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Postal 0.67

Postal 0.67


Postal is a SMTP and POP benchmark suite. more>>
Postal suite currently consists of two programs, Postal and Rabid. Postal (the mad postman) is a program that will deliver mail as fast as possible via the SMTP protocol to test mail server performance.
Rabid (the mad Biff) will eat mail via the POP protocol as fast as possible and measure POP server performance. All messages sent via Postal have MD5 checksums appended, and Rabid will check the MD5 to ensure that the messages are not being corrupted.
It works by taking a list of user names and applying random transformations to them to get the FROM and TO addresses, this is because if each email address takes 30 bytes of storage then 1,000,000 accounts would take 30M of RAM. 3,000,000 accounts would take 90M of RAM which would be more than the memory in my test machine (this would cause thrashing and make the benchmark invalid), and it would take ages to load all that data from the hard drive. Using 100,000 accounts and applying a transformation to map them to 30M accounts is a much more efficient use of resources.
When sending the mail the subject and body will be random data. A header field X-Postal will be used so that procmail can easily filter out such email just in case you accidentally put your own email address as one of the test addresses. ;)
For Debian the best thing to do is to do "apt-get install postal", if you dont want to use the version supplied with your version of Debian you can build a Debian package in the usual manner.
Change to the directory containing the unpacked source and use the command:
dpkg-buildpackage -rfakeroot -tc -us
That will create a .deb in the parent directory.
For Red Hat etc there is a portslave.spec file to allow for building with
the "rpm -b" command.
For Solaris use the command "make -C sun" to build a package in /var/spool/pkg
(make sure you have write access to that directory).
For other Unix setup "./configure ; make install" should do an install.
Enhancements:
- The license was changed to GPLv3.
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Added: 2007-07-02 License: GPL v3 Price:
1223 downloads
Tamil Converters 2.7.1

Tamil Converters 2.7.1


Tamil Converters is a package containing five programs that convert Tamil text from ISCII to Unicode. more>>
Tamil Converters is a package containing five programs that convert Tamil text from ISCII to Unicode, Unicode to ISCII, ITRANS to ISCII, ITRANS to ISCII, and TSCII to Unicode.
All five programs provide fairly extensive checking of their input for errors and untranslatable codes. The ITRANS used is, by default, extended to include codes for the Tamil digits and to include HZ escapes (as defined in RFC 1843) that delimit the Tamil portion.
This allows processing of mixed Tamil and ASCII text. The extensions and use of HZ escapes can be disabled by command-line switches.
Enhancements:
- Several programs inadvertently omitted from the previous version of the package are now included.
- Several errors in the Makefile have been fixed.
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Added: 2007-05-28 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
902 downloads
Pretty Code Web 1.00

Pretty Code Web 1.00


Pretty Code Web is a syntax highlighter for publishing code, written in any programming language, to the Web. more>>
Pretty Code Web is a syntax highlighter for publishing code, written in any programming language, to the web.
Written in php it uses syntax files separate from the main code to highlight a specified language.
Main features:
- Syntax highlighting for (potentially) any language.
- User defined syntax files.
- User defined colors
- Separate colors for:
- 6 Keyword Groups
- Text Strings
- Operators
- Block and Line Comments
- Bracket Characters
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Download (0.024MB)
Added: 2005-10-20 License: Free for non-commercial use Price:
1470 downloads
Html Code Convert 3.3

Html Code Convert 3.3


Speed up the conversion of HTML code into different format more>>
HTML Code Convert helps speed up the conversion of HTML code into different format including Java Script, JavaServer Pages, Microsoft ASP, PHP, Perl, Python, and the UNIX Shell. It is particularly useful in CGI scripting.
Enhancements:
- Colors and font selected in prefeferences box.
- Fixe bug with Quit button. First try to support accessibility.
- Updated schemas.
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Added: 2009-04-29 License: Freeware Price:
198 downloads
Postal 2: Share the Pain DEMO 1407

Postal 2: Share the Pain DEMO 1407


Postal 2: Share the Pain DEMO is a FPS game for Linux. more>> <<less
Download (167.3MB)
Added: 2006-03-17 License: Freeware Price:
1015 downloads
Morseall 0.4.8

