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Html To Xhtml Convertor 0.7.7
Html to Xhtml Convertor is a straight-forward Perl script to convert HTML pages into XHTML pages. more>>
Html to Xhtml Convertor is a straight-forward Perl script to convert HTML pages into XHTML pages.
It can process batches of files, convert Windows/Unix/Mac line breaks, and deal with attribute minimization, quoting of attribute values, and more.
Installation:
To install, simply run the following command as root: make install
Alternatively, simply move the htx file to wherever you would like. The command above installs it to /usr/local/bin/
Usage:
Use the following command to get usage information after installing:
htx --help
or if the htx file is in the current directory, try:
./htx --help
Example use:
htx --dos --verbose index.html index2.html
That will take a file with DOS line breaks, index.html, convert it
to XHTML as best it can and save the result as index2.html
Version restrictions:
- oes not check for closing < /p >, < /li > or other block-level tags.
- Assumes there are no < or > which are not part of tags, use < and >
- Does not distingish between block and inline tags.
Enhancements:
- Added the --tty option to dump output to STDOUT rather than a file
- Added detection of old ICRA data
- Improved handling of single quoted attribute values
- Removed updating of Pico version
- Fixed a typo with the years in the Changelog file
- Did a couple of very minor internal changes
<<lessIt can process batches of files, convert Windows/Unix/Mac line breaks, and deal with attribute minimization, quoting of attribute values, and more.
Installation:
To install, simply run the following command as root: make install
Alternatively, simply move the htx file to wherever you would like. The command above installs it to /usr/local/bin/
Usage:
Use the following command to get usage information after installing:
htx --help
or if the htx file is in the current directory, try:
./htx --help
Example use:
htx --dos --verbose index.html index2.html
That will take a file with DOS line breaks, index.html, convert it
to XHTML as best it can and save the result as index2.html
Version restrictions:
- oes not check for closing < /p >, < /li > or other block-level tags.
- Assumes there are no < or > which are not part of tags, use < and >
- Does not distingish between block and inline tags.
Enhancements:
- Added the --tty option to dump output to STDOUT rather than a file
- Added detection of old ICRA data
- Improved handling of single quoted attribute values
- Removed updating of Pico version
- Fixed a typo with the years in the Changelog file
- Did a couple of very minor internal changes
Download (0.010MB)
Added: 2005-08-06 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1543 downloads
how to raise your credit score fast 1.0
Discover how to raise your credit score fast. free report... more>> <<less
Download (4KB)
Added: 2009-04-21 License: Freeware Price: Free
185 downloads
Scriptol to Php Compiler
Scriptol to Php Compiler is a scriptol program that may be interpreted by the Php interpreter. more>>
Scriptol to Php Compiler is a scriptol program that may be interpreted by the Php interpreter and it may be also compiled either to C++ or directly as an executable.
The Php interpreter is required by solp (download it at www.php.net or get it on the Scriptol CD).
Installation:
It is better to install Scriptol at root of a disk, for example:
/home/user/scriptolp
Once the archive is extracted into the scriptolp directory, you have just to go to this directory from the console to run the compiler.
To use the compiler at command line from any directory, you have to put the compilers into the path, in the usr directory for exemple, or any directory assigned to the path variable (see .bashrc or equivalent). You may also add the scriptol directory to list of paths. Before to use the compiler, you have to read the licence, in the doc directory: licence.html.
Usage:
Type the source of your program in a text editor and save it as mysource.sol or any other name with the sol extension.
Then just type:
./solp mysource
To know the compilers options, type solp without argument, at command line.
Examples:
Type from the main scriptol directory:
./solp demos/helloyou
<<lessThe Php interpreter is required by solp (download it at www.php.net or get it on the Scriptol CD).
Installation:
It is better to install Scriptol at root of a disk, for example:
/home/user/scriptolp
Once the archive is extracted into the scriptolp directory, you have just to go to this directory from the console to run the compiler.
To use the compiler at command line from any directory, you have to put the compilers into the path, in the usr directory for exemple, or any directory assigned to the path variable (see .bashrc or equivalent). You may also add the scriptol directory to list of paths. Before to use the compiler, you have to read the licence, in the doc directory: licence.html.
Usage:
Type the source of your program in a text editor and save it as mysource.sol or any other name with the sol extension.
