the first except this issue is triggered by prefixing the .. sequence with
certain non-printable characters which are filtered out resulting in just
the .. sequence.
lxsplit is a utility that facilitates join and split operations on
files. It basically performs the same functions as cat(1) and
split(1), but has useful features such as warning if all parts aren't
available for a join operation.
ok naddy@
p5-Archive-Tar
p5-Archive-Zip
p5-Compress-Zlib
p5-IO-Zlib
----------------
All these use the same license:
"This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself."
Perl is GPL, so I am marking these # GPL
lzop -- # GNU GPL -> # GPL
macutil -- sync w/# None style
nulib -- # Restrictive
rar -- # Restrictive
ucl -- # GPL
unace -- # Copyrighted but freely distributable.
That's all the author states. Is this acceptable as a
license?
-- Drop MAINTAINER per his request
unarj -- # Restrictive
PERMIT_*_CDROM=No
"If you wish to distribute a modified version of UNARJ
you MUST indicate that it is a modified version both in
the program and source code."
unrar -- # Restrictive
unzip -- # Conditional
It is freely re-distributable with conditions which we meet.
This could use another pair of eyes to confirm.
zip -- # Conditional
Same thing as unzip.
zoo -- # Conditional
Different author/license but same idea as zip/unzip.
This update is based on an update by naddy@ done earlier this year.
I updated that to the current version and fixed sparc64 by disallowing
exceptions (otherwise core dumps would occur). I got some feedback from
wilfried@.
Main changes in the program are a seemingly total rewrite in C++ with
support for newer versions of the RAR algorithm (well, newer files that
didn't uncompress with the old unrar, uncompress with this).
The Archive::Zip module allows a Perl program to create, manipulate,
read, and write Zip archive files.
Zip archives can be created, or you can read from existing zip
files. Once created, they can be written to files, streams, or
strings.
Members can be added, removed, extracted, replaced, rearranged, and
enumerated. They can also be renamed or have their dates, comments,
or other attributes queried or modified. Their data can be compressed
or uncompressed as needed. Members can be created from members in
existing Zip files, or from existing directories, files, or strings.
This module uses the Compress::Zlib library to read and write the
compressed streams inside the files.
See Archive::Zip::Tree for easy operations on directories full of
files, or on entire Zip files. This is included in the Archive::Zip
distribution.
A perl module for handling tar archives. Allows user to read a tar
archive manipulate it in memory by adding or removing files and
write it out to disk.
Also supports gzip/zlib compressed archives.
UCL is a portable lossless data compression library. It implements a
number of algorithms with the following features:
- Decompression is simple and *very* fast.
- Requires no memory for decompression.
- The decompressors can be squeezed into less than 200 bytes of code.
- Includes compression levels for generating pre-compressed
data which achieve an excellent compression ratio.
- Allows you to dial up extra compression at a speed cost in the
compressor. The speed of the decompressor is not reduced.
- Algorithm is thread safe.
- Algorithm is lossless.
- In-place decompression.
ok naddy@.
- Remove again extraneous documentation that is of no interest to
users of the compiled package.
- Prune inappropriate verbiage from description.
- Disallow CDROM distribution according to old description.
- Rename patches.
- General clean-up.
tar.gz archive from a directory. The resulting file appears as a
shell script, and can be launched as is. The archive will then
uncompress itself to a temporary directory and an arbitrary command
will be executed (for example, an installation script).
has disappeared and with this brings a change of distname though the
content of the file more or less has not changed.
- rename checksums file
--
Pointed out by: Nikolay Sturm <Nikolay.Sturm@desy.de>