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rsync 2.6.9
rsync is a file transfer program to keep remote files in sync. more>>
rsync is a replacement for rcp (and scp) that has many more features. It uses the "rsync algorithm" which provides a very fast method for remote files into sync.
rsync project does this by sending just the differences in the files across the link, without requiring that both sets of files are present at one of the ends of the link beforehand.
<<lessrsync project does this by sending just the differences in the files across the link, without requiring that both sets of files are present at one of the ends of the link beforehand.
Download (0.56MB)
Added: 2006-11-07 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1087 downloads
PyPanel 2.2
PyPanel is a panel/taskbar for X11 window managers. more>>
PyPanel is a lightweight panel/taskbar written in Python and C for X11 window managers. It can be easily customized to match any desktop theme or taste.
PyPanel works with WindowMaker and EWMH compliant WMs (Kahakai, Openbox, PekWM, FVWM, etc). PyPanel is distributed under the GNU General Public License v2.
Main features:
- Transparency with shading/tinting
- Panel dimensions, location and layout
- Font type and colors with Xft support
- Button events/actions
- Clock and workspace name display
- System Tray (Notification Area)
- Autohiding
<<lessPyPanel works with WindowMaker and EWMH compliant WMs (Kahakai, Openbox, PekWM, FVWM, etc). PyPanel is distributed under the GNU General Public License v2.
Main features:
- Transparency with shading/tinting
- Panel dimensions, location and layout
- Font type and colors with Xft support
- Button events/actions
- Clock and workspace name display
- System Tray (Notification Area)
- Autohiding
Download (0.027MB)
Added: 2005-04-28 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1640 downloads
Feather Linux 0.7.5
Feather Linux is a Linux distribution which runs completely off a CD or a USB pendrive and takes up under 115Mb of space. more>>
Feather Linux is a Linux distribution which runs completely off a CD or a USB pendrive and takes up under 115Mb of space.
Feather Linux is a Knoppix remaster (based on Debian), and tries to include software which most people would use every day on their desktop.
As of version 0.7.3, it includes:
Kernel 2.4.27, Abiword, siag, Dillo, Firefox, Captive-NTFS, gaim, ethereal, Thunderbird, XMMS and plugins, Imposter, IceWM, wavplay, mpg321, FreeNX, John the Ripper, Tcl, qemu, kismet, abcde, macchanger, screen, paketto, ogg123 and other Ogg Vorbis tools, axyFTP, fireftp, rox-filer, cdrecord, mkisofs, rdesktop, tcpdump, parted, partimage, dsniff, aircrack, madwifi, dnsmasq, foremost, antiword, e2undel, iftop, bbpager, utelnetd, minicom, index, gpart, socat, traceroute, SciTE, prozilla, Midnight Commander, Samba, elmo, tmsnc, apsfilter, gmplayer, mount.app, chntpw, zile, tinycc, nano, Xpaint, Xzgv, Xpdf, naim, hdparm, usbview, index, recoverdm, mtr, cdparanoia, betaftpd, Chipmunk Basic, gqcam, e3, lua, Ruby, cdparanoia, giFTcurs, mtools, emelfm2, vncdec, elhttp, quagga, ettercap, wavemon, iptables, recover, amap, hping2, cabextract, splitvt, pciutils, LinNeighborhood, nmap and nmapfe, portmap and nfs-common, aumix, CTorrent, VNCviewer, sqlite, SSH and SCP, DHCP client, xtdesktop, PPP and PPPoE support, NTFS resize support, an RSS reader, stress, cpuburn, the Monkey webserver, Xcalc, Fluxbox, evilwm, the XBase apps, and the various standard console and system tools.
Enhancements:
- Fixed HD install script
- Updated Gaim and Firefox
<<lessFeather Linux is a Knoppix remaster (based on Debian), and tries to include software which most people would use every day on their desktop.
As of version 0.7.3, it includes:
Kernel 2.4.27, Abiword, siag, Dillo, Firefox, Captive-NTFS, gaim, ethereal, Thunderbird, XMMS and plugins, Imposter, IceWM, wavplay, mpg321, FreeNX, John the Ripper, Tcl, qemu, kismet, abcde, macchanger, screen, paketto, ogg123 and other Ogg Vorbis tools, axyFTP, fireftp, rox-filer, cdrecord, mkisofs, rdesktop, tcpdump, parted, partimage, dsniff, aircrack, madwifi, dnsmasq, foremost, antiword, e2undel, iftop, bbpager, utelnetd, minicom, index, gpart, socat, traceroute, SciTE, prozilla, Midnight Commander, Samba, elmo, tmsnc, apsfilter, gmplayer, mount.app, chntpw, zile, tinycc, nano, Xpaint, Xzgv, Xpdf, naim, hdparm, usbview, index, recoverdm, mtr, cdparanoia, betaftpd, Chipmunk Basic, gqcam, e3, lua, Ruby, cdparanoia, giFTcurs, mtools, emelfm2, vncdec, elhttp, quagga, ettercap, wavemon, iptables, recover, amap, hping2, cabextract, splitvt, pciutils, LinNeighborhood, nmap and nmapfe, portmap and nfs-common, aumix, CTorrent, VNCviewer, sqlite, SSH and SCP, DHCP client, xtdesktop, PPP and PPPoE support, NTFS resize support, an RSS reader, stress, cpuburn, the Monkey webserver, Xcalc, Fluxbox, evilwm, the XBase apps, and the various standard console and system tools.