Then just type:
./solp mysource
To know the compilers options, type solp without argument, at command line.
Examples:
Type from the main scriptol directory:
./solp demos/helloyou
Download (0.29MB)
Added: 2005-12-02 License: Freeware Price:
1421 downloads
How-To-Get-Money 1.0
The Ultimate Safe Money Guide -Free Online Money Guide Make Your Online Money The Safe Way And Generate a Daily Income Stream. The best thing I came ... more>> <<less
Download (2117KB)
Added: 2009-03-31 License: Freeware Price: Free
206 downloads
RTF to HTML convertor 3.6
The RTF to HTML convertor converts RTF files to HTML file. more>>
The RTF to HTML convertor converts RTF files (in Windows-1250 encoding) to HTML file (in ISO-8859-2 encoding).
Main features:
- Bullets
- Superscript and subscript look bad in html document.
- Subscript is transformed to number. Superscript is transformed to "[number]".
- Text: bold, italic and underline
- Footnotes
- Alignments: left, center and right. "Justify" alignment
- looks bad - program use left alignment. Centered text is greater.
- Tables
- Links: text "aaa@bbb.cz" and "http://www.aaaaaa.cz" convert
- to html links.
- Unicode: Commentary with the character
- name is added to the non ISO Latin2 characters. The program htm2htm will
- convert html with commentaries to the unicode.
- Rtf commands sa and sb.
- (sa>0) or (sb>0) New paragraph - "p" html command
- (sa=0) and (sb=0) New paragraph (left aligned text) "< br >"
Enhancements:
- Processing was fixed in the RTF commands "fldinst", "fldrslt", "plain", "bkmkstart", and "bkmend".
<<lessMain features:
- Bullets
- Superscript and subscript look bad in html document.
- Subscript is transformed to number. Superscript is transformed to "[number]".
- Text: bold, italic and underline
- Footnotes
- Alignments: left, center and right. "Justify" alignment
- looks bad - program use left alignment. Centered text is greater.
- Tables
- Links: text "aaa@bbb.cz" and "http://www.aaaaaa.cz" convert
- to html links.
- Unicode: Commentary with the character
- name is added to the non ISO Latin2 characters. The program htm2htm will
- convert html with commentaries to the unicode.
- Rtf commands sa and sb.
- (sa>0) or (sb>0) New paragraph - "p" html command
- (sa=0) and (sb=0) New paragraph (left aligned text) "< br >"
Enhancements:
- Processing was fixed in the RTF commands "fldinst", "fldrslt", "plain", "bkmkstart", and "bkmend".
Download (0.041MB)
Added: 2005-11-01 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1456 downloads
MySQL PHP to Posgres Converter 0.94
MySQL PHP to PostgreSQL is a program that takes a php page that uses mysql calls and changes them into PostgreSQL calls. more>>
MySQL PHP to PostgreSQL is an application that takes a php page that uses mysql calls and changes them into PostgreSQL calls.
This allows any website (if it converts properly) that was written in PHP for MySQL to run as a website written to run on PostgreSQL.
- Step 1: Download and uncompress
To uncompress simply type: tar xvzf mysqlphp2postgres.tar.gz
If youre on a non-GNU system you might have to type: gzip -dc mysqlphp2postgres.tar.gz | tar xvf -
- Step 2: Compile
To compile simply type: make
If youre on a non-GNU system youll have to edit the make file to change the compiler to cc instead of gcc
- Step 3: Install
Type: make install
This will simply copy the binary file to /usr/local/bin/
- Step 4: Convert
Type: mysqlphp2postgres inputfile.php outputfile.php
The input file is the php page that uses mysql. The outfile is the page you want to create. You will probably need to tell mysqlphp2postgres the name of the postgreSQL database since mysql_select_db doesnt translate. You can do this by using a -d switch. So if, for example, the database youre connecting to is called blah, you could type: mysqlphp2postgres -d blah inputfile.php outputfile.php
Problems:
I have had the following problems from using this program:
MySQL has a lot more functions in PHP than PostgreSQL that do more things. I havent had a problem with any unsupported functions in my programs, but someone probably will. If you want to help write code for this to support those functions (if thats even possible) feel free to help.
Enhancements:
- Fixed some stuff.
- Cleaned up some code.
- This program now produces code optomized for PHP 4.1.0 and above.
