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HTML::BBReverse 0.07
HTML::BBReverse is a Perl module to convert HTML to BBCode and back. more>>
HTML::BBReverse is a Perl module to convert HTML to BBCode and back.
SYNOPSIS
use HTML::BBReverse
my $bbr = HTML::BBReverse->new();
# convert BBCode into HTML
my $html = $bbr->parse($bbcode);
# convert generated HTML back to BBCode
my $bbcode = $bbr->reverse($html);
HTML::BBReverse is a pure perl module for converting BBCode to HTML and is able to convert the generated HTML back to BBCode.
And why would you want to reverse the generated HTML? Well, when you have a nice dynamic website where you and/or visitors can post messages, and in those messages BBCode is used for markup. In normal cases, your website has a lot more pageviews than edits, and saving all those messages as HTML will be a lot faster than saving them as the original BBCode and parsing them to HTML for every visit.
So now all BBCode gets converted to HTML before it will be saved, but what if you want to edit a message? Just reverse the generated HTML back to BBCode, edit your message, and save it as HTML again.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use HTML::BBReverse
my $bbr = HTML::BBReverse->new();
# convert BBCode into HTML
my $html = $bbr->parse($bbcode);
# convert generated HTML back to BBCode
my $bbcode = $bbr->reverse($html);
HTML::BBReverse is a pure perl module for converting BBCode to HTML and is able to convert the generated HTML back to BBCode.
And why would you want to reverse the generated HTML? Well, when you have a nice dynamic website where you and/or visitors can post messages, and in those messages BBCode is used for markup. In normal cases, your website has a lot more pageviews than edits, and saving all those messages as HTML will be a lot faster than saving them as the original BBCode and parsing them to HTML for every visit.
So now all BBCode gets converted to HTML before it will be saved, but what if you want to edit a message? Just reverse the generated HTML back to BBCode, edit your message, and save it as HTML again.
Download (0.009MB)
Added: 2006-08-10 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
676 downloads
Digest::MD5::Reverse 1.0
Digest::MD5::Reverse provides MD5 Reverse Lookup. more>>
Digest::MD5::Reverse provides MD5 Reverse Lookup.
MD5 sums (see RFC 1321 - The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm) are used as a one-way hash of data. Due to the nature of the formula used, it is impossible to reverse it.
This module provides functions to search several online MD5 hashes database and return the results (or return undefined if no match found).
We are not breaking security. We are however making it easier to lookup the source of a MD5 sum.
Version restrictions:
- It is very slow, because it will search each library until match found or all library search finished.
<<lessMD5 sums (see RFC 1321 - The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm) are used as a one-way hash of data. Due to the nature of the formula used, it is impossible to reverse it.
This module provides functions to search several online MD5 hashes database and return the results (or return undefined if no match found).
We are not breaking security. We are however making it easier to lookup the source of a MD5 sum.
Version restrictions:
- It is very slow, because it will search each library until match found or all library search finished.
Download (0.002MB)
Added: 2007-03-31 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
945 downloads
Apache::ReverseProxy 0.07
Apache::ReverseProxy is an Apache mod_perl reverse proxy. more>>
Apache::ReverseProxy is an Apache mod_perl reverse proxy.
SYNOPSIS
# In Apache config file
< Location / >
SetHandler perl-script
PerlHandler Apache::ReverseProxy
PerlSetVar ReverseProxyConfig /usr/local/apache/conf/rproxy.conf
< /Location >
# In rproxy.conf / http://www.cpan.org/
This is a reverse proxy module for Apache with mod_perl. It is intended to replace Apache::ProxyPass. Given a list of URI mappings, this module will translate an incoming URI, retrieve the contents for the translated URI, and return the contents to the original requestor. This module allows you to specify exact matching (instead of regular expression matching) and handles query string translations.