Enhancements:
- Fixed HD install script
- Updated Gaim and Firefox
Download (119.4MB)
Added: 2005-07-04 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
937 downloads
KDirStat 2.5.2
KDirStat is a graphical disk usage utility, very much like the Unix more>>
KDirStat is a graphical disk usage utility, very much like the Unix "du" command.
KDirStat project displays a directory tree both in classical tree format (like Konqueror, but with accumulated tree sizes, shown as MB / GB and as percentage bars) and in "treemap" format like SequoiaView.
In addition to that, KDirStat provides cleanup facilities to reclaim disk space - both predefined and customizable.
Main features:
Display Features
- Graphical and numeric display of used disk space
- Files kept apart from directories in separate items to prevent cluttering the display
- All numbers displayed human readable - e.g., 34.4 MB instead of 36116381 Bytes
- Different colors in the directory tree display to keep the different tree levels visually apart
- Display of latest change time within an entire directory tree - you can easily see what object was changed last and when.
Treemap Display
- Treemap as alternate (auxiliary) view of a directory tree
- Easily find large in a directory tree: You see the entire tree at once. Large rectangles are large files - you can see them even if they are hidden somewhere deep within the tree.
- Treemap view slaved to the tree (list) view: Click on a file in the treemap, and it is selected in the tree view - and vice versa.
- Treemap tiles are colored by file type - all images in cyan, all audio tracks (MP3 etc.) in yellow, executables in magenta etc.; you can see from the color what a treemap rectangle is.
- Many treemap variants available:
- Plain treemap
- Squarified treemap (no thin elongated rectangles)
- Cushion treemap
- Colored treemap
- All combinations of the above
- Fast implementation: Treemap built in fractions of a second (on quite ordinary machines: Athlon-550 class)
- Treemap subwindow can be resized as the user prefers
- Treemap can be switched off with a single keypress (F9)
- Context menu with cleanup actions etc.
- Zoom the treemap in/out treemap with double click (left/right)
- Many treemap configuration options
Directory Reading
- Stays on one file system by default - reads mounted file systems only on request.
- You dont care about a mounted /usr file system if the root file system is full and you need to find out why in a hurry, nor do you want to scan everybodys home directory on the NFS server when your local disk is full.
- Network transparency: Scan FTP or Samba directories - or whatever else protocols KDE support.
- PacMan animation while directories are being read. OK, this is not exactly essential, but its fun.
Cleaning up
- Predefined cleanup actions: Easily delete a file or a directory tree, move it to the KDE trash bin, compress it to a .tar.bz2 archive or simply open a shell or a Konqueror window there.
- User-defined cleanup actions: Add your own cleanup commands or edit the existing ones.
- "Send mail to owner" report facility: Send a mail requesting the owner of a large directory tree to please clean up unused files.
Misc
- Feedback mail facility: Rate the program and tell the authors your opinion about it.
Whats New in 2.4.4 Release:
- Sparse files and hard links are now properly supported.
Whats New in 2.5.2 Release:
- Can now read and write directory contents from cache files generated by (supplied) Perl script, e.g. in cron job over night
<<lessKDirStat project displays a directory tree both in classical tree format (like Konqueror, but with accumulated tree sizes, shown as MB / GB and as percentage bars) and in "treemap" format like SequoiaView.
In addition to that, KDirStat provides cleanup facilities to reclaim disk space - both predefined and customizable.
Main features:
Display Features
- Graphical and numeric display of used disk space
- Files kept apart from directories in separate items to prevent cluttering the display
- All numbers displayed human readable - e.g., 34.4 MB instead of 36116381 Bytes
- Different colors in the directory tree display to keep the different tree levels visually apart
- Display of latest change time within an entire directory tree - you can easily see what object was changed last and when.
Treemap Display
- Treemap as alternate (auxiliary) view of a directory tree
- Easily find large in a directory tree: You see the entire tree at once. Large rectangles are large files - you can see them even if they are hidden somewhere deep within the tree.
- Treemap view slaved to the tree (list) view: Click on a file in the treemap, and it is selected in the tree view - and vice versa.
- Treemap tiles are colored by file type - all images in cyan, all audio tracks (MP3 etc.) in yellow, executables in magenta etc.; you can see from the color what a treemap rectangle is.
- Many treemap variants available:
- Plain treemap
- Squarified treemap (no thin elongated rectangles)
- Cushion treemap
- Colored treemap
- All combinations of the above
- Fast implementation: Treemap built in fractions of a second (on quite ordinary machines: Athlon-550 class)
- Treemap subwindow can be resized as the user prefers
- Treemap can be switched off with a single keypress (F9)
- Context menu with cleanup actions etc.