<<lessThis allows any website (if it converts properly) that was written in PHP for MySQL to run as a website written to run on PostgreSQL.
- Step 1: Download and uncompress
To uncompress simply type: tar xvzf mysqlphp2postgres.tar.gz
If youre on a non-GNU system you might have to type: gzip -dc mysqlphp2postgres.tar.gz | tar xvf -
- Step 2: Compile
To compile simply type: make
If youre on a non-GNU system youll have to edit the make file to change the compiler to cc instead of gcc
- Step 3: Install
Type: make install
This will simply copy the binary file to /usr/local/bin/
- Step 4: Convert
Type: mysqlphp2postgres inputfile.php outputfile.php
The input file is the php page that uses mysql. The outfile is the page you want to create. You will probably need to tell mysqlphp2postgres the name of the postgreSQL database since mysql_select_db doesnt translate. You can do this by using a -d switch. So if, for example, the database youre connecting to is called blah, you could type: mysqlphp2postgres -d blah inputfile.php outputfile.php
Problems:
I have had the following problems from using this program:
MySQL has a lot more functions in PHP than PostgreSQL that do more things. I havent had a problem with any unsupported functions in my programs, but someone probably will. If you want to help write code for this to support those functions (if thats even possible) feel free to help.
Enhancements:
- Fixed some stuff.
- Cleaned up some code.
- This program now produces code optomized for PHP 4.1.0 and above.
Download (0.011MB)
Added: 2006-04-14 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1288 downloads
OO Text To Speech 0.1
OO Text To Speech is a text-to speech macro for OpenOffice.org. more>>
OO Text To Speech is a text-to speech macro for OpenOffice.org.
Its a syllable analyzer: using a reading motor, it reads a document and translates it into a vocal message.
About OpenOffice
OpenOffice.org is a multiplatform and multilingual office suite and an open-source project. Compatible with all other major office suites, the product is free to download, use, and distribute.
It is an international office suite that will run on all major platforms and provide access to all functionality and data through open-component based APIs and an XML- based file format.
<<lessIts a syllable analyzer: using a reading motor, it reads a document and translates it into a vocal message.
About OpenOffice
OpenOffice.org is a multiplatform and multilingual office suite and an open-source project. Compatible with all other major office suites, the product is free to download, use, and distribute.
It is an international office suite that will run on all major platforms and provide access to all functionality and data through open-component based APIs and an XML- based file format.
Download (4.8MB)
Added: 2006-03-01 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1347 downloads
Scriptol to binary Compiler
Scriptol to binary Compiler is a C++ native compiler. more>>
Scriptol to binary Compiler is a C++ native compiler.
Installation:
It is better to install Scriptol at root of a disk, for example:
c:scriptolc
Once the archive is extracted into the scriptolc directory, you have just to change to this directory to run the compiler.
To use the compiler at command line from any directory, you have to put the compiler into the path variable.
The setup script installs required file into sub-directories, or into the directory given as argument. Before to use the compiler, you have to read the licence, in the doc
directory: licence.html.
Usage:
Just type:
./solc mysource
Type "solc" only to list the options.
If your program is a multi-file project, the source given as parameter must be the main source file, the compiler will know dependencies from "include" statements and will build what is needed.
Exemples:
Type from the main scriptol directory:
./solc -bre demosfibo
Configuring:
By editing the solc.ini file, you may change the second pass compiler (you may have to rebuild the libsol library for this compiler), change the options of the compiler or add header files to include.
To add header files, just add "header=someheader.hpp" lines into the config file.
A xxx.cfg file may be written for each project main source beeing xxx, and if present, it overloads the solc.ini file.
<<lessInstallation:
It is better to install Scriptol at root of a disk, for example:
c:scriptolc
Once the archive is extracted into the scriptolc directory, you have just to change to this directory to run the compiler.
To use the compiler at command line from any directory, you have to put the compiler into the path variable.
The setup script installs required file into sub-directories, or into the directory given as argument. Before to use the compiler, you have to read the licence, in the doc
directory: licence.html.
Usage:
Just type:
./solc mysource
Type "solc" only to list the options.
If your program is a multi-file project, the source given as parameter must be the main source file, the compiler will know dependencies from "include" statements and will build what is needed.
Exemples:
Type from the main scriptol directory:
./solc -bre demosfibo
Configuring:
By editing the solc.ini file, you may change the second pass compiler (you may have to rebuild the libsol library for this compiler), change the options of the compiler or add header files to include.
