diff options
author | Miruna Paun <Miruna.Paun@enea.com> | 2017-10-11 18:37:25 +0200 |
---|---|---|
committer | Miruna Paun <Miruna.Paun@enea.com> | 2017-10-11 18:37:25 +0200 |
commit | 19488aacc5852a47294f4b644da971a74f40f6d2 (patch) | |
tree | 962ee67f58e47b1ab0fcae68b5b6bdf03e53c818 | |
parent | ec334b3da53471e66fb4cb07920fb6614895b06b (diff) | |
download | nfv-access-documentation-19488aacc5852a47294f4b644da971a74f40f6d2.tar.gz |
Updated the ENFV Release notes and debugged building the OSRs
LXCR-8001
Signed-off-by: Miruna Paun <Miruna.Paun@enea.com>
16 files changed, 21138 insertions, 11444 deletions
diff --git a/doc/Makefile b/doc/Makefile index 06c1a42..d3b4388 100644 --- a/doc/Makefile +++ b/doc/Makefile | |||
@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@ | |||
1 | #2017-10-11 Adding new OSRs and updated target info. | ||
1 | #2017-06-29 Converted EL7 virtualization profile to first version of ENFV Access | 2 | #2017-06-29 Converted EL7 virtualization profile to first version of ENFV Access |
2 | #2017-04-13 Created first version of virtualization profile | 3 | #2017-04-13 Created first version of virtualization profile |
3 | 4 | ||
@@ -21,8 +22,8 @@ TMPCLONEROOT_MANIFEST := $(TMPCLONEROOT)/manifest | |||
21 | 22 | ||
22 | 23 | ||
23 | # ******************* AutoGenerated chapters from template and target READMEs ******* | 24 | # ******************* AutoGenerated chapters from template and target READMEs ******* |
24 | BUILDBOOT_XML := book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/build_boot_generated.xml | 25 | #BUILDBOOT_XML := book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/build_boot_generated.xml |
25 | BUILDBOOT_TEMPLATE := book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/build_boot_template.xml | 26 | #BUILDBOOT_TEMPLATE := book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/build_boot_template.xml |
26 | 27 | ||
27 | PKGDIFF_GEN_XML := book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/pkgdiff_generated.xml | 28 | PKGDIFF_GEN_XML := book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/pkgdiff_generated.xml |
28 | JIRA_ISSUES_GEN_XML := book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/jiraissues_generated.xml | 29 | JIRA_ISSUES_GEN_XML := book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/jiraissues_generated.xml |
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-dev-hardening-guide/doc/hardening_checklist.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-dev-hardening-guide/doc/hardening_checklist.xml index 2e008e3..f444cd5 100644 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-dev-hardening-guide/doc/hardening_checklist.xml +++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-dev-hardening-guide/doc/hardening_checklist.xml | |||
@@ -7,8 +7,8 @@ | |||
7 | <section id="broken_algorithms"> | 7 | <section id="broken_algorithms"> |
8 | <title>Broken Algorithms</title> | 8 | <title>Broken Algorithms</title> |
9 | 9 | ||
10 | <para>Make sure that algorithms that are broken in regards to security are | 10 | <para>Algorithms that are broken in regards to security must not be used. |
11 | not used.</para> | 11 | The following should be verified to prevent this issue:</para> |
12 | 12 | ||
13 | <remark>Ask Sona/Casc if the algorithms listed below are the broken ones | 13 | <remark>Ask Sona/Casc if the algorithms listed below are the broken ones |
14 | to check for or if they're the ones that are broken to begin with and if | 14 | to check for or if they're the ones that are broken to begin with and if |
@@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ | |||
57 | <title>System Installation</title> | 57 | <title>System Installation</title> |
58 | 58 | ||
59 | <para>Enea NFV Access Images should be check summed with SHA512 and/or a | 59 | <para>Enea NFV Access Images should be check summed with SHA512 and/or a |
60 | signed GPG key. See <ulink | 60 | signed GPG key. Please see <ulink |
61 | url="https://www.openssl.org/source/">https://www.openssl.org/source/</ulink> | 61 | url="https://www.openssl.org/source/">https://www.openssl.org/source/</ulink> |
62 | for more details on how to proceed.</para> | 62 | for more details on how to proceed.</para> |
63 | </section> | 63 | </section> |
@@ -67,8 +67,8 @@ | |||
67 | 67 | ||
68 | <para>Applying security patches is an important part of security hardening | 68 | <para>Applying security patches is an important part of security hardening |
69 | and maintenance. Enea backports all known critical vulnerabilities within | 69 | and maintenance. Enea backports all known critical vulnerabilities within |
70 | a reasonable time frame if not immeditately, and makes them available to | 70 | a reasonable time frame and makes them available to users for |
71 | users for updates/upgrades.</para> | 71 | updates/upgrades.</para> |
72 | 72 | ||
73 | <para>Prepare the system for regular updates in the following | 73 | <para>Prepare the system for regular updates in the following |
74 | manner:</para> | 74 | manner:</para> |
@@ -89,9 +89,9 @@ | |||
89 | <section id="openembedded_security_layer"> | 89 | <section id="openembedded_security_layer"> |
90 | <title>OpenEmbedded meta-security layer</title> | 90 | <title>OpenEmbedded meta-security layer</title> |
91 | 91 | ||
92 | <para>An OpenEmbedded meta-security layer provides many hardening tools. | 92 | <para>An OpenEmbedded meta-security layer provides many hardening open |
93 | These tools are open source packages suited for embedded devices. Below is | 93 | source packages suited for embedded devices. Below is a list of several |
94 | a list of several packages included in meta-security layer:</para> | 94 | packages included in meta-security layer:</para> |
95 | 95 | ||
96 | <itemizedlist> | 96 | <itemizedlist> |
97 | <listitem> | 97 | <listitem> |
@@ -139,11 +139,11 @@ | |||
139 | </itemizedlist> | 139 | </itemizedlist> |
140 | 140 | ||
141 | <para>For more information about tools supported in the meta-security | 141 | <para>For more information about tools supported in the meta-security |
142 | layer please refer to <emphasis role="bold">Introduction to the Tools in | 142 | layer please refer to the chapter: <emphasis role="bold">Introduction to |
143 | meta-security layer</emphasis>.</para> | 143 | the Tools in meta-security layer</emphasis>.</para> |
144 | 144 | ||
145 | <remark>change the bold text to point to the section/chapter in question | 145 | <remark>change the bold text to point to the section/chapter in question |
146 | through an xref</remark> | 146 | through an xref refering to chapter 3 of the same title.</remark> |
147 | </section> | 147 | </section> |
148 | 148 | ||
149 | <section id="ker-hardening"> | 149 | <section id="ker-hardening"> |
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-dev-hardening-guide/doc/introduction.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-dev-hardening-guide/doc/introduction.xml index bbf203f..aaeb6d6 100644 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-dev-hardening-guide/doc/introduction.xml +++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-dev-hardening-guide/doc/introduction.xml | |||
@@ -4,124 +4,117 @@ | |||
4 | <chapter id="overview"> | 4 | <chapter id="overview"> |
5 | <title>Overview</title> | 5 | <title>Overview</title> |
6 | 6 | ||
7 | <para>This document describes the activities needed for securing/hardening | 7 | <para>This document describes the activities needed for securing Enea NFV |
8 | Enea NFV Access platform by ESRT/ developers in order to fulfill the | 8 | Access platform by ESRT/ developers in order to fulfill the security |
9 | security requirements specified in <ulink | 9 | requirements specified in <ulink |
10 | url="https://eneaissues.enea.com/browse/CPDX-2632">CPDX-2632</ulink> (see | 10 | url="https://eneaissues.enea.com/browse/CPDX-2632">CPDX-2632</ulink> (see |
11 | the Security section under Pre-Study).</para> | 11 | the Security section under Pre-Study). For further information about the |
12 | hardening features available, please read <ulink | ||
13 | url="https://eneadoc.enea.com/idc/idcplg?IdcService=GET_FILE&dDocName=055550&Rendition=Primary&RevisionSelectionMethod=Latest"><trademark | ||
14 | class="registered">Enea</trademark> NFV Access User's Hardening | ||
15 | Guide</ulink>.</para> | ||
12 | 16 | ||
13 | <section id="intro"> | 17 | <section id="rev_hist"> |
14 | <title>Introduction</title> | 18 | <title>Revision History</title> |
15 | 19 | ||
16 | <para>This document contains a checklist to use when hardening Enea NFV | 20 | <table> |
17 | Access. Please read <ulink | 21 | <tgroup cols="4"> |
18 | url="https://eneadoc.enea.com/idc/idcplg?IdcService=GET_FILE&dDocName=055550&Rendition=Primary&RevisionSelectionMethod=Latest"><trademark | 22 | <colspec align="center" /> |
19 | class="registered">Enea</trademark> NFV Access User's Hardening | ||
20 | Guide</ulink> for further information about the hardening features | ||
21 | available.</para> | ||
22 | 23 | ||
23 | <section id="rev-hist"> | 24 | <thead> |
24 | <title>Revision History</title> | 25 | <row> |
26 | <entry align="center">Revision</entry> | ||
25 | 27 | ||
26 | <table> | 28 | <entry align="center">Author</entry> |
27 | <tgroup cols="4"> | ||
28 | <colspec align="center" /> | ||
29 | 29 | ||
30 | <thead> | 30 | <entry align="center">Date</entry> |
31 | <row> | ||
32 | <entry align="center">Revision</entry> | ||
33 | 31 | ||
34 | <entry align="center">Author</entry> | 32 | <entry align="center">Purpose for Revision</entry> |
33 | </row> | ||
34 | </thead> | ||
35 | 35 | ||
36 | <entry align="center">Date</entry> | 36 | <tbody> |
37 | <row> | ||
38 | <entry>4</entry> | ||
37 | 39 | ||
38 | <entry align="center">Purpose for Revision</entry> | 40 | <entry>Sona Sarmadi</entry> |
39 | </row> | ||
40 | </thead> | ||
41 | 41 | ||
42 | <tbody> | 42 | <entry>2017-09-07</entry> |
43 | <row> | ||
44 | <entry>4</entry> | ||
45 | 43 | ||
46 | <entry>Sona Sarmadi</entry> | 44 | <entry>Added Appendix, sec 4.</entry> |
45 | </row> | ||
47 | 46 | ||
48 | <entry>2017-09-07</entry> | 47 | <row> |
48 | <entry>3</entry> | ||
49 | 49 | ||
50 | <entry>Added Appendix, sec 4.</entry> | 50 | <entry>Sona Sarmadi</entry> |
51 | </row> | ||
52 | 51 | ||
53 | <row> | 52 | <entry>2017-09-05</entry> |
54 | <entry>3</entry> | ||
55 | 53 | ||
56 | <entry>Sona Sarmadi</entry> | 54 | <entry>Added introduction to the tools in the Open Embedded |
55 | meta-security layer Fixed 1.1 Revision History.</entry> | ||
56 | </row> | ||
57 | 57 | ||
58 | <entry>2017-09-05</entry> | 58 | <row> |
59 | <entry>2</entry> | ||
59 | 60 | ||
60 | <entry>Added introduction to the tools in the Open Embedded | 61 | <entry>Sona Sarmadi</entry> |
61 | meta-security layer Fixed 1.1 Revision History.</entry> | ||
62 | </row> | ||
63 | 62 | ||
64 | <row> | 63 | <entry>2017-08-30</entry> |
65 | <entry>2</entry> | ||
66 | 64 | ||
67 | <entry>Sona Sarmadi</entry> | 65 | <entry>Made this document as a guideline for Enea NFV Access |
66 | developers. Moved section 2 and 3 to a new document (a guideline | ||
67 | only for users).</entry> | ||
68 | </row> | ||
68 | 69 | ||
69 | <entry>2017-08-30</entry> | 70 | <row> |
71 | <entry>1</entry> | ||
70 | 72 | ||
71 | <entry>Made this document as a guideline for Enea NFV Access | 73 | <entry>Sona Sarmadi</entry> |
72 | developers. Moved section 2 and 3 to a new document (a guideline | ||
73 | only for users).</entry> | ||
74 | </row> | ||
75 | 74 | ||
76 | <row> | 75 | <entry>2017-08-20</entry> |
77 | <entry>1</entry> | ||
78 | 76 | ||
79 | <entry>Sona Sarmadi</entry> | 77 | <entry>Initial Revision</entry> |
80 | 78 | </row> | |
81 | <entry>2017-08-20</entry> | 79 | </tbody> |
82 | 80 | </tgroup> | |
83 | <entry>Initial Revision</entry> | 81 | </table> |
84 | </row> | 82 | </section> |
85 | </tbody> | ||
86 | </tgroup> | ||
87 | </table> | ||
88 | </section> | ||
89 | |||
90 | <section id="references"> | ||
91 | <title>References</title> | ||
92 | |||
93 | <itemizedlist> | ||
94 | <listitem> | ||
95 | <para><ulink | ||
96 | url="https://www.sans.org/reading-room/whitepapers/linux/linux-kernel-hardening-1294">SANS | ||
97 | linux-kernel-hardening-1294</ulink></para> | ||
98 | </listitem> | ||
99 | |||
100 | <listitem> | ||
101 | <para><ulink | ||
102 | url="https://lwn.net/Articles/705262/">lwn.net/Articles/705262/</ulink></para> | ||
103 | </listitem> | ||
104 | 83 | ||
105 | <listitem> | 84 | <section id="references"> |
106 | <para><ulink | 85 | <title>References</title> |
107 | url="https://eneadoc.enea.com/idc/idcplg?IdcService=GET_FILE&dDocName=055550&Rendition=Primary&RevisionSelectionMethod=Latest">Hardening | 86 | |
108 | Guide for Users of Enea NFV Access</ulink><remark>Not sure if this | 87 | <itemizedlist> |
109 | should remain an ulink to eneadoc or be changed to an olink to the | 88 | <listitem> |
110 | guide in question.</remark></para> | 89 | <para><ulink |
111 | </listitem> | 90 | url="https://www.sans.org/reading-room/whitepapers/linux/linux-kernel-hardening-1294">SANS |
112 | </itemizedlist> | 91 | linux-kernel-hardening-1294</ulink></para> |
113 | </section> | 92 | </listitem> |
93 | |||
94 | <listitem> | ||
95 | <para><ulink | ||
96 | url="https://lwn.net/Articles/705262/">lwn.net/Articles/705262/</ulink></para> | ||
97 | </listitem> | ||
98 | |||
99 | <listitem> | ||
100 | <para><ulink | ||
101 | url="https://eneadoc.enea.com/idc/idcplg?IdcService=GET_FILE&dDocName=055550&Rendition=Primary&RevisionSelectionMethod=Latest">Hardening | ||
102 | Guide for Users of Enea NFV Access</ulink><remark>Not sure if this | ||
103 | should remain an ulink to eneadoc or be changed to an olink to the | ||
104 | guide in question.</remark></para> | ||
105 | </listitem> | ||
106 | </itemizedlist> | ||
107 | </section> | ||
114 | 108 | ||
115 | <section id="def_acro"> | 109 | <section id="def_acro"> |
116 | <title>Definitions and Acronyms</title> | 110 | <title>Definitions and Acronyms</title> |
117 | 111 | ||
118 | <para>Definitions</para> | 112 | <para>Definitions:</para> |
119 | 113 | ||
120 | <para>[FIXME]</para> | 114 | <para>[FIXME]</para> |
121 | 115 | ||
122 | <para>Acronyms</para> | 116 | <para>Acronyms:</para> |
123 | 117 | ||
124 | <para>[FIXME]</para> | 118 | <para>[FIXME]</para> |
125 | </section> | ||
126 | </section> | 119 | </section> |
127 | </chapter> \ No newline at end of file | 120 | </chapter> \ No newline at end of file |
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-dev-open-source/doc/licenses.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-dev-open-source/doc/licenses.xml index 8eec1fa..ee657dd 100644 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-dev-open-source/doc/licenses.xml +++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-dev-open-source/doc/licenses.xml | |||
@@ -3,2309 +3,4479 @@ | |||
3 | "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> | 3 | "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> |
4 | <chapter id="enea_linux_packages"> | 4 | <chapter id="enea_linux_packages"> |
5 | <title>Packages and Licenses</title> | 5 | <title>Packages and Licenses</title> |
6 | <section id="licenses_packages"> | ||
7 | 6 | ||
8 | <title>Packages</title> | 7 | <section id="licenses_packages"> |
8 | <title>Packages</title> | ||
9 | 9 | ||
10 | 10 | <!--This chapter contains a generated list of all packages that Enea Linux | |
11 | <!--This chapter contains a generated list of all packages that Enea Linux | ||
12 | supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package | 11 | supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package |
13 | specific documentation.--> | 12 | specific documentation.--> |
14 | 13 | ||
15 | <informaltable> | 14 | <informaltable> |
16 | <tgroup cols="4"> | 15 | <tgroup cols="4"> |
17 | <colspec colwidth="2*"/> | 16 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
18 | <colspec colwidth="1*"/> | 17 | |
19 | <colspec colwidth="5*"/> | 18 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
20 | <colspec colwidth="2*"/> | 19 | |
21 | 20 | <colspec colwidth="5*" /> | |
22 | <thead> | 21 | |
23 | <row> | 22 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
24 | <entry align="center">Package Name</entry> | 23 | |
25 | <entry align="center">Version</entry> | 24 | <thead> |
26 | <entry align="center">Description</entry> | 25 | <row> |
27 | <entry align="center">License</entry> | 26 | <entry align="center">Package Name</entry> |
28 | </row> | 27 | |
29 | </thead> | 28 | <entry align="center">Version</entry> |
30 | 29 | ||
31 | <tbody valign="top"> | 30 | <entry align="center">Description</entry> |
32 | <row> | 31 | |
33 | <entry>acl</entry> | 32 | <entry align="center">License</entry> |
34 | <entry>2.2.52</entry> | 33 | </row> |
35 | <entry>Utilities for managing POSIX Access Control Lists.</entry> | 34 | </thead> |
36 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 35 | |
37 | </row> | 36 | <tbody valign="top"> |
38 | <row> | 37 | <row> |
39 | <entry>alsa-lib</entry> | 38 | <entry>acl</entry> |
40 | <entry>1.1.3</entry> | 39 | |
41 | <entry>ALSA sound library.</entry> | 40 | <entry>2.2.52</entry> |
42 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 41 | |
43 | </row> | 42 | <entry>Utilities for managing POSIX Access Control Lists.</entry> |
44 | <row> | 43 | |
45 | <entry>ant</entry> | 44 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> |
46 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> | 45 | </row> |
47 | <entry>Another Neat Tool - build system for Java</entry> | 46 | |
48 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 47 | <row> |
49 | </row> | 48 | <entry>alsa-lib</entry> |
50 | <row> | 49 | |
51 | <entry>antlr</entry> | 50 | <entry>1.1.3</entry> |
52 | <entry>2.7.7</entry> | 51 | |
53 | <entry>Framework for constructing recognizers interpreters compilers and translators</entry> | 52 | <entry>ALSA sound library.</entry> |
54 | <entry>PD</entry> | 53 | |
55 | </row> | 54 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> |
56 | <row> | 55 | </row> |
57 | <entry>apache2</entry> | 56 | |
58 | <entry>2.4.25</entry> | 57 | <row> |
59 | <entry>The Apache HTTP Server is a powerful efficient and extensible web server.</entry> | 58 | <entry>ant</entry> |
60 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 59 | |