- Zoom the treemap in/out treemap with double click (left/right)
- Many treemap configuration options
Directory Reading
- Stays on one file system by default - reads mounted file systems only on request.
- You dont care about a mounted /usr file system if the root file system is full and you need to find out why in a hurry, nor do you want to scan everybodys home directory on the NFS server when your local disk is full.
- Network transparency: Scan FTP or Samba directories - or whatever else protocols KDE support.
- PacMan animation while directories are being read. OK, this is not exactly essential, but its fun.
Cleaning up
- Predefined cleanup actions: Easily delete a file or a directory tree, move it to the KDE trash bin, compress it to a .tar.bz2 archive or simply open a shell or a Konqueror window there.
- User-defined cleanup actions: Add your own cleanup commands or edit the existing ones.
- "Send mail to owner" report facility: Send a mail requesting the owner of a large directory tree to please clean up unused files.
Misc
- Feedback mail facility: Rate the program and tell the authors your opinion about it.
Whats New in 2.4.4 Release:
- Sparse files and hard links are now properly supported.
Whats New in 2.5.2 Release:
- Can now read and write directory contents from cache files generated by (supplied) Perl script, e.g. in cron job over night
Download (0.30MB)
Added: 2006-01-09 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1392 downloads
Mbedthis AppWeb 2.2.2
Mbedthis AppWeb is the leading web server technology for embedding in devices and applications. more>>
Mbedthis AppWeb is the leading web server technology for embedding in devices and applications. It is an open source, feature rich, embedded web server that has been designed from the ground up with security in mind.
It is integrated directly into embedded systems and applications for simple and convenient deployment and with features such as server side Embedded JavaScript and Embedded Server Pages, AppWeb is in a league of its own when compared with other embedded web servers.
AppWeb is also highly efficient. It has a modular architecture that results in a very small memory footprint and minimal CPU requirements. Compared to other web servers, AppWeb consumes a fraction of the resources that other servers require.
It also offers superior security and provides the easiest way to create dynamic, web based user and management interfaces.
Top Uses for AppWeb
- Embedded Device Management
- Personal Web Servers
- Web enabling Enterprise Applications
- Create a CD of your web site including a local web server
- Diagnostic web based user interfaces for Applications
- Create offline web applications
Enhancements:
- This release migrates the development release to a stable designation.
- Major features over the previous 2.0.5 stable release include: upgraded support for the latest PHP, MatrixSSL, and OpenSSL; a native Debian/Ubuntu package; and FSH conformance.
- Builds have been optimized to be twice as fast. 64-bit support has been improved. configure is more flexible.
- There are fixes for ranged requests, single threaded operation, and putHandler.
- The build system has been reworked.
<<lessIt is integrated directly into embedded systems and applications for simple and convenient deployment and with features such as server side Embedded JavaScript and Embedded Server Pages, AppWeb is in a league of its own when compared with other embedded web servers.
AppWeb is also highly efficient. It has a modular architecture that results in a very small memory footprint and minimal CPU requirements. Compared to other web servers, AppWeb consumes a fraction of the resources that other servers require.
It also offers superior security and provides the easiest way to create dynamic, web based user and management interfaces.
Top Uses for AppWeb
- Embedded Device Management
- Personal Web Servers
- Web enabling Enterprise Applications
- Create a CD of your web site including a local web server
- Diagnostic web based user interfaces for Applications
- Create offline web applications
Enhancements:
- This release migrates the development release to a stable designation.
- Major features over the previous 2.0.5 stable release include: upgraded support for the latest PHP, MatrixSSL, and OpenSSL; a native Debian/Ubuntu package; and FSH conformance.
- Builds have been optimized to be twice as fast. 64-bit support has been improved. configure is more flexible.
- There are fixes for ranged requests, single threaded operation, and putHandler.
- The build system has been reworked.
Download (4.8MB)
Added: 2007-05-25 License: Other/Proprietary License with Source Price:
889 downloads
WordPress 2.2.2
WordPress is a state-of-the-art semantic personal publishing platform with a focus on aesthetics, web standards, and usability. more>> <<less
Download (0.64MB)
Added: 2007-08-07 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1179 downloads
Smartmenu 0.2.2
Smartmenu is a menuing application for Lirc. more>>
Smartmenu is a menuing application for Lirc. Its purpose is to make use of an infra-red remote controller with a Linux box as easy and smart as possible.
It handles displaying and browsing menus in a way that is usable for typical user of a remote controller.
Such a user must be able to use the menus when he is a few meters away from the monitor or even with monitor turned off.
Enhancements:
- This release provided better control of lirc key repeating.
<<lessIt handles displaying and browsing menus in a way that is usable for typical user of a remote controller.
Such a user must be able to use the menus when he is a few meters away from the monitor or even with monitor turned off.
Enhancements:
- This release provided better control of lirc key repeating.
Download (0.036MB)
Added: 2005-11-10 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
808 downloads
rssh 2.3.0
rssh is a small shell that provides the ability for system administrators to give specific users access to a given system. more>>
rssh is a restricted shell for use with OpenSSH, allowing only scp and/or sftp. rssh project now also includes support for rdist, rsync, and cvs.