CONFIGURATION
You will need to set the ReverseProxyConfig perl variable in Apache to the path of the reverse proxy mapping file. For example:
< Location / >
SetHandler perl-script
PerlHandler Apache::ReverseProxy
PerlSetVar ReverseProxyConfig /usr/local/apache/conf/rproxy.conf
# Optional configuration items:
#PerlSetVar ReverseProxyChain http://proxy.mycompany.com:8888/
#PerlSetVar ReverseProxyNoChain mycompany.com
< /Location >
ReverseProxyChain specifies a proxy server to use. This is sometimes called proxy chaining when one proxy server uses another proxy server. The ReverseProxyNoChain directive can specify a domain to not use proxy chaining on.
Reverse proxy configuration files have three fields, each separated by white space. The first field is the uri to look for, the second field is the replacement uri, and the third field is optional and allows you to specify comma separated options for the mapping. The only option that is currently supported is the exact parameter, which will make the reverse proxy use exact matching for the first parameter instead of using regular expressions. This feature is convenient when the first parameter contains characters that may need to be escaped or quotemetaed. Exact options are evaluated first. If there isnt an exact match, regular expression matches are performed. Configuration files may contain comments, which start with a pound sign. For example:
/news/ http://www.news.com/
/ http://www.perl.com/
/stats http://localhost/stats exact
# /stats maps exactly to http://localhost/stats
# /stats/b maps to http://www.perl.com/stats/b
/french/news http://www.news.com/?language=french
# /french/news/index -> http://www.news.com/index?language=french
# /french/news/index?a=b -> http://www.news.com/index?language=french&a=b
<<lessSYNOPSIS
# In Apache config file
< Location / >
SetHandler perl-script
PerlHandler Apache::ReverseProxy
PerlSetVar ReverseProxyConfig /usr/local/apache/conf/rproxy.conf
< /Location >
# In rproxy.conf / http://www.cpan.org/
This is a reverse proxy module for Apache with mod_perl. It is intended to replace Apache::ProxyPass. Given a list of URI mappings, this module will translate an incoming URI, retrieve the contents for the translated URI, and return the contents to the original requestor. This module allows you to specify exact matching (instead of regular expression matching) and handles query string translations.
CONFIGURATION
You will need to set the ReverseProxyConfig perl variable in Apache to the path of the reverse proxy mapping file. For example:
< Location / >
SetHandler perl-script
PerlHandler Apache::ReverseProxy
PerlSetVar ReverseProxyConfig /usr/local/apache/conf/rproxy.conf
# Optional configuration items:
#PerlSetVar ReverseProxyChain http://proxy.mycompany.com:8888/
#PerlSetVar ReverseProxyNoChain mycompany.com
< /Location >
ReverseProxyChain specifies a proxy server to use. This is sometimes called proxy chaining when one proxy server uses another proxy server. The ReverseProxyNoChain directive can specify a domain to not use proxy chaining on.
Reverse proxy configuration files have three fields, each separated by white space. The first field is the uri to look for, the second field is the replacement uri, and the third field is optional and allows you to specify comma separated options for the mapping. The only option that is currently supported is the exact parameter, which will make the reverse proxy use exact matching for the first parameter instead of using regular expressions. This feature is convenient when the first parameter contains characters that may need to be escaped or quotemetaed. Exact options are evaluated first. If there isnt an exact match, regular expression matches are performed. Configuration files may contain comments, which start with a pound sign. For example:
/news/ http://www.news.com/
/ http://www.perl.com/
/stats http://localhost/stats exact
# /stats maps exactly to http://localhost/stats
# /stats/b maps to http://www.perl.com/stats/b
/french/news http://www.news.com/?language=french
# /french/news/index -> http://www.news.com/index?language=french
# /french/news/index?a=b -> http://www.news.com/index?language=french&a=b
Download (0.006MB)
Added: 2007-07-30 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
816 downloads
Enhanced Reverse Pimpage 2.3 Beta 1
Enhanced Reverse Pimpage is an enhanced version of the original rpimp by Matt Miller. more>>
Enhanced Reverse Pimpage project is an enhanced version of the original rpimp by Matt Miller. Reverse Pimpage was designed to allow you to access a computer that is behind a firewall from outside that firewall itself.
The way it accomplishes this is by having the client (the computer behind the firewall) send a SYN request to a certain port at certain intervals. The computer that will access the client must run the server program, and when the time interval is up it will connect.
