a2ps: a2ps (any to PostScript filter) a2ps: a2ps: GNU a2ps is an Any to PostScript filter. Of course it processes a2ps: plain text files, but also pretty prints quite a few popular a2ps: programming languages. Also contained in this package is psutils, a a2ps: collection of programs for manipulating PostScript files. a2ps: a2ps: a2ps is used by Apsfilter, so be sure to install this package if you a2ps: plan to do any printing. a2ps: a2ps: acct: acct (process accounting utilities) acct: acct: This is a set of utilities which reports and summarizes data about acct: user connect times and process execution statistics. To activate acct: process accounting, create the log file (touch /var/log/pacct), and acct: then use the accton command to start it (accton /var/log/pacct). acct: Be aware that the log file can grow to be quite large. acct: acct: The GNU process accounting utilities were written by Noel Cragg and acct: the software is currently maintained by Ciaran O'Riordan, acct: Manuel A. Fernandez Montecelo, and Tim Schmielau. alsa-utils: alsa-utils (Advanced Linux Sound Architecture utilities) alsa-utils: alsa-utils: The Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (ALSA) provides audio and MIDI alsa-utils: functionality to the Linux operating system. This package contains alsa-utils: command line audio utilities for use with ALSA: alsa-utils: alsactl (manage soundcard settings) alsa-utils: arecord/aplay (capture and play audio) alsa-utils: amixer (adjust mixer settings from the command line) alsa-utils: alsamixer (an ncurses-based console mixer) alsa-utils: alsa-utils: For more information, see http://alsa-project.org amp: amp (An MP3 player) amp: amp: amp (Audio Mpeg Player) is a command-line MPEG audio decoder (MP3 amp: player). It works with both MPEG1 and MPEG2 audio streams (except for amp: the multichannel extensions defined in MPEG2), layers 2 and 3. amp: amp: amp: amp: amp: amp: ash: ash (Kenneth Almquist's ash shell) ash: ash: A lightweight (92K) Bourne compatible shell. Great for machines with ash: low memory, but does not provide all the extras of shells like bash, ash: tcsh, and zsh. Runs most shell scripts compatible with the Bourne ash: shell. Note that under Linux, most scripts seem to use at least some ash: bash-specific syntax. The Slackware setup scripts are a notable ash: exception, since ash is the shell used on the install disks. NetBSD ash: uses ash as its /bin/sh. ash: ash: at: at (delayed command execution) at: at: at and batch read shell commands from standard input (or a specified at: file) storing them as a job to be scheduled for execution at a later at: time. at: at: The 'at' command was written by David Parsons and Thomas Koenig. at: at: Homepage: http://anonscm.debian.org/cgit/collab-maint/at.git/ at: at: bc: bc (An arbitrary precision calculator language) bc: bc: bc is an arbitrary precision numeric processing language. Syntax is bc: similar to C, but differs in many substantial areas. It supports bc: interactive execution of statements. bc is a utility included in the bc: POSIX P1003.2/D11 draft standard. bc: bc: The GNU version of bc was written by Philip A. Nelson. bc: bc: bc: bpe: bpe (Binary Patch Editor) bpe: bpe: bpe is a simple, screen-oriented editor for searching and editing bpe: ordinary files in either ASCII or hexadecimal modes. bpe: bpe: bpe was written by Andreas Pleschutznig. Bill Davidsen contributed bpe: additional features, as did Ralphe Neill (the current maintainer). bpe: bpe: bpe: bpe: cdparanoia: cdparanoia (digital audio extraction tool) cdparanoia: cdparanoia: cdparanoia is a Compact Disc Digital Audio (CDDA) extraction tool, cdparanoia: commonly known on the net as a 'ripper'. It reads digital audio data cdparanoia: from a Compact Disc and saves it to sound files. cdparanoia has been cdparanoia: designed to read correct audio data even using cheap CD-ROM drives cdparanoia: prone to misalignment, frame jitter and loss of streaming. cdparanoia: cdparanoia will also read and repair data from CDs that have been cdparanoia: damaged in some way. cdparanoia: cdparanoia: cdrdao: cdrdao (CD burning utility) cdrdao: cdrdao: cdrdao burns proper disc-at-once (DAO) audio discs. In DAO mode the cdrdao: disc is written in one shot, so you don't have to have irritating 2 cdrdao: second gaps