and flash it with a new system image. Although some new features in these tools are available only for recent versions of Android, the tools are backward compatible, so you need only one version of the SDK Platform-Tools. If you're an app developer, you should get the latest version from Android Studio's SDK Manager or from the sdkmanager command-line tool. This ensures the tools are saved to the right place with the rest of your Android SDK tools and easily updated. android-sdk The Android SDK includes a variety of tools that help you develop mobile applications for the Android platform. The tools are classified into 3 groups: SDK Tools, Platform-tools and Build-tools. SDK Tools are platform independent and are required no matter which Android platform you are developing on. It is the base toolset of Android SDK. antinat Antinat is a flexible SOCKS server and client library for writing proxy-based applications. It supports SOCKS 4, SOCKS 4a, SOCKS 5, authentication, CHAP, XML firewalling, Win32, server chaining, and UDP. It also contains very experimental IPv6 support. SOCKS can be used to overcome some limitations of NAT, including facilites for allowing connectbacks and server-side DNS. Antinat aims to be fully standards compliant, feature rich, and have a solid API for writing standards-compliant client applications. Connections are filtered by applying XML rules, which allow for very fine-grained control. You can filter out on the basis of addresses, ports, users, socks version, the operation requested, how the user was authenticated, and where user credentials came from. Note: Antinat is not malware! Antinat, like any SOCKS server, enables you to traverse network boundaries once you have access to a machine. Whether this is malicious or not depends on who installed and configured the software. If you're on this website looking to install and configure this software, that means it's no more malicious than you. Standard free software disclaimer: find a bug? Let us know. Want a feature? Let us know. Patches are preferred to feedback, feedback is preferred to nothing. We can't read your mind. We can't. Honest. antiword Antiword is a free MS Word reader. It converts the binary files from MS Word 2, 6, 7, 97, 2000 and 2003 to text, Postscript, PDF and XML. apache The Apache HTTP Server is an open-source HTTP server for modern operating systems including UNIX, Microsoft Windows, Mac OS/X and Netware. The goal of this project is to provide a secure, efficient and extensible server that provides HTTP services observing the current HTTP standards. Apache has been the most popular web server on the Internet since April of 1996. apache-ant Apache Ant is a Java library and command-line tool whose mission is to drive processes described in build files as targets and extension points dependent upon each other. The main known usage of Ant is the build of Java applications. Ant supplies a number of built-in tasks allowing to compile, assemble, test and run Java applications. Ant can also be used effectively to build non Java applications, for instance C or C++ applications. More generally, Ant can be used to pilot any type of process which can be described in terms of targets and tasks. Ant is written in Java. Users of Ant can develop their own "antlibs" containing Ant tasks and types, and are offered a large number of ready-made commercial or open-source "antlibs". Ant is extremely flexible and does not impose coding conventions or directory layouts to the Java projects which adopt it as a build tool. Software development projects looking for a solution combining build tool and dependency management can use Ant in combination with Apache Ivy. The Apache Ant project is part of the Apache Software Foundation. apache-dev The Apache HTTP Server Project's goal is to build a secure, efficient and extensible HTTP server as standards-compliant open source software. The result has long been the number one web server on the Internet. This package provides development headers and the apxs2 binary for the Apache 2 HTTP server. apache-doc The Apache HTTP Server Project's goal is to build a secure, efficient and extensible HTTP server as standards-compliant open source software. The result has long been the number one web server on the Internet. This package provides the documentation for the Apache 2 HTTP server. The documentation is shipped in HTML format and can be accessed from a local running Apache HTTP server instance or by browsing the file system directly. apng2gif This program converts APNG animations into animated GIF format. Wu64 quantization is used for true-color files. Transparency is handled either using a threshold, or composed over chosen background color. CLI version is OS-independent, GUI version is available for Windows. Another converter: gif2apng Features * Wu64 quantization for true-color files * Flexible options for transparency handling * CLI and GUI versions available * OS-independent source code is under zlib license apngdis This program converts APNG file into a sequence of individual PNG frames. Simple command-line interface. Also, APNG Assembler can be found at http://sourceforge.net/projects/apngasm apngopt The Animated Portable Network Graphics (APNG) file format is an extension to the Portable Network Graphics (PNG) specification. It allows for animated PNG files that work similarly to animated GIF files, while retaining backward compatibility with non-animated PNG files and adding support for 8-bit transparency and 24-bit images. apr The mission of the Apache Portable Runtime (APR) project is to create and maintain software libraries that provide a predictable and consistent interface to underlying platform-specific implementations. The primary goal is to provide an API to which software developers may code and be assured of predictable if not identical behaviour regardless of the platform on which their software is built, relieving them of the need to code special-case conditions to work around or take advantage of platform-specific deficiencies or features. apr-util APR-util provides a number of helpful abstractions on top of APR. arpwatch Arpwatch maintains a database of Ethernet MAC addresses seen on the network, with their associated IP pairs. Alerts the system administrator via e-mail if any change happens, such as new station/activity, flip-flops, changed and re-used old addresses. Arpsnmp keeps track for ethernet/ip address pairings. It syslogs activity and reports certain changes via email. Arpsnmp reads information from a file (usually generated by snmpwalk(8)). asciidoc AsciiDoc is a text document format for writing notes, documentation, articles, books, ebooks, slideshows, web pages, man pages and blogs. AsciiDoc files can be translated to many formats including HTML, PDF, EPUB, man page. AsciiDoc is highly configurable: both the AsciiDoc source file syntax and the backend output markups (which can be almost any type of SGML/XML markup) can be customized and extended by the user. AsciiDoc is free software and is licenced under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 (GPLv2). asciiquarium Asciiquarium is an aquarium/sea animation in ASCII art. It includes multicolored fish, a whale, and a fish-eating shark. aspell GNU Aspell is a Free and Open Source spell checker. It can either be used as a library or as an independent spell checker. Its main feature is that it does a superior job of suggesting possible replacements for a misspelled word than just about any other spell checker out there for the English language. asunder Asunder is a graphical Audio CD ripper and encoder for Linux. You can use it to save tracks from an Audio CD as any of WAV, MP3, OGG, FLAC, Opus, WavPack, Musepack, AAC, and Monkey's Audio files. at At and batch read shell commands from standard input storing them as a job to be scheduled for execution in the future. atk The accessibility tool kit contains the atk library. This is useful for allowing accessibility solutions to be available for all gtk+-2 and gtk+-3 applications. atk-dev These are the development files for ATK, needed for compilation of programs or toolkits which use it. atkmm atkmm is the official C++ interface for the ATK accessibility toolkit library. It may be used, for instance, by user interfaces implemented with gtkmm. atkmm-dev Atkmm is a C++ interface for ATK, accessibility toolkit used by Gtk+ library. It provides a familiar interface for C++ programmers to add accessibility features to their applications. This package contains development files. attr A set of tools for manipulating extended attributes on filesystem objects, in particular getfattr(1) and setfattr(1). An attr(1) command is also provided which is largely compatible with the SGI IRIX tool of the same name. attr-dev attr-dev contains the libraries and header files needed to develop programs which make use of extended attributes. For Linux programs, the documented system call API is the recommended interface, but an SGI IRIX compatibility interface is also provided. audiofile The Audio File Library handles reading and writing audio files in many common formats. Key goals of the Audio File Library are file format transparency and data format transparency. The same calls for opening a file, accessing and manipulating audio metadata (e.g. sample rate, sample format, textual information, MIDI parameters), and reading and writing sample data will work with any supported audio file format. audiofile-dev This package contains the development headers and library files needed to compile programs using libaudiofile, as well as example programs for identifying and converting audio files. autoblog Governments, organisations and corporations are putting more and more legal, moral and financial pressure on citizens, stifling free speech. High-profile sites like Wikileak can benefit from the Streisand effect, but it's rarely the case for smallers websites. But data must flow. The autoblog project aims at helping to automatically replicate articles all over the place, but on a smaller scale than what was done for Wikileaks. Think of it as an automated-Streisand effect. autoconf213 Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce shell scripts to automatically configure software source code packages. These scripts can adapt the packages to many kinds of UNIX-like systems without manual user intervention. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package from a template file that lists the operating system features that the package can use, in the form of M4 macro calls. autoconf Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce shell scripts to automatically configure software source code packages. These scripts can adapt the packages to many kinds of UNIX-like systems without manual user intervention. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package from a template file that lists the operating system features that the package can use, in the form of M4 macro calls. autofs Autofs controls the operation of the automount daemons. The automount daemons automatically mount filesystems when they are used and unmount them after a period of inactivity. This is done based on a set of pre-configured maps. automake **Automake** is a tool for automatically generating `Makefile.in's from files called `Makefile.am'. The goal of Automake is to remove the burden of Makefile maintenance from the back of the individual GNU maintainer (and put it on the back of the Automake maintainer). The `Makefile.am' is basically a series of `make' macro definitions (with rules being thrown in occasionally). The generated `Makefile.in's are compliant with the GNU Makefile standards. avfs This FUSE-base VFS (Virtual FileSystem) enables all programs to look inside archived or compressed files, or access remote files without recompiling the programs or changing the kernel. avfs-dev This package contains the development files for avfs. axel Axel tries to accelerate HTTP/FTP downloading process by using multiple connections for one file. It can use multiple mirrors for a download. Axel has no dependencies and is lightweight, so it might be useful as a wget clone on byte-critical systems. babl babl is a dynamic, any to any, pixel format translation library. It allows converting between different methods of storing pixels known as pixel formats that have different bitdepths and other data representations, color models and component permutations. babl-dev This package contains development files. balance Balance is our (still) suprisingly successful load balancing solution being a simple but powerful generic tcp proxy with round robin load balancing and failover mechanisms. Its behaviour can be controlled at runtime using a simple command line syntax. bash Bash is a shell, or command language interpreter, for the GNU operating system. Bash is an sh-compatible shell that incorporates useful features from the Korn shell (ksh) and C shell (csh). It is intended to conform to the IEEE POSIX P1003.2/ISO 9945.2 Shell and Tools standard. It offers functional improvements over sh for both programming and interactive use. In addition, most sh scripts can be run by Bash without modification. bazaar **Bazaar** is a version control system that helps you track project history over time and to collaborate easily with others. Whether you're a single developer, a co-located team or a community of developers scattered across the world, Bazaar scales and adapts to meet your needs. Part of the GNU Project, Bazaar is free software sponsored by Canonical: https://www.canonical.com/ bazaar-tools Bzrtools is plugin providing a collection of utilities for bzr. bc Bc Bc is an arbitrary precision numeric processing language. Syntax is similar to C, but differs in many substantial areas. It supports interactive execution of statements. Bc is a utility included in the POSIX P1003.2/D11 draft standard. http://www.gnu.org/software/bc/ bchunk binchunker converts a CD image in a ".bin / .cue" format (sometimes ".raw / .cue") to a set of .iso and .cdr tracks. The bin/cue format is used by some popular non-Unix cd-writing software, but is not supported on most other CD burning programs. A lot of CD/VCD images distributed on the Internet are in BIN/CUE format, I've been told. bcrypt Bcrypt is a cross platform file encryption utility. Encrypted files are portable across all supported operating systems and processors. Passphrases must be between 8 and 56 characters and are hashed internally to a 448 bit key. However, all characters supplied are significant. The stronger your passphrase, the more secure your data. beecrypt BeeCrypt is an ongoing project to provide a strong and fast cryptography toolkit. Includes entropy sources, random generators, block ciphers, hash functions, message authentication codes, multiprecision integer routines, and public key primitives. beecrypt-dev This package contains the development files provided by beecrypt. beep I just got so tired of being limited to printf("\a"); when I wanted a terminal beep. This program isn't supposed to be anything stupendous, it's just supposed to get the job done. Its intended purpose in life is to live inside shell/perl scripts, and allow a little more granularity than you get with the default terminal bell. Maybe I'm the only one who thinks this is useful. :) bind BIND is open source software that enables you to publish your Domain Name System (DNS) information on the Internet, and to resolve DNS queries for your users. The name BIND stands for “Berkeley Internet Name Domain”, because the software originated in the early 1980s at the University of California at Berkeley. BIND is by far the most widely used DNS software on the Internet, providing a robust and stable platform on top of which organizations can