For example, if you have a server which you only want to allow users to copy files off of via scp, without providing shell access, you can use rssh to do that.
hough rssh is written to work with OpenSSH, it will probably work with other implementations of SSH. Also, rssh is written and tested on Linux systems, but should compile cleanly and work on any POSIX.2-compliant system. It is verified to work on the following platforms:
A wide variety of Linux distributions, on IA32 and IA64 hardware
Compaq Tru64 Unix
Solaris 2.x - 8 (under certain conditions -- see the security link)
AIX 5.1
HP/UX 11.00 (PA-RISC)
HP/UX 11.22 (IA64)
Irix 6.5
Currently, it does not work on (at least most of) the *BSDs, nor on OS X. They lack the wordexp() function, which rssh uses for command line argument expansion. Until they have such a function (which is defined by POSIX.2), or until I get bored enough to write a replacement, rssh will not work with the BSDs out of the box.
Update, 7 Jun 2003: Jacques A. Vidrine reports that FreeBSD 5.0 now has the wordexp() function, and rssh compiles cleanly on it, though he has not tested it. I still do not have any confirmation that it will work on FreeBSD 5, but it seems like a safe bet. I have received reports that other operating environments are also adding support for wordexp(), and rssh should work on all of those platforms, too.
If youre on a BSD system without the wordexp() function, you could work around this by obtaining a copy of the wordexp() functions code from, say, glibc2, and creating your own wordexp.h header. Compile wordexp.c manually, and link it against the other .o files. I have no intention of doing any work to facilitate that, though, so youre on your own.
If you have success using rssh with some other implementation of SSH, or using it on other platforms, feel free to send e-mail to the rssh mailing list to let me know. If you have problems compiling or installing rssh on your favorite platform, please send me the complete configure output, and any compilation errors generated.
Enhancements:
- This release fixes a design flaw in rssh_chroot_helper that allowed local users with full shell access to gain root privileges.
<<lessFor example, if you have a server which you only want to allow users to copy files off of via scp, without providing shell access, you can use rssh to do that.
hough rssh is written to work with OpenSSH, it will probably work with other implementations of SSH. Also, rssh is written and tested on Linux systems, but should compile cleanly and work on any POSIX.2-compliant system. It is verified to work on the following platforms:
A wide variety of Linux distributions, on IA32 and IA64 hardware
Compaq Tru64 Unix
Solaris 2.x - 8 (under certain conditions -- see the security link)
AIX 5.1
HP/UX 11.00 (PA-RISC)
HP/UX 11.22 (IA64)
Irix 6.5
Currently, it does not work on (at least most of) the *BSDs, nor on OS X. They lack the wordexp() function, which rssh uses for command line argument expansion. Until they have such a function (which is defined by POSIX.2), or until I get bored enough to write a replacement, rssh will not work with the BSDs out of the box.
Update, 7 Jun 2003: Jacques A. Vidrine reports that FreeBSD 5.0 now has the wordexp() function, and rssh compiles cleanly on it, though he has not tested it. I still do not have any confirmation that it will work on FreeBSD 5, but it seems like a safe bet. I have received reports that other operating environments are also adding support for wordexp(), and rssh should work on all of those platforms, too.
If youre on a BSD system without the wordexp() function, you could work around this by obtaining a copy of the wordexp() functions code from, say, glibc2, and creating your own wordexp.h header. Compile wordexp.c manually, and link it against the other .o files. I have no intention of doing any work to facilitate that, though, so youre on your own.
If you have success using rssh with some other implementation of SSH, or using it on other platforms, feel free to send e-mail to the rssh mailing list to let me know. If you have problems compiling or installing rssh on your favorite platform, please send me the complete configure output, and any compilation errors generated.
Enhancements:
- This release fixes a design flaw in rssh_chroot_helper that allowed local users with full shell access to gain root privileges.
Download (0.052MB)
Added: 2005-12-20 License: BSD License Price:
1403 downloads
Download (12.4MB)
Added: 2007-08-13 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
813 downloads
File::Remote 1.17
File::Remote is a Perl module to read/write/edit remote files transparently. more>>
File::Remote is a Perl module to read/write/edit remote files transparently.