To add header files, just add "header=someheader.hpp" lines into the config file.
A xxx.cfg file may be written for each project main source beeing xxx, and if present, it overloads the solc.ini file.
Added: 2005-12-02 License: Freeware Price:
1423 downloads
RIR to DNS converter 0.1
RIR to DNS converter is a tool to convert Regional Internet Registry data to a DNS country lookup zone. more>>
RIR to DNS converter is a tool to convert Regional Internet Registry data to a DNS country lookup zone. You can use it to build your own DNS zone for looking up country codes from IP addresses.
It uses data directly from RIPE, ARIN, APNIC, LACNIC, and AFRINIC. The data can be updated on a schedule of your choosing.
The input data comes from:
ftp://ftp.afrinic.net/pub/stats/afrinic/delegated-afrinic-latest
ftp://ftp.apnic.net/pub/stats/apnic/delegated-apnic-latest
ftp://ftp.arin.net/pub/stats/arin/delegated-arin-latest
ftp://ftp.ripe.net/pub/stats/ripencc/delegated-ripencc-latest
ftp://ftp.lacnic.net/pub/stats/lacnic/delegated-lacnic-latest
The input data format is described in:
http://www.apnic.net/db/rir-stats-format.html
The output is a BIND 9 zone file that can be used to look up country codes
in a similar fashion to in-addr.arpa. For example, to find out what country
203.30.47.58 is:
host 58.47.30.203.rir.example.com
58.47.30.203.rir.example.com has address 127.0.65.86
where 65 and 85 are ASCII for A and U, which means 203.30.47.58 is
in Australia (AU).
HOW TO USE IT
Just feed it the above delegated- -latest files into stdin and it will
spit out the zone file to stdout. The zone file will only have the IP addresses,
so you could $INCLUDE it into a zone file that contains NS records, SOA, $ORIGIN,
etc.
WHY USE IT
You dont need the resolution of MaxMinds GeoIP database, but you do want
something that is free and you want it kept up to date on a schedule that
you decide.
You could use this to block or tag email based on countries, block or redirect
visitors to your website based on end-user country, and so on. Be very
careful about blocking mail this way, though, as you may block legitimate
email. Instead of blocking outright, use it in a SpamAssassin rule to add
something to the spam level, based on where the email comes from.
HOW IT WORKS
The RIR files contain ranges of IP addresses, and indicate what CC each range is allocated to. At the simplest level, rir2dns just sorts the ranges then iterates
through the IPs in each range and generates a reverse-dns-style A record that
represents the country code.
HOW IT WORKS - IN DETAIL
Rather than iterate through each IP address, the program tries to skip through
entire classes at a time (256 IPs, 65536 IPs, etc). Rather than iterate
through each IP, the loop iterates through classes or IP ranges (whichever are
smaller at the loop control), using control-breaks to accummulate neighbouring
ranges where possible so that entire classes that are in the same country dont
generate huge numbers of records.
Firstly, IPs are considered to be 4-digit numbers, but in base-256. In other
words, each octet is dealt with as if it were a single base-256 digit. This
turns out to be convenient because optimisations of large chunks of IP space can be done by looking for places where least-significant base-256 digits are zero.
Next, IP ranges are broken down into the following sub-ranges:
Optional individual IP addresses (ie: 4 octets)
Optional A-class ranges (ie: 3 octets)
Optional B-class ranges (ie: 2 octets)
Optional C-class ranges (ie: 1 octet)
Optional B-class ranges (ie: 2 octets)
Optional A-class ranges (ie: 3 octets)
Optional individual IP addresses (ie: 4 octets)
Considering that there is a pattern here, Im sure theres an elegant way to
handle breaking this down into two loops (one reducing the octets and one
increasing the octets), but I cant be bothered, so Ill break it down into
seven loops. Kind of hard-coded, but at least its simple.
For ease of processing, the IP addresses are actually converted to 32-bit numbers, then back again. This simplifies mathematics and looping through ranges.
Thats pretty much it, really...
Note that currently there are about 80,000 RIR records between all five
registries. This takes about 35 seconds on a 2.4GHz P4 to process, and
generates a 26MB file with around 3/4 million lines (RRs). This causes BIND
to use about 100MB or so of memory, and on a slow machine will probably cause it to take too long to reply, while it searches the zone. That size zone can
take a minute or two to load, which is quite a while.