build distributed computing systems with the knowledge that those systems are fully compliant with published DNS standards. binutils The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are: ld - the GNU linker. as - the GNU assembler. bison Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts an annotated context- free grammar into a deterministic LR or generalized LR (GLR) parser employing LALR(1) parser tables. blas LAPACK is written in Fortran 90 and provides routines for solving systems of simultaneous linear equations, least-squares solutions of linear systems of equations, eigenvalue problems, and singular value problems. The associated matrix factorizations (LU, Cholesky, QR, SVD, Schur, generalized Schur) are also provided, as are related computations such as reordering of the Schur factorizations and estimating condition numbers. Dense and banded matrices are handled, but not general sparse matrices. In all areas, similar functionality is provided for real and complex matrices, in both single and double precision. blazekiss BlazeKiss is a wiki based on the principle Kiss : Keep It Simple Stupid, that is to say, the simplicity and functionality above all. blogotext A little more than a lightweight SQLite Blog-Engine. bluez BlueZ is the official Linux Bluetooth protocol stack. It is an Open Source project distributed under GNU General Public License (GPL). bluez-dev This package contains the development files provided by Bluez. bozohttpd bozohttpd is a small and secure HTTP server. Its main feature is the lack of features, reducing code size and improving verifiability. It has no configuration file by design. It supports CGI/1.1, HTTP/1.1, HTTP/1.0, HTTP/0.9, ~user translations, virtual hosting support, as well as multiple IP-based servers on a single machine, and is able to serve pages via the IPv6 protocol. bvi BVI 1.4.0 The bvi is a display-oriented editor for binary files (hex editor), based on the vi texteditor. If you are familiar with vi, just start the editor and begin to edit! A bmore program is also included in the package. If you never heard about vi, maybe bvi is not the best choice for you. You will find now four new commands: bvi The binary editor bview The readonly version of bvi bvedit The beginners version of bvi bmore The binary more program http://bvi.sourceforge.net/ bzip2 bzip2 is a freely available, patent free, high-quality data compressor. It typically compresses files to within 10% to 15% of the best available techniques (the PPM family of statistical compressors), whilst being around twice as fast at compression and six times faster at decompression. cacerts The Public Key Infrastructure is used for many security issues in a Linux system. In order for a certificate to be trusted, it must be signed by a trusted agent called a Certificate Authority (CA). The certificates loaded by this section are from the list on the Mozilla version control system and formats it into a form used by OpenSSL-1.0.2a. The certificates can also be used by other applications either directly of indirectly through openssl. cairo Cairo is a 2D graphics library with support for multiple output devices. Currently supported output targets include the X Window System, Quartz, Win32, image buffers, PostScript, PDF, and SVG file output. Experimental backends include OpenGL, XCB, BeOS, OS/2, and DirectFB. cairo-compmgr Cairo Composite Manager is a versatile and extensible composite manager which use cairo for rendering. cairomm cairomm is a C++ wrapper for the cairo graphics library. It offers all the power of cairo with an interface familiar to C++ developers, including use of the Standard Template Library where it makes sense. cantarell-fonts The Cantarell font family is designed as a contemporary Humanist sans serif and is particularly designed for on-screen reading on mobile devices at small sizes, such as phones and tablets. This is the open font officially chosen by default for the GNOME 3 desktop and for Fedora branding materials. Regular and bold weights are provided for now. Italics are planned. Each font file currently contains 391 glyphs, and fully support the following writing systems: Basic Latin, Western European, Catalan, Baltic, Turkish, Central European, Dutch and Afrikaans. chrpath chrpath allows you to modify the dynamic library load path (rpath and runpath) of compiled programs and libraries. clex CLEX (pronounced KLEKS) is a file manager with a full-screen user interface. It displays directory contents including the file status details and provides features like command history, filename insertion, or name completion in order to help users to create commands to be executed by the shell. cmake CMake is a family of tools designed to build, test and package software. CMake is used to control the software compilation process using simple platform and compiler independent configuration files. CMake generates native makefiles and workspaces that can be used in the compiler environment of your choice. compface Compface provides utilities and a library to convert from/to X-Face format, a 48x48 bitmap format used to carry thumbnails of email authors in a mail header. cookutils The SliTaz Cookutils provide tools and utils to build SliTaz packages. Cook ---- The cook tool should be used in a chroot environment: simply use the command `tazdev gen-chroot` to build one. You can also build packages directly but build deps will not be handled correctly since cook will install missing packages to perform a build and then remove them only if they were not installed before, this way we can keep a clean build environment. We use standard SliTaz paths to work such as /home/slitaz/wok, if you work on cooking from stable or want to keep a clean system: create a chroot. Cooker ------ The Cooker is a Build Bot which automates the build process but doesn't make the dinner for you! We need quality receipts to cook successfully and the goal is not to have a bloated script so please Keep It Short and Simple. The web interface consists of one CGI script and one CSS style. Cook logs can be produced by cook and the cooker just acts as a fronted to check them in a nice way. A web interface also highlights success and error and can show receipts and the cooker logs such as the last ordered list or commits check. Cookiso ------- Cookiso is the official tool to automate the ISO build. The goal is to provide a simple to use, rock solid tool with a web interface à la Cooker. It shares configuration and templates with the Cooker but can be run on its own so it can be used by contributors or customers to automate custom ISO building. Cookiso must be run in a chroot which can be the same chroot as the Cooker. Cross compiling --------------- Cookutils lets you cross compile a package for a specific architecture. Say you want to build ARM binaries from a standard i486 machine. Cookutils provides helpers for the ARM platform, but the first thing to do is compile a cross toolchain and modify the main cook.conf variables to use the correct ARCH, CFLAGS and BUILD_SYSTEM coreutils Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * base64: base64 encode/decode data and print to standard output * cp: copy files and directories * csplit: split a file into sections determined by context lines * factor: factor numbers * fmt: simple optimal text formatter * groups: print the groups a user is in * join: join lines of two files on a common field * od: dump files in octal and other formats * paste: merge lines of files * ptx: produce a permuted index of file contents * shred: overwrite a file to hide its contents, and optionally delete it * shuf: generate random permutations * split: split a file into pieces * users: print the user names of users currently logged in to the current host coreutils-character Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * expand: convert tabs to spaces * tr: translate or delete characters * unexpand: convert spaces to tabs coreutils-command Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * chroot: run command or interactive shell with special root directory * env: run a program in a modified environment * kill: send signals to processes, or list signals * nice: run a program with modified scheduling priority * nohup: run a command immune to hangups, with output to a non-tty * sleep: delay for a specified amount of time * stdbuf: run command with modified buffering operations for its standard streams * timeout: run a command with a time limit coreutils-conditions Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * [ exit with the status determined by expression * expr: evaluate expressions * false: do nothing, unsuccessfully * test: check file types and compare values * true: do nothing, successfully coreutils-context-system Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * chcon: change file SELinux security context * date: print or set the system date and time * hostid: print the numeric identifier for the current host * nproc: print the number of processing units available * runcon: run command with specified SELinux security context * uname: print system information * uptime: tell how long the system has been running coreutils-context-user Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * groups: print the groups a user is in * id: print real and effective user and group IDs * logname: print user's login name * pinky: lightweight finger * users: print the user names of users currently logged in to the current host * who: show who is logged on * whoami: print effective user ID coreutils-context-working Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * printenv: print all or part of environment * pwd: print name of current/working directory * stty: change and print terminal line settings * tty: print the file name of the terminal connected to standard input coreutils-directory Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * dir: list directory contents * dircolors: color setup for ls * ls: list directory contents * vdir: list directory contents coreutils-disk Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * df: report file system disk space usage * du: estimate file space usage * stat: display file or file system status * sync: synchronize cached writes to persistent storage * truncate: shrink or extend the size of a file to the specified size coreutils-file-attributes Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * chgrp: change group ownership * chmod: change file mode bits * chown: change file owner and group * touch: change file timestamps coreutils-file-format Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * fmt: simple optimal text formatter * fold: wrap each input line to fit in specified width * pr: convert text files for printing coreutils-file-output-full Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * base32: base32 encode/decode data and print to standard output * base64: base64 encode/decode data and print to standard output * cat: concatenate files and print on the standard output * nl: number lines of files * od: dump files in octal and other formats * tac: concatenate and print files in reverse coreutils-file-output-part Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * csplit: split a file into sections determined by context lines * head: output the first part of files * split: split a file into pieces * tail: output the last part of files coreutils-file-sort Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * comm: compare two sorted files line by line * ptx: produce a permuted index of file contents * shuf: generate random permutations * sort: sort lines of text files * tsort: perform topological sort * uniq: report or omit repeated lines coreutils-file-special Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * link: call the link function to create a link to a file * ln: make links between files * mkdir: make directories * mkfifo: make FIFOs (named pipes) * mknod: make block or character special files * mktemp: create a temporary file or directory * readlink: print resolved symbolic links or canonical file names * realpath: print the resolved path * rmdir: remove empty directories * unlink: call the unlink function to remove the specified file coreutils-file-summarize Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * cksum: checksum and count the bytes in a file * md5sum: compute and check MD5 message digest * sha1sum: compute and check SHA1 message digest * sha224sum: compute and check SHA224 message digest * sha256sum: compute and check SHA256 message digest * sha384sum: compute and check SHA384 message digest * sha512sum: compute and check SHA512 message digest * sum: checksum and count the blocks in a file * wc: print newline, word, and byte counts for each file coreutils-line Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * cut: remove sections from each line of files * join: join lines of two files on a common field * paste: merge lines of files coreutils-multicall Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * [ exit with the status determined by expression * base32: base32 encode/decode data and print to standard output * base64: base64 encode/decode data and print to standard output * basename: strip directory and suffix from filenames * cat: concatenate files and print on the standard output * chcon: change file SELinux security context * chgrp: change group ownership * chmod: change file mode bits * chown: change file owner and group * chroot: run command or interactive shell with special root directory * cksum: checksum and count the bytes in a file * comm: compare two sorted files line by line * cp: copy files and directories * csplit: split a file into sections determined by context lines * cut: remove sections from each line of files * date: print or set the system date and time * dd: convert and copy a file * df: report file system disk space usage * dir: list directory contents * dircolors: color setup for ls * dirname: strip last component from file name * du: estimate file space usage * echo: display a line of text * env: run a program in a modified environment * expand: convert tabs to spaces * expr: evaluate expressions * factor: factor numbers * false: do nothing, unsuccessfully * fmt: simple optimal text formatter * fold: wrap each input line to fit in specified width * groups: print the groups a user is in * head: output the first part of files * hostid: print the numeric identifier for the current host * id: print real and effective user and group IDs * install: copy files and set attributes * join: join lines of two files on a common field * kill: send signals to processes, or list signals * link: call the link function to create a link to a file * ln: make links between files * logname: print user's login name * ls: list directory contents * md5sum: compute and check MD5 message digest * mkdir: make directories * mkfifo: make FIFOs (named pipes) * mknod: make block or character special files * mktemp: create a temporary file or directory * mv: move (rename) files * nice: run a program with modified scheduling priority * nl: number lines of files * nohup: run a command immune to hangups, with output to a non-tty * nproc: print the number of processing units available * numfmt: convert numbers from/to human-readable strings * od: dump files in octal and other formats * paste: merge lines of files * pathchk: check whether file names are valid or portable * pinky: lightweight finger * pr: convert text files for printing * printenv: print all or part of environment * printf: format and print data * ptx: produce a permuted index of file contents * pwd: print name of current/working directory * readlink: print resolved symbolic links or canonical file names * realpath: print the resolved path * rm: remove files or directories * rmdir: remove empty directories * runcon: run command with specified SELinux security context * seq: print a sequence of numbers * sha1sum: compute and check SHA1 message digest * sha224sum: compute and check SHA224 message digest * sha256sum: compute and check SHA256 message digest * sha384sum: compute and check SHA384 message digest * sha512sum: compute and check SHA512 message digest * shred: overwrite a file to hide its contents, and optionally delete it * shuf: generate random permutations * sleep: delay for a specified amount of time * sort: sort lines of text files * split: split a file into pieces * stat: display file or file system status * stdbuf: run command with modified buffering operations for its standard streams * stty: change and print terminal line settings * sum: checksum and count the blocks in a file * sync: synchronize cached writes to persistent storage * tac: concatenate and print files in reverse * tail: output the last part of files * tee: read from standard input and write to standard output and files * test: check file types and compare values * timeout: run a command with a time limit * touch: change file timestamps * tr: translate or delete characters * true: do nothing, successfully * truncate: shrink or extend the size of a file to the specified size * tsort: perform topological sort * tty: print the file name of the terminal connected to standard input * uname: print system information * unexpand: convert spaces to tabs * uniq: report or omit repeated lines * unlink: call the unlink function to remove the specified file * uptime: tell how long the system has been running * users: print the user names of users currently logged in to the current host * vdir: list directory contents * wc: print newline, word, and byte counts for each file * who: show who is logged on * whoami: print effective user ID * yes: output a string repeatedly until killed coreutils-numeric Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * factor: factor numbers * seq: print a sequence of numbers coreutils-operations Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * cp: copy files and directories * dd: convert and copy a file * install: copy files and set attributes * mv: move (rename) files * shred: overwrite a file to hide its contents, and optionally delete it coreutils-path Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * basename: strip directory and suffix from filenames * dirname: strip last component from file name * pathchk: check whether file names are valid or portable coreutils-print Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * echo: display a line of text * numfmt: convert numbers from/to human-readable strings * printf: format and print data * yes: output a string repeatedly until killed coreutils-redirection Coreutils: Core GNU (file, text, shell) utilities. * tee: read from standard input and write to standard output and files cpu-g CPU-G is an application that shows useful information about your hardware. It collects and displays information about your CPU, RAM, Motherboard, some general information about your system and more. cpuspeed CPUFreq is a Linux kernel subsystem which allows the clock speed of mobile CPUs (most often found in laptop computers) to be explicitly set. CPUSpeed dynamically controls CPUFreq, slowing down the CPU to conserve power and reduce heat when the system is idle, on battery power or overheating, and speeding up the CPU when the system is busy and more processing power is needed. Using CPUSpeed can significantly increase a laptop computer's battery life and significantly reduce the heat it generates while still allowing your system to perform at top speed when you need it. curl curl is a command line tool for transferring data with URL syntax, supporting DICT, FILE, FTP, FTPS, Gopher, HTTP, HTTPS, IMAP, IMAPS, LDAP, LDAPS, POP3, POP3S, RTMP, RTSP, SCP, SFTP, SMTP, SMTPS, Telnet and TFTP. curl supports SSL certificates, HTTP POST, HTTP PUT, FTP uploading, HTTP form based upload, proxies, cookies, user+password authentication (Basic, Digest, NTLM, Negotiate, kerberos...), file transfer resume, proxy tunneling and a busload of other useful tricks. cvs The Concurrent Versions System (CVS), also known as the Concurrent Versioning System, is a client-server free software revision control system in the field of software development. Version control system software keeps track of all work and all changes in a set of files, and allows several developers (potentially widely separated in space and/or time) to collaborate. dar dar is a shell command that backs up from a single file to a whole filesystems, taking care of hard links, Extended Attributes, sparse files, MacOS's file forks, any inode type (including Solaris Door inodes), etc. It has been tested under Linux, Windows, Solaris, FreeBSD, NetBSD, MacOS X and several other systems and is released under the GNU General Public License (GPL). It relies on the libdar library and its APplication Interface (API), which is the core part of dar programs; as such, this library is released under the GPL along with dar. Consequently, to use the API, your program must be released under the GPL as well. Some external programs do rely directly on libdar or on the dar command-line tool to provide Graphical User Interfaces (GUI). db Berkeley DB enables the development of custom data management solutions, without the overhead traditionally associated with such custom projects. Berkeley DB provides a collection of well-proven building-block technologies that can be configured to address any application need from the hand-held device to the datacenter, from a local storage solution to a world-wide distributed one, from kilobytes to petabytes. dbus D-Bus is a message bus, used for sending messages between applications. Conceptually, it fits somewhere in between raw sockets and CORBA in terms of complexity. D-Bus supports broadcast messages, asynchronous messages (thus decreasing latency), authentication, and more. It is designed to be low-overhead; messages are sent using a binary protocol, not using XML. D-Bus also supports a method call mapping for its messages, but it is not required; this makes using the system quite simple. It comes with several bindings, including GLib, Python, Qt and Java. dconf dconf is a low-level configuration system. Its main purpose is to provide a backend to GSettings API in Glib for storing and retrieving application settings. desktop-file-utils Some utilities to make dealing with .desktop files easier: * `update-desktop-database` -- build cache database of MIME types handled by desktop files * `desktop-file-validate` -- validate desktop entry files according to the Desktop Entry specification 1.1. For information about this specification, see: http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/desktop-entry-spec * `desktop-file-install` -- install a desktop file * `desktop-file-edit` -- edit a desktop file This package contains `update-desktop-database` only, other utilities you can find in the desktop-file-utils-extra package. desktop-file-utils-extra Some utilities to make dealing with .desktop files easier: * `update-desktop-database` -- build cache database of MIME types handled by desktop files * `desktop-file-validate` -- validate desktop entry files according to the Desktop Entry specification 1.1. For information about this specification, see: http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/desktop-entry-spec * `desktop-file-install` -- install a desktop file * `desktop-file-edit` -- edit a desktop file Utility `update-desktop-database` you can find in the desktop-file-utils package. dialog Though similar in style to CDK, Dialog is different, being a script-interpreter which provides a set of curses widgets. Widgets are objects whose appearance and behavior can be customized. drbl DRBL (Diskless Remote Boot in Linux) is free software, open source solution to managing the deployment of the GNU/Linux operating system across many clients. Imagine the time required to install GNU/Linux on 40, 30, or even 10 client machines individually! DRBL allows for the configuration all of your client computers by installing just one server (remember, not just any virtual private server) machine. DRBL provides a diskless or systemless environment for client machines. It works on Debian, Ubuntu, Red Hat, Fedora, CentOS and SuSE. DRBL uses distributed hardware resources and makes it possible for clients to fully access local hardware. It also includes Clonezilla, a partitioning and disk cloning utility similar to Symantec Ghost®. The features of DRBL: * Peacefully coexists with other OS * Simply install DRBL on a single server and all your clients are taken care of * Save on hardware, budget, and maintenance fees dropbear dropbear is a SSH 2 server and client designed to be small enough to be used in small memory environments, while still being functional and secure enough for general use. It implements most required features of the SSH 2 protocol, and other features such as X11 and authentication agent forwarding. See http://matt.ucc.asn.au/dropbear/dropbear.html e2fsprogs E2fsprogs provides the filesystem utilities for use with the ext2 filesystem. It also supports the ext3 and ext4 filesystems. emacs GNU Emacs is an extensible, customizable text editor and more. At its core is an interpreter for Emacs Lisp, a dialect of the Lisp programming language with extensions to support text editing and much more. enchant The enchant package provide a generic interface into various existing spell checking libaries. evince Evince is a document viewer for multiple document formats. The goal of evince is to replace the multiple document viewers that exist on the GNOME Desktop with a single simple application. expat This package contains the runtime, shared library of expat, the C library for parsing XML. Expat is a stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start tags). expect Expect is a tool for automating interactive applications such as telnet, ftp, passwd, fsck, rlogin, tip, etc. Expect really makes this stuff trivial. Expect is also useful for testing these same applications. And by adding Tk, you can also wrap interactive applications in X11 GUIs. file File tests each argument in an attempt to classify it. There are three sets of tests, performed in this order: filesystem tests, magic number tests, and language tests. The first test that succeeds causes the file type to be printed. flex Flex is a tool for generating scanners. A scanner, sometimes called a tokenizer, is a program which recognizes lexical patterns in text. fltk FLTK (pronounced "fulltick") is a cross-platform C++ GUI toolkit for UNIX/Linux (X11), Microsoft Windows, and MacOS X. FLTK provides modern GUI functionality without the bloat and supports 3D graphics via OpenGL and its built-in GLUT emulation. This package provides Fluid, an interactive GUI designer for FLTK, allowing graphical development of FLTK-based user interfaces. It natively works with (textual) `.fl` files, but also includes rough support for reading `.fd` files produced by fdesign. fontconfig Fontconfig is a library for configuring and customizing font access. fontconfig-infinality The purpose of these patches is to freely provide the nicest font rendering of any operating system. The second goal is to provide customization so that the end user is able to adjust the settings to his or her taste. Most common operating system font appearances can be emulated with these patches. The local.conf has been replaced with fontconfig-infinality, which drops into an existing /etc/fonts/. This should help distro maintainers greatly. It is strongly recommended to use these fontconfig settings, as they are tailored to work with the Freetype patches. fontforge FontForge allows you to edit outline and bitmap fonts. You may create new ones or modify old ones. It is also a format converter and can interconvert between PostScript (ASCII & binary Type1, some Type3, some Type0), TrueType, OpenType (Type2), CID, SVG. fpc The Free Pascal Compiler is a Turbo Pascal 7.0 and Delphi compatible 32bit Pascal Compiler. It comes with fully TP 7.0 compatible run-time library. freetype FreeType is written in C. It is designed to be small, efficient, and highly customizable while capable of producing high-quality output (glyph images) of most vector and bitmap font formats for digital typography. FreeType is a freely available and portable software library to render fonts. Subpixel hinting mode can be chosen by setting the right value in your environment, for example /etc/profile or ~/.profile Available settings: * FT2_SUBPIXEL_HINTING=0 # Classic mode * FT2_SUBPIXEL_HINTING=1 # Infinality mode * FT2_SUBPIXEL_HINTING=2 # Default mode freetype-infinality The FreeType engine is a free and portable font rendering engine, developed to provide advanced font support for a variety of platforms and environments. FreeType is a library which can open and manages font files as well as efficiently load, hint and render individual glyphs. FreeType is not a font server or a complete text-rendering library. This version is compiled with the patented bytecode interpreter and subpixel rendering enabled. It transparently overrides the system library using ld.so.conf.d. gawk If you are like many computer users, you would frequently like to make changes in various text files wherever certain patterns appear, or extract data from parts of certain lines while discarding the rest. To write a program to do this in a language such as C or Pascal is a time-consuming inconvenience that may take many lines of code. The job is easy with awk, especially the GNU implementation: gawk. gc The Boehm-Demers-Weiser conservative garbage collector can be used as a garbage collecting replacement for C malloc or C++ new. gcc The GNU Compiler Collection includes front ends for C, C++, Objective-C, Fortran, Java, Ada, and Go, as well as libraries for these languages (libstdc++, libgcj,...). gcc-graphite The GNU Compiler Collection includes front ends for C, C++, Objective-C, Fortran, Java, Ada, and Go, as well as libraries for these languages (libstdc++, libgcj,...). gcc-lib-base The GNU Compiler Collection includes front ends for C, C++, Objective-C, Fortran, Java, Ada, and Go, as well as libraries for these languages (libstdc++, libgcj,...). gcc-lib-base-graphite The GNU Compiler Collection includes front ends for C, C++, Objective-C, Fortran, Java, Ada, and Go, as well as libraries for these languages (libstdc++, libgcj,...). GConf GConf is a system for storing application preferences. It is intended for user preferences; not configuration of something like Apache, or arbitrary data storage. Geomyidae A gopherd for Linux/BSD. Features: * gopher menus (see index.gph for an example) * dir listings (if no index.gph was found) * CGI support (.cgi files are executed) * search support in CGI files * logging (-l option) and loglevels (-v option) Usage: geomyidae [-d] [-l logfile] [-v loglvl] [-b htdocs] [-p port] [-o sport] [-u user] [-g group] [-h host] [-i IP] -d don't fork into background -l logfile setting this will turn on logging into logfile -v loglevel see below (default 7) -b htdocs the htdocs root for serving files (default /var/gopher) -p port set the port where geomyidae should listen on (default 70) -o sport set the port that should be shown in the dir listings -u user which user rights the serving children should get -g group which group rights the serving children should get -i IP IP which geomyidae should bind to -h host host that should be used in the dir listings Loglevels: 0 - no logging 1 - served plain files 2 - dir listings 4 - HTTP redirects 8 - not found queries 1 + 2 + 4 = 7 (files + dir listings + HTTP) Init scripts: The rc.d directory