interrupting a live recording. cdrdao: cdrdao: cdrdao: cdrdao: cdrdao: cdrdao: cdrtools: cdrtools (CD-R, ISO and related tools) cdrtools: cdrtools: Tools for mastering and writing compact discs. cdrtools: cdrtools: cdda2wav -- CD audio sampling utility. cdrtools: cdrecord -- burn discs in most ATAPI and SCSI CD-R drives. cdrtools: mkisofs -- create ISO9660/HFS/Joliet CD-ROM images. cdrtools: mkzftree -- compress a file tree to make a compressed CD-ROM. cdrtools: cdrtools: cdrtools: cgmanager: cgmanager (Control Group manager daemons) cgmanager: cgmanager: CGManager manages all your cgroups for you through a simple DBus API. cgmanager: It's designed to work with nested LXC containers as well as accepting cgmanager: unprivileged requests including resolving user namespaces UIDs/GIDs. cgmanager: cgmanager: The package contains two daemons: cgmanager (which runs on the host), cgmanager: and cgproxy (which runs in containers). cgmanager: cgmanager: Homepage: https://linuxcontainers.org/cgmanager/ cgmanager: cups: CUPS (Common UNIX Printing System) cups: cups: The Common UNIX Printing System provides a portable printing layer for cups: UNIX(R)-like operating systems. It has been developed by Easy Software cups: Products to promote a standard printing solution for all UNIX vendors cups: and users. CUPS uses the Internet Printing Protocol ("IPP") as the cups: basis for managing print jobs and queues. The CUPS package includes cups: System V and Berkeley command-line interfaces, a PostScript RIP cups: package for supporting non-PostScript printer drivers, and tools for cups: creating additional printer drivers and other CUPS services. cups: cups-filters: cups-filters (backends and filters for CUPS) cups-filters: cups-filters: This package provides backends, filters, and other software that was cups-filters: once part of the core CUPS distribution but is no longer included. cups-filters: In addition it contains additional filters and software developed cups-filters: independently. cups-filters: cups-filters: cups-filters: cups-filters: cups-filters: dc3dd: dc3dd (version of dd designed for computer forensics) dc3dd: dc3dd: dc3dd is a patched version of GNU dd to include a number of features dc3dd: useful for computer forensics. Many of these features were inspired by dc3dd: dcfldd, but were rewritten for dc3dd. Added features include robust dc3dd: error handling, logging, progress meter, image verification, split dc3dd: output and more. dc3dd: dc3dd: http://sourceforge.net/projects/dc3dd/ dc3dd: dc3dd: ddrescue: ddrescue (automatic data recovery tool) ddrescue: ddrescue: GNU ddrescue is a data recovery tool. It copies data from one file or ddrescue: block device (hard disc, cdrom, etc) to another, trying hard to rescue ddrescue: data in case of read errors. Every time you run it on the same output ddrescue: file, it tries to fill in the gaps. ddrescue: ddrescue: ddrescue: ddrescue: ddrescue home: http://www.gnu.org/software/ddrescue/ddrescue.html ddrescue: diffstat: diffstat (produces statistics from diff output) diffstat: diffstat: DiffStat is a simple filter that reads the output of the 'diff' diffstat: program and displays a histogram of insertions, deletions, and diffstat: modifications per-file. It is useful for reviewing large, complex diffstat: patch files. diffstat: diffstat: Thomas E. Dickey is the author of DiffStat. diffstat: diffstat: diffstat: diffutils: diffutils (finds differences between files) diffutils: diffutils: The GNU diff utilities finds differences between files. A major use diffutils: for this package is to make source code patches. diffutils: diffutils: diffutils: diffutils: diffutils: diffutils: diffutils: dmapi: dmapi (Data Management API library) dmapi: dmapi: A library required to use the Data Management API (DMAPI). dmapi: This interface is defined in the X/Open document 'Systems Management: dmapi: Data Storage Management (XDSM) API' dated February 1997. dmapi: dmapi: The DMAPI library is used by the xfsdump utility. dmapi: dmapi: dmapi: dmapi: dmidecode: dmidecode (DMI table decoder) dmidecode: dmidecode: dmidecode is a tool for dumping a computer's DMI table (some say dmidecode: SMBIOS) contents in a human-readable format. This table contains a dmidecode: description of the system's hardware components, as well as