collectd gathers statistics about the system it is running on and stores
this information. Those statistics can then be used to find current
performance bottlenecks (i.e. performance analysis) and predict future
system load (i.e. capacity planning). Or if you just want pretty graphs
of your private server and are fed up with some homegrown solution
you're at the right place, too ;).
Reworked by bernd@ to use MULTI_PACKAGES instead of FLAVORS, thanks!
With feedback from Nico Szalay.
ok bernd@
snapdl helps you finding mirrors with snapshots of -current synced with
the main mirror http://ftp.OpenBSD.org, and download the sets from the
fastest one.
We already have sysutils/apc-upsd which hasn't been maintained upstream
in >10 years, which I intend to rm unless there are objections.
From maintainer Kirill Bychkov with various input from myself.
Apcupsd can be used for power mangement and controlling most of APC's
UPS models. Apcupsd works with most of APC's Smart-UPS models as well as
most simple signalling models such a Back-UPS, and BackUPS-Office.
During a power failure, apcupsd will inform the users about the power
failure and that a shutdown may occur. If power is not restored, a
system shutdown will follow when the battery is exhausted, a timeout
(seconds) expires, or runtime expires based on internal APC calculations
determined by power consumption rates.
Back In Time is a simple backup tool for Linux inspired from the flyback
project and TimeVault. The backup is done by taking snapshots of a
specified set of directories.
ok jasper@
long ago. ok jasper@
shmux is program for executing the same command on many hosts in
parallel. For each target, a child process is spawned by shmux, and a
shell on the target obtained one of the supported methods: rsh, ssh, or
sh. The output produced by the children is received by shmux and either
(optionally) output in turn to the user using an easy to read format, or
written to files for later processing making it well suited for use in
scripts.