61 | </row> | 60 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> |
62 | <row> | 61 | |
63 | <entry>apr-util</entry> | 62 | <entry>Another Neat Tool - build system for Java</entry> |
64 | <entry>1.5.4</entry> | 63 | |
65 | <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) companion library.</entry> | 64 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
66 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 65 | </row> |
67 | </row> | 66 | |
68 | <row> | 67 | <row> |
69 | <entry>apr</entry> | 68 | <entry>antlr</entry> |
70 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> | 69 | |
71 | <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) library.</entry> | 70 | <entry>2.7.7</entry> |
72 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 71 | |
73 | </row> | 72 | <entry>Framework for constructing recognizers interpreters |
74 | <row> | 73 | compilers and translators</entry> |
75 | <entry>apt</entry> | 74 | |
76 | <entry>1.2.12</entry> | 75 | <entry>PD</entry> |
77 | <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> | 76 | </row> |
78 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 77 | |
79 | </row> | 78 | <row> |
80 | <row> | 79 | <entry>apache2</entry> |
81 | <entry>asciidoc</entry> | 80 | |
82 | <entry>8.6.9</entry> | 81 | <entry>2.4.25</entry> |
83 | <entry>AsciiDoc is a text document format for writing short documents articles books and UNIX man pages.</entry> | 82 | |
84 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 83 | <entry>The Apache HTTP Server is a powerful efficient and |
85 | </row> | 84 | extensible web server.</entry> |
86 | <row> | 85 | |
87 | <entry>atk</entry> | 86 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
88 | <entry>2.22.0</entry> | 87 | </row> |
89 | <entry>Accessibility toolkit for GNOME.</entry> | 88 | |
90 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 89 | <row> |
91 | </row> | 90 | <entry>apr-util</entry> |
92 | <row> | 91 | |
93 | <entry>attr</entry> | 92 | <entry>1.5.4</entry> |
94 | <entry>2.4.47</entry> | 93 | |
95 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended attributes.</entry> | 94 | <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) companion library.</entry> |
96 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 95 | |
97 | </row> | 96 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
98 | <row> | 97 | </row> |
99 | <entry>aufs-util</entry> | 98 | |
100 | <entry>3.14</entry> | 99 | <row> |
101 | <entry>Tools for managing AUFS mounts.</entry> | 100 | <entry>apr</entry> |
102 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 101 | |
103 | </row> | 102 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> |
104 | <row> | 103 | |
105 | <entry>autoconf-archive</entry> | 104 | <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) library.</entry> |
106 | <entry>2016.09.16</entry> | 105 | |
107 | <entry>autoconf-archive-native version 2016.09.16-r0.</entry> | 106 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
108 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 107 | </row> |
109 | </row> | 108 | |
110 | <row> | 109 | <row> |
111 | <entry>autoconf</entry> | 110 | <entry>apt</entry> |
112 | <entry>2.69</entry> | 111 | |
113 | <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce shell scripts to automatically configure software source code packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package from a template file that lists the operating system features that the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> | 112 | <entry>1.2.12</entry> |
114 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 113 | |
115 | </row> | 114 | <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> |
116 | <row> | 115 | |
117 | <entry>autogen</entry> | 116 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
118 | <entry>5.18.12</entry> | 117 | </row> |
119 | <entry>AutoGen is a tool designed to simplify the creation and maintenance of programs that contain large amounts of repetitious text. It is especially valuable in programs that have several blocks of text that must be kept synchronized.</entry> | 118 | |
120 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 119 | <row> |
121 | </row> | 120 | <entry>asciidoc</entry> |
122 | <row> | 121 | |
123 | <entry>automake</entry> | 122 | <entry>8.6.9</entry> |
124 | <entry>1.15</entry> | 123 | |
125 | <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> | 124 | <entry>AsciiDoc is a text document format for writing short |
126 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 125 | documents articles books and UNIX man pages.</entry> |
127 | </row> | 126 | |
128 | <row> | 127 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
129 | <entry>avahi</entry> | 128 | </row> |
130 | <entry>0.6.32</entry> | 129 | |
131 | <entry>"Avahi is a fully LGPL framework for Multicast DNS Service Discovery. It allows programs to publish and discover services and hosts running on a local network with no specific configuration. This tool implements IPv4LL ""Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses"" (IETF RFC3927) a protocol for automatic IP address configuration from the link-local 169.254.0.0/16 range without the need for a central server."</entry> | 130 | <row> |
132 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 131 | <entry>atk</entry> |
133 | </row> | 132 | |
134 | <row> | 133 | <entry>2.22.0</entry> |
135 | <entry>avalon-framework-api</entry> | 134 | |
136 | <entry>4.3</entry> | 135 | <entry>Accessibility toolkit for GNOME.</entry> |
137 | <entry>Common way for components to be created initialized configured started. (API-only)</entry> | 136 | |
138 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 137 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
139 | </row> | 138 | </row> |
140 | <row> | 139 | |
141 | <entry>babeltrace</entry> | 140 | <row> |
142 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> | 141 | <entry>attr</entry> |
143 | <entry>Babeltrace provides trace read and write libraries in host side as well as a trace converter which used to convert LTTng 2.0 traces into human-readable log.</entry> | 142 | |
144 | <entry> MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> | 143 | <entry>2.4.47</entry> |
145 | </row> | 144 | |
146 | <row> | 145 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended |
147 | <entry>base-files</entry> | 146 | attributes.</entry> |
148 | <entry>3.0.14</entry> | 147 | |
149 | <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for the system.</entry> | 148 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> |
150 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 149 | </row> |
151 | </row> | 150 | |
152 | <row> | 151 | <row> |
153 | <entry>base-passwd</entry> | 152 | <entry>aufs-util</entry> |
154 | <entry>3.5.29</entry> | 153 | |
155 | <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> | 154 | <entry>3.14</entry> |
156 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 155 | |
157 | </row> | 156 | <entry>Tools for managing AUFS mounts.</entry> |
158 | <row> | 157 | |
159 | <entry>bash-completion</entry> | 158 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
160 | <entry>2.5</entry> | 159 | </row> |
161 | <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> | 160 | |
162 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 161 | <row> |
163 | </row> | 162 | <entry>autoconf-archive</entry> |
164 | <row> | 163 | |
165 | <entry>bash</entry> | 164 | <entry>2016.09.16</entry> |
166 | <entry>4.3.30</entry> | 165 | |
167 | <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> | 166 | <entry>autoconf-archive-native version 2016.09.16-r0.</entry> |
168 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 167 | |
169 | </row> | 168 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
170 | <row> | 169 | </row> |
171 | <entry>bc</entry> | 170 | |
172 | <entry>1.06</entry> | 171 | <row> |
173 | <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> | 172 | <entry>autoconf</entry> |
174 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 173 | |
175 | </row> | 174 | <entry>2.69</entry> |
176 | <row> | 175 | |
177 | <entry>bcel</entry> | 176 | <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce |
178 | <entry>5.2</entry> | 177 | shell scripts to automatically configure software source code |
179 | <entry>Java Bytecode manipulation library</entry> | 178 | packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package |
180 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 179 | from a template file that lists the operating system features that |
181 | </row> | 180 | the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> |
182 | <row> | 181 | |
183 | <entry>bdwgc</entry> | 182 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
184 | <entry>7.6.0</entry> | 183 | </row> |
185 | <entry>The Boehm-Demers-Weiser conservative garbage collector can be used as a garbage collecting replacement for C malloc or C++ new. It allows you to allocate memory basically as you normally would without explicitly deallocating memory that is no longer useful. The collector automatically recycles memory when it determines that it can no longer be otherwise accessed. The collector is also used by a number of programming language implementations that either use C as intermediate code want to facilitate easier interoperation with C libraries or just prefer the simple collector interface. Alternatively the garbage collector may be used as a leak detector for C or C++ programs though that is not its primary goal. Empirically this collector works with most unmodified C programs simply by replacing malloc with GC_malloc calls replacing realloc with GC_realloc calls and removing free calls.</entry> | 184 | |
186 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 185 | <row> |
187 | </row> | 186 | <entry>autogen</entry> |
188 | <row> | 187 | |
189 | <entry>bind</entry> | 188 | <entry>5.18.12</entry> |
190 | <entry>9.10.3-P3</entry> | 189 | |
191 | <entry>ISC Internet Domain Name Server.</entry> | 190 | <entry>AutoGen is a tool designed to simplify the creation and |
192 | <entry> ISC, BSD</entry> | 191 | maintenance of programs that contain large amounts of repetitious |
193 | </row> | 192 | text. It is especially valuable in programs that have several |
194 | <row> | 193 | blocks of text that must be kept synchronized.</entry> |
195 | <entry>binutils-cross-x86_64</entry> | 194 | |
196 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 195 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
197 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 196 | </row> |
198 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 197 | |
199 | </row> | 198 | <row> |
200 | <row> | 199 | <entry>automake</entry> |
201 | <entry>binutils</entry> | 200 | |
202 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 201 | <entry>1.15</entry> |
203 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 202 | |
204 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 203 | <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating |
205 | </row> | 204 | `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. |
206 | <row> | 205 | Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> |
207 | <entry>bison</entry> | 206 | |
208 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> | 207 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
209 | <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with little trouble.</entry> | 208 | </row> |
210 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 209 | |
211 | </row> | 210 | <row> |
212 | <row> | 211 | <entry>avahi</entry> |
213 | <entry>bjam</entry> | 212 | |
214 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> | 213 | <entry>0.6.32</entry> |
215 | <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry> | 214 | |
216 | <entry> BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> | 215 | <entry>"Avahi is a fully LGPL framework for Multicast DNS Service |
217 | </row> | 216 | Discovery. It allows programs to publish and discover services and |
218 | <row> | 217 | hosts running on a local network with no specific configuration. |
219 | <entry>boost</entry> | 218 | This tool implements IPv4LL ""Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 |
220 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> | 219 | Link-Local Addresses"" (IETF RFC3927) a protocol for automatic IP |
221 | <entry>Free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.</entry> | 220 | address configuration from the link-local 169.254.0.0/16 range |
222 | <entry> BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> | 221 | without the need for a central server."</entry> |
223 | </row> | 222 | |
224 | <row> | 223 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
225 | <entry>bridge-utils</entry> | 224 | </row> |
226 | <entry>1.5</entry> | 225 | |
227 | <entry>Tools for ethernet bridging.</entry> | 226 | <row> |
228 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 227 | <entry>avalon-framework-api</entry> |
229 | </row> | 228 | |
230 | <row> | 229 | <entry>4.3</entry> |
231 | <entry>bsf</entry> | 230 | |
232 | <entry>2.4.0</entry> | 231 | <entry>Common way for components to be created initialized |
233 | <entry>Bean Scripting Framework package</entry> | 232 | configured started. (API-only)</entry> |
234 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 233 | |
235 | </row> | 234 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
236 | <row> | 235 | </row> |
237 | <entry>btrfs-tools</entry> | 236 | |
238 | <entry>4.9.1</entry> | 237 | <row> |
239 | <entry>Btrfs is a new copy on write filesystem for Linux aimed at implementing advanced features while focusing on fault tolerance repair and easy administration. This package contains utilities (mkfs fsck btrfsctl) used to work with btrfs and an utility (btrfs-convert) to make a btrfs filesystem from an ext3.</entry> | 238 | <entry>babeltrace</entry> |
240 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 239 | |
241 | </row> | 240 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> |
242 | <row> | 241 | |
243 | <entry>busybox</entry> | 242 | <entry>Babeltrace provides trace read and write libraries in host |
244 | <entry>1.24.1</entry> | 243 | side as well as a trace converter which used to convert LTTng 2.0 |
245 | <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the options that are included provide the expected functionality and behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded system.</entry> | 244 | traces into human-readable log.</entry> |
246 | <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> | 245 | |
247 | </row> | 246 | <entry>MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> |
248 | <row> | 247 | </row> |
249 | <entry>bzip2</entry> | 248 | |
250 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> | 249 | <row> |
251 | <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> | 250 | <entry>base-files</entry> |
252 | <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry> | 251 | |
253 | </row> | 252 | <entry>3.0.14</entry> |
254 | <row> | 253 | |
255 | <entry>ca-certificates</entry> | 254 | <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory |
256 | <entry>20161130</entry> | 255 | structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for |
257 | <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> | 256 | the system.</entry> |
258 | <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> | 257 | |
259 | </row> | 258 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
260 | <row> | 259 | </row> |
261 | <entry>cacao-initial</entry> | 260 | |
262 | <entry>0.98</entry> | 261 | <row> |
263 | <entry>CacaoVM for use as OpenEmbedded's Java VM</entry> | 262 | <entry>base-passwd</entry> |
264 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 263 | |
265 | </row> | 264 | <entry>3.5.29</entry> |
266 | <row> | 265 | |
267 | <entry>cairo</entry> | 266 | <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd |
268 | <entry>1.14.8</entry> | 267 | and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep |
269 | <entry>Cairo is a multi-platform library providing anti-aliased vector-based rendering for multiple target backends. Paths consist of line segments and cubic splines and can be rendered at any width with various join and cap styles. All colors may be specified with optional translucence (opacity/alpha) and combined using the extended Porter/Duff compositing algebra as found in the X Render Extension.</entry> | 268 | the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> |
270 | <entry> MPL-1.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry> | 269 | |
271 | </row> | 270 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
272 | <row> | 271 | </row> |
273 | <entry>cantarell-fonts</entry> | 272 | |
274 | <entry>0.0.24</entry> | 273 | <row> |
275 | <entry>The Cantarell font typeface is designed as a contemporary Humanist sans serif and was developed for on-screen reading; in particular reading web pages on an HTC Dream mobile phone.</entry> | 274 | <entry>bash-completion</entry> |
276 | <entry> </entry> | 275 | |
277 | </row> | 276 | <entry>2.5</entry> |
278 | <row> | 277 | |
279 | <entry>cdrkit</entry> | 278 | <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> |
280 | <entry>1.1.11</entry> | 279 | |
281 | <entry>CD/DVD command line tools.</entry> | 280 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
282 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 281 | </row> |
283 | </row> | 282 | |
284 | <row> | 283 | <row> |
285 | <entry>cdrtools</entry> | 284 | <entry>bash</entry> |
286 | <entry>3.01a31</entry> | 285 | |
287 | <entry>A set of tools for CD recording including cdrecord.</entry> | 286 | <entry>4.3.30</entry> |
288 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 287 | |
289 | </row> | 288 | <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> |
290 | <row> | 289 | |
291 | <entry>chrpath</entry> | 290 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
292 | <entry>0.16</entry> | 291 | </row> |
293 | <entry>chrpath allows you to change the rpath (where the application looks for libraries) in an application. It does not (yet) allow you to add an rpath if there isn't one already.</entry> | 292 | |
294 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 293 | <row> |