includes startup scripts for various distributions. Have fun! gettext This is the GNU gettext package. It is interesting for authors or maintainers of other packages or programs which they want to see internationalized. As one step the handling of messages in different languages should be implemented. For this task GNU gettext provides the needed tools and library functions. It is also interesting for translators, because GNU gettext provides the 'msgmerge' program, which prepares a message catalog before a translation update. Users of GNU packages should also install GNU gettext because some other GNU packages will use the gettext program included in this package to internationalize the messages given by shell scripts. * [The homepage of this package](http://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/) * [The primary FTP site for its distribution] (ftp://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/gettext/) * Send comments and bug reports to gettext-base This package offers to programmers, translators, and even users, a well integrated set of tools and documentation to develop native language support for applications. gettext-tools This package is a part of GNU gettext, it contains: * `xgettext`: Extract translatable strings from given input files * `msgmerge`: Merges two Uniforum style .po files together * `msgfmt`: Generate binary message catalog from textual translation description * `msgcat`: Concatenates and merges the specified PO files gftp gFTP is a free multithreaded file transfer client for *NIX based machines. gif2apng This program converts GIF animations into animated PNG format. Usually it makes the files smaller. CLI version is OS-independent, GUI version is available for Windows. Another converter: apng2gif Features * Keeps frame delays and loop count * Option to keep the original GIF palette * CLI and GUI versions available * OS-independent source code is under zlib license git Git is a free & open source, distributed version control system designed to handle everything from small to very large projects with speed and efficiency. gnumeric The goal of Gnumeric is to be the best possible spreadsheet. It is not an attempt to clone existing applications. However, Gnumeric can read files saved with other spreadsheets and we offer a customizable feel that attempts to minimize the costs of transition. gnupg The GNU Privacy Guard GnuPG is GNU's tool for secure communication and data storage. It can be used to encrypt data and to create digital signatures. It includes an advanced key management facility and is compliant with the proposed OpenPGP Internet standard as described in RFC4880 and the S/MIME standard as described by several RFCs. goffice GOffice is a library of document-centric objects and utilities building on top of GLib and Gtk+ and used by software such as Gnumeric. gpgme GPGME - GnuPG Made Easy --------------------------- Copyright 2004, 2006, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015 g10 Code GmbH This file is free software; as a special exception the author gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. This file is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Introduction -------------- GnuPG Made Easy (GPGME) is a C language library that allows to add support for cryptography to a program. It is designed to make access to public key crypto engines like GnuPG or GpgSM easier for applications. GPGME provides a high-level crypto API for encryption, decryption, signing, signature verification and key management. GPGME uses GnuPG and GpgSM as its backends to support OpenPGP and the Cryptographic Message Syntax (CMS). GPGME runs best on GNU/Linux or *BSD systems. Other Unices may require small portability fixes, please send us your patches. See the files COPYING, COPYING.LESSER, and each file for copyright and warranty information. The file AUTHORS has a list of authors and useful web and mail addresses. Installation -------------- See the file INSTALL for generic installation instructions. Check that you have unmodified sources. See below on how to do this. Don't skip it - this is an important step! To build GPGME, you need to install libgpg-error (>= 1.11) and Libassuan (>= 2.0.2). For support of the OpenPGP protocol (default), you should use the latest version of GnuPG (>= 1.4) , available at: ftp://ftp.gnupg.org/gcrypt/gnupg/. For support of the CMS (Cryptographic Message Syntax) protocol and lot of other features, you need a GnuPG version >= 2.0. For building the GIT version of GPGME please see the file README.GIT for more information. How to Verify the Source -------------------------- In order to check that the version of GPGME which you are going to install is an original and unmodified one, you can do it in one of the following ways: a) If you have a trusted Version of GnuPG installed, you can simply check the supplied signature: $ gpg --verify gpgme-x.y.z.tar.gz.sig This checks that the detached signature gpgme-x.y.z.tar.gz.sig is indeed a a signature of gpgme-x.y.z.tar.gz. The key used to create this signature is either of: "pub 2048R/4F25E3B6 2011-01-12 Werner Koch (dist sig)" "pub 1024D/87978569 1999-05-13 Marcus Brinkmann Marcus Brinkmann " If you do not have this key, you can get it from any keyserver. You have to make sure that this is really the key and not a faked one. You can do this by comparing the output of: $ gpg --fingerprint 0x4F25E3B6 with the fingerprint published elsewhere. b) If you don't have any of the above programs, you have to verify the SHA1 checksum: $ sha1sum gpgme-x.y.z.tar.gz This should yield an output _similar_ to this: fd9351b26b3189c1d577f0970f9dcadc3412def1 gpgme-x.y.z.tar.gz Now check that this checksum is _exactly_ the same as the one published via the announcement list and probably via Usenet. Documentation --------------- For information how to use the library you can read the info manual, which is also a reference book, in the doc/ directory. The programs in the tests/gpg/ directory may also prove useful. Please subscribe to the gnupg-devel@gnupg.org mailing list if you want to do serious work. For hacking on GPGME, please have a look at doc/HACKING. gpicview GPicView is a lightweight GTK+ 2.x based image viewer with following features: * Extremely lightweight and fast with low memory usage * Very suitable for default image viewer of desktop system * Simple and intuitive interface * Minimal lib dependency: Only pure GTK+ is used * Desktop independent: Doesn't require any specific desktop environment graphviz Graphviz is open source graph visualization software. Graph visualization is a way of representing structural information as diagrams of abstract graphs and networks. It has important applications in networking, bioinformatics, software engineering, database and web design, machine learning, and in visual interfaces for other technical domains. grep This is GNU grep, the "fastest grep in the west" (we hope). All bugs reported in previous releases have been fixed. Many exciting new bugs have probably been introduced in this revision. GNU grep is provided "as is" with no warranty. The exact terms under which you may use and (re)distribute this program are detailed in the GNU General Public License. GNU grep is based on a fast lazy-state deterministic matcher (about twice as fast as stock Unix egrep) hybridized with a Boyer-Moore-Gosper search for a fixed string that eliminates impossible text from being considered by the full regexp matcher without necessarily having to look at every character. The result is typically many times faster than Unix grep or egrep. (Regular expressions containing backreferencing will run more slowly, however.) Send bug reports to bug-grep@gnu.org. KNOWN BUGS: Several tests in fmbtest.sh and foad1.sh fail under the cs_CZ.UTF-8 locale and have been disabled. The combination of -o and -i options is broken and the known failing cases are disabled in foad1.sh The option -i does not work properly in some multibyte locales such as tr_TR.UTF-8 where the upper case and lower case forms of a character are not necessarily of the same byte length. gtkspell3 GtkSpell is a library which provides MSWord/MacOSX-style highlighting of misspelled words in a GtkTextView widget. Right-clicking a misspelled word pops up a menu of suggested replacements. For more information, see http://sourceforge.net/projects/gtkspell/ . haserl haserl (Html And Shell Embedded Runtime Language) is a cgi program that runs interpreted scripts. It combines three elements into a single CGI interpreter: 1. It parses POST and GET requests, placing form-elements as name=value pairs into the environment for the CGI script to use. It is similar to uncgi (http://www.midwinter.com/~koreth/uncgi.html) in this respect 2. It prints the contents of the script as html, and conditionally interpets text within <% ... %> as shell script. In this case haserl scripts are like a poor-man's version of PHP (http://www.php.net) 3. It is very small, and so can be used in embedded environments ipaex-fonts IPA has been providing “IPA Font”^1 series from 2003, which IPA has all rights, and released “IPAex Mincho” and “IPAex Gothic” in February 2010 for common Japanese documentation. Main features of IPAex Fonts are as follows: * Fixed width for Japanese characters like Kana and Kanji * Proportional width for Western characters * Best balance for Japanese documentation mixed with Western characters When old versions are needed for backward compatibility, “IPA Mincho” and “IPA Gothic” for fixed width usage, “IPA P Mincho” and “IPA P Gothic” for proportional width usage has been still provided. ”IPAex Font” series (Ver.001 and upper) and “IPA Font” series (Ver.003 and upper) is able to use with the agreement to “IPA Open Font License”, which is consistent with international business practice and endorsed by Open Source Initiative (OSI) as confirmed license with Open Source Definition (OSD). ^1 “IPA Font” is a registered trademark of IPA in Japan. File name | Font name | Description -----------|--------------|------------- ipaexm.ttf | IPAex Mincho | Mincho-style ipaexg.ttf | IPAex Gothic | Sans-serif jclic JClic is a platform for the creation, playing and evaluation of multimedia educational activities, developed in the Java platform. The JClic project is an evolution of the programme Clic 3.0, a tool for the creation of multimedia educational applications with more than 10 years of history. Throughout this time many educators have been using it to design interactive activities which work on procedures of diverse curricular areas, from kindergarten up to secondary education. kbd This package contains tools for managing Linux console (Linux console, virtual terminals, keyboard, etc.) – mainly, what they do is loading console fonts and keyboard maps. keepalived The main goal of this project is to provide simple and robust facilities for loadbalancing and high-availability to Linux system and Linux based infrastructures. Loadbalancing framework relies on well-known and widely used Linux Virtual Server (IPVS) kernel module providing Layer4 loadbalancing. Keepalived implements a set of checkers to dynamically and adaptively maintain and manage loadbalanced server pool according their health. On the other hand high-availability is achieved by VRRP protocol. VRRP is a fundamental brick for router failover. In addition, Keepalived implements a set of hooks to the VRRP finite state machine providing low-level and high-speed protocol interactions. In order to offer fastest network failure detection, Keepalived implements BFD protocol. VRRP state transition can take into account BFD hint to drive fast state transition. Keepalived frameworks can be used independently or all together to provide resilient infrastructures. Keepalived implementation is based on an I/O multiplexer to handle a strong multi-threading framework. All the events process use this I/O multiplexer. kleanny **Kleanny** is an application that cleans cache and history files. An effective solution to remove unnecessary files and keep your hard drive free of junk. Kleanny analyzes the installed programs and searches the caches to be cleaned. l3afpad L3afpad is a simple GTK+ text editor that emphasizes simplicity. As development focuses on keeping weight down to a minimum, only the most essential features are implemented in the editor. L3afpad is simple to use, is easily compiled, requires few libraries, and starts up quickly. lcms2 Little CMS intends to be an OPEN SOURCE small-footprint color management engine, with special focus on accuracy and performance. It uses the International Color Consortium standard (ICC), which is the modern standard when regarding to color management. The ICC specification is widely used and is referred to in many International and other de-facto standards. It was approved as an International Standard, ISO 15076-1, in 2005. leafpad Leafpad is a simple GTK+ based text editor with user interface similar to Notepad. It aims to be lighter than Gedit and KWrite, and to be as useful as them. lfs-book Linux From Scratch (LFS) is a project that provides you with step-by-step instructions for building your own customized Linux system entirely from source. libart_lgpl This is the LGPL'd component of libart. All functions needed for running the Gnome canvas, and for printing support, will be going in here. The GPL'd component will be getting various enhanced functions for specific applications. * [More information about libart] (http://www.levien.com/libart/) * [Libart tutorial] (http://www.gnome.org/~mathieu/libart/libart.html) libassuan This is a general purpose IPC library which is for example used GnuPG, GPGME and some other software. libfm LibFM provides file management functions built on top of Glib/GIO, giving a convenient higher-level API. Some features: * Desktop-independent, following FreeDesktop standards; * Fast, light on memory usage, and responsive - well suited to less powerful hardware such as netbooks and thin clients; * Uses GIO/GVFS (like Nautilus) for Trash support and access to remote file systems (FTP, SFTP, WebDAV, Windows shares, etc.); * Clipboard operations are compatible with GTK+/GNOME and Qt/KDE; * Supports both Drag-and-Drop, and the X Direct Save protocol; * Reusable design with the core functions separated out to simplify porting to other GUIs. This package contains the core library. libfm-dev LibFM provides file management functions built on top of Glib/GIO giving a convenient higher-level API. This package contains the development files for builds using GTK+ library. libfm-gtk LibFM provides file management functions built on top of Glib/GIO giving a convenient higher-level API. This package contains the GTK+ version 2.0 GUI. libgcrypt Libgcrypt - The GNU Crypto Library Libgcrypt is a general purpose crypto library based on the code used in GnuPG. libgpg-error This is a library that defines common error values for all GnuPG components. Among these are GPG, GPGSM, GPGME, GPG-Agent, libgcrypt, Libksba, DirMngr, Pinentry, SmartCard Daemon and more. libksba KSBA (pronounced Kasbah) is a library to make X.509 certificates as well as the CMS easily accessible by other applications. Both specifications are building blocks of S/MIME and TLS. KSBA is made available as a standard shared library and reserves identifiers starting with "ksba" and "_ksba" (also uppercase and mixed case). It does not rely on another cryptographic library. libmagic This library can be used to classify files according to magic number tests. It implements the core functionality of the file command. libmagic-dev This library can be used to classify files according to magic number tests. It implements the core functionality of the file command. This package contains the development files. libmnl