SYNOPSIS
#
# Two ways to use File::Remote
#
# First, the function-based style. Here, we can use the
# special :replace tag to overload Perl builtins!
#
use File::Remote qw(:replace); # special :replace tag
# read from a remote file
open(REMOTE, "host:/remote/file") or die $!;
print while (< REMOTE >);
close(REMOTE);
# writing a local file still works!
open(LOCAL, ">>/local/file");
print LOCAL "This is a new line.n";
close(LOCAL);
mkdir("host:/remote/dir", 0755);
unlink("host:/remote/file");
unlink("/local/file"); # still works too!
symlink("host:/remote/src", "host:/remote/dest");
chown("root", "other", "host:/remote/dir/file");
chmod(0600, "host:/remote/dir/file");
#
# Next, the object-oriented style, if you dont want to
# mess with the builtins.
#
use File::Remote;
my $remote = new File::Remote;
# Standard filehandles
$remote->open(FILE, ">>host:/remote/file") or die $!;
print FILE "Heres a line thats added.n";
$remote->close(FILE);
# Create a new file and change its permissions
$remote->mkdir("host:/remote/dir");
$remote->touch("host:/remote/dir/file");
# Move files around
$remote->copy("/local/file", "host:/remote/file") or warn $!;
$remote->move("host:/remote/file", "/local/file");
# Read and write whole files
my @file = $remote->readfile("host:/remote/file");
$remote->writefile("/local/file", @file);
# Backup a file with a suffix
$remote->backup("host:/remote/oldfile", "save");
# Use secure connection methods
my $secure = new File::Remote (rsh => "/usr/local/bin/ssh",
rcp => "/usr/local/bin/scp");
$secure->unlink("/local/file");
$secure->rmdir("host:/remote/dir");
This module takes care of dealing with files regardless of whether theyre local or remote. It allows you to create and edit files without having to worry about their physical location on the network. If a file passed into a function is of the form host:/path/to/file, then File::Remote uses rsh/rcp (or ssh/scp, depending on how you configure it) to edit the file remotely. Otherwise, it assumes the file is local and passes calls directly through to Perls core functions.
The nice thing about this module is that you can use it for all your file calls, since it handles both remote and local files transparently. This means you dont have to put a whole bunch of checks for remote files in your code. Plus, if you use the function-oriented interface along with the :replace tag, you can actually redefine the Perl builtin file functions. This means that your existing Perl scripts can automatically handle remote files with no re-engineering(!).
<<lessSYNOPSIS
#
# Two ways to use File::Remote
#
# First, the function-based style. Here, we can use the
# special :replace tag to overload Perl builtins!
#
use File::Remote qw(:replace); # special :replace tag
# read from a remote file
open(REMOTE, "host:/remote/file") or die $!;
print while (< REMOTE >);
close(REMOTE);
# writing a local file still works!
open(LOCAL, ">>/local/file");
print LOCAL "This is a new line.n";
close(LOCAL);
mkdir("host:/remote/dir", 0755);
unlink("host:/remote/file");
unlink("/local/file"); # still works too!
symlink("host:/remote/src", "host:/remote/dest");
chown("root", "other", "host:/remote/dir/file");
chmod(0600, "host:/remote/dir/file");
#
# Next, the object-oriented style, if you dont want to
# mess with the builtins.
#
use File::Remote;
my $remote = new File::Remote;
# Standard filehandles
$remote->open(FILE, ">>host:/remote/file") or die $!;
print FILE "Heres a line thats added.n";
$remote->close(FILE);
# Create a new file and change its permissions
$remote->mkdir("host:/remote/dir");
$remote->touch("host:/remote/dir/file");
# Move files around
$remote->copy("/local/file", "host:/remote/file") or warn $!;
$remote->move("host:/remote/file", "/local/file");
# Read and write whole files
my @file = $remote->readfile("host:/remote/file");
$remote->writefile("/local/file", @file);
# Backup a file with a suffix
$remote->backup("host:/remote/oldfile", "save");
# Use secure connection methods
my $secure = new File::Remote (rsh => "/usr/local/bin/ssh",
rcp => "/usr/local/bin/scp");
$secure->unlink("/local/file");
$secure->rmdir("host:/remote/dir");
This module takes care of dealing with files regardless of whether theyre local or remote. It allows you to create and edit files without having to worry about their physical location on the network. If a file passed into a function is of the form host:/path/to/file, then File::Remote uses rsh/rcp (or ssh/scp, depending on how you configure it) to edit the file remotely. Otherwise, it assumes the file is local and passes calls directly through to Perls core functions.
The nice thing about this module is that you can use it for all your file calls, since it handles both remote and local files transparently. This means you dont have to put a whole bunch of checks for remote files in your code. Plus, if you use the function-oriented interface along with the :replace tag, you can actually redefine the Perl builtin file functions. This means that your existing Perl scripts can automatically handle remote files with no re-engineering(!).
Download (0.015MB)
Added: 2007-04-27 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
911 downloads
eBayize 1.0
eBayize is a program that resizes and beautifies pictures for use in an eBay offer. more>>
eBayize is a program that resize and beautifies pictures for use in an eBay offer. eBayize shows you a preview of the pictures, and allows you to select from them, edit them in the GIMP, and add a description to each.
It will them resize all selected images, put a nice drop-shadow border around them, and generate an HTML file which displays them as a gallery. Finally, eBayize uploads the generated files via SCP or FTP.
<<lessIt will them resize all selected images, put a nice drop-shadow border around them, and generate an HTML file which displays them as a gallery. Finally, eBayize uploads the generated files via SCP or FTP.
Download (0.007MB)
Added: 2006-08-23 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1158 downloads
ISPConfig 2.2.15 / 2.3.2
ISPConfig is an ISP management and hosting control panel. more>>
ISPConfig is an open source hosting controlpanel for Linux. ISPConfig is licensed under BSD license.
