output express
DVD BacKup Express 5
DVD BacKup Express is a small Kommander Script to create a GUI for dvdbackup. more>>
I made it because it can be run on any platform with kommander installed and dvdbackup available (which may be more platforms than kdvdbackup or other binary frontends are available for)
There is a lot of room for improvement here. Feel free to spruce it up a bit and send me the new .kmdr file and i will update this.
SmoothWall Express 3.0
SmoothWall is a small distribution designed to act as a secure, easy-to-configure firewall/gateway. more>> <<less
VBA Express 1.2
VBA Express is a frontend for the very popular game emulator VisualBoyAdvance. more>>
Whats VBA Express? Its First, to configure VisualBoyAdvance (emulator)... EASILY! Graphics, sound, controls (keyboard and joystick), paths (to saves and captures)... You can configure all this without edit VisualBoyAdvance.cfg manually!
Open your Roms (games) with the frontend! You can run the roms with "Play!" button (without using the console command VisualBoyAdvance game.rom).
Sys::OutPut 2.1
Sys::OutPut is a Perl module to help make output easier. more>>
SYNOPSIS
usage Sys::OutPut;
talk $fmtstr [, @args];
out $fmtstr [, @args];
put $fmtstr [, @args];
err $fmtstr [, @args];
debug $fmtstr [, @args];
$Sys::OutPut::quiet = $::quiet;
$Sys::OutPut::debug = $::debug;
These subroutines will make generating output to STDOUT and STDERR easier.
All of the routines treat the $fmtstr argument as a printf format string, with @args as the format string arguments.
The talk routine generates output to STDERR only if the variable $Sys::OutPut::quiet is non-null and non-zero.
The out routine generates output to STDOUT, with a newline appended to , if it is not already terminated with one.
The put routine generates output to STDOUT, without any additional trailing newline.
The err routine generates output to STDERR, with a newline appended if needed.
The debug routine generates output to STDERR only if the variable
$Sys::OutPut::debug is non-null and non-zero, which is also returned as the result.
This allows for convenient usages such as in the following example:
sub foo {
...
return if debug "Stopping now.";
...
next if debug "Skipping further processing";
...
}
If not defined by the user, the $Sys::OutPut::quiet and $Sys::OutPut::debug variables are initialized from their corresponding main variables $::quiet and $::debug, respectively, unless they are already defined.
SIP Express Router 0.9.6
SIP Express Router is a very fast and flexible SIP (RFC3261) server. more>>
SER features an application-server interface, presence support, SMS gateway, SIMPLE2Jabber gateway, RADIUS/syslog accounting and authorization, server status monitoring, FCP security, etc. Web-based user provisioning, serweb, available.
Its performance allows it to deal with operational burdens, such as broken network components, attacks, power-up reboots and rapidly growing user population.
SERs configuration ability meets needs of a whole range of scenarios including small-office use, enterprise PBX replacements and carrier services.
Main features:
- accounting
- digest authentication
- CPL scripts
- ENUM support
- instant messaging
- MySQL support
- PostgreSQL support
- a presence agent
- Radius authentication and accounting
- Diameter authentication
- record routing
- SMS gateway
- Jabber gateway
- NAT traversal support transaction module
- registrar
- user location
SER has been extensively and successfuly tested with many SIP products from other vendors (Microsoft, Cisco, Mitel, snom, Pingtel, Siemens, and many others). It has been powering our SIP services continuously for more than two years.
XML::Output 0.03
XML::Output is a Perl module for writing simple XML documents. more>>
SYNOPSIS
use XML::Output;
open(FH,>file.xml);
my $xo = new XML::Output({fh => *FH});
$xo->open(tagname, {attrname => attrval});
$xo->pcdata(element content);
$xo->close();
close(FH);
ABSTRACT
XML::Output is a Perl module for writing simple XML documents
XML::Output is a Perl module for writing simple XML document. The following methods are provided.
new
$xo = new XML::Output;
Constructs a new XML::Output object.
open
$xo->open(tagname, {attrname => attrval});
Open an element with specified name (and optional attributes)
close
$xo->close;
Close an element
empty
$xo->empty(tagname, {attrname => attrval});
Insert an empty element with specified name (and optional attributes)
pcdata
$xo->pcdata(element content);
Insert text
comment
$xo->comment(comment text);
Insert a comment
xmlstr
print $xo->xmlstr;
Get a string representation of the constructed document
IBM DB2 Express-C 9.5
IBM DB2 Express-C is a free database for storing and managing relational and XML data. It is free to download, use, distribute and does not have any e... more>> <<less
Logitech Quickcam express driver 0.6.4
This project is to produce drivers for the Logitech Quickam Express that will run popular linux software, such as video for linu more>>
This site hosts the Linux driver for the QuickCam Express and other QuickCam-related and QuickCam-compatible USB web cameras. The original work was done by Georg Acher and was known as qce-ga; Jean-Frederic Clere took that driver and created the first Video4Linux (V4L) driver, enabling popular V4L applications such as Xawtv to display pictures from the webcam. Since then, a group of developers around the world have evolved the driver into its current state, adding support for new cameras and chipsets as they have become available. In the process, the driver became known as qc-usb to reflect the fact that it supports a wide variety of USB-attached QuickCam cameras, not just the QuickCam Express.