libmnl is a minimalistic user-space library oriented to Netlink developers. There are a lot of common tasks in parsing, validating, constructing of both the Netlink header and TLVs that are repetitive and easy to get wrong. This library aims to provide simple helpers that allows you to re-use code and to avoid re-inventing the wheel. libnotify libnotify implements a standard for a desktop notifications service, through which applications can generate passive popups to notify the user in an asynchronous manner of events. Example use cases include: * Messages from chat programs * Scheduled alarm * Completed file transfer * New mail notification * Low disk space/battery warnings libpanel libpanel - panel stack extension for curses Panels are **curses** windows with the added feature of depth. Panel functions allow the use of stacked windows and ensure the proper portions of each window and the curses **stdscr** window are hidden or displayed when panels are added, moved, modified or removed. The set of currently visible panels is the stack of panels. The **stdscr** window is beneath all panels, and is not considered part of the stack. libplist A library to handle Apple Property List format whether it's in binary or XML format. libsdl This is the Simple DirectMedia Layer, a general API that provides low level access to audio, keyboard, mouse, joystick, 3D hardware via OpenGL, and 2D framebuffer across multiple platforms. libspiro Spiro is the creation of Raph Levien. It simplifies the drawing of beautiful curves. Using bézier splines an artist can easily draw curves with the same slope on either side of an on-curve point. Spiros, on the other hand, are based on clothoid splines which make it easy to maintain constant curvature as well as constant slope. Such curves will simply look nicer. Raph Levien's spiro splines only use on-curve points and so are easier to use and more intuitive to the artist. This library will take an array of spiro control points and convert them into a series of bézier splines which can then be used in the myriad of ways the world has come to use béziers. libuninameslist A library with a large (sparse) array mapping each unicode code point to the annotation data for it provided in http://www.unicode.org/Public/UNIDATA/NamesList.txt libwnck3 libwnck is Window Navigator Construction Kit, i.e. a library to use for writing pagers and taskslists and stuff. libwnck is not supported in the devel platform, which means OS vendors won't guarantee the API/ABI long-term, but authors of open source apps should feel free to use libwnck as users can always recompile against a new version. The API/ABI has historically changed very little: libwnck authors are not changing it gratuitously or without soname increments. libxcb The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint, latency hiding, direct access to the protocol, improved threading support, and extensibility. lines Original JavaScript port of the Lines game by Dmitry Baranovskiy: http://dmitry.baranovskiy.com/work/lines/ Here you can play the special version Dmitry sent to the 10K Apart contest. http://web.archive.org/web/20150912071602/http://10k.aneventapart.com/1/Entry/62 This SliTaz version is slightly tweaked for small screen to occupy less height. lxde LXDE (the Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment) is a new project aimed to provide a new desktop environment which is lightweight and fast. This package is a metapackage depends on the core components and recommended components of the LXDE. It includes lxpanel, lxtask, lxappearance, lxsession, pcmanfm, lxinput, lxsession-edit, lxrandr, gpicview and leafpad. lxinput LXInput is a GUI application for the Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment (LXDE). It configures keyboard and mouse settings: * Delay and Interval for character repeat * Enable/Disable beeps of keyboard input error * Swap left and right mouse buttons * Mouse acceleration and sensitivity lxmenu-data LXMenu-data is a component for the Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment (LXDE). It contains files required to build desktop menus for LXDE compling to the freedesktop.org menu specificiation. lxpanel LXPanel is a GUI application for the Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment (LXDE). It is derived from fbpanel and includes the following features: * User-friendly application menu automatically generated from .desktop files on the system. * Launcher bar (small icons clicked to launch apps). * Task bar supporting ICCCM/EWMH 'urgency' hint (Pidgin IM windows can flash on new incoming messages). * Run dialog (type a command to run, without opening a terminal). * Net status icon plug-in (optional). * Volume control plug-in (optional). * Notification area (system tray). * Digital clock. * Keyboard LEDs plug-in (display caps/num locks). * lxpanelctl: control lxpanel from other programs. For example, `lxpanelctl run` will show the Run dialog in lxpanel, and `lxpanelctl menu` will show the application menu. This is useful in combination with window manager key bindings. lxrandr LXRandR is a GUI application for the Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment (LXDE). This is a very basic monitor config tool utilizing the X extension called RandR. It can let you change the screen resolution on the fly. Besides, when you run lxrandr with external monitor connected, its GUI will change, and show you some quick options to get your projector or external monitor working correctly. This tool doesn't aim to be a full randr frontend. It's a utility for grandma, not for geeks. If you need the full power of RandR, get xrandr (console) or grandr (GUI) and read some tutorials. LXRandR only gives you some easy and quick options which are intuitive. It's very suitable for laptop users who frequently uses projectors or external monitor and just want to get their work done without reading a lot of "geek-centered" manuals or command line tutorials. lxsession LXSession is a lightweight X11 session manager with fewer dependencies, designed for use with the LXDE (Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment). It derived from XSM and have following differences: * Removed the session dialog from xsm. * Stripped down without session restore function. * Automaticlly restart specific program if crashes happened. * Use better configuration. * Provide a nice logout-dialog with the ability to shutdown / reboot / suspend / hibernate via HAL or gdm * Support halt/reboot LTSP thin clients, and more... It's desktop-independent and can be used with any window manager. As "session manager" lxsession used to automatically start a set of applications and set up a working desktop environment LXSession has also a built-in lightweight Xsettings daemon, which can configure GTK+ themes, keyboard, and mouse for you on session startup. lxsession-edit LXSession-Edit is a simple session editor GUI for lxsession-lite which follows autostart specs from FreeDesktop.Org. lxtask LXTask is a GUI application for the Lightweight X11 Desktop Environment (LXDE). It allows monitoring and controlling of running processes. lynx Lynx is a very configurable text-based web browser for use on cursor-addressable character cell terminals. lzma The Lempel-Ziv Markov-chain Algorithm is a compression method based on the famous LZ77 algorithm, and was first introduced by 7-Zip for use in 7z archives. Its main characteristics are a very high compression ratio, with high RAM usage, and fast decompression, with low RAM usage. These properties make it well suited to embedded uses, such as for ROM (firmware) compression. This package provides the lzma command line utility, which has a familiar gzip-like interface. make-slitaz-icons This utility helps you to make icon theme for SliTaz from any icon theme. You can check absent icons, make your own substitution rules, and improve this utility rules to have best results. Freedesktop.org Icon specification followed to make complete icon set. Also, it satisfies icon needs of all programs installed in the SliTaz Core. man2html View local man pages in the web browser. Typical usage: hman man2html Utility can search and show local man pages by it's name, and also list all local man pages by categories using web interface for queries. This version was patched for SliTaz to produce clean and modern HTML layout using SliTaz documents CSS styles, to fast search and display pages without caching, etc. man-pages This package contains Linux man pages for sections 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7. Note that sometimes these pages are duplicates of pages also distributed in other packages. This has been reported about dlclose.3, dlerror.3, dlopen.3, dlsym.3 (found in ld.so), about resolver.3, resolv.conf.5 (found in bind-utils), and about passwd.5, and mailaddr.7. Be careful not to overwrite more up-to-date versions. Reports on further duplicates are welcome. Formerly present and now removed duplicates: exports.5 (found in nfs-server-2.2*), fstab.5, nfs.5 (found in util-linux-2.12*), lilo.8, lilo.conf.5 (found in lilo-21.6*). Copyrights: These man pages come under various copyrights. All pages are freely distributable when the nroff source is included. If you have corrections and additions to suggest, see http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/contributing.html menu-cache Libmenu-cache is a library creating and utilizing caches to speed up the access to freedesktop.org defined application menus. It can be used as a replacement of libgnome-menu of gnome-menus: * Shorten time for loading menu entries. * Ease of use (API is very similar to that of libgnome-menu). * Lightweight runtime library (parsing of the menu definition files are done by menu-cache-gen when the menus are really changed). * Less unnecessary and complicated file monitoring. * Heavily reduced disk I/O. menu-cache-dev Libmenu-cache is a library creating and utilizing caches to speed up the access to freedesktop.org defined application menus. This package contains the development files. mmv This is mmv, a program to move/copy/append/link multiple files according to a set of wildcard patterns. All csh wildcards ('*', '?', '['...']', and '~') are supported. This multiple action is performed safely, i.e. without any unexpected deletion of files due to collisions of target names with existing filenames or with other target names. Furthermore, before doing anything, mmv attempts to detect any errors that would result from the entire set of actions specified and gives the user the choice of either aborting before beginning, or proceeding by avoiding the offending parts. mtpaint mtPaint is a painting program which Mark Tyler developed from scratch so he could easily create pixel art and manipulate digital photos. It uses the GTK+ toolkit (version 1 or 2) and runs on PC's via the GNU/Linux or Windows operating systems. Due to its efficient design it can run on older PC hardware (e.g. a 200MHz CPU and 16MB of free RAM). nano nano - Nano's ANOther editor, an enhanced free Pico clone nano is a small, free and friendly editor which aims to replace Pico, the default editor included in the non-free Pine package. On top of copying Pico's look and feel, nano also implements some missing (or disabled by default) features in Pico, such as "search and replace" and "go to line and column number". nasm The Netwide Assembler (NASM) is an assembler and disassembler for the Intel x86 architecture. It can be used to write 16-bit, 32-bit (IA-32) and 64-bit (x86-64) programs. NASM is considered to be one of the most popular assemblers for Linux. nmap Nmap ("Network Mapper") is a utility for network discovery and security auditing. Many systems and network administrators also find it useful for tasks such as network inventory, managing service upgrade schedules, and monitoring host or service uptime. Nmap uses raw IP packets in novel ways to determine what hosts are available on the network, what services (application name and version) those hosts are offering, what operating systems (and OS versions) they are running, what type of packet filters/firewalls are in use, and dozens of other characteristics. It was designed to rapidly scan large networks, but works fine against single hosts. noto-mono Beautiful and free fonts for all languages When text is rendered by a computer, sometimes characters are displayed as “tofu”. They are little boxes to indicate your device doesn’t have a font to display the text. Google has been developing a font family called Noto, which aims to support all languages with a harmonious look and feel. Noto is Google’s answer to tofu. The name noto is to convey the idea that Google’s goal is to see “**no** more **to**fu”. Noto has multiple styles and weights, and freely available to all. The comprehensive set of fonts and tools used in our development are available in our [GitHub repositories](https://github.com/googlei18n?query=noto). All Noto fonts are now licensed under OFL. noto-sans Beautiful and free fonts for all languages When text is rendered by a computer, sometimes characters are displayed as “tofu”. They are little boxes to indicate your device doesn’t have a font to display the text. Google has been developing a font family called Noto, which aims to support all languages with a harmonious look and feel. Noto is Google’s answer to tofu. The name noto is to convey the idea that Google’s goal is to see “**no** more **to**fu”. Noto has multiple styles and weights, and freely available to all. The comprehensive set of fonts and tools used in our development are available in our [GitHub repositories](https://github.com/googlei18n?query=noto). All Noto fonts are now licensed under OFL. noto-serif Beautiful and free fonts for all languages When text is rendered by a computer, sometimes characters are displayed as “tofu”. They are little boxes to indicate your device doesn’t have a font to display the text. Google has been developing a font family called Noto, which aims to support all languages with a harmonious look and feel. Noto is Google’s answer to tofu. The name noto is to convey the idea that Google’s goal is to see “**no** more **to**fu”. Noto has multiple styles and weights, and freely available to all. The comprehensive set of fonts and tools used in our development are available in our [GitHub repositories](https://github.com/googlei18n?query=noto). All Noto fonts are now licensed under OFL. npth nPth - The New GNU Portable Threads Library This is a library to provide the GNU Pth API and thus a non-preemptive threads implementation. In contrast to GNU Pth is is based on the system's standard threads implementation. This allows the use of libraries which are not compatible to GNU Pth. Experience with a Windows Pth emulation showed that this is a solid way to provide a co-routine based framework. nss Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries designed to support cross- platform development of security-enabled client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can support SSL v2 and v3, TLS, PKCS #5, PKCS #7, PKCS #11, PKCS #12, S/MIME, X.509 v3 certificates, and other security standards. ntfs-3g NTFS-3G uses FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) to provide support for the NTFS filesystem used by Microsoft Windows. o3read This is a standalone converter for the OpenOffice.org swriter (*.sxw) and scalc (*.sxc) formats. It doesn't depend on Open Office or any other external tools or libraries. Example: unzip -p filformat.sxw content.xml | o3read | utf8tolatin1 There are three output modules: * o3read displays a dump of the parse tree * o3totxt creates plain text * o3tohtml creates html code The utility utf8tolatin1 converts from utf8 to 8859-1. odt2txt odt2txt is a