Main features:
Interface Languages
- English
- German
- Spanish
- Dutch
- Italian
- Polish
- If you are interested in translating the interface, please contact us at dev [at] ispconfig [dot] org.
Daemons and Software
- Apache 1.3.x/2.0.x
- Proftpd & vsftpd
- Supports The Following Mail Servers: Sendmail & Postfix
- All POP3 & POP3s Servers
- All IMAP & IMAPs Servers
- BIND 8/9
- Firewall Configuration
- Monitoring Of Services And Automatic Restart
- Web FTP
- Web Mail Interface
- phpMyAdmin Integration
Domain options and services
- PHP incl. Safemode
- SSI
- CGI-Directories
- SSL Sites and Certificates
- Frontpage 2002 extensions (if installed on the server)
- MySQL Databases
- Disk Quota
- Webalizer statisics
- Traffic statistics
- Disk usage statistics and overquota warnings
- Individual standard index and error pages per domain
- Individual records for inclusion in apache vhost (admin only)
- Domain redirects
- Backup
- Log-Quota and Logrotation
- Standard CGI
- WAP pages
- Hosting templates
Email and user accounts
- System, FTP and Mail users
- Autoresponder
- Mailquota
- Mailscanner
- Mailfilter
- CatchAll Emal addresses
- Shell-User
- Automatic User prefix
- ClamAV antivirus filter
- SpamAssassin Spamfilter Settings
General
- Creation of folders / categories where resellers / clients / sites can be stored in.
- 4 different logins (Administrator, Resellers, Clients, Email-Users)
- Update manager
- Recycle bin to restore deleted clients / users / domains
- Language settings per user
- Secondary DNS
- Automatic network configuration for new IP Addresses (optional)
- Welcome mails for resellers / clients
- Several reseller limits
- Reseller Quota
<<lessMain features:
Interface Languages
- English
- German
- Spanish
- Dutch
- Italian
- Polish
- If you are interested in translating the interface, please contact us at dev [at] ispconfig [dot] org.
Daemons and Software
- Apache 1.3.x/2.0.x
- Proftpd & vsftpd
- Supports The Following Mail Servers: Sendmail & Postfix
- All POP3 & POP3s Servers
- All IMAP & IMAPs Servers
- BIND 8/9
- Firewall Configuration
- Monitoring Of Services And Automatic Restart
- Web FTP
- Web Mail Interface
- phpMyAdmin Integration
Domain options and services
- PHP incl. Safemode
- SSI
- CGI-Directories
- SSL Sites and Certificates
- Frontpage 2002 extensions (if installed on the server)
- MySQL Databases
- Disk Quota
- Webalizer statisics
- Traffic statistics
- Disk usage statistics and overquota warnings
- Individual standard index and error pages per domain
- Individual records for inclusion in apache vhost (admin only)
- Domain redirects
- Backup
- Log-Quota and Logrotation
- Standard CGI
- WAP pages
- Hosting templates
Email and user accounts
- System, FTP and Mail users
- Autoresponder
- Mailquota
- Mailscanner
- Mailfilter
- CatchAll Emal addresses
- Shell-User
- Automatic User prefix
- ClamAV antivirus filter
- SpamAssassin Spamfilter Settings
General
- Creation of folders / categories where resellers / clients / sites can be stored in.
- 4 different logins (Administrator, Resellers, Clients, Email-Users)
- Update manager
- Recycle bin to restore deleted clients / users / domains
- Language settings per user
- Secondary DNS
- Automatic network configuration for new IP Addresses (optional)
- Welcome mails for resellers / clients
- Several reseller limits
- Reseller Quota
Download (20MB)
Added: 2007-07-23 License: BSD License Price:
842 downloads
Closebracket 0.0.4
Closebracket let you define multiple shell actions in a single command. more>>
Closebracket let you define multiple shell actions in a single command to speed up the typing of the most repetitive shell commands. The command name of Closebracket is `] and `][, thats because these characters are near the "Enter" key and it is easy to type them fast.
`] stands for "primary fire", while `][ is the secondary one.
After few days youll find Closebracket very additive.
Closebracket is dedicated to the God of Laziness, may He bless you (when He feels to do it).
Installation:
Download the latest tarball from http://www.freaknet.org/alpt/src/utils/closebracket/tarball/
Use the ./install.sh script to install it. It will copy the files in ~/.closebracket and add some aliases in ~/.bashrc
Usage:
Since too many words are needed to describe all the actions that are included
by default, Ill show you them by examples.
Keep in mind that you can tune them and define your own actions by editing the
~/.closebracket/closebracket.conf file.
In the first line closebracket is used to activate an action. The second line is the equivalent of that action.