295 | </row> | 294 | <entry>bc</entry> |
296 | <row> | 295 | |
297 | <entry>classpath-initial</entry> | 296 | <entry>1.06</entry> |
298 | <entry>0.93</entry> | 297 | |
299 | <entry>Java1.4-compatible GNU Classpath variant that is used as bootclasspath for jikes-native.</entry> | 298 | <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> |
300 | <entry> GPL-2.0</entry> | 299 | |
301 | </row> | 300 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
302 | <row> | 301 | </row> |
303 | <entry>classpath</entry> | 302 | |
304 | <entry>0.99</entry> | 303 | <row> |
305 | <entry>GNU Classpath standard Java libraries - For native Java-dependent programs</entry> | 304 | <entry>bcel</entry> |
306 | <entry> GPL-2.0</entry> | 305 | |
307 | </row> | 306 | <entry>5.2</entry> |
308 | <row> | 307 | |
309 | <entry>cmake</entry> | 308 | <entry>Java Bytecode manipulation library</entry> |
310 | <entry>3.7.2</entry> | 309 | |
311 | <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> | 310 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
312 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 311 | </row> |
313 | </row> | 312 | |
314 | <row> | 313 | <row> |
315 | <entry>commons-logging</entry> | 314 | <entry>bdwgc</entry> |
316 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> | 315 | |
317 | <entry>Java Internet protocol suite library</entry> | 316 | <entry>7.6.0</entry> |
318 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 317 | |
319 | </row> | 318 | <entry>The Boehm-Demers-Weiser conservative garbage collector can |
320 | <row> | 319 | be used as a garbage collecting replacement for C malloc or C++ |
321 | <entry>commons-net</entry> | 320 | new. It allows you to allocate memory basically as you normally |
322 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | 321 | would without explicitly deallocating memory that is no longer |
323 | <entry>Java Internet protocol suite library</entry> | 322 | useful. The collector automatically recycles memory when it |
324 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 323 | determines that it can no longer be otherwise accessed. The |
325 | </row> | 324 | collector is also used by a number of programming language |
326 | <row> | 325 | implementations that either use C as intermediate code want to |
327 | <entry>compose-file</entry> | 326 | facilitate easier interoperation with C libraries or just prefer |
328 | <entry>3.0</entry> | 327 | the simple collector interface. Alternatively the garbage |
329 | <entry>Parser for the Compose file format (version 3)</entry> | 328 | collector may be used as a leak detector for C or C++ programs |
330 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 329 | though that is not its primary goal. Empirically this collector |
331 | </row> | 330 | works with most unmodified C programs simply by replacing malloc |
332 | <row> | 331 | with GC_malloc calls replacing realloc with GC_realloc calls and |
333 | <entry>compositeproto</entry> | 332 | removing free calls.</entry> |
334 | <entry>0.4.2</entry> | 333 | |
335 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X composite extension. The X composite extension provides three related mechanisms for compositing and off-screen storage.</entry> | 334 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
336 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 335 | </row> |
337 | </row> | 336 | |
338 | <row> | 337 | <row> |
339 | <entry>containerd-docker</entry> | 338 | <entry>bind</entry> |
340 | <entry>0.2.3</entry> | 339 | |
341 | <entry>containerd is a daemon to control runC built for performance and density. containerd leverages runC's advanced features such as seccomp and user namespace support as well as checkpoint and restore for cloning and live migration of containers.</entry> | 340 | <entry>9.10.3-P3</entry> |
342 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 341 | |
343 | </row> | 342 | <entry>ISC Internet Domain Name Server.</entry> |
344 | <row> | 343 | |
345 | <entry>coreutils</entry> | 344 | <entry>ISC, BSD</entry> |
346 | <entry>8.26</entry> | 345 | </row> |
347 | <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which are expected to exist on every system.</entry> | 346 | |
348 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 347 | <row> |
349 | </row> | 348 | <entry>binutils-cross-x86_64</entry> |
350 | <row> | 349 | |
351 | <entry>cross-localedef</entry> | 350 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
352 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 351 | |
353 | <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> | 352 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
354 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 353 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
355 | </row> | 354 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
356 | <row> | 355 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
357 | <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry> | 356 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
358 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 357 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
359 | <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> | 358 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
360 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 359 | |
361 | </row> | 360 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
362 | <row> | 361 | </row> |
363 | <entry>cup</entry> | 362 | |
364 | <entry>0.10k</entry> | 363 | <row> |
365 | <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry> | 364 | <entry>binutils</entry> |
366 | <entry> </entry> | 365 | |
367 | </row> | 366 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
368 | <row> | 367 | |
369 | <entry>cups</entry> | 368 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
370 | <entry>2.2.2</entry> | 369 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
371 | <entry>An Internet printing system for Unix.</entry> | 370 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
372 | <entry> GPL-2.0</entry> | 371 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
373 | </row> | 372 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
374 | <row> | 373 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
375 | <entry>curl</entry> | 374 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
376 | <entry>7.53.1</entry> | 375 | |
377 | <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL transfers.</entry> | 376 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
378 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 377 | </row> |
379 | </row> | 378 | |
380 | <row> | 379 | <row> |
381 | <entry>damageproto</entry> | 380 | <entry>bison</entry> |
382 | <entry>1.2.1</entry> | 381 | |
383 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the DAMAGE extension. The DAMAGE extension allows applications to receive information about changes made to pixel contents of windows and pixmaps.</entry> | 382 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> |
384 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 383 | |
385 | </row> | 384 | <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts |
386 | <row> | 385 | an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser |
387 | <entry>db</entry> | 386 | for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all |
388 | <entry>5.3.28</entry> | 387 | properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no |
389 | <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> | 388 | change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with |
390 | <entry>Sleepycat</entry> | 389 | little trouble.</entry> |
391 | </row> | 390 | |
392 | <row> | 391 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
393 | <entry>dbus-glib</entry> | 392 | </row> |
394 | <entry>0.108</entry> | 393 | |
395 | <entry>GLib bindings for the D-Bus message bus that integrate the D-Bus library with the GLib thread abstraction and main loop.</entry> | 394 | <row> |
396 | <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 395 | <entry>bjam</entry> |
397 | </row> | 396 | |
398 | <row> | 397 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> |
399 | <entry>dbus-test</entry> | 398 | |
400 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> | 399 | <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry> |
401 | <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing only).</entry> | 400 | |
402 | <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 401 | <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> |
403 | </row> | 402 | </row> |
404 | <row> | 403 | |
405 | <entry>dbus</entry> | 404 | <row> |
406 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> | 405 | <entry>boost</entry> |
407 | <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when their services are needed."</entry> | 406 | |
408 | <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 407 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> |
409 | </row> | 408 | |
410 | <row> | 409 | <entry>Free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.</entry> |
411 | <entry>debianutils</entry> | 410 | |
412 | <entry>4.8.1</entry> | 411 | <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> |
413 | <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> | 412 | </row> |
414 | <entry> GPL-2.0</entry> | 413 | |
415 | </row> | 414 | <row> |
416 | <row> | 415 | <entry>bridge-utils</entry> |
417 | <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> | 416 | |
418 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 417 | <entry>1.5</entry> |
419 | <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency indexer.</entry> | 418 | |
420 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 419 | <entry>Tools for ethernet bridging.</entry> |
421 | </row> | 420 | |
422 | <row> | 421 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
423 | <entry>dhcp</entry> | 422 | </row> |
424 | <entry>4.3.5</entry> | 423 | |
425 | <entry>DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) is a protocol which allows individual devices on an IP network to get their own network configuration information from a server. DHCP helps make it easier to administer devices.</entry> | 424 | <row> |
426 | <entry>ISC</entry> | 425 | <entry>bsf</entry> |
427 | </row> | 426 | |
428 | <row> | 427 | <entry>2.4.0</entry> |
429 | <entry>diffutils</entry> | 428 | |
430 | <entry>3.5</entry> | 429 | <entry>Bean Scripting Framework package</entry> |
431 | <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch files.</entry> | 430 | |
432 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 431 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
433 | </row> | 432 | </row> |
434 | <row> | 433 | |
435 | <entry>dmidecode</entry> | 434 | <row> |
436 | <entry>3.0</entry> | 435 | <entry>btrfs-tools</entry> |
437 | <entry>DMI (Desktop Management Interface) table related utilities.</entry> | 436 | |
438 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 437 | <entry>4.9.1</entry> |
439 | </row> | 438 | |
440 | <row> | 439 | <entry>Btrfs is a new copy on write filesystem for Linux aimed at |
441 | <entry>dnsmasq</entry> | 440 | implementing advanced features while focusing on fault tolerance |
442 | <entry>2.76</entry> | 441 | repair and easy administration. This package contains utilities |
443 | <entry>Lightweight easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP server.</entry> | 442 | (mkfs fsck btrfsctl) used to work with btrfs and an utility |
444 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 443 | (btrfs-convert) to make a btrfs filesystem from an ext3.</entry> |
445 | </row> | 444 | |
446 | <row> | 445 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
447 | <entry>docbook-xml-dtd4</entry> | 446 | </row> |
448 | <entry>4.5</entry> | 447 | |
449 | <entry>Document type definitions for verification of XML data files against the DocBook rule set it ships with the latest DocBook 4.5 XML DTD as well as a selected set of legacy DTDs for use with older documents including 4.0 4.1.2 4.2 4.3 and 4.4</entry> | 448 | <row> |
450 | <entry>OASIS</entry> | 449 | <entry>busybox</entry> |
451 | </row> | 450 | |
452 | <row> | 451 | <entry>1.24.1</entry> |
453 | <entry>docbook-xsl-stylesheets</entry> | 452 | |
454 | <entry>1.79.1</entry> | 453 | <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX |
455 | <entry>XSL stylesheets for processing DocBook XML to various output formats.</entry> | 454 | utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist |
456 | <entry> </entry> | 455 | replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU |
457 | </row> | 456 | fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have |
458 | <row> | 457 | fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the |
459 | <entry>docker</entry> | 458 | options that are included provide the expected functionality and |
460 | <entry>1.13.0</entry> | 459 | behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a |
461 | <entry>Linux container runtime Docker complements kernel namespacing with a high-level API which operates at the process level. It runs unix processes with strong guarantees of isolation and repeatability across servers. . Docker is a great building block for automating distributed systems: large-scale web deployments database clusters continuous deployment systems private PaaS service-oriented architectures etc. . This package contains the daemon and client. Using docker.io is officially supported on x86_64 and arm (32-bit) hosts. Other architectures are considered experimental. . Also note that kernel version 3.10 or above is required for proper operation of the daemon process and that any lower versions may have subtle and/or glaring issues. </entry> | 460 | fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded |
462 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 461 | system.</entry> |
463 | </row> | 462 | |
464 | <row> | 463 | <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> |
465 | <entry>dosfstools</entry> | 464 | </row> |
466 | <entry>4.1</entry> | 465 | |
467 | <entry>DOS FAT Filesystem Utilities.</entry> | 466 | <row> |
468 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 467 | <entry>bzip2</entry> |
469 | </row> | 468 | |
470 | <row> | 469 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> |
471 | <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> | 470 | |
472 | <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry> | 471 | <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler |
473 | <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> | 472 | block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. |
474 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 473 | Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by |
475 | </row> | 474 | more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the |
476 | <row> | 475 | performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> |
477 | <entry>dpdk</entry> | 476 | |
478 | <entry>17.08</entry> | 477 | <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry> |
479 | <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry> | 478 | </row> |
480 | <entry> BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 479 | |
481 | </row> | 480 | <row> |
482 | <row> | 481 | <entry>ca-certificates</entry> |
483 | <entry>dpkg</entry> | 482 | |
484 | <entry>1.18.10</entry> | 483 | <entry>20161130</entry> |
485 | <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> | 484 | |
486 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 485 | <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow |
487 | </row> | 486 | SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL |
488 | <row> | 487 | connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> |
489 | <entry>dtc</entry> | 488 | |
490 | <entry>1.4.2</entry> | 489 | <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> |
491 | <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> | 490 | </row> |
492 | <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> | 491 | |
493 | </row> | 492 | <row> |
494 | <row> | 493 | <entry>cacao-initial</entry> |
495 | <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> | 494 | |
496 | <entry>1.43.4</entry> | 495 | <entry>0.98</entry> |
497 | <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> | 496 | |
498 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> | 497 | <entry>CacaoVM for use as OpenEmbedded's Java VM</entry> |
499 | </row> | 498 | |
500 | <row> | 499 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
501 | <entry>ebtables</entry> | 500 | </row> |
502 | <entry>2.0.10-4</entry> | 501 | |
503 | <entry>Utility for basic Ethernet frame filtering on a Linux bridge advanced logging MAC DNAT/SNAT and brouting.</entry> | 502 | <row> |
504 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 503 | <entry>cairo</entry> |
505 | </row> | 504 | |
506 | <row> | 505 | <entry>1.14.8</entry> |
507 | <entry>ecj-bootstrap</entry> | 506 | |
508 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 507 | <entry>Cairo is a multi-platform library providing anti-aliased |
509 | <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Bootstrap variant</entry> | 508 | vector-based rendering for multiple target backends. Paths consist |
510 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 509 | of line segments and cubic splines and can be rendered at any |
511 | </row> | 510 | width with various join and cap styles. All colors may be |
512 | <row> | 511 | specified with optional translucence (opacity/alpha) and combined |
513 | <entry>ecj-initial</entry> | 512 | using the extended Porter/Duff compositing algebra as found in the |
514 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 513 | X Render Extension.</entry> |
515 | <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Bootstrap variant</entry> | 514 | |
516 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 515 | <entry>MPL-1.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry> |
517 | </row> | 516 | </row> |
518 | <row> | 517 | |
519 | <entry>elfutils</entry> | 518 | <row> |
520 | <entry>0.168</entry> | 519 | <entry>cantarell-fonts</entry> |
521 | <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object files.</entry> | 520 | |
522 | <entry> GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> | 521 | <entry>0.0.24</entry> |
