Reinhard Max
rmax
Involved Projects and Packages
This project was created for package tcl via attribute OBS:Maintained
This project contains tools and drivers for Henri Skippari's USBD480.
http://lcdinfo.com
This package contains a libusb based X driver for
Henri Skippari's USBD480 display (http://www.lcdinfo.com)
The project networking is intended for packages providing various networking services and related tools.
repository SLE_15 is for the latest service pack in SLE15.
repository SLE_12 is for the latest service pack in SLE12.
Berkeley Internet Name Domain (BIND) is an implementation of the Domain Name
System (DNS) protocols and provides an openly redistributable reference
implementation of the major components of the Domain Name System.
Dnsmasq is a lightweight, easy-to-configure DNS forwarder and DHCP
server. It is designed to provide DNS and, optionally, DHCP, to a small
network. It can serve the names of local machines that are not in the
global DNS. The DHCP server integrates with the DNS server and allows
machines with DHCP-allocated addresses to appear in DNS with names
configured either in each host or in a central configuration file.
Dnsmasq supports static and dynamic DHCP leases and BOOTP for network
booting of diskless machines.
NOTE: Automatically created during Factory devel project migration by admin.
NOTE: Automatically created during Factory devel project migration by admin.
NOTE: Automatically created during Factory devel project migration by admin.
NOTE: Automatically created during Factory devel project migration by admin.
NOTE: Automatically created during Factory devel project migration by admin.
libudns0 package provides libudns shared library needed
to run programs using it
NOTE: Automatically created during Factory devel project migration by admin.
This package contains the ISC DHCP suite.
Authors:
--------
Internet Systems Consortium, Inc.
If your software speaks SS7, ISDN, IAX, RTP, SRTP, Jingle, H.323, H.324, H.325, MGCP or SIP then it probably belongs in here.
Chrony is an implementation of the Network Time Protocol (NTP). It can
synchronize the system clock with NTP servers, reference clocks (e.g. a
GPS receiver), and manual input using wristwatch and keyboard. It can
also operate as an NTPv4 (RFC 5905) server and peer to provide a time
service to other computers in the network.
Chrony consists of two programs: chronyd and chronyc.
Chronyd is a daemon which runs in the background on the system. It
obtains measurements of the system clockâs offset relative to time
servers on other systems via the network and adjusts the system time
accordingly. For isolated systems, the user can periodically enter the
correct time by hand (using chronyc). In either case, chronyd
determines the rate at which the computer gains or loses time, and
compensates for this. Chronyd can act as either a client or a server.
Chronyc provides a user interface to chronyd for monitoring its
performance and configuring various settings. It can do so while
running on the same computer as the chronyd instance it is controlling
or a different computer.
The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is used to synchronize the time of a
computer client or server to another server or reference time source,
such as a radio, satellite receiver, or modem.
Ntpd is an operating system daemon that sets and maintains the system
time-of-day synchronized with Internet standard time servers.
NOTE: Automatically created during Factory devel project migration by admin.
NOTE: Automatically created during Factory devel project migration by admin.
NOTE: Automatically created during Factory devel project migration by admin.
Though originally designed for inexperienced email users, Alpine
supports many advanced features, and an ever-growing number of
configuration and personal-preference options.
Alpine (formerly Pine) features improved support for UTF-8 and the code
is licensed under the Apache License.
Despite many improvements "under the hood" (the bugs which were
introduced by them were ironed out during more than a full year of
public beta testing), the user interface stays the same, so pine users
can switch painlessly to alpine and notice no change at all.
It uses the same configuration files as pine, so it's a clean update.
The biggest user-visible change are the new animations which are shown
when operations take a long time.
Add useful and nice-looking widgets to your interfaces with the BWidget
Toolkit, a set of native Tk 8.x Widgets using Tcl8.x namespaces. The
BWidgets have a professional look and feel as in other well-known
toolkits (Tix or Incr Widget). However, the concept is radically
different because everything is native. There is no platform
compilation and no compiled extension libraries are needed. The code is
in pure Tcl/Tk.