Thomas Abraham
tabraham1
Involved Projects and Packages
ACPID is a completely flexible, totally extensible daemon for delivering ACPI events. It listens to a file (/proc/acpi/event) and, when an event occurs, executes programs to handle the event. The start script loads all needed modules.
Unlike most monitoring tools that either focus on a small set of
statistics, format their output in only one way, run either
interatively or as a daemon but not both, collectl tries to do it all.
Authors:
--------
Mark Seger
Text converters to and from DOS/MAC to UNIX
GNU awk is upwardly compatible with the
System V Release 4 awk. It is almost
completely POSIX 1003.2 compliant.
The grep command searches one or more input files for lines
containing a match to a specified pattern. By default, grep prints
the matching lines.
The Home Project of T.M. Abraham
This project was created for package bind via attribute OBS:Maintained
pssh provides parallel versions of the OpenSSH tools that are useful for
controlling large numbers of machines simultaneously. It includes parallel
versions of ssh, scp, and rsync, as well as a parallel kill command.
This package contains nbd-server. It is the server backend for the nbd
network block device driver that's in the Linux kernel.
nbd can be used to have a filesystem stored on another machine. It does
provide a block device, not a file system; so unless you put a
clustering filesystem on top of it, you can't access it simultaneously
from more than one client. Use NFS or a real cluster FS (such as
ocfs2) if you want to do this. nbd-server can export a file (which may
contain a filesystem image) or a partition. Swapping over nbd is
possible as well, though it's said not to be safe against OOM and
should not be used for that case. nbd-server also has a copy-on-write
mode where changes are saved to a separate file and thrown away when
the connection closes.
The package also contains the nbd-client tools, which you need to
configure the nbd devices on the client side.
Pdsh is a multithreaded remote shell client which executes commands on
multiple remote hosts in parallel. Pdsh can use several different
remote shell services, including standard "rsh", Kerberos IV, and ssh.
Authors:
--------
Jim Garlick
Method modifiers are a powerful feature from the CLOS (Common Lisp Object
System) world.
pssh provides parallel versions of the OpenSSH tools that are useful for
controlling large numbers of machines simultaneously. It includes parallel
versions of ssh, scp, and rsync, as well as a parallel kill command.
Sarg -- Squid Analysis Report Generator is a tool that allows you to
view "where" your users are going to on the Internet. Sarg generate
reports in html, with fields such as: users, IP Addresses, bytes,
sites, and times.
Unlike most monitoring tools that either focus on a small set of
statistics, format their output in only one way, run either
interatively or as a daemon but not both, collectl tries to do it all.
Pdsh is a multithreaded remote shell client which executes commands on
multiple remote hosts in parallel. Pdsh can use several different
remote shell services, including standard "rsh", Kerberos IV, and ssh.
Method modifiers are a powerful feature from the CLOS (Common Lisp Object
System) world.
pssh provides parallel versions of the OpenSSH tools that are useful for
controlling large numbers of machines simultaneously. It includes parallel
versions of ssh, scp, and rsync, as well as a parallel kill command.
Sarg -- Squid Analysis Report Generator is a tool that allows you to
view "where" your users are going to on the Internet. Sarg generate
reports in html, with fields such as: users, IP Addresses, bytes,
sites, and times.
Unlike most monitoring tools that either focus on a small set of
statistics, format their output in only one way, run either
interatively or as a daemon but not both, collectl tries to do it all.
Sarg -- Squid Analysis Report Generator is a tool that allows you to view "where" your users are going to on the Internet. Sarg generate reports in html, with fields such as: users, IP Addresses, bytes, sites, and times.