523 | </row> | 522 | |
524 | <row> | 523 | <entry>The Cantarell font typeface is designed as a contemporary |
525 | <entry>enea-nfv-access-dev</entry> | 524 | Humanist sans serif and was developed for on-screen reading; in |
526 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 525 | particular reading web pages on an HTC Dream mobile phone.</entry> |
527 | <entry>Image for the host side of the Enea NFV Access Platform</entry> | 526 | |
528 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 527 | <entry></entry> |
529 | </row> | 528 | </row> |
530 | <row> | 529 | |
531 | <entry>expat</entry> | 530 | <row> |
532 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> | 531 | <entry>cdrkit</entry> |
533 | <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start tags)</entry> | 532 | |
534 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 533 | <entry>1.1.11</entry> |
535 | </row> | 534 | |
536 | <row> | 535 | <entry>CD/DVD command line tools.</entry> |
537 | <entry>fastjar</entry> | 536 | |
538 | <entry>0.98</entry> | 537 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
539 | <entry>jar replacement written in C.</entry> | 538 | </row> |
540 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 539 | |
541 | </row> | 540 | <row> |
542 | <row> | 541 | <entry>cdrtools</entry> |
543 | <entry>file</entry> | 542 | |
544 | <entry>5.30</entry> | 543 | <entry>3.01a31</entry> |
545 | <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> | 544 | |
546 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 545 | <entry>A set of tools for CD recording including cdrecord.</entry> |
547 | </row> | 546 | |
548 | <row> | 547 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
549 | <entry>findutils</entry> | 548 | </row> |
550 | <entry>4.6.0</entry> | 549 | |
551 | <entry>The GNU Find Utilities are the basic directory searching utilities of the GNU operating system. These programs are typically used in conjunction with other programs to provide modular and powerful directory search and file locating capabilities to other commands.</entry> | 550 | <row> |
552 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 551 | <entry>chrpath</entry> |
553 | </row> | 552 | |
554 | <row> | 553 | <entry>0.16</entry> |
555 | <entry>fixesproto</entry> | 554 | |
556 | <entry>5.0</entry> | 555 | <entry>chrpath allows you to change the rpath (where the |
557 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Fixes extension. This extension is designed to provide server-side support for application work arounds to shortcomings in the core X window system.</entry> | 556 | application looks for libraries) in an application. It does not |
558 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 557 | (yet) allow you to add an rpath if there isn't one |
559 | </row> | 558 | already.</entry> |
560 | <row> | 559 | |
561 | <entry>flex</entry> | 560 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
562 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> | 561 | </row> |
563 | <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in text.</entry> | 562 | |
564 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 563 | <row> |
565 | </row> | 564 | <entry>classpath-initial</entry> |
566 | <row> | 565 | |
567 | <entry>fontconfig</entry> | 566 | <entry>0.93</entry> |
568 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> | 567 | |
569 | <entry>Fontconfig is a font configuration and customization library which does not depend on the X Window System. It is designed to locate fonts within the system and select them according to requirements specified by applications. Fontconfig is not a rasterization library nor does it impose a particular rasterization library on the application. The X-specific library 'Xft' uses fontconfig along with freetype to specify and rasterize fonts.</entry> | 568 | <entry>Java1.4-compatible GNU Classpath variant that is used as |
570 | <entry> MIT, PD</entry> | 569 | bootclasspath for jikes-native.</entry> |
571 | </row> | 570 | |
572 | <row> | 571 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
573 | <entry>freetype</entry> | 572 | </row> |
574 | <entry>2.7.1</entry> | 573 | |
575 | <entry>FreeType is a software font engine that is designed to be small efficient highly customizable and portable while capable of producing high-quality output (glyph images). It can be used in graphics libraries display servers font conversion tools text image generation tools and many other products as well.</entry> | 574 | <row> |
576 | <entry> FreeType, GPL-2.0</entry> | 575 | <entry>classpath</entry> |
577 | </row> | 576 | |
578 | <row> | 577 | <entry>0.99</entry> |
579 | <entry>fuse</entry> | 578 | |
580 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | 579 | <entry>GNU Classpath standard Java libraries - For native |
581 | <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem implementations. </entry> | 580 | Java-dependent programs</entry> |
582 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 581 | |
583 | </row> | 582 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
584 | <row> | 583 | </row> |
585 | <entry>gawk</entry> | 584 | |
586 | <entry>4.1.4</entry> | 585 | <row> |
587 | <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> | 586 | <entry>cmake</entry> |
588 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 587 | |
589 | </row> | 588 | <entry>3.7.2</entry> |
590 | <row> | 589 | |
591 | <entry>gcc-cross-initial-x86_64</entry> | 590 | <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> |
592 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 591 | |
593 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 592 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
594 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 593 | </row> |
595 | </row> | 594 | |
596 | <row> | 595 | <row> |
597 | <entry>gcc-cross-x86_64</entry> | 596 | <entry>commons-logging</entry> |
598 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 597 | |
599 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 598 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> |
600 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 599 | |
601 | </row> | 600 | <entry>Java Internet protocol suite library</entry> |
602 | <row> | 601 | |
603 | <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> | 602 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
604 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 603 | </row> |
605 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 604 | |
606 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 605 | <row> |
607 | </row> | 606 | <entry>commons-net</entry> |
608 | <row> | 607 | |
609 | <entry>gcc</entry> | 608 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> |
610 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 609 | |
611 | <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry> | 610 | <entry>Java Internet protocol suite library</entry> |
612 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> | 611 | |
613 | </row> | 612 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
614 | <row> | 613 | </row> |
615 | <entry>gdb</entry> | 614 | |
616 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> | 615 | <row> |
617 | <entry>GNU debugger.</entry> | 616 | <entry>compose-file</entry> |
618 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 617 | |
619 | </row> | 618 | <entry>3.0</entry> |
620 | <row> | 619 | |
621 | <entry>gdbm</entry> | 620 | <entry>Parser for the Compose file format (version 3)</entry> |
622 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 621 | |
623 | <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> | 622 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
624 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 623 | </row> |
625 | </row> | 624 | |
626 | <row> | 625 | <row> |
627 | <entry>gdk-pixbuf</entry> | 626 | <entry>compositeproto</entry> |
628 | <entry>2.36.5</entry> | 627 | |
629 | <entry>Image loading library for GTK+.</entry> | 628 | <entry>0.4.2</entry> |
630 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 629 | |
631 | </row> | 630 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X composite |
632 | <row> | 631 | extension. The X composite extension provides three related |
633 | <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> | 632 | mechanisms for compositing and off-screen storage.</entry> |
634 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> | 633 | |
635 | <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> | 634 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
636 | <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> | 635 | </row> |
637 | </row> | 636 | |
638 | <row> | 637 | <row> |
639 | <entry>gettext</entry> | 638 | <entry>containerd-docker</entry> |
640 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> | 639 | |
641 | <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools include a set of conventions about how programs should be written to support message catalogs a directory and file naming organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of translatable and already translated strings.</entry> | 640 | <entry>0.2.3</entry> |
642 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 641 | |
643 | </row> | 642 | <entry>containerd is a daemon to control runC built for |
644 | <row> | 643 | performance and density. containerd leverages runC's advanced |
645 | <entry>giflib</entry> | 644 | features such as seccomp and user namespace support as well as |
646 | <entry>5.1.4</entry> | 645 | checkpoint and restore for cloning and live migration of |
647 | <entry>shared library for GIF images.</entry> | 646 | containers.</entry> |
648 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 647 | |
649 | </row> | 648 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
650 | <row> | 649 | </row> |
651 | <entry>git</entry> | 650 | |
652 | <entry>2.11.1</entry> | 651 | <row> |
653 | <entry>Distributed version control system.</entry> | 652 | <entry>coreutils</entry> |
654 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 653 | |
655 | </row> | 654 | <entry>8.26</entry> |
656 | <row> | 655 | |
657 | <entry>glib-2.0</entry> | 656 | <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and |
658 | <entry>2.50.3</entry> | 657 | text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which |
659 | <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> | 658 | are expected to exist on every system.</entry> |
660 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> | 659 | |
661 | </row> | 660 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
662 | <row> | 661 | </row> |
663 | <entry>glibc-locale</entry> | 662 | |
664 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 663 | <row> |
665 | <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> | 664 | <entry>cross-localedef</entry> |
666 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 665 | |
667 | </row> | 666 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
668 | <row> | 667 | |
669 | <entry>glibc</entry> | 668 | <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> |
670 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 669 | |
671 | <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> | 670 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
672 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 671 | </row> |
673 | </row> | 672 | |
674 | <row> | 673 | <row> |
675 | <entry>gmp</entry> | 674 | <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry> |
676 | <entry>6.1.2</entry> | 675 | |
677 | <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point numbers</entry> | 676 | <entry>1.8</entry> |
678 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 677 | |
679 | </row> | 678 | <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> |
680 | <row> | 679 | |
681 | <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> | 680 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
682 | <entry>2014.1</entry> | 681 | </row> |
683 | <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> | 682 | |
684 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 683 | <row> |
685 | </row> | 684 | <entry>cup</entry> |
686 | <row> | 685 | |
687 | <entry>gnome-themes-standard</entry> | 686 | <entry>0.10k</entry> |
688 | <entry>3.22.2</entry> | 687 | |
689 | <entry>GTK+2 standard themes.</entry> | 688 | <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry> |
690 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 689 | |
691 | </row> | 690 | <entry></entry> |
692 | <row> | 691 | </row> |
693 | <entry>gnu-config</entry> | 692 | |
694 | <entry>20150728</entry> | 693 | <row> |
695 | <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a directory tree</entry> | 694 | <entry>cups</entry> |
696 | <entry> </entry> | 695 | |
697 | </row> | 696 | <entry>2.2.2</entry> |
698 | <row> | 697 | |
699 | <entry>gnujaf</entry> | 698 | <entry>An Internet printing system for Unix.</entry> |
700 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> | 699 | |
701 | <entry>Provides a mean to type data and locate components suitable for performing various kinds of action on it.</entry> | 700 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
702 | <entry> </entry> | 701 | </row> |
703 | </row> | 702 | |
704 | <row> | 703 | <row> |
705 | <entry>gnumail</entry> | 704 | <entry>curl</entry> |
706 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> | 705 | |
707 | <entry>GNU's free implementation of the JavaMail API specification</entry> | 706 | <entry>7.53.1</entry> |
708 | <entry> </entry> | 707 | |
709 | </row> | 708 | <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL |
710 | <row> | 709 | transfers.</entry> |
711 | <entry>gnutls</entry> | 710 | |
712 | <entry>3.5.9</entry> | 711 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
713 | <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> | 712 | </row> |
714 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 713 | |
715 | </row> | 714 | <row> |
716 | <row> | 715 | <entry>damageproto</entry> |
717 | <entry>go-bootstrap</entry> | 716 | |
718 | <entry>1.4.3</entry> | 717 | <entry>1.2.1</entry> |
719 | <entry> The Go programming language is an open source project to make programmers more productive. Go is expressive concise clean and efficient. Its concurrency mechanisms make it easy to write programs that get the most out of multicore and networked machines while its novel type system enables flexible and modular program construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code yet has the convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time reflection. It's a fast statically typed compiled language that feels like a dynamically typed interpreted language.</entry> | 718 | |
720 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 719 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the DAMAGE |
721 | </row> | 720 | extension. The DAMAGE extension allows applications to receive |
722 | <row> | 721 | information about changes made to pixel contents of windows and |
723 | <entry>go-capability</entry> | 722 | pixmaps.</entry> |
724 | <entry>0.0</entry> | 723 | |
725 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating POSIX capabilities in Go.</entry> | 724 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
726 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 725 | </row> |
727 | </row> | 726 | |
728 | <row> | 727 | <row> |
729 | <entry>go-cli</entry> | 728 | <entry>db</entry> |
730 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | 729 | |
731 | <entry>A small package for building command line apps in Go</entry> | 730 | <entry>5.3.28</entry> |
732 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 731 | |
733 | </row> | 732 | <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> |
734 | <row> | 733 | |
735 | <entry>go-connections</entry> | 734 | <entry>Sleepycat</entry> |
736 | <entry>0.2.1</entry> | 735 | </row> |
737 | <entry>Utility package to work with network connections</entry> | 736 | |
738 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 737 | <row> |
739 | </row> | 738 | <entry>dbus-glib</entry> |
740 | <row> | 739 | |
741 | <entry>go-context</entry> | 740 | <entry>0.108</entry> |
742 | <entry>git</entry> | 741 | |
743 | <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> | 742 | <entry>GLib bindings for the D-Bus message bus that integrate the |
744 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 743 | D-Bus library with the GLib thread abstraction and main |
745 | </row> | 744 | loop.</entry> |
746 | <row> | 745 | |
747 | <entry>go-cross-x86_64</entry> | 746 | <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
748 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 747 | </row> |
749 | <entry> The Go programming language is an open source project to make programmers more productive. Go is expressive concise clean and efficient. Its concurrency mechanisms make it easy to write programs that get the most out of multicore and networked machines while its novel type system enables flexible and modular program construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code yet has the convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time reflection. It's a fast statically typed compiled language that feels like a dynamically typed interpreted language.</entry> | 748 | |
750 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 749 | <row> |
751 | </row> | 750 | <entry>dbus-test</entry> |
752 | <row> | 751 | |
753 | <entry>go-dbus</entry> | 752 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> |
754 | <entry>4.0.0</entry> | 753 | |
755 | <entry>Native Go bindings for D-Bus</entry> | 754 | <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing |
756 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 755 | only).</entry> |
757 | </row> | 756 | |
758 | <row> | 757 | <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
759 | <entry>go-distribution</entry> | 758 | </row> |
760 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> | 759 | |
761 | <entry>The Docker toolset to pack ship store and deliver content</entry> | 760 | <row> |
762 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 761 | <entry>dbus</entry> |
763 | </row> | 762 | |
764 | <row> | 763 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> |