The qc-usb driver supports the following webcams:
Dexxa Webcam
Labtec Webcam (old model)
LegoCam
Logitech QuickCam Express (old model)
Logitech QuickCam Notebook (some models)
Logitech QuickCam Web
Generally, any USB camera with a USB vendor ID of 0x46d and a USB product ID of 0x840, 0x850, or 0x870 (so, 0x46d:0x840, for example), should work. You can see the USB ID using operating system utilities such as lsusb in Linux.
Class::Meta::Express 0.04
Class::Meta::Express is a Perl module for concise, expressive creation of Class::Meta classes. more>>
Synopsis
package My::Contact;
use Class::Meta::Express;
class {
meta contact => ( default_type => string );
has name;
has contact => ( required => 1 );
}
This module provides an interface to concisely yet expressively create classes with Class::Meta. Although I am of course fond of Class::Meta, Ive never been overly thrilled with its interface for creating classes:
package My::Thingy;
use Class::Meta;
BEGIN {
# Create a Class::Meta object for this class.
my $cm = Class::Meta->new( key => thingy );
# Add a constructor.
$cm->add_constructor( name => new );
# Add a couple of attributes with generated accessors.
$cm->add_attribute(
name => id,
is => integer,
required => 1,
);
$cm->add_attribute(
name => name,
is => string,
required => 1,
);
$cm->add_attribute(
name => age,
is => integer,
);
# Add a custom method.
$cm->add_method(
name => chk_pass,
code => sub { return code },
);
$cm->build;
}
This example is relatively simple; it can get a lot more verbose. But even still, all of the method calls were annoying. I mean, whoever thought of using an object oriented interface for declaring a class? (Oh yeah: I did.) I wasnt alone in wanting a more declarative interface; Curtis Poe, with my blessing, created Class::Meta::Declare, which would use this syntax to create the same class:
package My::Thingy;
use Class::Meta::Declare :all;
Class::Meta::Declare->new(
# Create a Class::Meta object for this class.
meta => [
key => thingy,
],
# Add a constructor.
constructors => [
new => { }
],
# Add a couple of attributes with generated accessors.
attributes => [
id => {
type => $TYPE_INTEGER,
required => 1,
},
name => {
required => 1,
type => $TYPE_STRING,
},
age => { type => $TYPE_INTEGER, },
],
# Add a custom method.
methods => [
chk_pass => {
code => sub { return code },
}
]
);
This approach has the advantage of being a bit more concise, and it is declarative, but I find all of the indentation levels annoying; its hard for me to figure out where I am, especially if I have to define a lot of attributes. And finally, everything is a string with this syntax, except for those ugly read-only scalars such as $TYPE_INTEGER. So I cant easily tell where one attribute ends and the next one starts. Bleh.
Express Scribe For Linux 4.14
Express Scribe is professional audio playback control software for Linux designed to assist with the transcription of audio recordings. Install on the typists computer and can be controlled using the more>>
Free digital transcription software for typists on Linux - Express Scribe is professional audio playback control software designed to assist the transcription of audio recordings. It is installed on the typists computer and can be controlled using the keyboard (with hot keys) and/or foot pedals. This computer transcriber application features variable speed playback, foot pedal operation, file management and more. This program is free.
Features:
~ Ability to play compressed wav or dct files.
~ Variable speed (constant pitch) playback.
~ Can use computer rudder pedals (or some other specialist transcription pedals) to control playback.
~ Ability to Dock portable recorders to load recordings.
~ Uses systemwide HotKeys so you can control playback when using other software (eg. Microsoft Word).
~ Automatically receives and loads files by internet (FTP), email or over a local computer network.
~ Automatically sends typing to the person who dictated the work.
~ Express Scribe is free.
Requirements: Sound Card, speakers or headset
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The full features list of Express Scribe transcription playback software follows but a quick ... Note: There are two options for running Express Scribe on the Linux operating system. Option 1Audio Input-Output Library 0.2.0
Audio Input-Output Library (libaio) is meant to solve the problem of differing digital audio platforms once and for all. more>>
JACK is unnecessarily complex for most applications, and while libaos support for file output is cool, it limits what the API can do and is therefore inadequate for any kind of real time application.
libaio provides a clean application interface and a simple compile-time driver switching decision, yielding a lightweight way to use the local sound hardware without having to care what it is.