Once its connected, the client telnets to itself and routes data back and forth between the two.
NEW FEATURES
rpimp server
[ client box ] - -------> [ rpimp server box ]<<less
The way it accomplishes this is by having the client (the computer behind the firewall) send a SYN request to a certain port at certain intervals. The computer that will access the client must run the server program, and when the time interval is up it will connect.
Once its connected, the client telnets to itself and routes data back and forth between the two.
NEW FEATURES
rpimp server
[ client box ] - -------> [ rpimp server box ]<<less
Download (0.17MB)
Added: 2007-03-16 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
952 downloads
Perl::Critic::Policy::BuiltinFunctions::ProhibitReverseSortBlock 1.061
Conway says that it is much clearer to use reverse than to flip $a and $b around in a sort block. more>>
Perl::Critic::Policy::BuiltinFunctions::ProhibitReverseSortBlock - Conway says that it is much clearer to use reverse than to flip $a and $b around in a sort block.
Conway says that it is much clearer to use reverse than to flip $a and $b around in a sort block. He also suggests that, in newer perls, reverse is specifically looked for and optimized, and in the case of a simple reversed string sort, using reverse with a sort with no block is faster even in old perls.
my @foo = sort { $b cmp $a } @bar; #not ok
my @foo = reverse sort @bar; #ok
my @foo = sort { $b $a } @bar; #not ok
my @foo = reverse sort { $a $b } @bar; #ok
<<lessConway says that it is much clearer to use reverse than to flip $a and $b around in a sort block. He also suggests that, in newer perls, reverse is specifically looked for and optimized, and in the case of a simple reversed string sort, using reverse with a sort with no block is faster even in old perls.
my @foo = sort { $b cmp $a } @bar; #not ok
my @foo = reverse sort @bar; #ok
my @foo = sort { $b $a } @bar; #not ok
my @foo = reverse sort { $a $b } @bar; #ok
Download (0.24MB)
Added: 2007-08-01 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
814 downloads
MassResolve 0.1
MassResolve application performs reverse DNS lookups for network blocks or an input file. more>>
MassResolve application performs reverse DNS lookups for network blocks or an input file. The requests can be performed mulit-threaded.
Usage:
./res < subnet or filename to resolve > < forks >
Code:
/*
MassResolve (C) 2000 John Anderson (john@ev6.net)
This program performs reverse dns lookups for network blocks
or an input file and supports multi threading.
*/
#include < stdio.h>
#include < fcntl.h>
#include < netdb.h>
#include < signal.h>
#include < sys/time.h>
#include < unistd.h>
#include < netinet/in.h>
#include < netinet/ip.h>
#include < netinet/ip_icmp.h>
#include < errno.h>
#include < string.h>
#include < getopt.h>
#include < setjmp.h>
char *
rlookup (u_long ip)
{
static char hostname[256];
struct hostent *host;
struct sockaddr_in addr;
addr.sin_addr.s_addr = ip;
host =
gethostbyaddr ((char *) &addr.sin_addr, sizeof (addr.sin_addr), AF_INET);
if (host == NULL)
{
printf ("%s does not resolve.n", inet_ntoa (ip));
fflush (stdout);
}
else
{
printf ("%s resolves to %sn", inet_ntoa (ip), host->h_name);
fflush (stdout);
}
}
int maxforq = 0;
int
main (int argc, char **argv)
{
int pid, k, j, frk, i, mforks;
char *pt;
char mehost[200], sv[3];
FILE *inp;
mforks = 64; /* default */
if (argv[1] == NULL)
{
printf ("Usage: %s n", argv[0]);
exit (0);
}
if (!argv[2] == NULL)
{
mforks = atoi (argv[2]);
}
/* printf ("Resolving all hosts in %s with %d threadsn", argv[1], mforks); */
if((inp=fopen(argv[1],"r"))!=NULL)
{
while(fgets(mehost,sizeof(mehost),inp))
{
sscanf(mehost,"%sn",mehost);
frk = fork ();
if (frk == 0)
{
fflush (stdout);
rlookup (inet_addr (mehost));
exit (0);
}
else
{ /* frk = 0 */
maxforq++;
if (maxforq > mforks)
{
wait (NULL); // waiting until the child died
maxforq--;
}
}
}
fclose(inp);
exit(0);
}
pt = strchr (argv[1], .);
if (pt == NULL)
{ /* ANET */
for (k = 0; k<<less
Usage:
./res < subnet or filename to resolve > < forks >
Code:
/*
MassResolve (C) 2000 John Anderson (john@ev6.net)
This program performs reverse dns lookups for network blocks
or an input file and supports multi threading.