other dmidecode: useful pieces of information such as serial numbers and BIOS dmidecode: revision. dmidecode: dmidecode: dmidecode was written by Alan Cox and Jean Delvare. dmidecode: dmidecode: dvd+rw-tools: dvd+rw-tools (DVD+-RW tools) dvd+rw-tools: dvd+rw-tools: A collection of tools to master DVD+RW/+R/-R/-RW media. For further dvd+rw-tools: information see http://fy.chalmers.se/~appro/linux/DVD+RW/. dvd+rw-tools: dvd+rw-tools: The DVD+RW tools were written by Andy Polyakov. dvd+rw-tools: dvd+rw-tools: dvd+rw-tools: dvd+rw-tools: dvd+rw-tools: enscript: enscript (converts text files to PostScript and other formats) enscript: enscript: Enscript converts text files to PostScript and spools the generated enscript: output to a printer or saves it to a file. If no input files are enscript: given, enscript processes standard input. Enscript can be extended to enscript: handle different output media and it has many options for customizing enscript: printouts. enscript: enscript: enscript: enscript: flac: flac (Free Lossless Audio Codec) flac: flac: FLAC stands for Free Lossless Audio Codec. Grossly oversimplified, flac: FLAC is similar to MP3, but lossless. "Free" means that the flac: specification of the stream format is in the public domain, and that flac: neither the FLAC format nor any of the implemented encoding/decoding flac: methods are covered by any patent. It also means that the sources for flac: libFLAC and libFLAC++ are available under the LGPL and the sources for flac: flac, metaflac, and the plugins are available under the GPL. flac: flac: FLAC was developed by Josh Coalson. ghostscript: ghostscript (Postscript and PDF interpreter) ghostscript: ghostscript: Ghostscript is an interpreter of Adobe Systems' PostScript(tm) ghostscript: and Portable Document Format (PDF) languages. Ghostscript is an ghostscript: essential part of the printing subsystem, taking PostScript output ghostscript: from applications and converting it into an appropriate printer or ghostscript: display format. Ghostscript supports many printers directly, and ghostscript: more are supported through add-on packages. ghostscript: ghostscript: ghostscript: ghostscript-fonts-std: ghostscript-fonts-std (fonts for the Ghostscript interpreter) ghostscript-fonts-std: ghostscript-fonts-std: These fonts are used by the GhostScript interpreter. ghostscript-fonts-std: ghostscript-fonts-std: ghostscript-fonts-std: ghostscript-fonts-std: ghostscript-fonts-std: ghostscript-fonts-std: ghostscript-fonts-std: ghostscript-fonts-std: gphoto2: gphoto2 (A command-line frontend to libgphoto2) gphoto2: gphoto2: libgphoto2 is a cross-platform digital camera library, and gphoto2 is gphoto2: a command-line client for it. gphoto2: gphoto2: Visit the gphoto project online: http://www.gphoto.org gphoto2: gphoto2: gphoto2: gphoto2: gphoto2: groff: groff (document formatting system) groff: groff: The GNU groff package provides versions of troff, nroff, eqn, tbl, and groff: other Unix text-formatting utilities. Groff is used to 'compile' man groff: pages stored in groff/nroff format into a form which can be printed or groff: displayed on the screen. These man pages are stored in compressed groff: form in the /usr/man/man? directories. groff: groff: groff: groff: gutenprint: gutenprint (IJS printer driver for Ghostscript and CUPS) gutenprint: gutenprint: Gutenprint (formerly named Gimp-Print) is a suite of printer drivers gutenprint: that may be used with most common print spooling systems, including gutenprint: CUPS, LPRng, or others. These drivers provide high quality printing gutenprint: in many cases equal to or better than proprietary vendor-supplied gutenprint: drivers. Gutenprint also includes an enhanced print plug-in for the gutenprint: GIMP image editor. gutenprint: gutenprint: gutenprint: hplip: hplip (HP print/scan/fax support) hplip: hplip: HPLIP is an HP developed solution for printing, scanning, and faxing hplip: with HP inkjet and laser based printers in Linux. The HPLIP project hplip: provides printing support for more than 1400 HP printer models, hplip: including Deskjet, Officejet, Photosmart, PSC (Print Scan Copy), hplip: Business Inkjet, LaserJet, and LaserJet MFP. hplip: hplip: For more information, see: http://hplipopensource.com hplip: hplip: htop: htop (ncurses-based