Basic algorithm:
Read & process RIR data:
Read RIR ranges
Sort RIR ranges by start IP address
Glue together contiguous ranges of the same country
For each range
Generate the IPs at the start of the range
Generate the A-classes at the start of the range
Generate the B-classes at the start of the range
Generate the C-classes in the middle of the range
Generate the B-classes at the end of the range
Generate the A-classes at the end of the range
Generate the IPs at the end of the range
<<lessIt uses data directly from RIPE, ARIN, APNIC, LACNIC, and AFRINIC. The data can be updated on a schedule of your choosing.
The input data comes from:
ftp://ftp.afrinic.net/pub/stats/afrinic/delegated-afrinic-latest
ftp://ftp.apnic.net/pub/stats/apnic/delegated-apnic-latest
ftp://ftp.arin.net/pub/stats/arin/delegated-arin-latest
ftp://ftp.ripe.net/pub/stats/ripencc/delegated-ripencc-latest
ftp://ftp.lacnic.net/pub/stats/lacnic/delegated-lacnic-latest
The input data format is described in:
http://www.apnic.net/db/rir-stats-format.html
The output is a BIND 9 zone file that can be used to look up country codes
in a similar fashion to in-addr.arpa. For example, to find out what country
203.30.47.58 is:
host 58.47.30.203.rir.example.com
58.47.30.203.rir.example.com has address 127.0.65.86
where 65 and 85 are ASCII for A and U, which means 203.30.47.58 is
in Australia (AU).
HOW TO USE IT
Just feed it the above delegated- -latest files into stdin and it will
spit out the zone file to stdout. The zone file will only have the IP addresses,
so you could $INCLUDE it into a zone file that contains NS records, SOA, $ORIGIN,
etc.
WHY USE IT
You dont need the resolution of MaxMinds GeoIP database, but you do want
something that is free and you want it kept up to date on a schedule that
you decide.
You could use this to block or tag email based on countries, block or redirect
visitors to your website based on end-user country, and so on. Be very
careful about blocking mail this way, though, as you may block legitimate
email. Instead of blocking outright, use it in a SpamAssassin rule to add
something to the spam level, based on where the email comes from.
HOW IT WORKS
The RIR files contain ranges of IP addresses, and indicate what CC each range is allocated to. At the simplest level, rir2dns just sorts the ranges then iterates
through the IPs in each range and generates a reverse-dns-style A record that
represents the country code.
HOW IT WORKS - IN DETAIL
Rather than iterate through each IP address, the program tries to skip through
entire classes at a time (256 IPs, 65536 IPs, etc). Rather than iterate
through each IP, the loop iterates through classes or IP ranges (whichever are
smaller at the loop control), using control-breaks to accummulate neighbouring
ranges where possible so that entire classes that are in the same country dont
generate huge numbers of records.
Firstly, IPs are considered to be 4-digit numbers, but in base-256. In other
words, each octet is dealt with as if it were a single base-256 digit. This
turns out to be convenient because optimisations of large chunks of IP space can be done by looking for places where least-significant base-256 digits are zero.
Next, IP ranges are broken down into the following sub-ranges:
Optional individual IP addresses (ie: 4 octets)
Optional A-class ranges (ie: 3 octets)
Optional B-class ranges (ie: 2 octets)
Optional C-class ranges (ie: 1 octet)
Optional B-class ranges (ie: 2 octets)
Optional A-class ranges (ie: 3 octets)
Optional individual IP addresses (ie: 4 octets)
Considering that there is a pattern here, Im sure theres an elegant way to
handle breaking this down into two loops (one reducing the octets and one
increasing the octets), but I cant be bothered, so Ill break it down into
seven loops. Kind of hard-coded, but at least its simple.
For ease of processing, the IP addresses are actually converted to 32-bit numbers, then back again. This simplifies mathematics and looping through ranges.
Thats pretty much it, really...
Note that currently there are about 80,000 RIR records between all five
registries. This takes about 35 seconds on a 2.4GHz P4 to process, and
generates a 26MB file with around 3/4 million lines (RRs). This causes BIND
to use about 100MB or so of memory, and on a slow machine will probably cause it to take too long to reply, while it searches the zone. That size zone can
take a minute or two to load, which is quite a while.
