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Fenris 0.07-m2 build 3245 Fenris is a suite of tools suitable for code analysis, debugging, protocol analysis, reverse engineering, forensics, diagnostics, sec GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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FlightGear 0.9.10 The FlightGear flight simulator project is an open-source, multi-platform, cooperative flight simulator development project GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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Philip's Music Writer 4.12 Philip's Music Writer is a program for typesetting music. It reads text files as input, and generates PostScript as output. Philip's Music Writer can also write simple MIDI files for proofhearing purposes. PMW is written in C and is freestanding; that is, it does not require additional processing software. It is a Linux/Unix port of a program that has run for over a decade on Acorn systems, where it was known as Philip's Music Scribe. PMW operates by reading an input file containing an encoded description of the music; such a file can be constructed using any text editor or word processor. The music encoding is very straightforward and compact, and quick to enter. Although such an input method may not be considered as "user-friendly" as pointing and dragging on the screen, it is a much faster way of inputting music, once the format of the input files has been learned. In addition, the usual facilities of a word processor, such as cutting and pasting, can be used to speed up entry, and PMW is able to provide text-based features such as macros and included files. The output of PMW is a PostScript file that can be printed on a PostScript printer, or viewed on screen or printed on a non-PostScript printer by the use of GhostScript. PMW comes with a PostScript outline font that contains all the musical shapes (notes, rests, accidentals, bar lines, clefs, etc.) that it requires. There is a man page for the command line options, and a 200-page manual that is distributed as a PDF file. The PMW input encoding is designed to be easy for a musician to remember. It makes use of as many familiar musical notations as possible within the limitations of the computer's character set. Normally it will be input by a human using any available word processor or text editor. There is no reason, however, why PMW input should not form the output of some other computer program that captures (or generates) music in another fashion. PMW has many features which enable it to print a wide variety of music using standard notation. A number of these are listed below. The extensive manual describes the input notation in detail. Here are some key features of "Philip s Music Writer": · The input coding is easy to learn. · Bar lengths are automatially checked by the program, but this can be overridden for special effects. · The program automatically lays out the bars, splits the sequence of bars up into systems, and allocates the systems to pages. For special cases, space can be forced into a bar at any point; line breaks and page breaks can be forced after any bar. Alternatively, a pre-imposed layout in terms of the number of bars for each system (varying per system) and the number of systems for each page can be specified. · Conditional if-then-else facilities are available in the input, thus allowing several different versions of a piece to be output from the same basic source. · Magnification or reduction; music can be printed at any size. Some staves can be printed smaller or larger than the others. · Page length and width can be specified as required. · Any number of title lines; page heading and footing lines; footnotes; centring and right-justifying facilities; spacing, type size and type font can be specified for each heading and footing line. · Up to 63 simultaneous staves. · Staves can be "suspended" (i.e. not printed) for parts of the piece where they have a long sequence of rest bars; resumption of printing is automatic. · Any combination of staves is selectable for printing (thus allowing the extraction of individual parts or groups of parts). · The spacing between staves and betwen systems is individually controllable, and can be varied within the piece. · Staves can be overprinted, allowing two independent parts to share a stave in full score; stem and tie directions can be forced. · Bar lines can be solid through each system (set of staves), or broken after each stave, or broken as specified by the user. · Chords are handled automatically, including printing some noteheads on the "wrong" side of the stem and the positioning of accidentals. · The amount of horizontal space after each note type can be specified at the start and altered in the middle of the piece if necessary. · Treble, alto, tenor, baritone, bass, deep bass, soprano, and mezzo-soprano clefs; the treble and bass clefs can have `8' above or below them; music entered in one clef can be printed in another. Clefless music can be printed, and the percussion H-clef is also supported. · PMW supports breves, semibreves, minims, crotchets, quavers, semiquavers, demisemiquavers and hemidemisemiquavers. · Round, diamond and cross-shaped note heads are available; also stemless notes and stems without note heads. · Beaming of quavers, semiquavers, etc., with sloping beams (the slope can be specified if necessary); whether to beam or not is controlled by the user; part-broken beams (all but the primary beam broken) are available. Beams with notes on either side of them can be printed. Beaming over rests and over bar lines is supported. · Double sharps and double flats are supported; accidentals can be in round or square brackets, or printed above notes if so specified. · There is automatic centring of full bar rests. · There is automatic support for many bars rest; they are automatically collapsed into a single long-rest bar when printing parts (though this can be overridden if not required). · Tied notes and glissando markings are automatically processed when they cross bar lines and line ends. · Automatic cautionary time and key signatures are printed at the end of a line when the change happens at the start of the next line. This can be suppressed if not required. · There is support for pieces where different staves use different time signatures. · Triplets, duplets and other non-standard rhythms are correctly positioned. · Repeat signs can be at bar ends or in the middle of bars. · Grace notes, independently beamed if necessary, are supported. · There are many expression marks - accents, mordants, turns, tremolo (on single notes and between notes), arpeggio and spread signs on chords, etc. · First, second and nth time bars are supported; you can define