interactive process viewer) htop: htop: htop is a free (GPL) ncurses-based process viewer that is similar to htop: the well-known "top" program, but allows to scroll the list vertically htop: and horizontally to see all processes and their full command lines. htop: Tasks related to processes (killing, renicing) can be done without htop: entering their PIDs. htop: htop: htop is developed by Hisham Muhammad. htop: Homepage: http://hisham.hm/htop/ htop: ispell: ispell (spelling checker) ispell: ispell: Ispell is a fast screen-oriented spelling checker that shows you your ispell: errors in the context of the original file, and suggests possible ispell: corrections when it can figure them out. Compared to UNIX spell, it ispell: is faster and much easier to use. Ispell can also handle languages ispell: other than English. Ispell has a long history, and many people have ispell: contributed to the current version -- some of the major contributors ispell: include R. E. Gorin, Pace Willisson, Walt Buehring, and Geoff ispell: Kuenning. ispell: itstool: itstool (Translate XML documents with PO files) itstool: itstool: ITS Tool allows you to translate your XML documents with PO itstool: files, using rules from the W3C Internationalization Tag Set itstool: (ITS) to determine what to translate and how to separate it itstool: into PO file messages. itstool: itstool: Homepage: http://itstool.org/ itstool: itstool: itstool: jed: jed (programmer's editor) jed: jed: JED (by John E. Davis) is an extremely powerful but small emacs-like jed: programmer's editor that is extensible in a C-like macro language and jed: can do color syntax highlighting. Among the many features: jed: Emacs, wordstar, EDT emulation; jed: C, Fortran, TeX, text editing modes; Full undo; jed: GNU Emacs compatible info reader, and lots more. jed: jed: JED is also 8 bit clean, so you can even edit binary files! jed: joe: joe (Joe text editor) joe: joe: Joseph H. Allen's easy to use text editor, similar to WordStar[tm]. joe: joe: joe: joe: joe: joe: joe: joe: jove: jove (Jonathan's Own Version of Emacs) jove: jove: A mostly Emacs compatible text editor, with man pages and the jove: 'teachjove' tutorial program. If you'd rather have the real thing, jove: the actual Emacs editor/environment is available in series 'E'. jove: jove: JOVE was written by Jonathan Payne. jove: jove: jove: jove: ksh93: ksh (AT&T Korn Shell 93) ksh93: ksh93: The KornShell language and interactive shell were designed by ksh93: David G. Korn at AT&T Bell Laboratories. Besides offering a powerful ksh93: interactive shell, it also offers a robust programming language with ksh93: such features as associative arrays and built in integer math ksh93: operations. ksh is an excellent choice for system administration ksh93: scripts and for everyday interactive use. ksh93: ksh93: The official site for the Korn Shell is http://www.kornshell.com/ ksh93: libx86: libx86 (hardware-independent library for x86 code execution) libx86: libx86: libx86 is a hardware-independent library for executing libx86: real-mode x86 code, such as bios calls, from userspace. libx86: libx86: Homepage: http://www.codon.org.uk/~mjg59/libx86/ libx86: libx86: libx86: libx86: libx86: linuxdoc-tools: linuxdoc-tools (utilities for working with DocBook and SGML) linuxdoc-tools: linuxdoc-tools: SGML stands for Standard Generalized Markup Language. This is a linuxdoc-tools: system which allows you to produce LaTeX, HTML, GNU info, LyX, RTF, linuxdoc-tools: and plain text (via groff) from a single source file in SGML. It is linuxdoc-tools: often used for technical software documentation, such as the Linux linuxdoc-tools: HOWTO documents. linuxdoc-tools: linuxdoc-tools: This package includes everything you need to use SGML -- all of the linuxdoc-tools: standard SGML tools; OpenJade; tools for working with DocBook linuxdoc-tools: documents (various DTDs); xmlto and AsciiDoc. lm_sensors: lm_sensors (hardware monitoring package) lm_sensors: lm_sensors: lm_sensors provides tools for monitoring the temperatures, voltages, lm_sensors: and fans of Linux systems with hardware monitoring devices. Included lm_sensors: are text-based tools for sensor reporting, and a library for sensors lm_sensors: access called libsensors. It also contains tools for sensor hardware lm_sensors: identification and I2C bus probing. lm_sensors: lm_sensors: lm_sensors: lm_sensors: lsof: lsof (list open files) lsof: lsof: Lsof is a Unix-specific tool. Its name stands for "LiSt Open Files", lsof: and it does just that. It lists information about files that are open lsof: by the processes running on the system. lsof: lsof: Victor A. Abell of Purdue University is the developer of lsof. lsof: lsof: lsof: lsof: lsscsi: lsscsi (list SCSI devices or hosts, and their attributes) lsscsi: lsscsi: Uses information in sysfs to list scsi devices (or hosts) currently lsscsi: attached to the system. Options can be used to control the amount lsscsi: and form of information provided for each device. lsscsi: lsscsi: lsscsi was written by Doug Gilbert. lsscsi: lsscsi: lsscsi: lsscsi: lxc: lxc (Linux Containers) lxc: lxc: Linux Containers (LXC) are an operating system-level virtualization lxc: method for running multiple isolated server installs (containers) on lxc: a single control host. LXC does not provide a virtual machine, but lxc: rather provides a virtual environment that has its own process and lxc: network space. It is similar to a chroot, but offers more isolation. lxc: lxc: Daniel Lezcano is the primary developer of lxc. lxc: Homepage: https://linuxcontainers.org lxc: lzip: lzip (a lossless data compressor) lzip: lzip: Lzip is a lossless data compressor with a user interface similar to lzip: the one of gzip or bzip2. Lzip decompresses almost as fast as gzip lzip: and compresses more than bzip2, which makes it well suited for lzip: software distribution and data archiving. Lzip is a clean lzip: implementation of the LZMA algorithm. lzip: lzip: Homepage: http://www.nongnu.org/lzip/lzip.html lzip: lzip: madplay: madplay (MPEG audio decoder and player) madplay: madplay: madplay is a command-line MPEG audio decoder and player based on the madplay: MAD library (libmad). For details about MAD, see the libmad package madplay: distributed separately. madplay: madplay: madplay was written by Robert Leslie. madplay: madplay: madplay: madplay: man: man (format and display the on-line manual pages) man: man: The man package is a collection of tools used for searching and man: reading the online system documentation. In fact, on most UNIX-like man: operating systems it is the primary means of finding out how programs man: on the system work. For example, 'man man' will display the man: documentation for man itself. man: man: Man requires the groff text processing package. man: man: man-pages: man-pages (system documentation) man-pages: man-pages: Man pages are online documentation for Linux. This package includes man-pages: many section 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, and 8 man pages for Linux. man-pages: man-pages: The man-pages distribution is maintained by Michael Kerrisk with man-pages: the help of more writers, editors, and other contributors than we man-pages: can name here. man-pages: man-pages: For more information, see http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/ man-pages: mariadb: mariadb (Drop-in replacement for the MySQL Database Server) mariadb: mariadb: MariaDB is a backward compatible, drop-in replacement branch of the mariadb: MySQL(R) Database Server. It includes all major open source storage mariadb: engines, including the Aria storage engine. mariadb: mariadb: Homepage: http://mariadb.org/ mariadb: mariadb: mariadb: mariadb: mc: mc (Midnight Commander file manager) mc: mc: The Midnight Commander is a Norton Commander clone, a program that mc: manipulates and manages files and directories. Useful, fast, and has mc: color displays on the Linux console. Mouse support is provided mc: through the gpm mouse server. This is a lightweight compilation of mc: mc for use on the text console or in an xterm. mc: mc: mc was written by Miguel de Icaza and Mauricio Plaza. mc: mc: moc: moc (console audio player) moc: moc: MOC is a console audio player with a simple ncurses interface. moc: It supports OGG, FLAC, WAV, and MP3 formats. Just run mocp, go to some moc: directory using the menu, select a file, and press enter to play it. moc: MOC will continue playing the rest of the files in the directory. moc: moc: MOC was written by Damian Pietras. moc: moc: Homepage: http://moc.daper.net moc: most: most (another pager, like 