POE::API::Peek extends the POE::Kernel interface to provide clean access
to Kernel internals in a cross-version compatible manner. Other
calculated data is also available.
This module provides a Perl interface to the C library libusb. This
library supports a relatively full set of functionality to access a USB
device. In addition to the libusb, functioality, Device::USB provides a
few convenience features that are intended to produce a more Perl-ish
interface.
with help from landry@ to unfuck it's LIBS handling.
The glog library implements application-level logging. This library
provides logging APIs based on C++-style streams and various helper
macros.
From MAINTAINER Vicent Auclair (thanks!) @ ACSEL and a few tweaks by me
Google's framework for writing C++ tests on a variety of platforms
(Linux, Mac OS X, Windows, Cygwin, Windows CE, and Symbian). Based on
the xUnit architecture. Supports automatic test discovery, a rich set
of assertions, user-defined assertions, death tests, fatal and
non-fatal failures, value- and type-parameterized tests, various
options for running the tests, and XML test report generation.
From MAINTAINER Vincent Auclair (thanks!) @ ACSEL
STP is a constraint solver (also referred to as a decision procedure
or automated prover) aimed at solving constraints generated by program
analysis tools, theorem provers, automated bug finders, intelligent
fuzzers and model checkers.
ok benoit@
try harder not to go back).
put more packages we know to be gone in the base system list.
display a more helpful message in case we don't find base packages (say
we're not removing them since we can't find the file in the base system)
Clio is a great way to build commandline tools. It provides an advanced
options parser with a variety of notations suited to almost any perfered
style, and provides a very rich and and easy to use library for
generating console output.
ok bernd@
Trollop is YAFCLAP --- yet another fine commandline argument processing
library for Ruby. Trollop is designed to provide the maximal amount of
GNU-style argument processing in the minimum number of lines of code
(for you, the programmer).
ok bernd@
Ruby Facets is a collection of general purpose, pure-Ruby extensions
and additions for the Ruby programming language. Facets is divided into
two libraries, one for the extensions and the other for the additions.
called Facets/CORE and Facets/MORE, respectively.
Facets/CORE is a large collection of methods which extend the core
capabilities of Ruby's built-in classes and modules. This collection of
extension methods are unique by virtue of their atomicity. The methods
are stored individually so that each can be required independently.
This gives developers fine-grain control over which extra methods to bring
into his or her code. The collection currently contains over 400 methods
spanning 28 classes and modules. It is an atomic library in that the
methods are packaged individually so that each can be required
independently. This gives the programmer greater control to
include only the extra methods he or she actually needs.
Facets/MORE are a collection of classes, modules and light frameworks
whcih cons itutes an ever growing and improving source of reusable
components. Some very nice additions are provided, from an amazing SI
Units system to an elegant Annotations system. And of course there are
all the more typical goodies like Tuple, Functor and Multiton.
ok bernd@