*/
#include < stdio.h>
#include < fcntl.h>
#include < netdb.h>
#include < signal.h>
#include < sys/time.h>
#include < unistd.h>
#include < netinet/in.h>
#include < netinet/ip.h>
#include < netinet/ip_icmp.h>
#include < errno.h>
#include < string.h>
#include < getopt.h>
#include < setjmp.h>
char *
rlookup (u_long ip)
{
static char hostname[256];
struct hostent *host;
struct sockaddr_in addr;
addr.sin_addr.s_addr = ip;
host =
gethostbyaddr ((char *) &addr.sin_addr, sizeof (addr.sin_addr), AF_INET);
if (host == NULL)
{
printf ("%s does not resolve.n", inet_ntoa (ip));
fflush (stdout);
}
else
{
printf ("%s resolves to %sn", inet_ntoa (ip), host->h_name);
fflush (stdout);
}
}
int maxforq = 0;
int
main (int argc, char **argv)
{
int pid, k, j, frk, i, mforks;
char *pt;
char mehost[200], sv[3];
FILE *inp;
mforks = 64; /* default */
if (argv[1] == NULL)
{
printf ("Usage: %s n", argv[0]);
exit (0);
}
if (!argv[2] == NULL)
{
mforks = atoi (argv[2]);
}
/* printf ("Resolving all hosts in %s with %d threadsn", argv[1], mforks); */
if((inp=fopen(argv[1],"r"))!=NULL)
{
while(fgets(mehost,sizeof(mehost),inp))
{
sscanf(mehost,"%sn",mehost);
frk = fork ();
if (frk == 0)
{
fflush (stdout);
rlookup (inet_addr (mehost));
exit (0);
}
else
{ /* frk = 0 */
maxforq++;
if (maxforq > mforks)
{
wait (NULL); // waiting until the child died
maxforq--;
}
}
}
fclose(inp);
exit(0);
}
pt = strchr (argv[1], .);
if (pt == NULL)
{ /* ANET */
for (k = 0; k<<less
Download (0.004MB)
Added: 2007-08-22 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
796 downloads
pyRacerz 0.2
pyRacerz is a multiplayer top view 2D racing game. more>>
pyRacerz is a multiplayer top view 2D racing game. It features multiplayer (on the same computer), tournaments, high scores, replays, 6 tracks (really 12, because each track can be used Normal or Reverse), 9 cars, a basic robot player, 3 different levels of difficulty, and a music player (it can play the .ogg files locating in the musics directory).
Main features:
- Multiplayer (on the same computer)
- Tournament
- Challenge mode (for single user)
- Hi Scores
- Replays
- 8 tracks (1 to be unlocked)(in fact 16 because each track can be used Normal or Reverse)
- 9 cars
- Basic robot player
- 3 different levels of difficulty
- Music player (pyRacerz can play the .ogg files locating in the musics directory)
<<lessMain features:
- Multiplayer (on the same computer)
- Tournament
- Challenge mode (for single user)
- Hi Scores
- Replays
- 8 tracks (1 to be unlocked)(in fact 16 because each track can be used Normal or Reverse)
- 9 cars
- Basic robot player
- 3 different levels of difficulty
- Music player (pyRacerz can play the .ogg files locating in the musics directory)
Download (4.5MB)
Added: 2005-10-17 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1468 downloads
VNC Reflector 1.2.4
VNC Reflector project is a specialized VNC proxy server. more>>
VNC Reflector project is a specialized VNC proxy server.
VNC Reflector is a specialized VNC server which acts as a proxy between a real VNC server (a host) and a number of VNC clients.