command-line tool which extracts the text out of OpenDocument Texts produced by OpenOffice.org, StarOffice, KOffice and others. odt2txt can also extract text from some file formats similar to OpenDocument Text, such as OpenOffice.org XML (*.sxw), which was used by OpenOffice.org version 1.x and older StarOffice versions. To a lesser extent, odt2txt may be useful to extract content from OpenDocument spreadsheets (*.ods) and OpenDocument presentations (*.odp). odt2txt is ... * small * supports multiple output encodings * adopts to your locale * able to substitute common characters which the output charset does not contain with ascii look-a-likes * written in C, has few dependencies * portable (runs on Linux, *BSD, Solaris, HP-UX, Windows, Cygwin) * licensed under GPL, version 2 openbox Openbox works with your applications, and makes your desktop easier to manage. This is because the approach to its development was the opposite of what seems to be the general case for window managers. Openbox was written first to comply with standards and to work properly. Only when that was in place did the team turn to the visual interface. Openbox is fully functional as a stand-alone working environment, or can be used as a drop-in replacement for the default window manager in the GNOME or KDE desktop environments. Openbox 3 is a completely new breed of window manager. It is not based upon any existing code base, although the visual appearance has been based upon that of Blackbox. Openbox 2 was based on the Blackbox 0.65.0 codebase. Some of the things to look for in Openbox are: * ICCCM and EWMH compliance! * Very fast * Chainable key bindings * Customizable mouse actions * Window resistance * Multi-head Xinerama support! * Pipe menus p4wn A concise javascript chess engine, first written for the 5k web competition. It plays at the level of a lazy amateur, so is a good match for most opponents. p910nd p910nd implements the port 9100 network printer protocol which simply copies any incoming data on the port to the printer (and in the reverse direction, if bidirectional mode is selected). Both parallel and USB printers are supported. This protocol was used in HP's printers and is called JetDirect (probably TM). p910nd is particularly useful for diskless hosts and embedded devices because it does not require any disk space for spooling as this is done at the sending host. pango Pango is a library for layout and rendering of text, with an emphasis on internationalization. Pango can be used anywhere that text layout is needed. However, most of the work on Pango-1.0 was done using the GTK+ widget toolkit as a test platform. Pango forms the core of text and font handling for GTK+-2.0. Pango is designed to be modular; the core Pango layout can be used with four different font backends: * Core X windowing system fonts * Client-side fonts on X using the Xft library * Direct rendering of scalable fonts using the FreeType library * Native fonts on Microsoft backends pciutils This package contains various utilities for inspecting and setting of devices connected to the PCI bus. pcmciautils This package provides PCMCIA initialisation tools for Linux 2.6.13-rc1 or later, replacing the old pcmcia-cs tools used with earlier kernel versions. PCMCIA cards are commonly used in laptops to provide expanded capabilities such as network connections, modems, increased memory, etc. pcre2 PCRE2 is a library of functions to support regular expressions whose syntax and semantics are as close as possible to those of the Perl 5 language. Also included in the distribution is a just-in-time compiler that can be used to optimize pattern matching. pcre This is a library of functions to support regular expressions whose syntax and semantics are as close as possible to those of the Perl 5 language. peazip Open Source archive manager and data compression utility Free Software replacement for WinRar, WinZip and similar tools Zip, Unzip, Unace, Unrar files on GNU/Linux systems Open 7Z ACE BZ2 CAB GZ ISO RAR TAR ZIP format and more. PeaZip For Linux http://www.peazip.org/peazip-linux.html pixman A library for manipulating pixel regions -- a set of Y-X banded rectangles, image compositing using the Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric primitives including trapezoids, triangles, and rectangles. pngquant pngquant converts 24/32-bit RGBA PNG images to 8-bit palette with alpha channel preserved. Such images are compatible with all modern web browsers and a compatibility setting is available to help transparency degrade well in Internet Explorer 6. Quantized files are often 40-70 percent smaller than their 24/32-bit version. pngquant uses the median cut algorithm. pngrewrite Pngrewrite is command-line utility that reduces the unnecessarily large palettes that some programs write into PNG files. It also optimizes transparency data, and reduces the bits-per-pixel if possible. Handy for post-processing PNG files before putting them on a web site. Pngrewrite will: * Remove any unused palette entries, and write a palette that is only as large as needed. * Remove (collapse) any duplicate palette entries. * Convert non-palette image to palette images, provided they contain no more than 256 different colors. * Move any colors with transparency to the beginning of the palette, and write a tRNS chunk that is a small as possible. * Reduce the bit-depth (bits per pixel) as much as possible. * Write images as grayscale when possible, if that is compatible with the goal of using the minimum possible bit depth. Under no circumstances does pngrewrite change the actual pixel colors, or background color, or transparency of the image. If it ever does, that's a bug. --WARNING-- pngrewrite removes most extra (ancillary) information from the PNG file, such as text comments. Although this does make the file size smaller, the removed information may sometimes be important. The only ancillary chunks that are NOT removed are: * gAMA - Image gamma setting * sRGB - srgb color space indicator * tIME - creation time * pHYs - physical pixel size * bKGD and tRNS - Background color and transparency are maintained. The actual chunk may be modified according to the new color structure. If the original image was interlaced, the new one will also be interlaced. Pngrewrite will not work at all on images that have more than 256 colors. Colors with the same RGB values but a different level of transparency count as different colors. The background color counts as an extra color if it does not occur in the image. It will also not work at all on images that have a color depth of 16 bits, since they cannot have a palette. ----------------- This is a very inefficient program. It is (relatively) slow, and may use a lot of memory. To be specific, it uses about 5 bytes per pixel, no matter what the bit depth of the image is. This program is (hopefully) reasonably portable, and should compile without too much effort on most C compilers. It requires the libpng and zlib libraries. The pngrewrite code is structured as a library that could be used in other applications, but I have not documented the interface. ----------------- How to use: From a command-line, run pngrewrite.exe To read from standard-input, or write to standard-output, use "-" for the filename. popt Popt was heavily influenced by the getopt() and getopt_long() functions, but it allows more powerful argument expansion. It can parse arbitrary argv[] style arrays and automatically set variables based on command line arguments. It also allows command line arguments to be aliased via configuration files and includes utility functions for parsing arbitrary strings into argv[] arrays using shell-like rules. posixovl With posixovl it is possible to mount FAT, VFAT, NTFS file system so that it behaves like POSIX. File permissions, symbolic links etc. are supported transparently. An extra file stores the information and the file system itself stays unmodified. It is a modern equivalent of the UMSDOS file system. Typical use: Mount an USB FAT32 drive with posixovl and your files retain their permission settings. This package extends mount and provides option '-t posixovl'. ppp The Point-to-Point Protocol provides a standard way to transmit datagrams over a serial link, as well as a standard way for the machines at either end of the link to negotiate various optional characteristics of the link. This package is most commonly used to manage a modem for dial-up or certain kinds of broadband connections. python-configobj ConfigObj is a simple but powerful config file reader and writer: an ini file round tripper. Its main feature is that it is very easy to use, with a straightforward programmer's interface and a simple syntax for config files. It has lots of other features though: * Nested sections (subsections), to any level * List values * Multiple line values * Full Unicode support * String interpolation (substitution) * Integrated with a powerful validation system - including automatic type checking/conversion - and allowing default values - repeated sections * All comments in the file are preserved * The order of keys/sections is preserved * Powerful unrepr mode for storing/retrieving Python data-types python-magic This library can be used to classify files according to magic number tests. It implements the core functionality of the file command. This package contains the Python bindings. python-peak-rules PEAK-Rules is a highly-extensible framework for creating and using generic functions, from the very simple to the very complex. Out of the box, it supports multiple-dispatch on positional arguments using tuples of types, full predicate dispatch using strings containing Python expressions, and CLOS-like method combining. (But the framework allows you to mix and match dispatch engines and custom method combinations, if you need or want to.) rclone Run 'rclone config' to setup rcssmin RCSSmin is a CSS minifier written in Python. The minifier is based on the semantics of the YUI compressor, which itself is based on the rule list by Isaac Schlueter. This module is a re-implementation aiming for speed instead of maximum compression, so it can be used at runtime (rather than during a preprocessing step). RCSSmin does syntactical compression only (removing spaces, comments and possibly semicolons). It does not provide semantic compression (like removing empty blocks, collapsing redundant properties etc). It does, however, support various CSS hacks (by keeping them working as intended). Here's a feature list: - Strings are kept, except that escaped newlines are stripped - Space/Comments before the very end or before various characters are stripped: ``:{});=>],!`` (The colon (``:``) is a special case, a single space is kept if it's outside a ruleset.) - Space/Comments at the very beginning or after various characters are stripped: ``{}(=:>[,!`` - Optional space after unicode escapes is kept, resp. replaced by a simple space - whitespaces inside ``url()`` definitions are stripped - Comments starting with an exclamation mark (``!``) can be kept optionally. - All other comments and/or whitespace characters are replaced by a single space. - Multiple consecutive semicolons are reduced to one - The last semicolon within a ruleset is stripped - CSS Hacks supported: - IE7 hack (``>/**/``) - Mac-IE5 hack (``/*\*/.../**/``) - The boxmodelhack is supported naturally because it relies on valid CSS2 strings - Between ``:first-line`` and the following comma or curly brace a space is inserted. (apparently it's needed for IE6) - Same for ``:first-letter`` rcssmin.c is a reimplementation of rcssmin.py in C and improves runtime up to factor 100 or so (depending on the input). docs/BENCHMARKS in the source distribution contains the details. The module additionally provides a "streamy" interface: $ python -mrcssmin minified It takes two options: -b Keep bang-comments (Comments starting with an exclamation mark) -p Force using the python implementation (not the C implementation) re2c Re2c is a free and open-source lexer generator for C and C++. The main goal of the project is to generate very fast lexers that match or exceed the speed of carefully optimized hand-written code. Instead of using traditional table-driven approach, re2c encodes the underlying finite state automata directly in the form of conditional jumps and applies numerous optimizations to the generated code. The resulting programs are faster and often smaller than their table-driven counterparts, and they are much easier to debug and understand. Re2c has an unusual flexible user interface: instead of assuming a fixed program template, it leaves the definition of the interface code to the user and allows to configure almost every aspect of the generated code. This gives the users a lot of freedom in the way they bind the lexer to their particular environment and allows them to decide on the optimal input model. Re2c supports fast and lightweight submatch extraction which does not requre the overhead on full parsing — a feature that is rarely found in the wild. Re2c is used by many other projects (such as php, ninja, yasm, spamassassin, BRL-CAD and wake) and aims at being fully backward compatible. On the other hand, it is a research project and a playground for the development of new algorithms in the field of formal grammars and automata. rpcsvc-proto The rpcsvc-proto package contains the rcpsvc protocol files and headers, formerly included with glibc, that are not included in replacement libtirpc, along with the rpcgen program. runcom Runcom support DOS .com binary files and boot sector files. 1- The DOS .com support Runcom provides few BIOS and DOS (int 21H) interrupt handlers. Many .com files may not work. DOS .exe are also supported. You can test it with the file /usr/bin/debug.com, with the command line : $ debug.com 2- The boot sector image support A boot sector image is a 512 bytes file ending with the 0xAA and 0x55 bytes with the .bin extension. Bios disk (int 13H) are emulated (CHS or LBA) with an image file : - hard disk are image ./hd0, ./hd1, ... for disk 0x80, 0x81... - floppy disk are image ./fd0, ./fd1 ... or /dev/fd0, /dev/fd1 if not found. You can test it with the file /usr/bin/debug.bin, with the command line : $ debug.bin 3- The 512 bytes boot sector debugger /usr/bin/debug.bin Usage: f DX:CX load one CHS sector to 0000:7C00 t trace one step g
go to adrs d
display 16 bytes, CR for next 16 bytes... e
