Involved Projects and Packages
Camomile is a Unicode library for ocaml. Camomile provides Unicode
character type, UTF-8, UTF-16, UTF-32 strings, conversion to/from
about 200 encodings, collation and locale-sensitive case mappings, and
more.
Ocaml-gettext provides support for internationalization of Ocaml
programs.
Constraints :
* provides a pure Ocaml implementation,
* the API should be as close as possible to GNU gettext,
* provides a way to automatically extract translatable
strings from Ocaml source code.
Harness output delegate for JUnit output
Term::ProgressBar provides a simple progress bar on the terminal, to let the user know that something is happening, roughly how much stuff has been done, and maybe an estimate at how long remains.
A typical use sets up the progress bar with a number of items to do, and then calls update to update the bar whenever an item is processed.
XML::DOM::XPath allows you to use XML::XPath methods to query a DOM. This
is often much easier than relying only on getElementsByTagName.
Authors:
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Michel Rodriguez
Ceph is a distributed object store and file system designed to provide excellent performance, reliability and scalability. For more information see http://ceph.com/
For Ceph on openSUSE specifically, see https://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Ceph
The purpose of the filesystems:ceph:X:upstream projects is to test that the tip of the upstream X branch builds for openSUSE distros and flavors of interest.
Additional packages, beyond those included in the base distro, needed for installing and deploying Ceph Octopus on openSUSE Tumbleweed
This project was created for package kiwi-templates-JeOS via attribute OBS:Maintained
Factory development project for virtualization-related packages
Tests and supporting packages related to testing Virtualization infrastructure.
Tools for VMware
open Virtual Machine Tools (open-vm-tools) are the open source implementation of VMware Tools. They are a set of guest operating system virtualization components that enhance performance and user experience of virtual machines. As virtualization technology rapidly becomes mainstream, each virtualization solution provider implements their own set of tools and utilities to supplement the guest virtual machine. However, most of the implementations are proprietary and are tied to a specific virtualization platform.
With the Open Virtual Machine Tools project, we are hoping to solve this and other related problems. The tools are currently composed of kernel modules for Linux and user-space programs for all VMware supported Unix-like guest operating systems. They provide several useful functions like:
* File transfer between a host and guest
* Improved memory management and network performance under virtualization
* General mechanisms and protocols for communication between host and guests and from guest to guest