Guillermo Ballester Valor
gbvalor
Involved Projects and Packages
Apache2 module to restrict the number of simultaneous connections per vhost/dir and limit the bandwidth for files on vhost/dir
Packages I needed for my servers, desktops or laptops and could not find available rpms. Other packages are added because of dependencies
This package is based on the package 'apache2-mod_bw' from project 'Apache:Modules'.
Apache2 module to restrict the number of simultaneous connections per vhost/dir and limit the bandwidth for files on vhost/dir
libcsv is a small, simple and fast CSV library written in pure ANSI C89 that can read and write CSV data. It provides a straight-forward interface using callback functions to handle parsed fields and rows and can parse improperly formatted CSV files
This package merges libspf2 and policyd.
libspf2 is an implementation of the SPF (Sender Policy Framework)
specification as found at:
http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-mengwong-spf-00.txt
SPF allows email systems to check SPF DNS records and make sure that
an email is authorized by the administrator of the domain name that
it is coming from. This prevents email forgery, commonly used by
spammers, scammers, and email viruses/worms.
Policyd is a postfix special daemon filtering incoming mails. This
package includes the one implementing SPF, using the libraries libspf2.
Because libraries and policyd_spf are written in C it is designed for a
fast response and low system charge.
Squirrelmail is a web-mail reader and writer written in php4 (works in php5). Itsupports adressbook, ldap searches and many other plugins.
A collection of plugins for web-mailer squirrelmail
WGRIB is a program to manipulate, inventory and decode GRIB files. (version 1)
wgrib2 is a swiss army knife for grib2 files. You can use it inventory or extract data. You can do basic database operations and other nifty things.
GRIB-2 has arrived and has begun replacing the the older standard GRIB (GRIB-1). Since GRIB-2 can reduce the file size by upto 80% (NAM, JPEG2000 compression), converting to the new standard may be faster than some expected.