... enter memory byte/word/dword m self move + default segment offset seqment and offset are hexadecimal values in 0..FFFF range address is linear hexadecimal value in 0..FFFFF range or seqment:offset words are bytes in 0..FF range or words in 000..FFFF range or double words CX and DX are used by INT13H/AL=01 BIOS interrupt. Example: m 0FC0 move debugger to 0FC0:0000 0FC0:01FF f 1 read floppy boot sector to 0000:7C00 f 80:1 read hard disk master boot sector to 0000:7C00 g 7C0E ... sakura Sakura is a terminal emulator based just on GTK and VTE. It's a terminal emulator with few dependencies, so you don't need a full GNOME desktop installed to have a decent terminal emulator. Some of the terminal emulators based on VTE are gnome-terminal, XFCE Terminal, TermIt, etc. Sakura just uses a notebook to provide several terminals in one window and adds a contextual menu with some basic options. No more no less. shared-mime-info The shared-mime-info package contains the core database of common types and the `update-mime-database` command used to extend it. This database is translated at [Transifex](http://www.transifex.net/projects/p/shared-mime-info/). See the [Shared MIME Info Specification] (https://freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/shared-mime-info-spec/) for more information about the database. SkypeFreak A Forensic Framework for Skype. Default run of the program produces the following output: 8""""8 8 e e e e eeeee eeee 8eeeee 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 88 8eee8e 8eeee8 8eee8 8eee e 88 88 8 88 88 88 8eee88 88 8 88 88 88ee 8"""" 8 eeeee eeee eeeee e e 8eeee 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 88 8eee8e 8eee 8eee8 8eee8e 88 88 8 88 88 8 88 8 88 88 8 88ee 88 8 88 8 [*] A creation of Osanda Malith & contributors [*] Follow @OsandaMalith and @yasoobkhalid [*] URL: http://osandamalith.github.io/SkypeFreak/ [~] What Do You Like to Investigate? 1. Profile 2. Contact 3. Calls 4. Messages 5. Generate Full Report 6. Print the list of contributors & exit 7. Exit Select the option which you deem suitable for the given conditions. After that Skype Freak will perform the given task and will print the output to console and will ask you to write the extracted data to disk. slim SLiM aims to be light, simple and independent from the various desktop environments. Although completely configurable through themes and an option file. It is particularly suitable for machines that don't require remote logins. slitaz-backgrounds A collection of wallpapers for SliTaz. It contains beautiful images for your desktop. All images are available at: /usr/share/images. [15.03.2016] New Slitaz Papers! - Black Floral - Black Zen - Dust - Meditation - Secret Orion - The Force - Varnish - Woodland slitaz-boot-scripts This package contains all default boot scripts to get SliTaz GNU/Linux up to a runable, and more importantly, usable, state. spectrwm spectrwm is a small dynamic tiling window manager for X11. It tries to stay out of the way so that valuable screen real estate can be used for much more important stuff. It has sane defaults and does not require one to learn a language to do any configuration. It was written by hackers for hackers and it strives to be small, compact and fast. sshttp sshttp - hiding SSH servers behind HTTP ======================================= ![sshttp](https://github.com/stealth/sshttp/blob/master/sshttp.jpg) [![paypal](https://www.paypalobjects.com/en_US/i/btn/btn_donateCC_LG.gif)](https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=9MVF8BRMX2CWA) 0. Intro -------- In case your FW policy forbids __SSH__ access to the DMZ or internal network from outside, but you still want to use ssh on machines which only have one open port, e.g. __HTTP__, you can use `sshttpd`. _sshttpd_ can multiplex the following protocol pairs: * SSH/HTTP * SSH/HTTPS * SSH/SMTP (without SMTP multiline banners) * HTTPS SNI multiplexing * SSH/HTTPS with SNI multiplexing 1. Build --------- Be sure you run recent Linux kernel and install `nf-conntrack` as well as `libcap` and `libcap-devel` if you want to use the capability feature. ``` $ make ``` There is a new `splice` branch inside the git. `git checkout splice` before `make`, if you want to test this new branch. It implements zero-copy in terms of the __splice(2)__ system call which has a performance benefit since it avoids copying the network data between user and kernel land back and forth (__read()/write()__), which could also just be spliced kernel-internally at the "extra cost" of two additional pipe descriptors per connection. 2. Setup for single host ------------------------ This paragraph describes the setup where all services run on the same host as _sshttpd_ itself. The muxing happens to the same IP/IP6 address that the outside connects arrive to, so basically just the ports are changing per detected service. _sshttpd_ is an easy to use OSI-Layer5 switching daemon. It runs transparently on __HTTP(S)__ port (`-L` switch, default 80) and decides on incoming connections whether this is __SSH__ or __HTTP(S)__ traffic. If its __HTTP(S)__ traffic, it switches the traffic to the `HTTP_PORT` (`-H`, default 8080) and if its __SSH__ traffic to `SSH_PORT` (`-S`, default 22) respectively. You need to edit `nf-setup` script to match your network device and `$PORTS` (`22` and `8080` are just fine for the SSH/HTTP case) and run it to install the proxy rules. Your _sshd_ has to run on `$SSH_PORT` and your webserver on `$HTTP_PORT`. Thats basically it. Go ahead and run _sshttpd_ (as root) and it will layer5-switch your traffic destinated to TCP port 80: ``` # ./nf-setup Using network device eth0 Setting up port 22 ... Setting up port 8080 ... # ./sshttpd -S 22 -L 80 -H 8080 -U nobody -R /var/empty sshttpd: Using HTTP_PORT=8080 SSH_PORT=22 and local port=80. Going background. Using caps/chroot. # ``` If you want to mux __SMTP__ with _sshttpd_, just give `25` as `-L` parameter, `2525` as `-H` parameter, and setup your smtp daemon to listen on 2525. Then edit the `nf-setup` script to match these ports. In the `Makefile`, change the `SMTP_DOMAIN` and `SSH_BANNER` to your needs (`SSH_BANNER` must match exactly yours of the running _sshd_). SMTP/SSH muxing was tested with OpenSSH client and Postfix client and server. When muxing IPv6 connections, the setup is basically the same; just use the `nf6-setup` script and invoke _sshttpd_ with `-6`. 3. Transparent proxy setup -------------------------- You can run _sshttpd_ also on your gateway machine and transparently proxy/mux all of your __HTTP(S)/SSH__ traffic to your internal LAN. To do so, run _sshttpd_ with `-T` and use `nf-tproxy` rather than `nf-setup` as a template for your FW setup. Carefully read `nf-tproxy` so you dont lock yourself out of the network and all the network devices and IP addresses match your setup. 4. SNI Mux ---------- With _sshttpd_ you can also mux based on the HTTPS SNI. Just set up your `nf-setup` to contain the SNI ports (there are already samples) and invoke _sshttpd_ with `-N name:port` e.g. `sshttpd -S 22 -H 4433 -L 443 -N drops.v2:7350` to hide a sshd on 22 and a [drops setup](https://github.com/stealth/drops) on port 7350 behind port 443, and at the same time serving your webserver from port 4433 to be visible to outside on port 443. This works because _drops_ sets the SNI of `drops.v2` in outgoing connects. Multiple `-N` switches are allowed so you could mux a lot of services via SNI. The ports/services must run all on the same machine where the original request was destinated to. If you just want to mux based on SNI, you can set the SSH port to 0 via `-S 0`. 5. Misc ------- You dont need to patch any of your ssh/web/smtp client or server software. It works as is. _sshttpd_ runs only on Linux and needs `IP_TRANSPARENT` support. It would work without, but by using `IP_TRANSPARENT` it is possible to even have unmodified syslogs, e.g. the original source IP/port of incoming connections is passed as-is to the SSH/HTTP/SMTP servers. Make sure the `nf_conntrack` and `nf_conntrack_ipv4` or `nf_conntrack_ipv6` modules are loaded. _sshttpd_ is also a tricky anti-SSH0day (if ever:) and anti SSH-scanning/bruteforcing measurement. _sshttpd_ has small footprint and was optimized for speed so it also runs on heavily loaded web servers. Since version 0.24, _sshttpd_ also supports multiple CPU cores. Unless `-n 1` is used as switch, _sshttpd_ binds one thread per CPU core, to better exploit the hardware if running on heavily used web servers. It still runs this fixed number of threads no matter how many 1000s connection it handles at the same time. _sshttpd_ runs as `nobody` user inside a `chroot()` (configurable via `-U` and `-R` switch) if compiled with `USE_CAPS`. It can also distinguish between __SSH__ and __SSL__ sessions, you just have to use an `LOCAL_PORT (-L)` of 443 or 4433 and change the `HTTP_PORT` in the `nf-setup` script to match your webservers __HTTPS__ port. You cannot mix HTTP/SSH and HTTPS/SSH in one _sshttpd_ instance but you can run two sshttpd's to reach that goal: one on `LOCAL_PORT 80` and one on `LOCAL_PORT 443`. 6. Alternative docu ------------------- As per 2017 it seems you have to provide alternative facts for everything, so here are some good writeups from other people for better understanding or in case my description was too brief: * [by stalkr](http://blog.stalkr.net/2012/02/sshhttps-multiplexing-with-sshttp.html) * [by Will Rouesnel](http://blog.wrouesnel.com/articles/Setting%20up%20sshttp/) * [by Yves](http://yalis.fr/cms/index.php/post/2014/02/22/Multiplex-SSH-and-HTTPS-on-a-single-port) stella The Atari 2600 Video Computer System (VCS), introduced in 1977, was the most popular home video game system of the early 1980's. Now you can enjoy all of your favorite Atari 2600 games on your PC thanks to Stella! sudo Sudo (su "do") allows a system administrator to delegate authority to give certain users (or groups of users) the ability to run some (or all) commands as root or another user while providing an audit trail of the commands and their arguments. tango-icon-theme This is an icon theme that follows the [Tango visual guidelines] (https://web.archive.org/web/20160202102503/http://tango.freedesktop.org/Tango_Icon_Theme_Guidelines) tcsh Tcsh is an enhanced, but completely compatible version of the Berkeley UNIX C shell (csh). It is a command language interpreter usable both as an interactive login shell and a shell script command processor. It includes a command-line editor, programmable word completion, spelling correction, a history mechanism, job control and a C-like syntax. thunar Thunar is a new modern file manager for the Xfce Desktop Environment. Thunar has been designed from the ground up to be fast and easy-to-use. Its user interface is clean and intuitive, and does not include any confusing or useless options. Thunar is fast and responsive with a good start up time and directory load time. Thunar is accessible using Assistive Technologies and is fully standards compliant. tidy-html5 Tidy reads HTML, XHTML, and XML files and writes cleaned-up markup. For HTML variants, it detects, reports, and corrects many common coding errors and strives to produce visually equivalent markup that is both conformant to the HTML specifications and that works in most browsers. A common use of Tidy is to convert plain HTML to XHTML. For generic XML files, Tidy is limited to correcting basic well-formedness errors and pretty printing. If no input file is specified, Tidy reads the standard input. If no output file is specified, Tidy writes the tidied markup to the standard output. If no error file is specified, Tidy writes messages to the standard error. For command line options that expect a numerical argument, a default is assumed if no meaningful value can be found. Tidy was written by Dave Raggett , and subsequently maintained by a team at , and now maintained by HTACG (). tint2 tint2 is a simple panel/taskbar made for modern X window managers. It was specifically made for Openbox but it should also work with other window managers (GNOME, KDE, XFCE etc.). It is based on ttm . Features -------- * Panel with taskbar, system tray, clock and launcher icons; * Easy to customize: color/transparency on fonts, icons, borders and backgrounds; * Pager like capability: move tasks between workspaces (virtual desktops), switch between workspaces; * Multi-monitor capability: create one panel per monitor, showing only the tasks from the current monitor; * Customizable mouse events. Goals ----- * Be unintrusive and light (in terms of memory, CPU and aesthetic); * Follow the freedesktop.org specifications; * Make certain workflows, such as multi-desktop and multi-monitor, easy to use. tintin++ TinTin++, aka tt++, is a free MUD client for Mac OS X, Linux, and Windows. Besides MUDs, TinTin++ also works well with MUSH, Rogue, BBS, and Linux servers. traceroute Traceroute is a network diagnostic tool for displaying the route (path) and measuring transit delays of packets across an Internet Protocol (IP) network. ttf-bwahh Bwahh Font Bwahh is public domain and futuristic display font, by Robert Jablonski on FontStruct. Support: Basic Latin, Euro, Western European. https://fontlibrary.org/en/font/bwahh ttf-dejavu The DejaVu fonts are a font family based on the [Bitstream Vera Fonts] (http://gnome.org/fonts/). Its purpose is to provide a wider range of characters (see status.txt for more information) while maintaining the original look and feel. DejaVu fonts are based on Bitstream Vera fonts version 1.10. This package contains 3 fonts: * DejaVu Sans Mono * DejaVu Sans * DejaVu Sans Bold ttf-dejavu-extra The DejaVu fonts are a font family based on the [Bitstream Vera Fonts] (http://gnome.org/fonts/). Its purpose is to provide a wider range of characters (see status.txt for more information) while maintaining the original look and feel. DejaVu fonts are based on Bitstream Vera fonts version 1.10. Available fonts: * DejaVu Sans Mono * DejaVu Sans Mono Bold * DejaVu Sans Mono Bold Oblique * DejaVu Sans Mono Oblique * DejaVu Sans * DejaVu Sans Bold * DejaVu Sans Bold Oblique * DejaVu Sans Oblique * DejaVu Sans ExtraLight (experimental) * DejaVu Serif * DejaVu Serif Bold * DejaVu Serif Bold Italic (experimental) * DejaVu Serif Italic (experimental) * DejaVu Sans Condensed (experimental) * DejaVu Sans Condensed Bold (experimental) * DejaVu Sans Condensed Bold Oblique (experimental) * DejaVu Sans Condensed Oblique (experimental) * DejaVu Serif Condensed (experimental) * DejaVu Serif Condensed Bold (experimental) * DejaVu Serif Condensed Bold Italic (experimental) * DejaVu Serif Condensed Italic (experimental) All fonts are also available as derivative called DejaVu LGC with support only for Latin, Greek and Cyrillic scripts. ttf-warenhaus-typenhebel Warenhaus Typenhebel Font This font is an imitation of an old type writer, including relevant lapped and thereby self-intersecting symbols. Support: Basic Latin, Euro, Western European https://fontlibrary.org/en/font/warenhaus-typenhebel tuffy-font Tuffy Font Tuffy is a neutral, readable sans-serif text font with public domain license. Full Language Support: Afrikaans, Baltic, Basic Cyrillic, Basic Greek, Basic Latin, Catalan, Central European, Dutch, Euro, Polytonic Greek, Romanian, Turkish, Western European. Partial Language Support: Archaic Greek Letters 85% and IPA 95%. By: Thatcher Ulrich, Karoly Barta and Michael Everson. http://tulrich.com/fonts/ turbine **Turbine** is an application to improve memory by cleaning dead and frozen processes. Turbine is built to clear memory in SliTaz OS. tzdata The Time Zone Database (often called tz or zoneinfo) contains code and data that represent the history of local time for many representative locations around the globe. It is updated periodically to reflect changes made by political bodies to time zone boundaries, UTC offsets, and daylight-saving rules. Historical local time information has been included here to: * provide a compendium of data about the history of civil time that is useful even if not 100% accurate; * give an idea of the variety of local time rules that have existed in the past and thus an idea of the variety that may be expected in the future; * provide a test of the generality of the local time rule description system. unclutter unclutter is a program which runs permanently in the background of an X11 session. It checks on the X11 pointer (cursor) position every few seconds, and when it finds it has not moved (and no buttons are pressed on the mouse, and the cursor is not in the root window) it creates a small sub-window as a child of the window the cursor is in. The new window installs a cursor of size 1x1 but a mask of all 0, ie an invisible cursor. This allows you to see all the text in an xterm or xedit, for example. The human factors crowd would agree it should make things less distracting. Once created, the program waits for the pointer to leave the window and then destroys it, restoring the original situation. Button events are passed transparently through to the parent window. They will usually cause the cursor to reappear because an active