Morseall 0.4.8


Morseall allows you to control any computer using morse code. more>>
Morseall allows you to control any computer using only the mouse buttons. It allows you to produce keystrokes by tapping Morse codes with just a single button or with a three-button mouse for faster entry.
Morseall is designed for disabled users who can only move one muscle.
Morseall can also be used with wearable laptops, tablets, or handhelds where a keyboard would be inconvenient or unavailable.
Main features:
- Anyone who can press a switch can use Morseall!
- You can go faster if you can control two or three buttons
- An Iambic Keyer is available for ultra-fast coding
- Audio feedback is given for each dot and dash
- Characters can be read aloud as they are typed for verification
- It works with a standard mouse! No custom hardware needed.
- On-line help is always visible for looking up codes
- Takes over the mouse so disabled users can maintain control.
- Code Timing is adjustable from within the program (seven dots=faster)
- A Configuration file allows you to set defaults (/etc/morseall.conf)
- A Reset feature helps users recover if the terminal gets stuck
- Visual feedback on your morse code timing as you key it
- Morseall is Free Software, Licensed under the GNU GPL
Enhancements:
- The most-recent code sequence is kept visible, for better sanity checking.
- A repeat code is available for users who cant hold it in for the normal repeat (some sip/puff users need this)
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Added: 2006-08-30 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1151 downloads
XML::Code 0.04

XML::Code 0.04


XML::Diff is a Perl module for XML DOM-Tree based Diff & Patch Module. more>>
XML::Diff is a Perl module for XML DOM-Tree based Diff & Patch Module.

SYNOPSIS

my $diff = XML::Diff->new();

# to generate a diffgram of two XML files, use compare.
# $old and $new can be filepaths, XML as a string,
# XML::LibXML::Document or XML::LibXML::Element objects.
# The diffgram is a XML::LibXML::Document by default.
my $diffgram = $diff->compare(
-old => $old_xml,
-new => $new_xml,
);

# To patch an XML document, an patch. $old and $diffgram
# follow the same formatting rules as compare.
# The resulting XML is a XML::LibXML::Document by default.
my $patched = $diff->patch(
-old => $old,
-diffgram => $diffgram,
);

This module provides methods for generating and applying an XML diffgram of two related XML files. The basis of the algorithm is tree-wise comparison using the DOM model as provided by XML::LibXML.

The Diffgram is well-formed XML in the XVCS namespance and supports update, insert, delete and move operations. It is meant to be human and machine readable. It uses XPath expressions for locating the nodes to operate on.

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Added: 2006-09-14 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1138 downloads
HTML Tidy

HTML Tidy


HTML Tidy cleans up HTML source and formats it nicely. more>>
HTML TIDY is a free utility to fix mistakes made while editing HTML and to automatically tidy up sloppy editing into nicely layed out markup. It also works great on the atrociously hard to read markup generated by specialized HTML editors and conversion tools, and can help you identify where you need to pay further attention on making your pages more accessible to people with disabilities.
When editing HTML its easy to make mistakes. Wouldnt it be nice if there was a simple way to fix these mistakes automatically and tidy up sloppy editing into nicely layed out markup? Well now there is! Dave Raggetts HTML TIDY is a free utility for doing just that. It also works great on the atrociously hard to read markup generated by specialized HTML editors and conversion tools, and can help you identify where you need to pay further attention on making your pages more accessible to people with disabilities.
Tidy is able to fix up a wide range of problems and to bring to your attention things that you need to work on yourself. Each item found is listed with the line number and column so that you can see where the problem lies in your markup. Tidy wont generate a cleaned up version when there are problems that it cant be sure of how to handle. These are logged as "errors" rather than "warnings".
Dave Raggett has now passed the baton for maintaining Tidy to a group of volunteers working together as part of the open source community at Source Forge. The source code continues to be available under an open source license, and you are encouraged to pass on bug reports and enhancement requests at http://tidy.sourceforge.net.
If you find HTML Tidy useful and you would like to say thanks, then please send me a (paper) postcard or other souvenir from the area in which you live along with a few words on what you are using Tidy for. It will be fun to map out where Tidy users are to be found! My postal address is given at the end of this file.
The W3C public email list devoted to HTML Tidy is: . To subscribe send an email to html-tidy-request@w3.org with the word subscribe in the subject line (include the word unsubscribe if you want to unsubscribe). The archive for this list is accessible online. If you would like to contact the developers, or you just want to submit an enhancement request or a bug report, please visit http://tidy.sourceforge.net.
Tidy can now perform wonders on HTML saved from Microsoft Word 2000! Word bulks out HTML files with stuff for round-tripping presentation between HTML and Word. If you are more concerned about using HTML on the Web, check out Tidys "Word-2000" config option! Of course Tidy does a good job on Word97 files as well!
Main features:
- Missing or mismatched end tags are detected and corrected
- End tags in the wrong order are corrected
- Fixes problems with heading emphasis
- Recovers from mixed up tags
- Getting the
in the right place
- Adding the missing "/" in end tags for anchors
- Perfecting lists by putting in tags missed out
- Missing quotes around attribute values are added
- Unknown/Proprietary attributes are reported
- Proprietary elements are recognized and reported as such
- Tags lacking a terminating > are spotted
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Added: 2005-05-05 License: MIT/X Consortium License Price:
2216 downloads
StringParser_BBCode 0.3.1

