DHCPerf Provides Communication Providers with Predictive Planning
Tools to Scale Networks.
This tool, DHCPerf, delivers accurate performance metrics of
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) services. These
tools are easy-to-use and simulate real Internet workloads to
provide the necessary insight that carriers need to plan and
deploy network services.
DHCPerf measures the DHCP lease assignments to client computers
by ramping up lease assignment over time to determine the maximum
performance profile.
WWW: http://www.nominum.com/testing_tools.php
PR: ports/104663
Submitted by: Edwin Groothuis <edwin@mavetju.org>
SLIGE map generator.
Basically Slump is a fork of SLIGE that is optimized for making FreeDoom maps.
In particular, Slump only places monsters that the FreeDoom artists have drawn
in to maps; this way one can play FreeDoom without feeling that the game is
incomplete.
WWW: http://www.samiam.org/slump.html
(compilable also for DOS and Linux) that produces brand-new levels for DOOM or
DOOM II. If you're tired of the levels and PWADs that you have, you can use
SLIGE to generate dozens or hundreds or thousands more. Some of them will
probably be pretty good, too (he said modestly).
WWW: http://www.doomworld.com/slige/
with support for as many features as possible, while still being fast and
reliable.
The main features of FileZilla are:
* Ability to resume Uploads/Downloads (if the server supports it).
* Custom Commands.
* Site Manager with folders.
* Keep Alive system.
* Timeout detection.
* Firewall support.
* SOCKS4/5 and HTTP1.1 Proxy support.
* SSL secured connections.
* SFTP support.
* Upload/Download Queue.
* Drag&Drop.
* Multi-language support.
* GSS authentication and encryption using Kerberos.
WWW: http://filezilla.sourceforge.net/
- Patch math/vtk43 to install headers and libraries in subdirectories rather
that using a separate prefix [2].
PR: ports/95492
Submitted by: Jason Bacon <bacon@smithers.neuro.mcw.edu> [1]
Obtained from: Jason Bacon <bacon@smithers.neuro.mcw.edu> (talked on private e-mail) [2]
keeping track of the changes each patch makes. Patches can be applied,
un-applied, refreshed, etc.
The key philosophical concept is that your primary output is
patches. Not ".c" files, not ".h" files. But patches. So patches are
the first-class object here.
Quilt was originally based on Andrew Morton's patch scripts published
on the linux kernel mailing list a while ago, but where heavily
modified since then.
WWW: http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt
PR: ports/104614
Submitted by: Dirk Jagdmann <doj at cubic.org>
English queries. In the future I hope to add support for kana and kanji
queries, as well as multi-radical lookups for kanji. Jishyo is based in
large part on code from Jim Breen's xjdic. It also uses the dictionary
data from the same software.
PR: 104965
Submitted by: Gürkan Sengün
files line by line and field by field, ignoring small numeric differences
or/and different numeric formats.
Equivalently, Numdiff is a program with the capability to appropriately
compare files containing numerical fields (and not only).
% numdiff file1 file2
WWW: http://www.nongnu.org/numdiff/
PR: ports/104525
Submitted by: Cheng-Lung Sung <clsung at FreeBSD.org>
Cocoa libraries. The GNUstep port that can be found here, was done by me. It
was very easy to do; primarily requiring only new interface files, and build
files.
PR: 104964
Submitted by: Gürkan Sengün