Basic algorithm:
Read & process RIR data:
Read RIR ranges
Sort RIR ranges by start IP address
Glue together contiguous ranges of the same country
For each range
Generate the IPs at the start of the range
Generate the A-classes at the start of the range
Generate the B-classes at the start of the range
Generate the C-classes in the middle of the range
Generate the B-classes at the end of the range
Generate the A-classes at the end of the range
Generate the IPs at the end of the range
Download (0.60MB)
Added: 2007-04-27 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
913 downloads
Attach to Email Service Menu 0.7.5
Attach to Email Service Menu is a service menu for Konqueror. more>>
Attach to Email Service Menu is a service menu for Konqueror that works in conjunction with a python script to allow the user to select multiple files and add them as attachments to an email using whatever mail client is configured. If a directory is selected, then its contents will be attached to the email recursively.
Installation:
0) tar -jxf attach-to-email-servicemenu.tar.bz2
1) cd attach-to-email-servicemenu
2) ./install.sh --remove-old
#Get rid of previous installations.
3) ./install.sh [--global-install|--local-install]
#Depending on whether you want system-wide or not.
The Readme file included explains how to set this up for different email clients.
Enhancements:
- New Italian translation by Giurerro.
<<lessInstallation:
0) tar -jxf attach-to-email-servicemenu.tar.bz2
1) cd attach-to-email-servicemenu
2) ./install.sh --remove-old
#Get rid of previous installations.
3) ./install.sh [--global-install|--local-install]
#Depending on whether you want system-wide or not.
The Readme file included explains how to set this up for different email clients.
Enhancements:
- New Italian translation by Giurerro.
Download (0.007MB)
Added: 2006-10-30 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1089 downloads
MS Word to plaintext converter 0.1
MS Word to plaintext converter is a service menue easily converts MS Word documents to plain text files. more>>
MS Word to plaintext converter is a service menue easily converts MS Word documents to plain text files. The generated text file is named *.doc.txt.
I hope it is as useful for you as it is for me.
<<lessI hope it is as useful for you as it is for me.
Download (MB)
Added: 2006-04-26 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1283 downloads
Gem to rpm converter 0.5.1
Gem to rpm converter creates an RPM spec file from a Ruby gem. more>>
Gem to rpm converter creates an RPM spec file from a Ruby gem. The project uses the gem metadata to fill out most of the information needed for building an RPM containing the gem.
Usage:
Run gem2rpm --help for options
At its simplest, download a gem (lets call that file GEM) and run
gem2rpm $GEM
This will print an rpm spec file based on the information contained in the gems spec file. In general, it is necessary to edit the generated spec file because the gem is missing some important information that is customarily provided in rpms, most notably the license and the changelog.
Rather than editing the generated specfile, edit the template from which the specfile is generated. This will make it easier to update the RPM when a new version of the Gem becomes available.
To support this process, it is recommended to first save the default template somewhere:
gem2rpm -T > rubygem-GEM.spec.template
Now, edit the template and then run gem2rpm to generate the spec file using the edited template:
gem2rpm -t rubygem-GEM.spec.template > rubygem-GEM.spec
With that, you can now build your RPM as ususal. When a new version of the gem becomes available, you should edit the saved template and rerun gem2rpm over it.
Template Details:
The template is a standard erb file; there are three main variables available in the template file:
format - The Gem::Format for the gem
spec - The Gem::Specification for the gem (the same as format.spec)
Conventions:
A typical source RPM for a gem should consist of three files: the gem file itself, the template for the spec file and the spec file. To ensure that the template will be included in the source RPM, it must be listed as one of the sources in the spec file.
The resulting rpms should follow the naming convention rubygem-$GEM where GEM is the name of the packaged gem. The default template also makes sure that the resulting package provides ruby($GEM), according to general packaging conventions for scripting languages
<<lessUsage:
Run gem2rpm --help for options
At its simplest, download a gem (lets call that file GEM) and run
gem2rpm $GEM
This will print an rpm spec file based on the information contained in the gems spec file. In general, it is necessary to edit the generated spec file because the gem is missing some important information that is customarily provided in rpms, most notably the license and the changelog.
Rather than editing the generated specfile, edit the template from which the specfile is generated. This will make it easier to update the RPM when a new version of the Gem becomes available.
