3296 projects tagged "Utilities"
losetup-utils are three bash scripts that attempt to make the use of losetup a bit easier and faster. losetup can be fast, easy, and practical if you need to transport sensitive information over the Internet or in CD's, DVD's, or a pendrive. Also, if you want to store private data on your hard disk or in the cloud, an encrypted volume can be a convenient choice. The types of encryption can be any installed on the system.
/etc/net represents a new approach to Linux network configuration tasks. Inspired by the limitations of traditional network configuration subsystems, /etc/net provides built-in support for configuration profiles, interface name management, removable devices, full iproute2 command set, interface dependencies resolution, QoS, and firewall configuration frameworks. /etc/net provides support for the following interface types: ethernet, WiFi (WEP), IPv4/IPv6 tunnels, PSK IPSec tunnels, VLAN, PLIP, ethernet bonding and bridging, traffic equalizer, Pent@NET, Pent@VALUE, SkyStar-2, TUN/TAP, OpenVPN TUN/TAP, usbnet, and PPP. Due to its modular structure, support for new interface types can be added without overall design changes.
42go ISP Manager is a Linux/FreeBSD Web server management solution. It can manage reseller administration, Apache Web server administration, sendmail/postfix, an FTP server, a POP3 auto-responder, MySQL client databases, Webalizer statistics, disk-quotas, mail-quotas, IP addresses, SSL, SSI, shell access, anti-virus mail scanning, and spam filtering (with SpamAssassin). 42go ISP Manager supports all major Linux distributions, including RedHat 9, Fedora Core 4, Mandriva 2006, SuSE 10.0, CentOS 4.2, Ubuntu 5.10, Debian Woody (3.0), and Debian Sarge (3.1).
4Sports is an exercise management application. You can use it to analyze your exercises in a number of ways. 4Sports can import data from the Garmin "Forerunner 201/301" devices, and can display some information in a table and in a graph (like heart rate over distance). It's also possible to export the tracks (GPS data) into Google Earth, where the track is color-coded according to your heart-rate. The graphs can be exported to SVG files.