765 | <entry>go-fsnotify</entry> | 764 | |
766 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> | 765 | <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for |
767 | <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> | 766 | applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess |
768 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 767 | communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes |
769 | </row> | 768 | it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application |
770 | <row> | 769 | or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when |
771 | <entry>go-libtrust</entry> | 770 | their services are needed."</entry> |
772 | <entry>0.0</entry> | 771 | |
773 | <entry>Primitives for identity and authorization</entry> | 772 | <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
774 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 773 | </row> |
775 | </row> | 774 | |
776 | <row> | 775 | <row> |
777 | <entry>go-logrus</entry> | 776 | <entry>debianutils</entry> |
778 | <entry>0.11.0</entry> | 777 | |
779 | <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> | 778 | <entry>4.8.1</entry> |
780 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 779 | |
781 | </row> | 780 | <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> |
782 | <row> | 781 | |
783 | <entry>go-mux</entry> | 782 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
784 | <entry>git</entry> | 783 | </row> |
785 | <entry>A powerful URL router and dispatcher for golang.</entry> | 784 | |
786 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 785 | <row> |
787 | </row> | 786 | <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> |
788 | <row> | 787 | |
789 | <entry>go-patricia</entry> | 788 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
790 | <entry>2.2.6</entry> | 789 | |
791 | <entry>A generic patricia trie (also called radix tree) implemented in Go (Golang)</entry> | 790 | <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency |
792 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 791 | indexer.</entry> |
793 | </row> | 792 | |
794 | <row> | 793 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
795 | <entry>go-pty</entry> | 794 | </row> |
796 | <entry>git</entry> | 795 | |
797 | <entry>PTY interface for Go</entry> | 796 | <row> |
798 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 797 | <entry>dhcp</entry> |
799 | </row> | 798 | |
800 | <row> | 799 | <entry>4.3.5</entry> |
801 | <entry>go-systemd</entry> | 800 | |
802 | <entry>4</entry> | 801 | <entry>DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) is a protocol |
803 | <entry>Go bindings to systemd socket activation journal D-Bus and unit files</entry> | 802 | which allows individual devices on an IP network to get their own |
804 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 803 | network configuration information from a server. DHCP helps make |
805 | </row> | 804 | it easier to administer devices.</entry> |
806 | <row> | 805 | |
807 | <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> | 806 | <entry>ISC</entry> |
808 | <entry>1.50.0</entry> | 807 | </row> |
809 | <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and language bindings.</entry> | 808 | |
810 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 809 | <row> |
811 | </row> | 810 | <entry>diffutils</entry> |
812 | <row> | 811 | |
813 | <entry>gperf</entry> | 812 | <entry>3.5</entry> |
814 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> | 813 | |
815 | <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> | 814 | <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp |
816 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 815 | utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch |
817 | </row> | 816 | files.</entry> |
818 | <row> | 817 | |
819 | <entry>grep</entry> | 818 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
820 | <entry>3.0</entry> | 819 | </row> |
821 | <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> | 820 | |
822 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 821 | <row> |
823 | </row> | 822 | <entry>dmidecode</entry> |
824 | <row> | 823 | |
825 | <entry>groff</entry> | 824 | <entry>3.0</entry> |
826 | <entry>1.22.3</entry> | 825 | |
827 | <entry>The groff (GNU troff) software is a typesetting package which reads plain text mixed with formatting commands and produces formatted output.</entry> | 826 | <entry>DMI (Desktop Management Interface) table related |
828 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 827 | utilities.</entry> |
829 | </row> | 828 | |
830 | <row> | 829 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
831 | <entry>grpc-go</entry> | 830 | </row> |
832 | <entry>1.4.0</entry> | 831 | |
833 | <entry>The Go language implementation of gRPC. HTTP/2 based RPC</entry> | 832 | <row> |
834 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 833 | <entry>dnsmasq</entry> |
835 | </row> | 834 | |
836 | <row> | 835 | <entry>2.76</entry> |
837 | <entry>grub-efi</entry> | 836 | |
838 | <entry>2.00</entry> | 837 | <entry>Lightweight easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP |
839 | <entry>GRUB2 is the next generaion of a GPLed bootloader intended to unify bootloading across x86 operating systems. In addition to loading the Linux kernel it implements the Multiboot standard which allows for flexible loading of multiple boot images.</entry> | 838 | server.</entry> |
840 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 839 | |
841 | </row> | 840 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
842 | <row> | 841 | </row> |
843 | <entry>gtk+</entry> | 842 | |
844 | <entry>2.24.31</entry> | 843 | <row> |
845 | <entry>GTK+ is a multi-platform toolkit for creating graphical user interfaces. Offering a complete set of widgets GTK+ is suitable for projects ranging from small one-off projects to complete application suites.</entry> | 844 | <entry>docbook-xml-dtd4</entry> |
846 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 845 | |
847 | </row> | 846 | <entry>4.5</entry> |
848 | <row> | 847 | |
849 | <entry>gtk-doc</entry> | 848 | <entry>Document type definitions for verification of XML data |
850 | <entry>1.25</entry> | 849 | files against the DocBook rule set it ships with the latest |
851 | <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of html documentation files from them</entry> | 850 | DocBook 4.5 XML DTD as well as a selected set of legacy DTDs for |
852 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 851 | use with older documents including 4.0 4.1.2 4.2 4.3 and |
853 | </row> | 852 | 4.4</entry> |
854 | <row> | 853 | |
855 | <entry>gtk-icon-utils</entry> | 854 | <entry>OASIS</entry> |
856 | <entry>3.22.8</entry> | 855 | </row> |
857 | <entry>gtk-update-icon-cache and gtk-encode-symbolic-svg built from GTK+ natively for build time and on-host postinst script execution.</entry> | 856 | |
858 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 857 | <row> |
859 | </row> | 858 | <entry>docbook-xsl-stylesheets</entry> |
860 | <row> | 859 | |
861 | <entry>guile</entry> | 860 | <entry>1.79.1</entry> |
862 | <entry>2.0.14</entry> | 861 | |
863 | <entry>Guile is the GNU Ubiquitous Intelligent Language for Extensions the official extension language for the GNU operating system. Guile is a library designed to help programmers create flexible applications. Using Guile in an application allows the application's functionality to be extended by users or other programmers with plug-ins modules or scripts. Guile provides what might be described as 'practical software freedom' making it possible for users to customize an application to meet their needs without digging into the application's internals.</entry> | 862 | <entry>XSL stylesheets for processing DocBook XML to various |
864 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 863 | output formats.</entry> |
865 | </row> | 864 | |
866 | <row> | 865 | <entry></entry> |
867 | <entry>gzip</entry> | 866 | </row> |
868 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 867 | |
869 | <entry>GNU Gzip is a popular data compression program originally written by Jean-loup Gailly for the GNU project. Mark Adler wrote the decompression part</entry> | 868 | <row> |
870 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 869 | <entry>docker</entry> |
871 | </row> | 870 | |
872 | <row> | 871 | <entry>1.13.0</entry> |
873 | <entry>harfbuzz</entry> | 872 | |
874 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | 873 | <entry>Linux container runtime Docker complements kernel |
875 | <entry>HarfBuzz is an OpenType text shaping engine.</entry> | 874 | namespacing with a high-level API which operates at the process |
876 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 875 | level. It runs unix processes with strong guarantees of isolation |
877 | </row> | 876 | and repeatability across servers. . Docker is a great building |
878 | <row> | 877 | block for automating distributed systems: large-scale web |
879 | <entry>hicolor-icon-theme</entry> | 878 | deployments database clusters continuous deployment systems |
880 | <entry>0.15</entry> | 879 | private PaaS service-oriented architectures etc. . This package |
881 | <entry>Default icon theme that all icon themes automatically inherit from.</entry> | 880 | contains the daemon and client. Using docker.io is officially |
882 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 881 | supported on x86_64 and arm (32-bit) hosts. Other architectures |
883 | </row> | 882 | are considered experimental. . Also note that kernel version 3.10 |
884 | <row> | 883 | or above is required for proper operation of the daemon process |
885 | <entry>htop</entry> | 884 | and that any lower versions may have subtle and/or glaring |
886 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> | 885 | issues.</entry> |
887 | <entry>htop process monitor.</entry> | 886 | |
888 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 887 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
889 | </row> | 888 | </row> |
890 | <row> | 889 | |
891 | <entry>icedtea7</entry> | 890 | <row> |
892 | <entry>2.1.3</entry> | 891 | <entry>dosfstools</entry> |
893 | <entry>Harness to build the source code from OpenJDK using Free Software build tools</entry> | 892 | |
894 | <entry> </entry> | 893 | <entry>4.1</entry> |
895 | </row> | 894 | |
896 | <row> | 895 | <entry>DOS FAT Filesystem Utilities.</entry> |
897 | <entry>icu</entry> | 896 | |
898 | <entry>58.2</entry> | 897 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
899 | <entry>The International Component for Unicode (ICU) is a mature portable set of C/C++ and Java libraries for Unicode support software internationalization (I18N) and globalization (G11N) giving applications the same results on all platforms.</entry> | 898 | </row> |
900 | <entry>ICU</entry> | 899 | |
901 | </row> | 900 | <row> |
902 | <row> | 901 | <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> |
903 | <entry>inetlib</entry> | 902 | |
904 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> | 903 | <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry> |
905 | <entry>GNU Classpath inetlib is an extension library to provide extra network protocol support for GNU Classpath and ClasspathX project but it can also used standalone to add http imap pop3 and smtp client support applications. </entry> | 904 | |
906 | <entry> </entry> | 905 | <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> |
907 | </row> | 906 | |
908 | <row> | 907 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
909 | <entry>initscripts</entry> | 908 | </row> |
910 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 909 | |
911 | <entry>Initscripts provide the basic system startup initialization scripts for the system. These scripts include actions such as filesystem mounting fsck RTC manipulation and other actions routinely performed at system startup. In addition the scripts are also used during system shutdown to reverse the actions performed at startup.</entry> | 910 | <row> |
912 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 911 | <entry>dpdk</entry> |
913 | </row> | 912 | |
914 | <row> | 913 | <entry>17.08</entry> |
915 | <entry>inputproto</entry> | 914 | |
916 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> | 915 | <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry> |
917 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input extension. The extension supports input devices other then the core X keyboard and pointer.</entry> | 916 | |
918 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 917 | <entry>BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
919 | </row> | 918 | </row> |
920 | <row> | 919 | |
921 | <entry>intel-microcode</entry> | 920 | <row> |
922 | <entry>20170511</entry> | 921 | <entry>dpkg</entry> |
923 | <entry>The microcode data file contains the latest microcode definitions for all Intel processors. Intel releases microcode updates to correct processor behavior as documented in the respective processor specification updates. While the regular approach to getting this microcode update is via a BIOS upgrade Intel realizes that this can be an administrative hassle. The Linux operating system and VMware ESX products have a mechanism to update the microcode after booting. For example this file will be used by the operating system mechanism if the file is placed in the /etc/firmware directory of the Linux system.</entry> | 922 | |
924 | <entry> </entry> | 923 | <entry>1.18.10</entry> |
925 | </row> | 924 | |
926 | <row> | 925 | <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> |
927 | <entry>intltool</entry> | 926 | |
928 | <entry>0.51.0</entry> | 927 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
929 | <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry> | 928 | </row> |
930 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 929 | |
931 | </row> | 930 | <row> |
932 | <row> | 931 | <entry>dtc</entry> |
933 | <entry>iproute2</entry> | 932 | |
934 | <entry>4.10.0</entry> | 933 | <entry>1.4.2</entry> |
935 | <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP / IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6 configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry> | 934 | |
936 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 935 | <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the |
937 | </row> | 936 | Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> |
938 | <row> | 937 | |
939 | <entry>iptables</entry> | 938 | <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> |
940 | <entry>1.6.1</entry> | 939 | </row> |
941 | <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to configure and control network packet filtering code in Linux.</entry> | 940 | |
942 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 941 | <row> |
943 | </row> | 942 | <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> |
944 | <row> | 943 | |
945 | <entry>iucode-tool</entry> | 944 | <entry>1.43.4</entry> |
946 | <entry>2.1.1</entry> | 945 | |
947 | <entry>iucode_tool is a program to manipulate Intel i686 and X86-64 processor microcode update collections and to use the kernel facilities to update the microcode on Intel system processors. It can load microcode data files in text and binary format sort list and filter the microcode updates contained in these files write selected microcode updates to a new file in binary format or upload them to the kernel. It operates on microcode data downloaded directly from Intel: http://feeds.downloadcenter.intel.com/rss/?p=2371</entry> | 946 | <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of |
948 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 947 | the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and |
949 | </row> | 948 | debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> |
950 | <row> | 949 | |
951 | <entry>jacl</entry> | 950 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> |
952 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | 951 | </row> |
953 | <entry>Tcl interpreter for Java</entry> | 952 | |
954 | <entry> , , , </entry> | 953 | <row> |
955 | </row> | 954 | <entry>ebtables</entry> |
956 | <row> | 955 | |
957 | <entry>jamvm</entry> | 956 | <entry>2.0.10-4</entry> |
958 | <entry>2.0.0-devel</entry> | 957 | |
959 | <entry>A compact Java Virtual Machine which conforms to the JVM specification version 2.</entry> | 958 | <entry>Utility for basic Ethernet frame filtering on a Linux |
960 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 959 | bridge advanced logging MAC DNAT/SNAT and brouting.</entry> |
961 | </row> | 960 | |
962 | <row> | 961 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
963 | <entry>jansson</entry> | 962 | </row> |
964 | <entry>2.9</entry> | 963 | |
965 | <entry>Jansson is a C library for encoding decoding and manipulating JSON data.</entry> | 964 | <row> |
966 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 965 | <entry>ecj-bootstrap</entry> |
967 | </row> | 966 | |
968 | <row> | 967 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
969 | <entry>jaxp1.3</entry> | 968 | |
970 | <entry>1.4.01</entry> | 969 | <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Bootstrap variant</entry> |
971 | <entry>Java XML parser and transformer APIs (DOM SAX JAXP TrAX)</entry> | 970 | |
972 | <entry> Apache-2.0, PD</entry> | 971 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
973 | </row> | 972 | </row> |
974 | <row> | 973 | |
975 | <entry>jdepend</entry> | 974 | <row> |
976 | <entry>2.9.1</entry> | 975 | <entry>ecj-initial</entry> |
977 | <entry>Design quality metrics generator for each Java</entry> | 976 | |
978 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 977 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
979 | </row> | 978 | |
980 | <row> | 979 | <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Bootstrap variant</entry> |
981 | <entry>jikes-initial</entry> | 980 | |
982 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 981 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
983 | <entry>Initial Java 1.4-compatible (and not higher) compiler.</entry> | 982 | </row> |
984 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 983 | |
985 | </row> | 984 | <row> |
986 | <row> | 985 | <entry>elfutils</entry> |
