--
SASL is a generic mechanism for authentication used by several
network protocols. Authen::SASL provides a Perl implementation
framework that all protocols should be able to share.
--
CIL (C Intermediate Language) is a high-level representation along
with a set of tools that permit easy analysis and source-to-source
transformation of C programs.
CIL is both lower-level than abstract-syntax trees, by clarifying
ambiguous constructs and removing redundant ones, and also higher-level
than typical intermediate languages designed for compilation, by
maintaining types and a close relationship with the source program.
The main advantage of CIL is that it compiles all valid C programs
into a few core constructs with a very clean semantics. Also CIL
has a syntax-directed type system that makes it easy to analyze and
manipulate C programs. Furthermore, the CIL front-end is able to
process not only ANSI-C programs but also those using Microsoft C
or GNU C extensions.
dvd::rip is a full featured DVD copy program written in
Perl. It provides an easy to use but feature-rich Gtk+
GUI to control almost all aspects of the ripping and
transcoding process. It uses the widely known video
processing swissknife transcode and many other
Open Source tools.
from Waldemar Brodkorb <wbx at openbsd.de>
transcode is a text console video-stream processing tool.
It supports elementary video and audio frame transformations.
Some example modules are included to enable import of MPEG-1/2,
Digital Video, and other formats. It also includes export
modules for writing to AVI files with DivX, OpenDivX, XviD,
Digital Video or other codecs. Direct DVD transcoding is also
supported. A set of tools is available to extract and decode
the sources into raw video/audio streams for import and to
enable post-processing of AVI files.
from Waldemar Brodkorb and Jacob Meuser, maintained by
Waldemar Brodkorb <wbx at openbsd.de>
The wtf utility displays the expansion of the acronyms
specified on the command line. If the acronym is unknown,
wtf will check to see if the acronym is known by the
whatis(1) command.