'more' and 'less') most: most: most is a paging program that displays, one windowful at a time, the most: contents of a file on a terminal. Unlike other well-known paging most: programs, most supports multiple windows and can scroll left and most: right. Why settle for less? most: most: 'most' was written by John E. Davis. most: most: most: mpg123: mpg123 (a command-line mp3 player) mpg123: mpg123: mpg123 is a real time MPEG 1.0/2.0/2.5 audio player/decoder for mpg123: layers 1, 2, and 3 (MPEG 1.0 layer 3 aka MP3 most commonly tested). mpg123: mpg123: It is free software licensed under LGPL 2.1. mpg123: mpg123: Homepage: http://mpg123.org/ mpg123: mpg123: mpg123: nano: nano (Nano's ANOther editor, an enhanced free Pico clone) nano: nano: nano is a small, free, and friendly editor. It aims to copy Pico's nano: look and feel while providing additional (or disabled by default) nano: features that are missing from Pico, such as "search and replace" or nano: "go to line and column number". nano: nano: Chris Allegretta is Nano's author. nano: nano: Homepage: http://www.nano-editor.org nano: normalize: normalize (adjusts volume levels of audio files) normalize: normalize: normalize is a tool for adjusting the volume of audio files to a normalize: standard level. This is useful for things like creating mix CDs normalize: from mp3 collections, where different recording levels on normalize: different albums can cause the volume to vary greatly from song normalize: to song. The package also contains an XMMS plugin. normalize: normalize: Chris Vaill is the author of normalize. normalize: normalize: pamixer: pamixer (pulseaudio command line mixer) pamixer: pamixer: pamixer is a console based mixer for pulseaudio. It can adjust the pamixer: volume levels of the audio sinks. pamixer: pamixer: Homepage: https://github.com/cdemoulins/pamixer pamixer: pamixer: pamixer: pamixer: pamixer: pm-utils: pm-utils (Power Management Utilities) pm-utils: pm-utils: The pm-utils package provides simple shell command line tools to pm-utils: suspend and hibernate computers that can be used to run vendor or pm-utils: distribution supplied scripts on suspend and resume. pm-utils: pm-utils: Homepage: http://pm-utils.freedesktop.org/ pm-utils: pm-utils: pm-utils: pm-utils: powertop: powertop (tool for analyzing system power usage) powertop: powertop: PowerTOP is a utility that collects data from your system and presents powertop: an overview to help optimize power savings. PowerTOP will identify powertop: which tunables and software components are the biggest offenders in powertop: slurping up your battery time. PowerTOP updates its display powertop: frequently so that you can directly see the impact of any changes you powertop: are making. powertop: powertop: Homepage: http://01.org/powertop/ powertop: qpdf: qpdf (Command-line tools and library for transforming PDF files) qpdf: qpdf: QPDF is a program that does structural, content-preserving qpdf: transformations on PDF files. It could have been called something qpdf: like pdf-to-pdf. It also provides many useful capabilities to qpdf: developers of PDF-producing software or for people who just want to qpdf: look at the innards of a PDF file to learn more about how they work. qpdf: qpdf: Homepage: http://qpdf.sourceforge.net/ qpdf: qpdf: radeontool: radeontool (small utility for ati radeon-based laptops) radeontool: radeontool: Radeontool is a small utility to control ATI Radeon-based radeontool: laptops' backlight and external output functions radeontool: radeontool: Homepage: http://people.freedesktop.org/~airlied/radeontool/ radeontool: radeontool: radeontool: radeontool: radeontool: rpm: rpm (RPM package format tool) rpm: rpm: RPM is a tool from Red Hat Software used to install and remove rpm: packages in the .rpm format. When installing RPM packages on rpm: Slackware, you may need to use the --nodeps and --force options. rpm: Before installing any binary package, it's wise to examine it to rpm: see what it's going to do, and if it will overwrite any files. You rpm: can use rpm2tgz to convert .rpm packages to .tgz packages so you rpm: can look them over. rpm: rpm: rzip: rzip (a large-file compression program) rzip: rzip: rzip is a file compression program designed to do particularly well rzip: on very large files containing