It was designed to work efficiently with large number of clients. It can switch between different hosts on the fly, preserving client connections.
It supports reverse host-to-reflector connections, it can save host sessions on disk, and it also has other unique features.
<<lessVNC Reflector is a specialized VNC server which acts as a proxy between a real VNC server (a host) and a number of VNC clients.
It was designed to work efficiently with large number of clients. It can switch between different hosts on the fly, preserving client connections.
It supports reverse host-to-reflector connections, it can save host sessions on disk, and it also has other unique features.
Download (0.083MB)
Added: 2006-10-06 License: BSD License Price:
1117 downloads
mod_sesehe SEcure SErver HEader 1.0
mod_sesehe SEcure SErver HEader is an Apache module that disguise or remove Server: HTTP header. more>>
mod_sesehe SEcure SErver HEader is an Apache module that disguise or remove "Server: " HTTP header.
The ServerTokens directive currently can at best be set to Prod, which will cause apache to return "Apache" as Server header. Some problem still occurs:
First, the level of security by obscurity of this directive is not acceptable by some people that just want to change it to some other value, without re-compiling Apache, or people that even want to simply drop the "Server: " header. Secondly, if apache is configured as a reverse proxy, and a malformed request is received, then it will display its own server token instead of the backend one, so we need to handle error response header.
I developed this tiny module by hijacking normal behavior of (reverse) proxy feature of Apache : i.e. even if a request is not a proxy request, I tag it as if it was, to make Apache core let me do what I want with this header.
<<lessThe ServerTokens directive currently can at best be set to Prod, which will cause apache to return "Apache" as Server header. Some problem still occurs:
First, the level of security by obscurity of this directive is not acceptable by some people that just want to change it to some other value, without re-compiling Apache, or people that even want to simply drop the "Server: " header. Secondly, if apache is configured as a reverse proxy, and a malformed request is received, then it will display its own server token instead of the backend one, so we need to handle error response header.
I developed this tiny module by hijacking normal behavior of (reverse) proxy feature of Apache : i.e. even if a request is not a proxy request, I tag it as if it was, to make Apache core let me do what I want with this header.
Download (0.006MB)
Added: 2006-04-03 License: The Apache License 2.0 Price:
1301 downloads
rdns 1.0
rdns provides a tiny little UNIX utility that will preform reverse dns lookups. more>>
rdns provides a tiny little UNIX utility that will preform reverse dns lookups.
This simple little program takes an IP address as an argument, and spits out the hostname that it finds. Its a simple little program designed to be used in scripts, primarily.
Syntax:
rdns [-s]
Optionally, you can append -s onto the command line. This will prevent rdns from printing any available aliases.
Note: Sometimes rdns will just seem to hang there during the gethostbyname() call. This usually occurs when you try to resolve addresses private IP addresses, like 192.168.*, 10.* and so forth. This is usually BAD for scripting, so try to have all the possible hosts in your /etc/hosts.
<<lessThis simple little program takes an IP address as an argument, and spits out the hostname that it finds. Its a simple little program designed to be used in scripts, primarily.
Syntax:
rdns [-s]
Optionally, you can append -s onto the command line. This will prevent rdns from printing any available aliases.
Note: Sometimes rdns will just seem to hang there during the gethostbyname() call. This usually occurs when you try to resolve addresses private IP addresses, like 192.168.*, 10.* and so forth. This is usually BAD for scripting, so try to have all the possible hosts in your /etc/hosts.
Download (0.008MB)
Added: 2007-04-20 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
921 downloads
UNIVERSAL::derived_classes 0.01
UNIVERSAL::derived_classes module returns derived classes of a class. more>>
SYNOPSIS
require UNIVERSAL::derived_classes;
package A;
package B;
@ISA = qw( A );
package C;
@ISA = qw( B );
package main;
my @derived_classes = A->derived_classes; # B, C
my @derived_classes_reversed = A->derived_classes_reversed; # C, B
UNIVERSAL::derived_classes provides the following methods:
CLASS->derived_classes(REVERSED)
$obj->derived_classes(REVERSED)
Where
REVERSED
is the flag to reverse classes
When used as a class method (CLASS->derived_classes(REVERSED)), derived_classes returns derived classes of the CLASS.