##
### Basic shell movements
##
$ ]
$ ls # ls current directory
$ ][
$ cd # cd to home
$ ] dir/
$ cd dir/
$ ][ dir/
$ ls dir/
$ ][ file
$ cat file
$ ][ non_existent_file
$ vim non_existent_file
##
### Remote shells
##
$ ] shell # With closebracket you keep the list of the
$ ssh shell.expanded.org # name of your remote shells in
# ~/.closebracket/shells. In this case we put
# "shell.expanded.org" in the list.
# Closebracket searches the closest match with
# the word you typed and then use that as the
# remote shell hostname.
$ ] shell:file
$ vim scp://shell.expanded.org/file # Beware of the Vim power
$ ] user@shell:/path/file
$ ] scp://user@shell.expanded.org/path/file
$ ][ shell:dir/
$ scp -r shell.expanded.org:dir/ .
$ ][ shell:dir/ local_dir/
$ scp -r shell.expanded.org:dir/ local_dir/
$ ][ file1 file3 dir1 dir3 shell:remote_dir/
$ scp -r file1 file3 dir1 dir3 shell.expanded.org:remote_dir/
##
### URLs, mail addresses and algebra
##
$ ] http://URL
$ firefox http://URL
$ ][ http://URL
$ wget http://URL
$ ] email@address.org
$ mutt email@address.org
$ ] 2*2+1-21%2^2
$ echo 2*2+1-21%2^2 | bc -l
$ ] "2*2+1*sqrt(400)/l(2)^2" # if you want to use parentesis you
$ echo "2*2+1*sqrt(400)/l(2)^2" | bc -l # have to use quotes ;(
##
### File type based on extension
##
$ ] pack.tar.gz # This works for .tar, .tar.bz2,
$ tar xfz pack.tar.gz; cd pack/ # .tar.gz, .tgz, .zip, .rar
# If the directory unpacked isnt the
# same of the filename of the tarball
# it understands that ^_-
$ ] movie_or_mp3.ogg # .avi, .mp3, .wav, .wmv, ...
$ mplayer movie_or_mp3.ogg
$ ] image.jpg # .jpg, .png, .gif, ...
$ gqview image.jpg # if you are in tty it launches `seejpeg
$ ][ image.jpg
$ gimp image.jpg
$ ] file.htm # .htm, .html, .php, ...
$ firefox file.htm # if you are in tty it launches `links instead.
Enhancements:
- ] file:line is now equivalent to executing "vim file +line".
- The "untarra script will now repair broken tar/zip/rar archives, i.e. archives that would decompress files in ./.
<<less`] stands for "primary fire", while `][ is the secondary one.
After few days youll find Closebracket very additive.
Closebracket is dedicated to the God of Laziness, may He bless you (when He feels to do it).
Installation:
Download the latest tarball from http://www.freaknet.org/alpt/src/utils/closebracket/tarball/
Use the ./install.sh script to install it. It will copy the files in ~/.closebracket and add some aliases in ~/.bashrc
Usage:
Since too many words are needed to describe all the actions that are included
by default, Ill show you them by examples.
Keep in mind that you can tune them and define your own actions by editing the
~/.closebracket/closebracket.conf file.
In the first line closebracket is used to activate an action. The second line is the equivalent of that action.
##
### Basic shell movements
##
$ ]
$ ls # ls current directory
$ ][
$ cd # cd to home
$ ] dir/
$ cd dir/
$ ][ dir/
$ ls dir/
$ ][ file
$ cat file
$ ][ non_existent_file
$ vim non_existent_file
##
### Remote shells
##
$ ] shell # With closebracket you keep the list of the
$ ssh shell.expanded.org # name of your remote shells in
# ~/.closebracket/shells. In this case we put
# "shell.expanded.org" in the list.
# Closebracket searches the closest match with
# the word you typed and then use that as the
# remote shell hostname.
$ ] shell:file
$ vim scp://shell.expanded.org/file # Beware of the Vim power
$ ] user@shell:/path/file
$ ] scp://user@shell.expanded.org/path/file
$ ][ shell:dir/
$ scp -r shell.expanded.org:dir/ .
$ ][ shell:dir/ local_dir/
$ scp -r shell.expanded.org:dir/ local_dir/
$ ][ file1 file3 dir1 dir3 shell:remote_dir/
$ scp -r file1 file3 dir1 dir3 shell.expanded.org:remote_dir/
##
### URLs, mail addresses and algebra
##
$ ] http://URL
$ firefox http://URL
$ ][ http://URL
$ wget http://URL
$ ] email@address.org
$ mutt email@address.org
$ ] 2*2+1-21%2^2
$ echo 2*2+1-21%2^2 | bc -l
$ ] "2*2+1*sqrt(400)/l(2)^2" # if you want to use parentesis you
$ echo "2*2+1*sqrt(400)/l(2)^2" | bc -l # have to use quotes ;(
##
### File type based on extension
##
$ ] pack.tar.gz # This works for .tar, .tar.bz2,
$ tar xfz pack.tar.gz; cd pack/ # .tar.gz, .tgz, .zip, .rar
# If the directory unpacked isnt the
# same of the filename of the tarball
# it understands that ^_-
$ ] movie_or_mp3.ogg # .avi, .mp3, .wav, .wmv, ...