long distance redundancy. rzip: rzip: rzip was written by Andrew Tridgell. rzip: rzip: rzip: rzip: rzip: sc: sc (spreadsheet calculator) sc: sc: This is a simple curses-based spreadsheet program. sc: sc: sc: sc: sc: sc: sc: sc: screen: screen (screen manager with VT100/ANSI terminal emulation) screen: screen: Screen is a full-screen window manager that multiplexes a physical screen: terminal between several processes (typically interactive shells). screen: Each virtual terminal provides the functions of a DEC VT100 terminal screen: and several control functions from the ISO 6492 (ECMA 48, ANSI X3.64) screen: and ISO 2022 standards (e.g. insert/delete line and support for screen: multiple character sets). There is a scrollback history buffer for screen: each virtual terminal and a copy-and-paste mechanism that allows screen: moving text regions between windows. screen: seejpeg: seejpeg (console JPEG viewer) seejpeg: seejpeg: Seejpeg is an image viewer which uses SVGAlib. In spite of the name, seejpeg: it understands the JPEG, GIF, PPM, BMP and TARGA formats. One nice seejpeg: feature of seejpeg is that it automatically decides on the best video seejpeg: mode to use based on the image being displayed and the video card seejpeg: being used. seejpeg: seejpeg: Evan Harris is the author of seejpeg. seejpeg: seejpeg: slackpkg: slackpkg slackpkg: slackpkg: Slackpkg is a package manager for Slackware. It can download, slackpkg: upgrade, install and remove selected packages. With it, you slackpkg: can search in the Slackware Package database and find which slackpkg: package has the selected file. slackpkg: slackpkg: Slackpkg DOESN'T replace pkgtool. Actually, Slackpkg uses pkgtool slackpkg: for all install|upgrade|remove functions. slackpkg: slackpkg: soma: Soma (a command line/dialog internet radio player) soma: soma: Soma is a frontend for mplayer to play radio playlists pls, m3ui, and soma: ram. More will be added as it progresses. soma: soma: Homepage: http://www.dawoodfall.net/slackbuilds/noversion/soma soma: soma: soma: soma: soma: sox: sox (universal sound sample translator) sox: sox: Sox is a universal sound converter, player, and recorder. It can sox: play, record, and convert between several sound file formats such as sox: .au, .snd, .voc and .wav. sox: sox: sox: sox: sox: Homepage: http://sox.sourceforge.net/ sox: sqlite: SQLite (simple, self contained database engine) sqlite: sqlite: SQLite is a small C library that implements a self-contained, sqlite: embeddable, zero-configuration SQL database engine. sqlite: sqlite: The SQLite distribution comes with a standalone command-line access sqlite: program (sqlite) that can be used to administer an SQLite database sqlite: and which serves as an example of how to use the SQLite library. sqlite: sqlite: Homepage: http://www.sqlite.org/ sqlite: squashfs-tools: squashfs-tools (squashed read-only filesystem for Linux) squashfs-tools: squashfs-tools: Squashfs is a highly compressed read-only filesystem for Linux. squashfs-tools: Squashfs compresses both files, inodes and directories, and squashfs-tools: supports block sizes up to 1Mbytes for greater compression. squashfs-tools: It is implemented as a kernel module under VFS. squashfs-tools: The package contains tools for manipulation of squashfs bundles. squashfs-tools: squashfs-tools: squashfs-tools: squashfs-tools home: http://squashfs.sourceforge.net/ squashfs-tools: sudo: sudo (give limited root privileges to certain users) sudo: sudo: 'sudo' is a command that allows users to execute some commands as sudo: root. The /etc/sudoers file (edited with 'visudo') specifies which sudo: users have access to sudo and which commands they can run. 