When used as an instance method ($obj->derived_classes(REVERSED)), derived_classes returns derived classes of a class where $obj is blessed.
If the REVERSED flag is true then reversed derived classes are returned.
CLASS->derived_classes_reversed
$obj->derived_classes_reversed
derived_classes_reversed is same as derived_classes(REVERSED)
Download (0.003MB)
Added: 2007-08-03 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
812 downloads
MILA::Transliterate 0.01
MILA::Transliterate is a Perl Module for transliterating text from Hebrew to various transliterations used in the Knowledge Cent more>>
MILA::Transliterate is a Perl Module for transliterating text from Hebrew to various transliterations used in the Knowledge Center for Processing Hebrew (MILA) and vise versa.
SYNOPSIS
use MILA::Transliterate qw((hebrew2treebank hebrew2erel hebrew2fsma);
my $erel_transliterated = hebrew2erel($utf8_encoded_hebrew_text);
my $treebank_transliterated = hebrew2treebank($utf8_encoded_hebrew_text);
my $fsma_transliterated = hebrew2fsma($utf8_encoded_hebrew_text);
# note that the reverse transliteration does NOT maintain final Hebrew letters!
Before UNICODE was widely used, applications that were manipulating Hebrew text usually used some transliteration into ASCII characters instead of using Hebrew letters. This was particularly true for software developed in the academia. MILA is a nick name for the Knowledge Center for Processing Hebrew (see: http://mila.cs.technion.ac.il/).
This knowledge center develops software and standards that result from research in natural language processing for Hebrew. As a result, some legacy software also needs to be maintained and such legacy software usually used transliteration.
This module contains mapping from UTF-8 encoded Hebrew to the various transliteration schemes that MILA needs to support and also contains the reversed mapping.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use MILA::Transliterate qw((hebrew2treebank hebrew2erel hebrew2fsma);
my $erel_transliterated = hebrew2erel($utf8_encoded_hebrew_text);
my $treebank_transliterated = hebrew2treebank($utf8_encoded_hebrew_text);
my $fsma_transliterated = hebrew2fsma($utf8_encoded_hebrew_text);
# note that the reverse transliteration does NOT maintain final Hebrew letters!
Before UNICODE was widely used, applications that were manipulating Hebrew text usually used some transliteration into ASCII characters instead of using Hebrew letters. This was particularly true for software developed in the academia. MILA is a nick name for the Knowledge Center for Processing Hebrew (see: http://mila.cs.technion.ac.il/).
This knowledge center develops software and standards that result from research in natural language processing for Hebrew. As a result, some legacy software also needs to be maintained and such legacy software usually used transliteration.
This module contains mapping from UTF-8 encoded Hebrew to the various transliteration schemes that MILA needs to support and also contains the reversed mapping.
Download (0.004MB)
Added: 2007-03-05 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
964 downloads
THC-RWWWShell 2.0
Reverse-WWW-Tunnel-Backdoor is proof-of-concept Perl program for the paper Placing Backdoors through Firewalls. more>>
THC-RWWWShell is proof-of-concept Perl program for the paper "Placing Backdoors through Firewalls".
It allows communicating with a shell through firewalls and proxy servers by imitating webtraffic. The master/slave relation is reversed, therefore no listening ports are used on the target machine.
THC-RWWWShell was verified to work on Linux, Solaris, AIX and OpenBSD
BUGS: some Solaris machines: select(3) is broken, wont work there on some systems Perls recv is broken (AIX, OpenBSD) ... we cant make proper receive checks here. Workaround implemented.
Enhancements:
- HTTP 1.0 protocol compliance (finally)
<<lessIt allows communicating with a shell through firewalls and proxy servers by imitating webtraffic. The master/slave relation is reversed, therefore no listening ports are used on the target machine.
THC-RWWWShell was verified to work on Linux, Solaris, AIX and OpenBSD
BUGS: some Solaris machines: select(3) is broken, wont work there on some systems Perls recv is broken (AIX, OpenBSD) ... we cant make proper receive checks here. Workaround implemented.