what is actually printed. · Text can be printed at the start of each stave; separate text available for the first stave and for subsequent staves; can be changed during the piece; can be printed vertically. · Rehearsal letters and bar numbers can be printed, either at line starts or every so many bars, with or without enclosing boxes or circles. · Transposition of whole piece or individual parts is supported, with some options for handling pieces where the tonality is different to the key signature. · Crescendo and decrescendo marks ("hairpins") are available. · Text can be printed anywhere in the music: p f mf ff etc. and arbitrary words; roman, italic, bold, bold-italic and other typefaces; any available font can be used at any arbitrary size; musical characters are available in text. From release 4.10, text coding is Unicode in UTF-8 format, and all characters in PostScript text fonts are accessible. · Vocal underlay, overlay, and figured bass markings can be printed at arbitrary sizes; vocal underlay and overlay has support for extender lines and automatically drawn rows of hyphens. There is no limit on the number of verses. · Phrasing marks and long slurs: There is user control over the end points and the degree of curvature where necessary. There is no limit on the number of simultaneous slurs. Dashed slurs, and "wiggly" (S-shaped) slurs are available. · Cue bars can be printed in small notes in parts; if-then-else facilities allow them to be omitted in the score. · Indenting of the initial system bracket allows for the printing of incipits. · Multiple movements can be input in a single input file. · And much, much more! What's New in This Release: · Minor bugfixes in the chord name transposition code. · The (previously undocumented) midistart directive actually works, and has been documented. GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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RSBAC 1.2.7 RSBAC is a flexible, powerful and fast open source access control framework for current Linux kernels. Linux systems, as many othe GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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AeroMail 2.52 AeroMail 2 is the next generation of Mark Cushman's AeroMail. AeroMail is a web-based e-mail client written in PHP GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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Arno's IPTABLES Firewall Script 1.8.8c Arno's IPTABLES firewall script was initially written because I needed to protect my single-homed Linux machine at work. I wrote it at the time I couldn't find any script that really satisfied my needs except for one that was written by a guy called 'Seven'. I helped him for several months with the work on his script by suppling patches, reporting bugs etc. In this period I was fortunately also able to master scripting for iptables myself because soon Seven discontinued his work, I never got to even talk to the guy ever again. At that point I decided to continue his work, or actually I started my own branch based on his script. In the summer of 2002 I finally got an ADSL connection at home. Initially I used the iptables firewall that came with the great ADSL4LINUX-package (http://www.adsl4linux.nl). But it didn't take me long to come to the conclusion that their iptables firewall lacked important features like port-forwarding and flexbility with "trusted hosts" etc. I also didn't like the fact that I had to use a different firewall for my home machine and the machine at work. This made me decide to use some of the ADSL4LINUX knowledge to implement ADSL support. By now (about 1 year later as of writing) there are only few remnants left of Seven's original script and many, many, many improvements were applied. One major improvement is the ADSL and NAT support (Check the 'features' page with the specifiations of my firewall). For version 2 (alpha) I plan to completely rewrite to script to make it more flexible and to increase the usability for others. Here are some key features of "Arno s IPTABLES Firewall Script": · Very secure stateful filtering firewall · Both kernel 2.4 & 2.6 support · It can be used for both single- and multi(eg. dual)-homed boxes · Masquerading (NAT) and SNAT support · Multiple external (internet) interfaces · Support multiroute NAT & SNAT (load balancing over multiple (internet) interfaces) · Port forwarding (NAT) · Support MAC address filtering · Support for DSL/ADSL modems · Support for PPPoE, PPPoA and bridging modem setups · Support for static and ISP assigned (DHCP) IPs · Support for (transparent) proxies · Full support for DMZ's and DMZ-2-LAN forwarding. You can also use it to isolate your eg. wireless LAN. · (Nmap)(stealth) portscan detection · Protection against SYN-flooding (DoS attacks) · Protection against ICMP-flooding (DoS attacks) · Extensive user-definable logging with rate limiting to prevent log flooding · Includes options to optimize your throughput · User definable open ports, closed ports, trusted hosts, blocked hosts etc. · Log & protection options are both highly customizable · Support for custom iptables rules in a seperate file · It can be used with chkconfig runlevel system (eg. RedHat/Fedora) · Main focus on TCP/UDP/ICMP but additional support for *ALL* IP protocols · It works with Freeswan IPSEC (VPN) & SSH Sentinel (http://www.freeswan.org) (+virtual IP's) · It works with PoPTop PPTP (http://www.poptop.org) · It works with UPnP · DRDOS protection/detection (experimental) · It's easy to configure · And much more. What's New in This Release: · A bug in the MAC_FILTER was fixed. · The MAC/blocked hosts rules were slightly changed. · The number of MAC addresses and blocked hosts loaded is now shown. · Minor changes were made. GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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ASPseek 1.2.10 ASPseek is an Internet search engine software developed by SWsoft and licensed as free software under GNU GPL. ASPseek consists of GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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Dekadent 0.94.4 Dekadent is an IRC bot coded in C GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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Gammu 1.09.00 Gammu is a project, where all created applications, scripts and drivers are used for managing all possible functions in cellular phon GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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Java Application Monitor API 2.2 Java Application Monitor (JAMon) project is a free, simple, high performance, thread safe, Java API that allows developers to easily BSD License |
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