Filelight creates an interactive map of concentric segmented-rings that
helps visualise disk usage on your computer.
It is like a pie-chart, but the segments nest, allowing you to see not
only which directories take up all your space, but which directories and
files inside those directories are the real culprits.
thanks to steven@ for improving my pathetic patch...
ok steven@
FAM, the File Alteration Monitor, provides an API which applications can
use to be notified when specific files or directories are changed.
from alek@, with minor tweaks by me
feedback and ok espie@ martynas@
Logpp is a tool for preprocessing event logs and feeding relevant
information to other programs for storing or in-depth analysis.
During its work, logpp reads lines appended to input files (like tail(1)
in -f mode), matches the lines with patterns (e.g., regular
expressions), converts matching lines according to given templates, and
writes the results to given destinations.
Logpp supports multi-line matching and several types of output
destinations like regular files, FIFOs, external programs, and the
system logger.Therefore, logpp can act as a filter in front of the
more complex event log analysis system and increase the system's
performance by weeding out irrelevant log data; it can work as a syslog
gateway between the system logger and the application that doesn't use
syslog(3); it can convert multiline log messages to shorter single
line messages, and accomplish other log pre-processing tasks.
ok sturm@ jasper@
- tabled can now listen on a local fifo and on a network socket
- a command line client, tablec, has been added to speak to a tabled daemon
over the net
- network exchange can be protected by a secret hash
File::Which was created to be able to get the paths to executable
programs on systems under which the `which' program wasn't implemented
in the shell.
ok msf@
* improved the daemonization code.
* changed Sys::Syslog::openlog() options from 'cons,pid' to 'pid'.
* starting from this version, 'logonly' action has an optional parameter.
From maintainer, Okan Demirmem <okan@demirmen.com>