Enhancements:
- HTTP 1.0 protocol compliance (finally)
Download (0.005MB)
Added: 2006-03-08 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1341 downloads
File Beamer 0.1.5
File Beamer is an easy to use file transfer tool. more>>
File Beamer is an easy to use file transfer tool. The programm is platform independent. That means it runs with Windows 98/ME/2000/XP, Linux, Unix and MacOS X.
This is made possible by using Trolltechs Qt Library which provides an easy to use GUI toolkit, networking functions and a lot more.
File Beamer is free open source software and was released under the GPL license.
Usage:
Receiving files:
Click the "Receive" tab
If the receiver is behind a firewall or router, check "reverse connection" and enter the senders IP or host name. *
Click the "listen" button. The client can now receive files
When receving a file, a "Save as" dialog appears. Choose a place to safe the file.
Sending files:
Click the "Send" tab
If the receiver is behind a firewall or router check "reverse connection" *
Else input the target IP address or host name and port
Select a file to send either by typing the path or by clicking the "..." button
Click the "Send" button (target must be in listen mode)
<<lessThis is made possible by using Trolltechs Qt Library which provides an easy to use GUI toolkit, networking functions and a lot more.
File Beamer is free open source software and was released under the GPL license.
Usage:
Receiving files:
Click the "Receive" tab
If the receiver is behind a firewall or router, check "reverse connection" and enter the senders IP or host name. *
Click the "listen" button. The client can now receive files
When receving a file, a "Save as" dialog appears. Choose a place to safe the file.
Sending files:
Click the "Send" tab
If the receiver is behind a firewall or router check "reverse connection" *
Else input the target IP address or host name and port
Select a file to send either by typing the path or by clicking the "..." button
Click the "Send" button (target must be in listen mode)
Download (2.8MB)
Added: 2005-11-08 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1578 downloads
List::Pairwise 0.23
List::Pairwise is a Perl module with map/grep arrays and hashes pairwise. more>>
List::Pairwise is a Perl module with map/grep arrays and hashes pairwise.
SYNOPSIS
use List::Pairwise qw(:all);
my %a = (
snoogy1 => 4,
snoogy2 => 2,
NOT => 4,
snoogy3 => 5,
hehe => 12,
);
# keys/values emulation (only slower)
my @keys = mapp {$a} %a;
my @values = mapp {$b} %a;
# reverse hash (does not work in-place)
my %reverse_a = mapp {$b, $a} %a;
# reverse array pairs in-place
my @a = %a;
mapp { ($a, $b) = ($b, $a) } @a;
# modify values in-place
mapp {$b++} %a;
# modify keys (does not work in-place)
my %b = mapp {lc($a) => $b} %a;
# grep hash subset
my %subset1 = grepp {$a =~ /snoogy/} %a;
my %subset2 = grepp {$b < 5} %a;
# grep some specific values
my @snoog_values = mapp {$b} grepp {$a =~ /snoogy/} %a;
# This does not work:
# values grepp {$a =~ /snoogy/} %a; # values() expects a real hash
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use List::Pairwise qw(:all);
my %a = (
snoogy1 => 4,
snoogy2 => 2,
NOT => 4,
snoogy3 => 5,
hehe => 12,
);
# keys/values emulation (only slower)
my @keys = mapp {$a} %a;
my @values = mapp {$b} %a;
# reverse hash (does not work in-place)
my %reverse_a = mapp {$b, $a} %a;
# reverse array pairs in-place
my @a = %a;
mapp { ($a, $b) = ($b, $a) } @a;
# modify values in-place
mapp {$b++} %a;
# modify keys (does not work in-place)
my %b = mapp {lc($a) => $b} %a;
# grep hash subset
my %subset1 = grepp {$a =~ /snoogy/} %a;
my %subset2 = grepp {$b < 5} %a;
# grep some specific values
my @snoog_values = mapp {$b} grepp {$a =~ /snoogy/} %a;
# This does not work:
# values grepp {$a =~ /snoogy/} %a; # values() expects a real hash
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Added: 2007-05-18 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
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