'sudo' sudo: logs all its activities to /var/log/ so the system administrator sudo: can keep an eye on things. sudo: sudo: sudo: sudo: sysstat: sysstat (System performance monitoring tools) sysstat: sysstat: The sysstat utilities are a collection of performance monitoring sysstat: tools for Linux. These include the iostat, mpstat, pidstat, sadf, sysstat: and sar tools. sysstat: sysstat: The sysstat utilities were written by Sebastien Godard. sysstat: sysstat: For more information, see the sysstat web site: sysstat: http://pagesperso-orange.fr/sebastien.godard/ sysstat: terminus-font: terminus-font (a clean fixed width font) terminus-font: terminus-font: Terminus Font is designed for long (8 and more hours per day) terminus-font: work with computers. It is a good choice if you run a Unicode-enabled terminus-font: console but the package also contains a non-scalable Unicode-enabled terminus-font: font for use in X terminal applications. terminus-font: terminus-font: terminus-font: terminus-font: terminus-font home: http://terminus-font.sourceforge.net terminus-font: texinfo: texinfo (GNU software documentation system) texinfo: texinfo: 'Texinfo' is a documentation system that uses a single source file to texinfo: produce both on-line information and printed output. Using Texinfo, texinfo: you can create a printed document with the normal features of a book, texinfo: including chapters, sections, cross references, and indices. From the texinfo: same Texinfo source file, you can create a menu-driven, on-line Info texinfo: file with nodes, menus, cross references, and indices. texinfo: texinfo: This package is needed to read the documentation files in /usr/info. texinfo: tmux: tmux (terminal multiplexer) tmux: tmux: tmux is a terminal multiplexer. It enables a number of terminals tmux: (or windows) to be accessed and controlled from a single terminal. tmux: tmux is intended to be a simple, modern, BSD-licensed alternative to tmux: programs such as GNU screen. tmux: tmux: Homepage: http://tmux.github.io/ tmux: tmux: tmux: usbmuxd: usbmuxd (iOS USB connection daemon) usbmuxd: usbmuxd: A client daemon to multiplex connections from and to iOS devices. usbmuxd: It is used by libgpod. usbmuxd: usbmuxd: The usbmuxd homepage: http://www.libimobiledevice.org/ usbmuxd: usbmuxd: usbmuxd: usbmuxd: usbmuxd: vbetool: vbetool (video bios execution tool) vbetool: vbetool: vbetool is a small application that executes code from the BIOS of vbetool: your video card. vbetool: vbetool: This is mostly useful for reinitializing the hardware, for instance vbetool: after ACPI suspend/resuming. vbetool: vbetool: Homepage: http://www.codon.org.uk/~mjg59/vbetool/ vbetool: vbetool: vim: vim (Vi IMproved) vim: vim: Vim is an almost compatible version of the UNIX editor vi. Many new vim: features have been added: multi level undo, command line history, vim: filename completion, block operations, and more. vim: vim: Vim's development is led by Bram Moolenaar. vim: vim: This package also contains the Exuberant Ctags program vim: written by Darren Hiebert. vim: vorbis-tools: vorbis-tools (Ogg Vorbis Tools) vorbis-tools: vorbis-tools: The vorbis-tools package contains several basic tools for working with vorbis-tools: compressed audio files in the Ogg Vorbis (.ogg) format: vorbis-tools: vorbis-tools: oggenc (an .ogg encoder), ogg123 (a playback tool), vorbiscomment vorbis-tools: (add comments to vorbis files), ogginfo (show information about an vorbis-tools: ogg file), oggdec (a command line decoder), and vcut (a tool for vorbis-tools: splitting vorbis files). vorbis-tools: vorbis-tools: These tools require the libao, libogg, and libvorbis libraries. workbone: workbone (text-based CD player) workbone: workbone: WorkBone is a simple interactive tool for for playing audio CDs from workbone: the Linux console. workbone: workbone: workbone: workbone: workbone: workbone: workbone: xfsdump: xfsdump (backup tools for the XFS filesystem) xfsdump: xfsdump: The xfsdump package contains the xfsdump and xfsrestore utilities for xfsdump: backing up and restoring XFS partitions. xfsdump examines files in a xfsdump: filesystem, determines which need to be backed up, and copies those xfsdump: files to a specified disk, tape or other storage medium. xfsrestore xfsdump: performs the inverse function of xfsdump; it can restore a full xfsdump: or incremental backup of a filesystem. xfsdump: xfsdump: xfsdump: zsh: zsh (the Z shell) zsh: zsh: Zsh is a UNIX command interpreter (shell) which of the standard shells zsh: most resembles the Korn shell (ksh), although it is not completely zsh: compatible. It includes enhancements of many types, notably in the zsh: command-line editor, options for customizing its behavior, filename zsh: globbing, features to make C-shell (csh) users feel more at home and zsh: extra features drawn from tcsh (another 'custom' shell). Zsh was zsh: written by Paul Falstad. zsh: zsh: