Puppet lets you centrally manage every important aspect of your system using
a cross-platform specification language that manages all the separate
elements normally aggregated in different files, like users, cron jobs,
and hosts, along with obviously discrete elements like packages, services,
and files.
Puppet's simple declarative specification language provides powerful classing
abilities for drawing out the similarities between hosts while allowing them
to be as specific as necessary, and it handles dependency and prerequisite
relationships between objects clearly and explicitly.
Puppet is written entirely in Ruby.
A cross-platform Ruby library for retrieving facts from operating systems.
Supports multiple resolution mechanisms, any of which can be restricted to
working only on certain operating systems or environments.
Facter is especially useful for retrieving things like operating system names,
IP addresses, MAC addresses, and SSH keys.
ocaml apps compiled using it.
Issue was that the configure script which tried threads gets confused by
the spurious OpenBSD linker warnings about sprintf and falls back to VM
threads.
Bump PKGNAME, and trim an unneeded line from PLIST while here.
Reported by Adam Montague <amontague@siriushosting.com> and
Ivan M Makarenko <I.Makarenko@zsttk.ru>.
TkDVD is a GUI to dvd+rw-tools and cdrecord. It allows burnning CDs and
DVDs easily.
Features:
* View the current command line that will be used to burn the CD/DVD
* Burn CD/DVD from iso images
* Create ISO images from files and CD/DVD
* CD/DVD Copy
* Can overburn CD/DVD
* Support multi session CD/DVD
* Add/delete/exclude file/directories and show current used space
* Can keep directory structure
* Options to choose iso9660 filesystem extension (like Joliet or
RockRidge extensions)
* Prevent burning if used space > DVD+R/RW capacity
* Show output of growisofs/mkisofs to view burned % and estimated
remaining time
submitted by Vlad Glagolev <stelzy at gmail.com> (MAINTAINER)
dwdiff is a front-end for the diff program that operates at the word
level instead of the line level. It is different from wdiff in that it
allows the user to specify what should be considered whitespace, and in
that it takes an optional list of characters that should be considered
delimiters. Delimiters are single characters that are treated as if they
are words, even when there is no whitespace separating them from
preceding words or delimiters. dwdiff is mostly commandline compatible
with wdiff. Only the --autopager, --terminal and --avoid-wraps options
are not supported.
feedback & ok steven