To support this process, it is recommended to first save the default template somewhere:
gem2rpm -T > rubygem-GEM.spec.template
Now, edit the template and then run gem2rpm to generate the spec file using the edited template:
gem2rpm -t rubygem-GEM.spec.template > rubygem-GEM.spec
With that, you can now build your RPM as ususal. When a new version of the gem becomes available, you should edit the saved template and rerun gem2rpm over it.
Template Details:
The template is a standard erb file; there are three main variables available in the template file:
format - The Gem::Format for the gem
spec - The Gem::Specification for the gem (the same as format.spec)
Conventions:
A typical source RPM for a gem should consist of three files: the gem file itself, the template for the spec file and the spec file. To ensure that the template will be included in the source RPM, it must be listed as one of the sources in the spec file.
The resulting rpms should follow the naming convention rubygem-$GEM where GEM is the name of the packaged gem. The default template also makes sure that the resulting package provides ruby($GEM), according to general packaging conventions for scripting languages
Download (0.009MB)
Added: 2007-07-19 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
832 downloads
Send to Coppermine 1.0
Send to Coppermine is a service menu for send a jpeg/gif/png file to a Coppermine gallery install. more>>
Send to Coppermine is a service menu for send a jpeg/gif/png file to a Coppermine gallery install.
The add-on has been tested on Fedora core 2 and 3 (should work with FC4)
PNG and GIF support depends on your coppermine settings.
You can add keywords and description for the image while uploading.
This add-on requires the Coppermine API which we have already released.
The attached tarball contains a copy of API and two other files needed.
Installation:
1. Untar the attached tarball.
2. Copy the api folder to your coppermines root directory.
3. Copy kdesh to your home directory.
4. Copy Send2Coppermine.desktop to your/home/.kde/share/apps/konqueror/servicemenus (create servicemenus folder if not already there)
5. Now open kdesh in your favourite editor and modify the values of aid, username, password and URL to your coppermine installation.
Currently, the album id where photo is uploaded needs to be hardcoded in this file. The future version may allow choose album for each picture.
<<lessThe add-on has been tested on Fedora core 2 and 3 (should work with FC4)
PNG and GIF support depends on your coppermine settings.
You can add keywords and description for the image while uploading.
This add-on requires the Coppermine API which we have already released.
The attached tarball contains a copy of API and two other files needed.
Installation:
1. Untar the attached tarball.
2. Copy the api folder to your coppermines root directory.
3. Copy kdesh to your home directory.
4. Copy Send2Coppermine.desktop to your/home/.kde/share/apps/konqueror/servicemenus (create servicemenus folder if not already there)
5. Now open kdesh in your favourite editor and modify the values of aid, username, password and URL to your coppermine installation.
Currently, the album id where photo is uploaded needs to be hardcoded in this file. The future version may allow choose album for each picture.
Download (0.012MB)
Added: 2006-01-04 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1390 downloads
How-To-Make-Money-On-Internet 1.0
The Ultimate Safe Money Guide -Free Online Money Guide Make Your Online Money The Safe Way And Generate a Daily Income Stream. The best thing I came ... more>> <<less
Download (2117KB)
Added: 2009-04-26 License: Freeware Price: Free
180 downloads
DTD to XML Schema translator 1.60
DTD to XML Schema translator allows you to translate a Document Type Definition (DTD) into an XML Schema. more>>
DTD to XML Schema translator allows you to translate a Document Type Definition (DTD) into an XML Schema.
DTD to XML Schema translator lets you translate a Document Type Definition into an XML Schema (REC-xmlschema-1-20010502).
The translator can map meaningful DTD entities onto XML Schema constructs (simpleType, attributeGroup, group); the XML document model is not anonymized.
In addition, the translator can map DTD comments onto XML Schema documentation nodes in various ways.
Free available as Java class, Standalone application and as Web tool.
<<lessDTD to XML Schema translator lets you translate a Document Type Definition into an XML Schema (REC-xmlschema-1-20010502).
The translator can map meaningful DTD entities onto XML Schema constructs (simpleType, attributeGroup, group); the XML document model is not anonymized.
In addition, the translator can map DTD comments onto XML Schema documentation nodes in various ways.
Free available as Java class, Standalone application and as Web tool.
Download (0.53MB)
Added: 2007-02-26 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
976 downloads
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