grab will be made by the program while the button is down, so the pointer will apparently leave the window, even though its x y position doesnt change. The first version of this program used a grab to remove the cursor. This method is still available with a "-grab" option to the program. unifont GNU Unifont Glyphs GNU Unifont is part of the GNU Project. This page containsthe latest release of GNU Unifont, with glyphs for every printable code point in the Unicode 8.0 Basic Multilingual Plane (BMP). The standard font build — with and without Michael Everson ConScript Unicode Registry (CSUR) Private Use Area(PUA) glyphs. http://www.unifoundry.com/unifont.html util-linux-blkid * `blkid` - locate/print block device attributes * `lsblk` - list block devices util-linux-blockdev * `blockdev` - call block device ioctls from the command line util-linux-cfdisk * `cfdisk` - display or manipulate a disk partition table util-linux-column * `column` - columnate lists util-linux-cramfs * `fsck.cramfs` - fsck compressed ROM file system * `mkfs.cramfs` - make compressed ROM file system util-linux-eject * `eject` - eject removable media util-linux-fdisk * `fdisk` - manipulate disk partition table util-linux-flock * `flock` - manage locks from shell scripts util-linux-getopt * `getopt` - parse command options (enhanced) util-linux-losetup * `losetup` - configure loop/cloop device util-linux-minix * `fsck.minix` - check consistency of Minix filesystem * `mkfs.minix` - make a Minix filesystem util-linux-mkfs * `mkfs` - build a Linux filesystem * `mkfs.bfs` - make an SCO bfs filesystem * `mkfs.cramfs` - make compressed ROM file system * `mkfs.minix` - make a Minix filesystem * `mkswap` - set up a Linux swap area util-linux-mount * `findmnt` - find a filesystem * `mount` - mount a filesystem * `mountpoint` - see if a directory or file is a mountpoint * `umount` - unmount file systems util-linux-partx * `addpart` - tell the kernel about the existence of a partition * `delpart` - tell the kernel to forget about a partition * `partx` - tell the kernel about the presence and numbering of on-disk partitions * `resizepart` - tell the kernel about the new size of a partition util-linux-setterm * `setterm` - set terminal attributes util-linux-sfdisk * `sfdisk` - display or manipulate a disk partition table util-linux-uuid * `uuidgen` - create a new UUID value * `uuidd` - UUID generation daemon util-linux-whereis * `whereis` - locate the binary, source, and manual page files for a command vbindiff VBinDiff (Visual Binary Diff) displays files in sedecimal and ASCII (or EBCDIC). It can also display two files at once, and highlight the differences between them. Unlike diff, it works well with large files (up to 4 GB). vifm Vifm is a file manager with curses interface, which provides Vi[m]-like environment for managing objects within file systems, extended with some useful ideas from mutt. vlgothic-fonts The VL Gothic font family is a Japanese TrueType font of modern Gothic type based on M+ outline font and has the following features: * M+ FONTS PROJECT using the M+1C and M+1M font due to alphanumeric, kana, and part of the kanji (JIS about 4800 characters, including a first level Kanji) * Support for switching to JIS 2004 glyph support with IVS and OpenType Feature Tag (from M+) * A portion (about 2500 characters) of the lack part Project Vine of Suzuki, Daisuke use what has been produced to the new based on the Chinese character parts and the like of the M+ * The remainder of Electronic Font Open Laboratory according to the ripples Gothic font to the base Project Vine compensation in what has been partially modified * Some characters including Latin 1 Supplement symbols added based on parts such as M+ alphabets added (VLGothic) * Add a part of a double-byte character * Changing part of character width as Japanese font (context dependent character) * Adjust height of character vnstat vnStat is a console-based network traffic monitor for Linux and BSD that keeps a log of network traffic for the selected interface(s). It uses the network interface statistics provided by the kernel as information source. This means that vnStat won't actually be sniffing any traffic and also ensures light use of system resources. Features: * quick and simple to install and get running * gathered statistics persists through system reboots * can monitor multiple interfaces at the same time * several output options * summary, hourly, daily, monthly, weekly, top 10 days * optional png image output (using libgd) * months can be configured to follow billing period * light, minimal resource usage * same low cpu usage regardless of traffic * can be used without root permissions * [online color configuration editor](http://humdi.net/vnstat/coloredit/) webian-shell Shell is built on Mozilla Chromeless, some of the latest technology from the people who make Firefox. Chromeless allows Shell itself to be written in standard web technologies like HTML, CSS & JavaScript, giving you a pure web experience. Shell is completely open source and is built on open source technologies and open standards. Webian Shell - Browser http://webian.org/shell/ weechat WeeChat is a fast, light and extensible chat client. It runs on many platforms (including Linux, BSD and Mac OS). wget Wget is a network utility to retrieve files from the web using HTTP(S) and FTP, the two most widely used internet protocols. It works non-interactively, so it will work in the background, after having logged off. The program supports recursive retrieval of web-authoring pages as well as FTP sites -- you can use Wget to make mirrors of archives and home pages or to travel the web like a WWW robot. Wget works particularly well with slow or unstable connections by continuing to retrieve a document until the document is fully downloaded. Re-getting files from where it left off works on servers (both HTTP and FTP) that support it. Both HTTP and FTP retrievals can be time stamped, so Wget can see if the remote file has changed since the last retrieval and automatically retrieve the new version if it has. Wget supports proxy servers; this can lighten the network load, speed up retrieval, and provide access behind firewalls. wireless-regdb This package contains the wireless regulatory database used by all cfg80211 based Linux wireless drivers. The wireless database being used is maintained by John Linville, the Linux wireless kernel maintainer http://wireless.kernel.org/en/developers/Regulatory/ wv wv is a library which allows access to Microsoft Word files. It can load and parse Word 2000, 97, 95 and 6 file formats (these are the file formats known internally as Word 9, 8, 7 and 6). wxWidgets wxWidgets is a free and open source cross-platform C++ framework for writing advanced GUI applications using native controls. wxWidgets allows you to write native-looking GUI applications for all the major desktop platforms and also helps with abstracting the differences in the non-GUI aspects between them. It is free for the use in both open source and commercial applications, comes with the full, easy to read and modify, source and extensive documentation and a collection of more than a hundred examples. You can learn more about wxWidgets at and read its documentation online at Further information ------------------- If you are looking for support, you can get it from - [wxForum](http://forums.wxwidgets.org/) - [wx-users mailing list](http://www.wxwidgets.org/support/maillst2.htm) - #wxwidgets IRC channel - if you tag your question with "wxwidgets" Have fun! The wxWidgets Team, October 2014 x11vnc x11vnc allows to view remotely and interact with real X displays (i.e. a display corresponding to a physical monitor, keyboard, and mouse) with any VNC viewer. In this way it plays the role for Unix/X11 that WinVNC plays for Windows. It has built-in SSL/TLS encryption and 2048 bit RSA authentication, including VeNCrypt support; UNIX account and password login support; server-side scaling; single port HTTPS/HTTP+VNC; Zeroconf service advertising; and TightVNC and UltraVNC file-transfer. It has also been extended to work with non-X devices: natively on Mac OS X Aqua/Quartz, webcams and TV tuner capture devices, and embedded Linux systems such as Qtopia Core. Full IPv6 support is provided. It also provides an encrypted Terminal Services mode (-create, -svc, or -xdmsvc options) based on Unix usernames and Unix passwords where the user does not need to memorize his VNC display/port number. Normally a virtual X session (Xvfb) is created for each user, but it also works with X sessions on physical hardware. See the tsvnc terminal services mode of the SSVNC viewer for one way to take advantage of this mode. xapian Xapian is an Open Source Search Engine Library, released under the GPL v2+. It's written in C++, with bindings to allow use from Perl, Python 2, Python 3, PHP 5, PHP 7, Java, Tcl, C#, Ruby, Lua, Erlang, Node.js and R (so far!) Xapian is a highly adaptable toolkit which allows developers to easily add advanced indexing and search facilities to their own applications. It has built-in support for several families of weighting models and also supports a rich set of boolean query operators. xarchiver Xarchiver is a GTK+2 only frontend to 7z, zip, rar, tar, bzip2, gzip, arj, lha, rpm and deb (open and extract only). Xarchiver allows you to create,add, extract and delete files in the above formats. 7z, zip, rar, arj password protected archives are supported. xbill Ever get the feeling that nothing is going right? You're a sysadmin, and someone's trying to destroy your computers. The little people running around the screen are trying to infect your computers with Wingdows [TM], a virus cleverly designed to resemble a popular operating system. Additionally, some computers are connected with network cables. When one computer on a network becomes infected, a spark will be sent down the cable, and will infect the computer on the other end when it reaches there. That's the basic idea of the game. Pretty simple, but fun for a while, and definitely something to appreciate. xcb-proto The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint, latency hiding, direct access to the protocol, improved threading support, and extensibility. xcircuit XCircuit is a UNIX/X11 program for drawing publishable-quality electrical circuit schematic diagrams and related figures, and produce circuit netlists through schematic capture. xcursor-comix The original Comix Cursors. X11 mouse theme with a comics feeling. The package comes with 12 different mouse themes for X11. 6 colors (black, blue, green, orange, red and white) 2 different weights (slim and normal) From version 0.8 on the cursors are 'multisize', meaning that you don't need to install one theme for each size, but only one theme, and chose the size in the cursor theme selection dialog. The full installation also includes left-handed themes, you can choose whatever you prefer from the downloads below. The cursors are named according to the freedesktop.org cursor naming convention, compatibility and hash cursor names are linked. In addition to the original cursor pack left-handed and opaque versions are still available here. ComixCursors come in sizes 32, 40, 48 and 64. xlockmore xlockmore is an enhanced version of xlock. It incorporates several new command- line options, which allow you to run it in a window, in the root window, in a different size/location, change the size of the iconified window, to install a new colormap and delay locking for use with xautolock. xmlstarlet XMLStarlet is a set of command line utilities (tools) to transform, query, validate, and edit XML documents and files using simple set of shell commands in similar way it is done for text files with UNIX grep, sed, awk, diff, patch, join, etc utilities. xmlto xmlto ----- Utility `xmlto` is a simple shell script for converting XML files to various formats. It serves as easy to use command line frontend to make fine output without remembering many long options and searching for the syntax of the backends. At the moment it supports conversion from docbook, xhtml1 and fo format to various output formats (awt, fo, htmlhelp, javahelp, mif, pdf, svg, xhtml, dvi, html, html-nochunks, man , pcl, ps, txt, xhtml-nochunks). Some output formats may be unavailable if you use don't have all prerequisities installed, as xmlto uses backends (xsltproc, passivetex/fop/dblatex) for processing. You could check the documentation online at (or generate the offline version with xmlto from doc/xmlto.xml sources). If you received xmlto as a part of distribution, you should already have xmlto(1) manpage on your machine. xmlif ----- `xmlif` utility filters XML according to conditionalizing markup. This can be useful for formatting one of several versions of a XML document depending on conditions passed to the command. You could check the documentation online at (or generate the offline version with xmlto from doc/xmlif.xml sources). If you received xmlif as a part of distribution, you should already have xmlif(1) manpage on your machine. How to contact authors ---------------------- Since xmlto 0.19, xmlto is maintained by Ondřej Vašík . You can contact me directly via email or leave a ticket on project's trac instance at . Registered fedoraproject.org account is required for this. xpenguins_themes Additional themes for XPenguins: The Simpsons, Sonic the Hedgehog, Lemmings, Winnie the Pooh, and Worms. xterm xterm is a terminal emulator for the X Window System. It provides DEC VT102 and Tektronix 4014 compatible terminals for programs that cannot use the window system directly. This version implements ISO/ANSI colors and most of the control sequences used by DEC VT220 terminals. This package provides commands: xterm, which is the traditional terminal emulator; uxterm, which is a wrapper around xterm that is intelligent about locale settings (especially those which use the UTF-8 character encoding). xwax xwax is an open-source Digital Vinyl System (DVS) for Linux. It allows DJs and turntablists to playback digital audio files (MP3, Ogg Vorbis, FLAC, AAC and more), controlled using a normal pair of turntables via timecoded vinyls. It's designed for both beat mixing and scratch mixing. Needle drops, pitch changes, scratching, spinbacks and rewinds are all supported, and feel just like the audio is pressed onto the vinyl itself. The focus is on an accurate vinyl feel which is efficient, stable and fast. yad-gtk2 Yad (yet another dialog) is a fork of Zenity with many improvements, such as custom buttons, additional dialogs, pop-up menu in notification icon and more. yad-gtk3 Yad (yet another dialog) is a fork of Zenity with many improvements, such as custom buttons, additional dialogs, pop-up menu in notification icon and more. zile Zile is short for Zile Is Lossy Emacs. Zile has been written to be as similar as possible to Emacs; every Emacs user should feel at home. zim Zim is a graphical text editor used to maintain a collection of wiki pages. Each page can contain links to other pages, simple formatting and images. Pages are stored in a folder structure, like in an outliner, and can have attachments. Creating a new page is as easy as linking to a nonexistent page. All data is stored in plain text files with wiki formatting. Various plugins provide additional functionality, like a task list manager, an equation editor, a tray icon, and support for version control. zlib zlib is a library implementing the deflate compression method found in gzip and PKZIP. This package includes the shared library. zsh Zsh is a shell designed for interactive use, although it is also a powerful scripting language. Many of the useful features of bash, ksh, and tcsh were incorporated into zsh; many original features were added.