StringParser_BBCode 0.3.1


StringParser_BBCode class provides the possibility to parse strings with BB-Codes and convert them to e.g. HTML code. more>>
StringParser_BBCode class provides the possibility to parse strings with BB-Codes and convert them to e.g. HTML code.
BBCode is a kind of markup "language" with which one may structure and format text. It is similar to HTML but it utilizes square braces instead of angle brackets.
Another difference between BBCode and HTML is that when using BBCode invalid code is ignored whereas the validity of the code is important when using HTML.
Enhancements:
- Several bugfixes were made.
- Support was added for parsing [code=foo attr=bar].
- A callback function may be called again on close tag occurrence.
- A processing type "callback_replace?" was added which exhibits the opposite behavior of "usecontent?".
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Added: 2006-04-27 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1276 downloads
Geography::States 2.1

Geography::States 2.1


Geography::States is a Perl module with map states and provinces to their codes, and vice versa. more>>
Geography::States is a Perl module with map states and provinces to their codes, and vice versa.

SYNOPSIS

use Geography::States;

my $obj = Geography::States -> new (COUNTRY [, STRICT]);

EXAMPLES

my $canada = Geography::States -> new (Canada);

my $name = $canada -> state (NF); # Newfoundland.
my $code = $canada -> state (Ontario); # ON.
my ($code, $name) = $canada -> state (BC); # BC, British Columbia.
my @all_states = $canada -> state; # List code/name pairs.

This module lets you map states and provinces to their codes, and codes to names of provinces and states.

The Geography::States - new ()> call takes 1 or 2 arguments. The first, required, argument is the country we are interested in. Current supported countries are USA, Brazil, Canada, The Netherlands, and Australia. If a second non-false argument is given, we use strict mode. In non-strict mode, we will map territories and alternative codes as well, while we do not do that in strict mode. For example, if the country is USA, in non-strict mode, we will map GU to Guam, while in strict mode, neither GU and Guam will be found.

The state() method

All queries are done by calling the state method in the object. This method takes an optional argument. If an argument is given, then in scalar context, it will return the name of the state if a code of a state is given, and the code of a state, if the argument of the method is a name of a state. In list context, both the code and the state will be returned.

If no argument is given, then the state method in list context will return a list of all code/name pairs for that country. In scalar context, it will return the number of code/name pairs. Each code/name pair is a 2 element anonymous array.

Arguments can be given in a case insensitive way; if a name consists of multiple parts, the number of spaces does not matter, as long as there is some whitespace. (That is "NewYork" is wrong, but "new YORK" is fine.)

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Added: 2007-02-14 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
982 downloads
Convert::GeekCode 0.51

Convert::GeekCode 0.51


Convert::GeekCode is a Perl module that can convert and generate geek code sequences. more>>
Convert::GeekCode is a Perl module that can convert and generate geek code sequences.

SYNOPSIS

use Convert::GeekCode; # exports geek_decode()

my @out = geek_decode(q(
-----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-----
Version: 3.12
GB/C/CM/CS/CC/ED/H/IT/L/M/MU/P/SS/TW/AT d---x s+: a-- C++++ UB++++$
P++++$ L+ E--->+ W+++$ N++ !o K w--(++) O-- M-@ !V PS+++ PE Y+>++
PGP++ t+ 5? X+ R+++ !tv b++++ DI+++@ D++ G++++ e-(--) h* r++(+) z++*
------END GEEK CODE BLOCK------
)); # yes, thats the authors geek code

my ($key, $val);
print "[$key]n$valnn" while (($key, $val) = splice(@out, 0, 2));

Convert::GeekCode converts and generates Geek Code sequences (cf. http://geekcode.com/). It supports different langugage codes and user-customizable codesets.
Since version 0.5, this module uses YAML to represent the geek code tables, for greater readability and ease of deserialization. Please refer to http://www.yaml.org/ for more related information.