Libaios first sparkle was when I, Hod McWuff (alias, of course), found myself trying to debug ALSA implementations for libao and madplay, and another audio-related project Id been working on. That project needed multiplatform audio support of its own, with latency management, which libao lacked.
It also seemed that libao shouldnt have been trying to be both a hardware abstraction *AND* an output abstraction, and also that it seemed more intuitive as an output (live vs file) abstraction.
Enter libaio. All it does is abstract the local sound hardware platform, to present a clean, uniform interface to playing and capturing digital audio, with facilities for basic latency management. It was written from scratch around its developing ALSA driver, from many many reference sources including libao and Robert Leslies excellent madplay MP3 decoder, and of course the ALSA documentation and examples.
Libaios distinction comes from its build-time decisionmaking. It only compiles and links the best driver available for the given platform. Therefore, selecting and loading a driver no longer applies; and well it shouldnt, theres never more than one correct choice anyway.
Libaio is not intended to replace libao; rather it is intended to supplement it. The key argument is, why would anyone EVER have more than one running sound platform type on any single machine? Sure, they might have ESD or ARTS, but they more resemble file output than a live device. Theres also the OSS emulation in ALSA, but given a good ALSA driver, whod use OSS?
Then theres the fact that applications have to tell libao what "plugin" to use, and all the drivers in libao have different parameters. That means the application has to know more than it should about what it shouldnt have to see. The app shouldnt have to say more than "give me the local device for playback with *** format" or something to that effect, and start writing.
Finally, plugins for stuff like proprietary file formats, ESD et al, but there shouldnt be any need for more than one of (ALSA|OSS|SUN|WIN32|MACOSX ) on any given distribution. Therefore, binary distribution of a compiled-in driver is possible, even preferred.
It is proposed that all of the hardware drivers in libao, and madplay, and several other places, be reviewed and ported to libaio. Then, they can be removed from those packages in favor of an AIO interface.
Installation:
## building
./configure
make
## installing (as root)
make install
Arbitrary Command Output Colourer 0.7.1
acoc is a regular-expression based colour formatter for programs that display output on the command-line. more>>
Ever wondered why the output of your favourite UNIX/Linux commands is still displayed in black-and-white after all these years?
Ever had to search back through your scroll-buffer in search of gcc errors and salient information to tell you what went wrong with your programs execution?
acoc is a regular expression based colour formatter for programs that display output on the command-line. It works as a wrapper around the target program, executing it and capturing the stdout stream. Optionally, stderr can be redirected to stdout, so that it, too, can be manipulated.
acoc then applies matching rules to patterns in the output and applies colour sets to those matches. A picture is worth a thousand words, so look at the sample screenshots in the next section.
Configuration
The configuration files used by the program are /usr/local/etc/acoc.conf, /etc/acoc.conf and ~/acoc.conf. One or more of these must exist. A sample /etc/acoc.conf is supplied with some example matching rules.
Blank lines and those that begin with a # are ignored.
A program configuration stanza is introduced as follows:
[program_spec]
The square brackets are mandatory literal characters. Alternatively, the @ symbol may be used, to allow [ and ] to retain their usual semantics in program specs comprising a regular expression:
@program_spec@
program_spec is defined as one or more instances of the following component, separated by a comma:
invocation[/flags]
where invocation consists of the programs name (not including its directory path component) plus any initial arguments.
Alternatively, invocation may be a regular expression, which can be used to match multiple programs and/or command-line arguments in arbitrary order. Regular expressions are automatically anchored to the beginning of the command line.
flags, if present, is separated from invocation by a slash and consists of one or more of the following characters:
a
continue to attempt to find matching patterns after the first match has been found. By default, acoc will stop processing a line and display it after the first match has been found.
e
redirect the target programs stderr to stdout, allowing it, too, to be matched by rules
p
allocate a pseudo-terminal in which to run the target program
Some programs, such as ls(1), behave differently when their stdout is not connected to a tty. Use of this option will fool the target program into believing it is outputting to a tty, rather than a pipe to acoc.
Use of this flag requires Masahiro Tomitas Ruby/TPty library to be installed. Otherwise, the flag is silently ignored.
Note that the pseudo-terminal communication enabled by this flag is one-way only, from the target program to acoc. It is thus not possible to use acoc in combination with interactive programs, such as the interactive Ruby interpreter (irb).
t
apply colour formatting even if stdout is not a tty. By default, formatting is not applied if the output stream is not attached to a terminal.
Heres an example of a line that introduces a configuration stanza:
[rpm/ae,rpmbuild/ae]
which says to apply the following rules to the rpm and rpmbuild commands, attempt to apply all matching rules, and also apply those rules to the programs stderr stream.