$ mplayer movie_or_mp3.ogg
$ ] image.jpg # .jpg, .png, .gif, ...
$ gqview image.jpg # if you are in tty it launches `seejpeg
$ ][ image.jpg
$ gimp image.jpg
$ ] file.htm # .htm, .html, .php, ...
$ firefox file.htm # if you are in tty it launches `links instead.
Enhancements:
- ] file:line is now equivalent to executing "vim file +line".
- The "untarra script will now repair broken tar/zip/rar archives, i.e. archives that would decompress files in ./.
Download (0.008MB)
Added: 2007-01-27 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1000 downloads
relman 0.1.3
relman application takes your source code, runs the build, and distributes the packages. more>>
relman application takes your source code, runs the build, and distributes the packages. A configuration file allows you to define application-wide defaults in addition to information particular to individual projects such as the source directory, package name, and the like.
Once set up, you just have to call relman with the name given to the project plus the version to release. It calls pkgmake to build .tar.gz, .deb, and .rpm files, and then distributes them using FTP and/or SCP all in one run.
<<lessOnce set up, you just have to call relman with the name given to the project plus the version to release. It calls pkgmake to build .tar.gz, .deb, and .rpm files, and then distributes them using FTP and/or SCP all in one run.
Download (0.018MB)
Added: 2007-08-21 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
796 downloads
pBeans 2.0.2
pBeans project is a Object/Relational (O/R) database mapping layer. more>>
pBeans project is a Object/Relational (O/R) database mapping layer. It is designed to be simple to use and automated.
The idea is that you save time and effort by simply focusing on writing Java classes, and not worrying about maintenance of matching SQL scripts, schema evolution, XML based schemas, or generating code. The pBeans framework takes care of persisting JavaBeans with little assistance from the developer.
Main features:
- Automatic Table Creation and Schema Evolution- Tables corresponding to JavaBean classes are created on demand. Field types are based, by default, on JavaBean compile-time types. Field type changes and new fields are detected. Manually changing tables (user-managed mode) is also supported.
- Based on Annotated JavaBeans- You define a getter and setter for each bean property. Persisent bean classes only need to be tagged with a @PersistentClass annotation.
- Transitive Persistence- If object A is persisted and it refers to Persistent object B, then object B is automatically persisted. If Persistent object C also refers to B, and C is also persisted, the record for object B in the database is not duplicated.
- Instance Consistency- If you retrieve an object from persistent storage that is already known to exist in main memory, you get a reference to the object in main memory. (Garbage collection is allowed to happen via weak references.)
- Near-Zero Configuration- There is no need to define schemas or anything of the sort in a language other than Java, and there are no code generation steps of any kind. No XML or SQL need to be written, except the necessary to create a database and grant user permissions. However, you can instruct pBeans to let you manage database modifications manually.
- Database features- Transactions and auto-increment IDs (MySQL only) are now supported.
- Flexibility- Via annotations users are allowed to define their own table and field names, the name of the primary key, whether fields are nullable, whether tables are user-managed (not automatically modified), table indexes, unique or otherwise, whether unused fields should be deleted, whether a field is nullable, whether it is renamed from another field (to prevent loss of data when a property is renamed), etc.
- Servlet support- A pBeans store may be easily configured using servlet context parameters (see ServletAccess.)
<<lessThe idea is that you save time and effort by simply focusing on writing Java classes, and not worrying about maintenance of matching SQL scripts, schema evolution, XML based schemas, or generating code. The pBeans framework takes care of persisting JavaBeans with little assistance from the developer.
Main features:
- Automatic Table Creation and Schema Evolution- Tables corresponding to JavaBean classes are created on demand. Field types are based, by default, on JavaBean compile-time types. Field type changes and new fields are detected. Manually changing tables (user-managed mode) is also supported.
- Based on Annotated JavaBeans- You define a getter and setter for each bean property. Persisent bean classes only need to be tagged with a @PersistentClass annotation.
- Transitive Persistence- If object A is persisted and it refers to Persistent object B, then object B is automatically persisted. If Persistent object C also refers to B, and C is also persisted, the record for object B in the database is not duplicated.
- Instance Consistency- If you retrieve an object from persistent storage that is already known to exist in main memory, you get a reference to the object in main memory. (Garbage collection is allowed to happen via weak references.)
- Near-Zero Configuration- There is no need to define schemas or anything of the sort in a language other than Java, and there are no code generation steps of any kind. No XML or SQL need to be written, except the necessary to create a database and grant user permissions. However, you can instruct pBeans to let you manage database modifications manually.
- Database features- Transactions and auto-increment IDs (MySQL only) are now supported.
- Flexibility- Via annotations users are allowed to define their own table and field names, the name of the primary key, whether fields are nullable, whether tables are user-managed (not automatically modified), table indexes, unique or otherwise, whether unused fields should be deleted, whether a field is nullable, whether it is renamed from another field (to prevent loss of data when a property is renamed), etc.
- Servlet support- A pBeans store may be easily configured using servlet context parameters (see ServletAccess.)
Download (1.3MB)
Added: 2007-04-25 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
912 downloads
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