987 | <entry>jikes</entry> | 986 | |
988 | <entry>1.22</entry> | 987 | <entry>0.168</entry> |
989 | <entry>Java compiler adhering to language and VM specifications</entry> | 988 | |
990 | <entry> </entry> | 989 | <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object |
991 | </row> | 990 | files.</entry> |
992 | <row> | 991 | |
993 | <entry>jlex</entry> | 992 | <entry>GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> |
994 | <entry>1.2.6</entry> | 993 | </row> |
995 | <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry> | 994 | |
996 | <entry> </entry> | 995 | <row> |
997 | </row> | 996 | <entry>enea-nfv-access-dev</entry> |
998 | <row> | 997 | |
999 | <entry>jsch</entry> | 998 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
1000 | <entry>0.1.40</entry> | 999 | |
1001 | <entry>SSH implementation in Java</entry> | 1000 | <entry>Image for the host side of the Enea NFV Access |
1002 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1001 | Platform</entry> |
1003 | </row> | 1002 | |
1004 | <row> | 1003 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1005 | <entry>json-c</entry> | 1004 | </row> |
1006 | <entry>0.12</entry> | 1005 | |
1007 | <entry>JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that allows you to easily construct JSON objects in C.</entry> | 1006 | <row> |
1008 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1007 | <entry>expat</entry> |
1009 | </row> | 1008 | |
1010 | <row> | 1009 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> |
1011 | <entry>junit</entry> | 1010 | |
1012 | <entry>3.8.2</entry> | 1011 | <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a |
1013 | <entry>JUnit is a testing framework for Java</entry> | 1012 | stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers |
1014 | <entry> </entry> | 1013 | for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start |
1015 | </row> | 1014 | tags)</entry> |
1016 | <row> | 1015 | |
1017 | <entry>jzlib</entry> | 1016 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1018 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> | 1017 | </row> |
1019 | <entry>zlib implementation in Java</entry> | 1018 | |
1020 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1019 | <row> |
1021 | </row> | 1020 | <entry>fastjar</entry> |
1022 | <row> | 1021 | |
1023 | <entry>kbd</entry> | 1022 | <entry>0.98</entry> |
1024 | <entry>2.0.4</entry> | 1023 | |
1025 | <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry> | 1024 | <entry>jar replacement written in C.</entry> |
1026 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1025 | |
1027 | </row> | 1026 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1028 | <row> | 1027 | </row> |
1029 | <entry>kbproto</entry> | 1028 | |
1030 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> | 1029 | <row> |
1031 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard extension. This extension is used to control options related to keyboard handling and layout.</entry> | 1030 | <entry>file</entry> |
1032 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1031 | |
1033 | </row> | 1032 | <entry>5.30</entry> |
1034 | <row> | 1033 | |
1035 | <entry>kern-tools</entry> | 1034 | <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents |
1036 | <entry>0.2</entry> | 1035 | and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> |
1037 | <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched kernels.</entry> | 1036 | |
1038 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1037 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1039 | </row> | 1038 | </row> |
1040 | <row> | 1039 | |
1041 | <entry>kernel-devsrc</entry> | 1040 | <row> |
1042 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1041 | <entry>findutils</entry> |
1043 | <entry>Development source linux kernel. When built this recipe packages the source of the preferred virtual/kernel provider and makes it available for full kernel development or external module builds</entry> | 1042 | |
1044 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1043 | <entry>4.6.0</entry> |
1045 | </row> | 1044 | |
1046 | <row> | 1045 | <entry>The GNU Find Utilities are the basic directory searching |
1047 | <entry>keymaps</entry> | 1046 | utilities of the GNU operating system. These programs are |
1048 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1047 | typically used in conjunction with other programs to provide |
1049 | <entry>Keymaps and initscript to set the keymap on bootup.</entry> | 1048 | modular and powerful directory search and file locating |
1050 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1049 | capabilities to other commands.</entry> |
1051 | </row> | 1050 | |
1052 | <row> | 1051 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1053 | <entry>kmod</entry> | 1052 | </row> |
1054 | <entry>23</entry> | 1053 | |
1055 | <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve dependencies and aliases.</entry> | 1054 | <row> |
1056 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1055 | <entry>fixesproto</entry> |
1057 | </row> | 1056 | |
1058 | <row> | 1057 | <entry>5.0</entry> |
1059 | <entry>krb5</entry> | 1058 | |
1060 | <entry>1.15.1</entry> | 1059 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Fixes |
1061 | <entry>"Kerberos is a system for authenticating users and services on a network. Kerberos is a trusted third-party service. That means that there is a third party (the Kerberos server) that is trusted by all the entities on the network (users and services usually called ""principals""). . This is the MIT reference implementation of Kerberos V5. . This package contains the Kerberos key server (KDC). The KDC manages all authentication credentials for a Kerberos realm holds the master keys for the realm and responds to authentication requests. This package should be installed on both master and slave KDCs."</entry> | 1060 | extension. This extension is designed to provide server-side |
1062 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1061 | support for application work arounds to shortcomings in the core X |
1063 | </row> | 1062 | window system.</entry> |
1064 | <row> | 1063 | |
1065 | <entry>latencytop</entry> | 1064 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1066 | <entry>0.5</entry> | 1065 | </row> |
1067 | <entry>Linux tool for measuring and fixing latency.</entry> | 1066 | |
1068 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1067 | <row> |
1069 | </row> | 1068 | <entry>flex</entry> |
1070 | <row> | 1069 | |
1071 | <entry>ldconfig</entry> | 1070 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> |
1072 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> | 1071 | |
1073 | <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry> | 1072 | <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool |
1074 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1073 | for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in |
1075 | </row> | 1074 | text.</entry> |
1076 | <row> | 1075 | |
1077 | <entry>less</entry> | 1076 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1078 | <entry>487</entry> | 1077 | </row> |
1079 | <entry>Less is a program similar to more i.e. a terminal based program for viewing text files and the output from other programs. Less offers many features beyond those that more does.</entry> | 1078 | |
1080 | <entry> GPL-3.0, BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 1079 | <row> |
1081 | </row> | 1080 | <entry>fontconfig</entry> |
1082 | <row> | 1081 | |
1083 | <entry>libaio</entry> | 1082 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> |
1084 | <entry>0.3.110</entry> | 1083 | |
1085 | <entry>Asynchronous input/output library that uses the kernels native interface</entry> | 1084 | <entry>Fontconfig is a font configuration and customization |
1086 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1085 | library which does not depend on the X Window System. It is |
1087 | </row> | 1086 | designed to locate fonts within the system and select them |
1088 | <row> | 1087 | according to requirements specified by applications. Fontconfig is |
1089 | <entry>libarchive</entry> | 1088 | not a rasterization library nor does it impose a particular |
1090 | <entry>3.2.2</entry> | 1089 | rasterization library on the application. The X-specific library |
1091 | <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry> | 1090 | 'Xft' uses fontconfig along with freetype to specify and rasterize |
1092 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1091 | fonts.</entry> |
1093 | </row> | 1092 | |
1094 | <row> | 1093 | <entry>MIT, PD</entry> |
1095 | <entry>libatomic-ops</entry> | 1094 | </row> |
1096 | <entry>7.4.4</entry> | 1095 | |
1097 | <entry>A library for atomic integer operations.</entry> | 1096 | <row> |
1098 | <entry> GPL-2.0, MIT</entry> | 1097 | <entry>freetype</entry> |
1099 | </row> | 1098 | |
1100 | <row> | 1099 | <entry>2.7.1</entry> |
1101 | <entry>libbsd</entry> | 1100 | |
1102 | <entry>0.8.3</entry> | 1101 | <entry>FreeType is a software font engine that is designed to be |
1103 | <entry>This library provides useful functions commonly found on BSD systems and lacking on others like GNU systems thus making it easier to port projects with strong BSD origins without needing to embed the same code over and over again on each project.</entry> | 1102 | small efficient highly customizable and portable while capable of |
1104 | <entry> BSD-4-Clause, ISC, PD</entry> | 1103 | producing high-quality output (glyph images). It can be used in |
1105 | </row> | 1104 | graphics libraries display servers font conversion tools text |
1106 | <row> | 1105 | image generation tools and many other products as well.</entry> |
1107 | <entry>libcap</entry> | 1106 | |
1108 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 1107 | <entry>FreeType, GPL-2.0</entry> |
1109 | <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry> | 1108 | </row> |
1110 | <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1109 | |
1111 | </row> | 1110 | <row> |
1112 | <row> | 1111 | <entry>fuse</entry> |
1113 | <entry>libcgroup</entry> | 1112 | |
1114 | <entry>0.41</entry> | 1113 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> |
1115 | <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of processes.</entry> | 1114 | |
1116 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1115 | <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for |
1117 | </row> | 1116 | userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux |
1118 | <row> | 1117 | kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non |
1119 | <entry>libcheck</entry> | 1118 | privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem |
1120 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> | 1119 | implementations.</entry> |
1121 | <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry> | 1120 | |
1122 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1121 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
1123 | </row> | 1122 | </row> |
1124 | <row> | 1123 | |
1125 | <entry>libcroco</entry> | 1124 | <row> |
1126 | <entry>0.6.11</entry> | 1125 | <entry>gawk</entry> |
1127 | <entry>Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) parsing and manipulation toolkit.</entry> | 1126 | |
1128 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1127 | <entry>4.1.4</entry> |
1129 | </row> | 1128 | |
1130 | <row> | 1129 | <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk |
1131 | <entry>libdaemon</entry> | 1130 | interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and |
1132 | <entry>0.14</entry> | 1131 | easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> |
1133 | <entry>Lightweight C library which eases the writing of UNIX daemons.</entry> | 1132 | |
1134 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1133 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1135 | </row> | 1134 | </row> |
1136 | <row> | 1135 | |
1137 | <entry>libdevmapper</entry> | 1136 | <row> |
1138 | <entry>2.02.166</entry> | 1137 | <entry>gcc-cross-initial-x86_64</entry> |
1139 | <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in Linux.</entry> | 1138 | |
1140 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1139 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
1141 | </row> | 1140 | |
1142 | <row> | 1141 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
1143 | <entry>libecj-bootstrap</entry> | 1142 | |
1144 | <entry>3.6.2</entry> | 1143 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
1145 | <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Jar only</entry> | 1144 | </row> |
1146 | <entry>EPL-1.0</entry> | 1145 | |
1147 | </row> | 1146 | <row> |
1148 | <row> | 1147 | <entry>gcc-cross-x86_64</entry> |
1149 | <entry>liberation-fonts</entry> | 1148 | |
1150 | <entry>1.04</entry> | 1149 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
1151 | <entry>The Liberation(tm) Fonts is a font family originally created by Ascender(c) which aims at metric compatibility with Arial Times New Roman Courier New.</entry> | 1150 | |
1152 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1151 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
1153 | </row> | 1152 | |
1154 | <row> | 1153 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
1155 | <entry>libevent</entry> | 1154 | </row> |
1156 | <entry>2.0.22</entry> | 1155 | |
1157 | <entry>An asynchronous event notification library.</entry> | 1156 | <row> |
1158 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1157 | <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> |
1159 | </row> | 1158 | |
1160 | <row> | 1159 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
1161 | <entry>libffi</entry> | 1160 | |
1162 | <entry>3.2.1</entry> | 1161 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
1163 | <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for the interface that allows code written in one language to call code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that handles type conversions for values passed between the two languages.</entry> | 1162 | |
1164 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1163 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
1165 | </row> | 1164 | </row> |
1166 | <row> | 1165 | |
1167 | <entry>libgcc</entry> | 1166 | <row> |
1168 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 1167 | <entry>gcc</entry> |
1169 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 1168 | |
1170 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 1169 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
1171 | </row> | 1170 | |
1172 | <row> | 1171 | <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry> |
1173 | <entry>libgudev</entry> | 1172 | |
1174 | <entry>231</entry> | 1173 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> |
1175 | <entry>GObject wrapper for libudev.</entry> | 1174 | </row> |
1176 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1175 | |
1177 | </row> | 1176 | <row> |
1178 | <row> | 1177 | <entry>gdb</entry> |
1179 | <entry>libice</entry> | 1178 | |
1180 | <entry>1.0.9</entry> | 1179 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> |
1181 | <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up and shutting down connections for performing authentication for negotiating versions and for reporting errors. </entry> | 1180 | |
1182 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1181 | <entry>GNU debugger.</entry> |
1183 | </row> | 1182 | |
1184 | <row> | 1183 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> |
1185 | <entry>libidn</entry> | 1184 | </row> |
1186 | <entry>1.33</entry> | 1185 | |
1187 | <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) working group.</entry> | 1186 | <row> |
1188 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 1187 | <entry>gdbm</entry> |
1189 | </row> | 1188 | |
1190 | <row> | 1189 | <entry>1.12</entry> |
1191 | <entry>libjpeg-turbo</entry> | 1190 | |
1192 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | 1191 | <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> |
1193 | <entry>libjpeg-turbo is a derivative of libjpeg that uses SIMD instructions (MMX SSE2 NEON) to accelerate baseline JPEG compression and decompression</entry> | 1192 | |
1194 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1193 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1195 | </row> | 1194 | </row> |
1196 | <row> | 1195 | |
1197 | <entry>libmpc</entry> | 1196 | <row> |
1198 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> | 1197 | <entry>gdk-pixbuf</entry> |
1199 | <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as Mpfr</entry> | 1198 | |
1200 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | 1199 | <entry>2.36.5</entry> |
1201 | </row> | 1200 | |
1202 | <row> | 1201 | <entry>Image loading library for GTK+.</entry> |
1203 | <entry>libndp</entry> | 1202 | |
1204 | <entry>1.6</entry> | 1203 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> |
1205 | <entry>Library for IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol.</entry> | 1204 | </row> |
1206 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1205 | |
1207 | </row> | 1206 | <row> |
1208 | <row> | 1207 | <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> |
1209 | <entry>libnewt</entry> | 1208 | |
1210 | <entry>0.52.19</entry> | 1209 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> |
1211 | <entry>Newt is a programming library for color text mode widget based user interfaces. Newt can be used to add stacked windows entry widgets checkboxes radio buttons labels plain text fields scrollbars etc. to text mode user interfaces. This package also contains the shared library needed by programs built with newt as well as a /usr/bin/dialog replacement called whiptail. Newt is based on the slang library.</entry> | 1210 | |
1212 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1211 | <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building |
1213 | </row> | 1212 | autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup |
1214 | <row> | 1213 | by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now |
1215 | <entry>libnl</entry> | 1214 | only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> |
1216 | <entry>3.2.29</entry> | 1215 | |