The geekgen and geekdec utilities are installed by default, and may be used to generate / decode geek code blocks, respectively

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Added: 2006-08-03 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1180 downloads
PHP Active Code Library 0.10

PHP Active Code Library 0.10


PHP Active Code Library (ACL) is a PHP 5 class used to store and call PHP files that are stored in a database. more>>
PHP Active Code Library (ACL) is a PHP 5 class used to store and call PHP files that are stored in a database.

The files are stored in a plain text field and not a binary field. PHP ACL also takes care of include/require calls.

If a file includes another file stored in the database, PHP ACL takes care of getting, generating, and including that file.
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Download (0.013MB)
Added: 2006-07-27 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1191 downloads
Resistor Color Code Calculator 1.0

Resistor Color Code Calculator 1.0


Resistor Color Code Calculator calculates the value of a resistor (an electronic component). more>>
Resistor Color Code Calculator project calculates the value of a resistor (an electronic component).

The colors on the resistor are input into the program, and the result displays the resistance value of the resistor.

This is much easier than memorizing rhymes to remember colors.
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Download (0.87MB)
Added: 2006-06-09 License: Free for non-commercial use Price:
1256 downloads
MyServerTalks 1.1

MyServerTalks 1.1


MyServerTalks aims to be an interface between your server and messaging networks. more>>
MyServerTalks project aims to be an interface between your server and messaging networks. Based on the XMPP protocol, it lets you manage your servers using a Jabber or Google Talk account.
Main features:
- Runs in Windows, Linux and BSD systems
- Auto reconnect
- Auto-add enabled contacts present at configuration file (contacts.ini)
- Auto-remove contacts that are not listed at configuration file (contacts.ini)
- Very expansible framework
- 2 security levels (escope USER and escope SUPER)
- Easy setup (only 3 simple ini files)
Enhancements:
- Added help command to show all commands for your escope
- Added about command to show information about version of MyServerTalks and local server informations
- Messages normalized
- Sucess, error and unavaible codes do reply messages
- Code organization and sanity checks added
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Download (0.017MB)
Added: 2007-07-12 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
834 downloads
Telephony::CountryDialingCodes 1.02

Telephony::CountryDialingCodes 1.02


Telephony::CountryDialingCodes is a Perl module that can convert international dialing codes to country codes and vice versa. more>>
Telephony::CountryDialingCodes is a Perl module that can convert international dialing codes to country codes and vice versa.

SYNOPSIS

# Usage method 1 (using object methods):
use Telephony::CountryDialingCodes;
my $o = new Telephony::CountryDialingCodes();
my $country_code = NL;
print "The dialing access code for country $country_code is " . $o->dialing_code($country_code) . "n";
my $dialing_code = 1;
my @country_codes = $o->country_codes($dialing_code);
print "The country code(s) for dialing access code $dialing_code is/are: " . join(,,@country_codes) . "n";


# Usage method 2 (using class methods):
use Telephony::CountryDialingCodes;
my $country_code = NL;
print "The dialing access code for country $country_code is " . Telephony::CountryDialingCodes->dialing_code($country_code) . "n";
my $dialing_code = 1;
my @country_codes = Telephony::CountryDialingCodes->country_codes($dialing_code);
print "The country code(s) for dialing access code $dialing_code is/are: " . join(,,@country_codes) . "n";

# Extracting an intl dialing code from an intl phone number:
use Telephony::CountryDialingCodes;
my $o = new Telephony::CountryDialingCodes();
my $dialing_code = $o->extract_dialing_code(+521234567890);
# $dialing_code will contain 52.

This class exports a method for determining a countrys international dialing code, and another method for doing the reverse: i.e. determining the country code(s) that belong(s) to a given international dialing code.

You can call these methods as class methods or you can create an object and call these methods as object methods. The difference is that if you call them in object context that the internal lookup tables are freed when the object is destroyed, otherwise if you call the methods in class context, then the internal lookup tables are global and will persist for the lifespan of the current process. Its not really a big deal which approach you choose, so for the sake of style, use the object method approach if you have no clue which is better.

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Download (0.004MB)
Added: 2006-09-20 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1130 downloads
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