Another example:
[ls/p]
This says to allocate a pseudo-terminal to ls(1), fooling it into believing that its output is being sent to a regular terminal instead of a pipe to acoc.
With this flag, the effect will be this:
$ ls
file1 file2 file3 file4 file5 file6
Without it, ls will detect that its stdout is connected to a pipe and behave accordingly:
$ ls
file1
file2
file3
file4
file5
file6
A third example:
[diff/t,rcsdiff/t,cvs diff/t,p4 diff/t]
This says that the rules that follow should be applied to all invocations of diff(1) and rcsdiff(1), as well as those invocations of cvs(1) and p4 that are followed by the argument diff.
Additionally, colouring should be applied even when stdout is not connected to a tty, so that the colours still show up when the output is displayed in a pager such as more(1) or less(1).
Yet another example:
/ps -.*(e.*f|f.*e)/
In this example, the ps(1) command will be matched, as long as the e and f options are both passed in either order.
An alternative way to write the above spec is:
@ps -.*[ef].*[ef]@
There are two things to note in this alternative:
1. @ has been used to delimit the spec, because [ and ] are required for the character lists in the regular expression.
2. While this form is less specific (in that it allows matches against duplicated command line options), it makes for considerably shorter specs if one wishes to test for the inclusion of a set of more than 2 or 3 command line flags. In the original form, one must manually list all of the possible permutations, which is equal to x! (factorial). For 3 command line flags, this is 6 permutations; for 4, it is 24, etc.
Heres one more example:
[tcpdump/r]
If this were placed in ~/.acoc.conf, it would remove any matching rules that had been installed for the diff command by either /etc/acoc.conf or /usr/local/etc/acoc.conf.
After defining the program name and operational flags, matching rules can be defined. These take the following form:
/regex/[flags] colour_spec
where regex is a Ruby-compatible regular expression. The delimiting / characters can be any character, as long as that character is not present in the regular expression itself. flags, if present, consists of one or more characters from the following list:
g
find every match on the line, not just the first. When using this flag, regex should not include parentheses.
colour_spec is defined as a comma-separated list of one or more colour_groups, which are defined as a plus-separated (+) list of one or more of the following:
* black
* blink
* blue
* bold
* clear
* concealed
* cyan
* dark
* green
* italic
* magenta
* negative
* on_black
* on_blue
* on_cyan
* on_green
* on_magenta
* on_red
* on_white
* on_yellow
* rapid_blink
* red
* reset
* strikethrough
* underline
* underscore
* white
* yellow
Examples of a colour_group are white+bold, black+on_white, etc. A complete colour_spec might look like this:
red+bold,white,yellow+bold,black+on_green
Except when using the g flag, each component of the regex that you wish to colour should be placed in parentheses. Text outside parentheses will be used for matching, but will not be coloured.
For example, examine the following:
/^(d+)foos*(w+)/
This will match a line that starts with more or one digits, followed by the string foo and any amount of white space, followed by one or more word characters. However, only the initial group of digits and the group of word characters will be coloured. The string foo and the white space that follows it will be used for matching, but will not be coloured.
Separated from the regex by white space is the colour_spec. Usually, you will include in this as many colours (separated by commas) as you have parenthesised expressions in the regex. However, its also permissible to have fewer. If, for example, you have three parenthesised expressions in the regex, but only two colours listed in the colour_spec, then the second colour will be used for colouring both the second and third matches.
If you have more colours listed in the colour_spec than there are parenthesised expressions in the regex, the surplus colours are ignored.
When using the g flag to perform a global match on the line, you may list as many colours as you want. The same rules apply here. If there are more matches than colours, the remaining matches will be coloured using the last colour listed. Surplus colours are ignored.
wmMute 1r1
WindowMaker dock app which is used to control the level of sound output. more>> wmMute is a small WindowMaker dock app which is used to control the level of sound output. It consists of two part: wmMute (the GUI part) and wmMute-helper (the helper program which does the actual sound setting manipulation).
Currently the wmMute-helper is ALSA-centric. But as it is a shell script it can easily be tailored to control other sound systems as well.<<less
phpautotest 1.0.3
phpautotest is a tool for conducting automated regression tests on PHP-driven Web sites. more>>
HTTP output is tested using regular expressions.
pdfTeX 1.40.5
pdfTeX is an extended version of TeX that can create PDF directly from TeX source files. more>>
When PDF output is not selected, pdfTeX produces normal DVI output, otherwise it produces PDF output that looks identical to the DVI output.
An important aspect of pdfTeX project is to investigate alternative justification algorithms, optionally making use of multiple master fonts.
Enhancements:
- This includes xpdf 3.02pl1, fixing some security problems.