1217 | <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink sockets.</entry> | 1216 | <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> |
1218 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1217 | </row> |
1219 | </row> | 1218 | |
1220 | <row> | 1219 | <row> |
1221 | <entry>libnss-mdns</entry> | 1220 | <entry>gettext</entry> |
1222 | <entry>0.10</entry> | 1221 | |
1223 | <entry>Name Service Switch module for Multicast DNS (zeroconf) name resolution.</entry> | 1222 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> |
1224 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1223 | |
1225 | </row> | 1224 | <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to |
1226 | <row> | 1225 | help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools |
1227 | <entry>libpcap</entry> | 1226 | include a set of conventions about how programs should be written |
1228 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> | 1227 | to support message catalogs a directory and file naming |
1229 | <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection security monitoring and network debugging.</entry> | 1228 | organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library |
1230 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1229 | supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few |
1231 | </row> | 1230 | stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of |
1232 | <row> | 1231 | translatable and already translated strings.</entry> |
1233 | <entry>libpciaccess</entry> | 1232 | |
1234 | <entry>0.13.4</entry> | 1233 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1235 | <entry>libpciaccess provides functionality for X to access the PCI bus and devices in a platform-independent way.</entry> | 1234 | </row> |
1236 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1235 | |
1237 | </row> | 1236 | <row> |
1238 | <row> | 1237 | <entry>giflib</entry> |
1239 | <entry>libpcre</entry> | 1238 | |
1240 | <entry>8.40</entry> | 1239 | <entry>5.1.4</entry> |
1241 | <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular expression API.</entry> | 1240 | |
1242 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1241 | <entry>shared library for GIF images.</entry> |
1243 | </row> | 1242 | |
1244 | <row> | 1243 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1245 | <entry>libpng</entry> | 1244 | </row> |
1246 | <entry>1.6.28</entry> | 1245 | |
1247 | <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry> | 1246 | <row> |
1248 | <entry>Libpng</entry> | 1247 | <entry>git</entry> |
1249 | </row> | 1248 | |
1250 | <row> | 1249 | <entry>2.11.1</entry> |
1251 | <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry> | 1250 | |
1252 | <entry>0.3</entry> | 1251 | <entry>Distributed version control system.</entry> |
1253 | <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry> | 1252 | |
1254 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1253 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1255 | </row> | 1254 | </row> |
1256 | <row> | 1255 | |
1257 | <entry>librsvg</entry> | 1256 | <row> |
1258 | <entry>2.40.16</entry> | 1257 | <entry>glib-2.0</entry> |
1259 | <entry>Library for rendering SVG files.</entry> | 1258 | |
1260 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1259 | <entry>2.50.3</entry> |
1261 | </row> | 1260 | |
1262 | <row> | 1261 | <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides |
1263 | <entry>libsdl</entry> | 1262 | many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities |
1264 | <entry>1.2.15</entry> | 1263 | file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> |
1265 | <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video framebuffer.</entry> | 1264 | |
1266 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1265 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> |
1267 | </row> | 1266 | </row> |
1268 | <row> | 1267 | |
1269 | <entry>libsm</entry> | 1268 | <row> |
1270 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | 1269 | <entry>glibc-locale</entry> |
1271 | <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of clients each of which has a particular state."</entry> | 1270 | |
1272 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1271 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
1273 | </row> | 1272 | |
1274 | <row> | 1273 | <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> |
1275 | <entry>libtasn1</entry> | 1274 | |
1276 | <entry>4.10</entry> | 1275 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1277 | <entry>Library for ASN.1 and DER manipulation.</entry> | 1276 | </row> |
1278 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1277 | |
1279 | </row> | 1278 | <row> |
1280 | <row> | 1279 | <entry>glibc</entry> |
1281 | <entry>libtool</entry> | 1280 | |
1282 | <entry>2.4.6</entry> | 1281 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
1283 | <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script. Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry> | 1282 | |
1284 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1283 | <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most |
1285 | </row> | 1284 | systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> |
1286 | <row> | 1285 | |
1287 | <entry>libunistring</entry> | 1286 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1288 | <entry>0.9.7</entry> | 1287 | </row> |
1289 | <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains documentation.</entry> | 1288 | |
1290 | <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1289 | <row> |
1291 | </row> | 1290 | <entry>gmp</entry> |
1292 | <row> | 1291 | |
1293 | <entry>liburcu</entry> | 1292 | <entry>6.1.2</entry> |
1294 | <entry>0.9.3</entry> | 1293 | |
1295 | <entry>Userspace RCU (read-copy-update) library.</entry> | 1294 | <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic |
1296 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, MIT</entry> | 1295 | operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point |
1297 | </row> | 1296 | numbers</entry> |
1298 | <row> | 1297 | |
1299 | <entry>libusb-compat</entry> | 1298 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> |
1300 | <entry>0.1.5</entry> | 1299 | </row> |
1301 | <entry>libusb-0.1 compatible layer for libusb1 a drop-in replacement that aims to look feel and behave exactly like libusb-0.1</entry> | 1300 | |
1302 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1301 | <row> |
1303 | </row> | 1302 | <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> |
1304 | <row> | 1303 | |
1305 | <entry>libusb1</entry> | 1304 | <entry>2014.1</entry> |
1306 | <entry>1.0.21</entry> | 1305 | |
1307 | <entry>Userspace library to access USB (version 1.0).</entry> | 1306 | <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> |
1308 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1307 | |
1309 | </row> | 1308 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> |
1310 | <row> | 1309 | </row> |
1311 | <entry>libvirt</entry> | 1310 | |
1312 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | 1311 | <row> |
1313 | <entry>A toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities of recent versions of Linux.</entry> | 1312 | <entry>gnome-themes-standard</entry> |
1314 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1313 | |
1315 | </row> | 1314 | <entry>3.22.2</entry> |
1316 | <row> | 1315 | |
1317 | <entry>libx11</entry> | 1316 | <entry>GTK+2 standard themes.</entry> |
1318 | <entry>1.6.4</entry> | 1317 | |
1319 | <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for the basic functions of the window system.</entry> | 1318 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1320 | <entry> MIT, BSD</entry> | 1319 | </row> |
1321 | </row> | 1320 | |
1322 | <row> | 1321 | <row> |
1323 | <entry>libxau</entry> | 1322 | <entry>gnu-config</entry> |
1324 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | 1323 | |
1325 | <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X connections both client-side and server-side.</entry> | 1324 | <entry>20150728</entry> |
1326 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1325 | |
1327 | </row> | 1326 | <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a |
1328 | <row> | 1327 | directory tree</entry> |
1329 | <entry>libxcb</entry> | 1328 | |
1330 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 1329 | <entry></entry> |
1331 | <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading support and extensibility.</entry> | 1330 | </row> |
1332 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1331 | |
1333 | </row> | 1332 | <row> |
1334 | <row> | 1333 | <entry>gnujaf</entry> |
1335 | <entry>libxcomposite</entry> | 1334 | |
1336 | <entry>0.4.4</entry> | 1335 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> |
1337 | <entry>The composite extension provides three related mechanisms: per-hierarchy storage automatic shadow update and external parent. In per-hierarchy storage the rendering of an entire hierarchy of windows is redirected to off-screen storage. In automatic shadow update when a hierarchy is rendered off-screen the X server provides an automatic mechanism for presenting those contents within the parent window. In external parent a mechanism for providing redirection of compositing transformations through a client.</entry> | 1336 | |
1338 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1337 | <entry>Provides a mean to type data and locate components suitable |
1339 | </row> | 1338 | for performing various kinds of action on it.</entry> |
1340 | <row> | 1339 | |
1341 | <entry>libxcursor</entry> | 1340 | <entry></entry> |
1342 | <entry>1.1.14</entry> | 1341 | </row> |
1343 | <entry>Xcursor is a simple library designed to help locate and load cursors. Cursors can be loaded from files or memory. A library of common cursors exists which map to the standard X cursor names. Cursors can exist in several sizes and the library automatically picks the best size.</entry> | 1342 | |
1344 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1343 | <row> |
1345 | </row> | 1344 | <entry>gnumail</entry> |
1346 | <row> | 1345 | |
1347 | <entry>libxdamage</entry> | 1346 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> |
1348 | <entry>1.1.4</entry> | 1347 | |
1349 | <entry>'Damage' is a term that describes changes make to pixel contents of windows and pixmaps. Damage accumulates as drawing occurs in the drawable. Each drawing operation 'damages' one or more rectangular areas within the drawable. The rectangles are guaranteed to include the set of pixels modified by each operation but may include significantly more than just those pixels. The DAMAGE extension allows applications to either receive the raw rectangles as a stream of events or to have them partially processed within the X server to reduce the amount of data transmitted as well as reduce the processing latency once the repaint operation has started.</entry> | 1348 | <entry>GNU's free implementation of the JavaMail API |
1350 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1349 | specification</entry> |
1351 | </row> | 1350 | |
1352 | <row> | 1351 | <entry></entry> |
1353 | <entry>libxdmcp</entry> | 1352 | </row> |
1354 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> | 1353 | |
1355 | <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime example of an autonomous display.</entry> | 1354 | <row> |
1356 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1355 | <entry>gnutls</entry> |
1357 | </row> | 1356 | |
1358 | <row> | 1357 | <entry>3.5.9</entry> |
1359 | <entry>libxext</entry> | 1358 | |
1360 | <entry>1.3.3</entry> | 1359 | <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> |
1361 | <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X protocol extensions.</entry> | 1360 | |
1362 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1361 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1363 | </row> | 1362 | </row> |
1364 | <row> | 1363 | |
1365 | <entry>libxfixes</entry> | 1364 | <row> |
1366 | <entry>5.0.3</entry> | 1365 | <entry>go-bootstrap</entry> |
1367 | <entry>X applications have often needed to work around various shortcomings in the core X window system. This extension is designed to provide the minimal server-side support necessary to eliminate problems caused by these workarounds.</entry> | 1366 | |
1368 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1367 | <entry>1.4.3</entry> |
1369 | </row> | 1368 | |
1370 | <row> | 1369 | <entry>The Go programming language is an open source project to |
1371 | <entry>libxft</entry> | 1370 | make programmers more productive. Go is expressive concise clean |
1372 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> | 1371 | and efficient. Its concurrency mechanisms make it easy to write |
1373 | <entry>Xft was designed to provide good support for scalable fonts and to do so efficiently. Unlike the core fonts system it supports features such as anti-aliasing and sub-pixel rasterisation. Perhaps more importantly it gives applications full control over the way glyphs are rendered making fine typesetting and WYSIWIG display possible. Finally it allows applications to use fonts that are not installed system-wide for displaying documents with embedded fonts. Xft is not compatible with the core fonts system: usage of Xft requires fairly extensive changes to toolkits (user-interface libraries).</entry> | 1372 | programs that get the most out of multicore and networked machines |
1374 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1373 | while its novel type system enables flexible and modular program |
1375 | </row> | 1374 | construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code yet has the |
1376 | <row> | 1375 | convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time |
1377 | <entry>libxi</entry> | 1376 | reflection. It's a fast statically typed compiled language that |
1378 | <entry>1.7.9</entry> | 1377 | feels like a dynamically typed interpreted language.</entry> |
1379 | <entry>libxi is an extension to the X11 protocol to support input devices other than the core X keyboard and pointer. It allows client programs to select input from these devices independently from each other and independently from the core devices.</entry> | 1378 | |
1380 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1379 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
1381 | </row> | 1380 | </row> |
1382 | <row> | 1381 | |
1383 | <entry>libxkbcommon</entry> | 1382 | <row> |
1384 | <entry>0.7.1</entry> | 1383 | <entry>go-capability</entry> |
1385 | <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB specification.</entry> | 1384 | |
1386 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1385 | <entry>0.0</entry> |
1387 | </row> | 1386 | |
1388 | <row> | 1387 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating POSIX capabilities in |
1389 | <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry> | 1388 | Go.</entry> |
1390 | <entry>2.44</entry> | 1389 | |
1391 | <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML documents.</entry> | 1390 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> |
1392 | <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | 1391 | </row> |
1393 | </row> | 1392 | |
1394 | <row> | 1393 | <row> |
1395 | <entry>libxml2</entry> | 1394 | <entry>go-cli</entry> |
1396 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | 1395 | |
1397 | <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2 includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible with Expat.</entry> | 1396 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> |
1398 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1397 | |
1399 | </row> | 1398 | <entry>A small package for building command line apps in |
1400 | <row> | 1399 | Go</entry> |
1401 | <entry>libxrandr</entry> | 1400 | |
1402 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | 1401 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1403 | <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry> | 1402 | </row> |
1404 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1403 | |
1405 | </row> | 1404 | <row> |
1406 | <row> | 1405 | <entry>go-connections</entry> |
1407 | <entry>libxrender</entry> | 1406 | |
1408 | <entry>0.9.10</entry> | 1407 | <entry>0.2.1</entry> |
1409 | <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of them.</entry> | 1408 | |
1410 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1409 | <entry>Utility package to work with network connections</entry> |
1411 | </row> | 1410 | |
1412 | <row> | 1411 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
1413 | <entry>libxslt</entry> | 1412 | </row> |
1414 | <entry>1.1.29</entry> | 1413 | |
1415 | <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry> | 1414 | <row> |
1416 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1415 | <entry>go-context</entry> |
1417 | </row> | 1416 | |
1418 | <row> | 1417 | <entry>git</entry> |
1419 | <entry>libxt</entry> | 1418 | |
1420 | <entry>1.1.5</entry> | 1419 | <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> |
1421 | <entry>The Intrinsics are a programming library tailored to the special requirements of user interface construction within a network window system specifically the X Window System. The Intrinsics and a widget set make up an X Toolkit. The Intrinsics provide the base mechanism necessary to build a wide variety of interoperating widget sets and application environments. The Intrinsics are a layer on top of Xlib the C Library X Interface. They extend the fundamental abstractions provided by the X Window System while still remaining independent of any particular user interface policy or style.</entry> | 1420 | |
1422 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1421 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
1423 | </row> | 1422 | </row> |
1424 | <row> | 1423 | |
1425 | <entry>libxtst</entry> | 1424 | <row> |
1426 | <entry>1.2.3</entry> | 1425 | <entry>go-cross-x86_64</entry> |
1427 | <entry>This extension is a minimal set of client and server extensions required to completely test the X11 server with no user intervention.</entry> | 1426 | |
1428 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1427 | <entry>1.8</entry> |
1429 | </row> | 1428 | |
1430 | <row> | 1429 | <entry>The Go programming language is an open source project to |
1431 | <entry>linux-intel-dev</entry> | 1430 | make programmers more productive. Go is expressive concise clean |
1432 | <entry>4.9.47</entry> | 1431 | and efficient. Its concurrency mechanisms make it easy to write |
1433 | <entry>Linux kernel.</entry> | 1432 | programs that get the most out of multicore and networked machines |
1434 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1433 | while its novel type system enables flexible and modular program |
1435 | </row> | 1434 | construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code yet has the |
1436 | <row> | 1435 | convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time |
1437 | <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry> | 1436 | reflection. It's a fast statically typed compiled language that |
1438 | <entry>4.10</entry> | 1437 | feels like a dynamically typed interpreted language.</entry> |
1439 | <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's use.</entry> | 1438 | |
1440 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1439 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
1441 | </row> | 1440 | </row> |
1442 | <row> | 1441 | |
1443 | <entry>log4j1.2</entry> | 1442 | <row> |
1444 | <entry>1.2.17</entry> | 1443 | <entry>go-dbus</entry> |
1445 | <entry>Java library to help the programmer output log statements to a variety of output targets</entry> | 1444 | |
1446 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1445 | <entry>4.0.0</entry> |
1447 | </row> | 1446 | |
1448 | <row> | 1447 | <entry>Native Go bindings for D-Bus</entry> |
1449 | <entry>logkit</entry> | 1448 | |
1450 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | 1449 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> |
1451 | <entry>Logging toolkit designed for secure performance orientated logging in Java applications</entry> | 1450 | </row> |
1452 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1451 | |
1453 | </row> | 1452 | <row> |
1454 | <row> | 1453 | <entry>go-distribution</entry> |
1455 | <entry>lsb</entry> | 1454 | |
1456 | <entry>4.1</entry> | 1455 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> |
1457 | <entry>LSB support for OpenEmbedded.</entry> | 1456 | |
1458 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1457 | <entry>The Docker toolset to pack ship store and deliver |
1459 | </row> | 1458 | content</entry> |
1460 | <row> | 1459 | |
1461 | <entry>lsbinitscripts</entry> | 1460 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
1462 | <entry>9.68</entry> | 1461 | </row> |
1463 | <entry>SysV init scripts which are only used in an LSB image.</entry> | 1462 | |
1464 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1463 | <row> |
1465 | </row> | 1464 | <entry>go-fsnotify</entry> |
1466 | <row> | 1465 | |
1467 | <entry>lttng-modules</entry> | 1466 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> |
1468 | <entry>2.9.1</entry> | 1467 | |
1469 | <entry>The lttng-modules 2.0 package contains the kernel tracer modules</entry> | 1468 | <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> |
1470 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0, MIT</entry> | 1469 | |
1471 | </row> | 1470 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
1472 | <row> | 1471 | </row> |
1473 | <entry>lttng-tools</entry> | 1472 | |
1474 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | 1473 | <row> |
1475 | <entry>The Linux trace toolkit is a suite of tools designed to extract program execution details from the Linux operating system and interpret them.</entry> | 1474 | <entry>go-libtrust</entry> |
1476 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1475 | |
1477 | </row> | 1476 | <entry>0.0</entry> |
1478 | <row> | 1477 | |
1479 | <entry>lttng-ust</entry> | 1478 | <entry>Primitives for identity and authorization</entry> |
1480 | <entry>2.9.0</entry> | 1479 | |
1481 | <entry>The LTTng UST 2.x package contains the userspace tracer library to trace userspace codes.</entry> | 1480 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
1482 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1481 | </row> |
1483 | </row> | 1482 | |
1484 | <row> | 1483 | <row> |
1485 | <entry>lvm2</entry> | 1484 | <entry>go-logrus</entry> |
1486 | <entry>2.02.166</entry> | 1485 | |
1487 | <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in Linux.</entry> | 1486 | <entry>0.11.0</entry> |
1488 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1487 | |
1489 | </row> | 1488 | <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> |
1490 | <row> | 1489 | |
1491 | <entry>lxc</entry> | 1490 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1492 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> | 1491 | </row> |
1493 | <entry>lxc aims to use these new functionnalities to provide an userspace container object</entry> | 1492 | |
1494 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1493 | <row> |
1495 | </row> | 1494 | <entry>go-mux</entry> |
1496 | <row> | 1495 | |
1497 | <entry>lxd</entry> | 1496 | <entry>git</entry> |
1498 | <entry>git</entry> | 1497 | |
1499 | <entry>"LXD is a container ""hypervisor"" and a new user experience for LXC Specifically it's made of three components: - A system-wide daemon (lxd) - A command line client (lxc) - An OpenStack Nova plugin (nova-compute-lxd)"</entry> | 1498 | <entry>A powerful URL router and dispatcher for golang.</entry> |
1500 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1499 | |
1501 | </row> | 1500 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
1502 | <row> | 1501 | </row> |
1503 | <entry>lz4</entry> | 1502 | |
1504 | <entry>131</entry> | 1503 | <row> |
1505 | <entry>LZ4 is a very fast lossless compression algorithm providing compression speed at 400 MB/s per core scalable with multi-cores CPU. It also features an extremely fast decoder with speed in multiple GB/s per core typically reaching RAM speed limits on multi-core systems.</entry> | 1504 | <entry>go-patricia</entry> |
1506 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1505 | |
1507 | </row> | 1506 | <entry>2.2.6</entry> |
1508 | <row> | 1507 | |
1509 | <entry>lzo</entry> | 1508 | <entry>A generic patricia trie (also called radix tree) |
1510 | <entry>2.09</entry> | 1509 | implemented in Go (Golang)</entry> |
1511 | <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry> | 1510 | |
1512 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1511 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1513 | </row> | 1512 | </row> |
1514 | <row> | 1513 | |
1515 | <entry>lzop</entry> | 1514 | <row> |
1516 | <entry>1.03</entry> | 1515 | <entry>go-pty</entry> |
1517 | <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher compression and decompression speed at the cost of some \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry> | 1516 | |
1518 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1517 | <entry>git</entry> |
1519 | </row> | 1518 | |
1520 | <row> | 1519 | <entry>PTY interface for Go</entry> |
1521 | <entry>m4</entry> | 1520 | |
1522 | <entry>1.4.18</entry> | 1521 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1523 | <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry> | 1522 | </row> |
1524 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1523 | |
1525 | </row> | 1524 | <row> |
1526 | <row> | 1525 | <entry>go-systemd</entry> |
1527 | <entry>make</entry> | 1526 | |
1528 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 1527 | <entry>4</entry> |
1529 | <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables and other non-source files of a program from the program's source files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files and how to compute it from other files.</entry> | 1528 | |
1530 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1529 | <entry>Go bindings to systemd socket activation journal D-Bus and |
1531 | </row> | 1530 | unit files</entry> |
1532 | <row> | 1531 | |
1533 | <entry>makedepend</entry> | 1532 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
1534 | <entry>1.0.5</entry> | 1533 | </row> |
1535 | <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can reference files having other #include directives and parsing will occur in these files as well.</entry> | 1534 | |
1536 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1535 | <row> |
1537 | </row> | 1536 | <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> |
1538 | <row> | 1537 | |
1539 | <entry>makedevs</entry> | 1538 | <entry>1.50.0</entry> |
1540 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> | 1539 | |
1541 | <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry> | 1540 | <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and |
1542 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1541 | language bindings.</entry> |
1543 | </row> | 1542 | |
1544 | <row> | 1543 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
1545 | <entry>man</entry> | 1544 | </row> |
1546 | <entry>1.6g</entry> | 1545 | |
1547 | <entry>A set of documentation tools: man apropos and whatis</entry> | 1546 | <row> |
1548 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1547 | <entry>gperf</entry> |
1549 | </row> | 1548 | |
1550 | <row> | 1549 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> |
1551 | <entry>mklibs</entry> | 1550 | |
1552 | <entry>0.1.43</entry> | 1551 | <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> |
1553 | <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry> | 1552 | |
1554 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1553 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1555 | </row> | 1554 | </row> |
1556 | <row> | 1555 | |
1557 | <entry>mozjs</entry> | 1556 | <row> |
1558 | <entry>17.0.0</entry> | 1557 | <entry>grep</entry> |
1559 | <entry>SpiderMonkey is Mozilla's JavaScript engine written in C/C++.</entry> | 1558 | |
1560 | <entry>MPL-2.0</entry> | 1559 | <entry>3.0</entry> |
1561 | </row> | 1560 | |
1562 | <row> | 1561 | <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> |
1563 | <entry>mpfr</entry> | 1562 | |
1564 | <entry>3.1.5</entry> | 1563 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1565 | <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point computations with exact rounding.</entry> | 1564 | </row> |
1566 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 1565 | |
1567 | </row> | 1566 | <row> |
1568 | <row> | 1567 | <entry>groff</entry> |
1569 | <entry>mtools</entry> | 1568 | |
1570 | <entry>4.0.18</entry> | 1569 | <entry>1.22.3</entry> |
1571 | <entry>Mtools is a collection of utilities to access MS-DOS disks from GNU and Unix without mounting them.</entry> | 1570 | |
1572 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1571 | <entry>The groff (GNU troff) software is a typesetting package |
1573 | </row> | 1572 | which reads plain text mixed with formatting commands and produces |
1574 | <row> | 1573 | formatted output.</entry> |
1575 | <entry>nasm</entry> | 1574 | |
1576 | <entry>2.12.02</entry> | 1575 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1577 | <entry>General-purpose x86 assembler.</entry> | 1576 | </row> |
1578 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 1577 | |
1579 | </row> | 1578 | <row> |
1580 | <row> | 1579 | <entry>grpc-go</entry> |
1581 | <entry>ncurses</entry> | 1580 | |
1582 | <entry>6.0</entry> | 1581 | <entry>1.4.0</entry> |
1583 | <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using the gpm library.</entry> | 1582 | |
1584 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1583 | <entry>The Go language implementation of gRPC. HTTP/2 based |
1585 | </row> | 1584 | RPC</entry> |
1586 | <row> | 1585 | |
1587 | <entry>net-snmp</entry> | 1586 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1588 | <entry>5.7.3</entry> | 1587 | </row> |
1589 | <entry>Various tools relating to the Simple Network Management Protocol.</entry> | 1588 | |
1590 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1589 | <row> |
1591 | </row> | 1590 | <entry>grub-efi</entry> |
1592 | <row> | 1591 | |
1593 | <entry>netbase</entry> | 1592 | <entry>2.00</entry> |
1594 | <entry>5.4</entry> | 1593 | |
1595 | <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for basic TCP/IP based networking</entry> | 1594 | <entry>GRUB2 is the next generaion of a GPLed bootloader intended |
1596 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1595 | to unify bootloading across x86 operating systems. In addition to |
1597 | </row> | 1596 | loading the Linux kernel it implements the Multiboot standard |
1598 | <row> | 1597 | which allows for flexible loading of multiple boot images.</entry> |
1599 | <entry>netcat-openbsd</entry> | 1598 | |
1600 | <entry>1.105</entry> | 1599 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1601 | <entry>A simple Unix utility which reads and writes data across network connections using TCP or UDP protocol. It is designed to be a reliable 'back-end' tool that can be used directly or easily driven by other programs and scripts. At the same time it is a feature-rich network debugging and exploration tool since it can create almost any kind of connection you would need and has several interesting built-in capabilities.</entry> | 1600 | </row> |
1602 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1601 | |
1603 | </row> | 1602 | <row> |
1604 | <row> | 1603 | <entry>gtk+</entry> |
1605 | <entry>nettle</entry> | 1604 | |
1606 | <entry>3.3</entry> | 1605 | <entry>2.24.31</entry> |
1607 | <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry> | 1606 | |
1608 | <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1607 | <entry>GTK+ is a multi-platform toolkit for creating graphical |
1609 | </row> | 1608 | user interfaces. Offering a complete set of widgets GTK+ is |
1610 | <row> | 1609 | suitable for projects ranging from small one-off projects to |
1611 | <entry>networkmanager</entry> | 1610 | complete application suites.</entry> |
1612 | <entry>1.4.4</entry> | 1611 | |
1613 | <entry>NetworkManager.</entry> | 1612 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1614 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1613 | </row> |
1615 | </row> | 1614 | |
1616 | <row> | 1615 | <row> |
1617 | <entry>notary</entry> | 1616 | <entry>gtk-doc</entry> |
1618 | <entry>0.4.2</entry> | 1617 | |
1619 | <entry>Notary is a Docker project that allows anyone to have trust over arbitrary collections of data</entry> | 1618 | <entry>1.25</entry> |
1620 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1619 | |
1621 | </row> | 1620 | <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially |
1622 | <row> | 1621 | formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of |
1623 | <entry>nspr</entry> | 1622 | html documentation files from them</entry> |
1624 | <entry>4.13.1</entry> | 1623 | |
1625 | <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry> | 1624 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1626 | <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1625 | </row> |
1627 | </row> | 1626 | |
1628 | <row> | 1627 | <row> |
1629 | <entry>nss</entry> | 1628 | <entry>gtk-icon-utils</entry> |
1630 | <entry>3.28.1</entry> | 1629 | |
1631 | <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry> | 1630 | <entry>3.22.8</entry> |
1632 | <entry> MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1631 | |
1633 | </row> | 1632 | <entry>gtk-update-icon-cache and gtk-encode-symbolic-svg built |
1634 | <row> | 1633 | from GTK+ natively for build time and on-host postinst script |
1635 | <entry>ntp</entry> | 1634 | execution.</entry> |
1636 | <entry>4.2.8p10</entry> | 1635 | |
1637 | <entry>The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is used to synchronize the time of a computer client or server to another server or reference time source such as a radio or satellite receiver or modem.</entry> | 1636 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1638 | <entry>NTP</entry> | 1637 | </row> |
1639 | </row> | 1638 | |
1640 | <row> | 1639 | <row> |
1641 | <entry>numactl</entry> | 1640 | <entry>guile</entry> |
1642 | <entry>2.0.11</entry> | 1641 | |
1643 | <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in applications.</entry> | 1642 | <entry>2.0.14</entry> |
1644 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1643 | |
1645 | </row> | 1644 | <entry>Guile is the GNU Ubiquitous Intelligent Language for |
1646 | <row> | 1645 | Extensions the official extension language for the GNU operating |
1647 | <entry>openjdk-8</entry> | 1646 | system. Guile is a library designed to help programmers create |
1648 | <entry>102b14</entry> | 1647 | flexible applications. Using Guile in an application allows the |
1649 | <entry>Java runtime based upon the OpenJDK Project</entry> | 1648 | application's functionality to be extended by users or other |
1650 | <entry> </entry> | 1649 | programmers with plug-ins modules or scripts. Guile provides what |
1651 | </row> | 1650 | might be described as 'practical software freedom' making it |
1652 | <row> | 1651 | possible for users to customize an application to meet their needs |
1653 | <entry>openjre-8</entry> | 1652 | without digging into the application's internals.</entry> |
1654 | <entry>102b14</entry> | 1653 | |
1655 | <entry>Java runtime based upon the OpenJDK Project</entry> | 1654 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1656 | <entry> </entry> | 1655 | </row> |
1657 | </row> | 1656 | |
1658 | <row> | 1657 | <row> |
1659 | <entry>openssh</entry> | 1658 | <entry>gzip</entry> |
1660 | <entry>7.4p1</entry> | 1659 | |
1661 | <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry> | 1660 | <entry>1.8</entry> |
1662 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1661 | |
1663 | </row> | 1662 | <entry>GNU Gzip is a popular data compression program originally |
1664 | <row> | 1663 | written by Jean-loup Gailly for the GNU project. Mark Adler wrote |
1665 | <entry>openssl</entry> | 1664 | the decompression part</entry> |
1666 | <entry>1.0.2k</entry> | 1665 | |
1667 | <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic tools.</entry> | 1666 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1668 | <entry>OpenSSL</entry> | 1667 | </row> |
1669 | </row> | 1668 | |
1670 | <row> | 1669 | <row> |
1671 | <entry>openvswitch</entry> | 1670 | <entry>harfbuzz</entry> |
1672 | <entry>2.8.1</entry> | 1671 | |
1673 | <entry> Open vSwitch is a production quality multilayer virtual switch licensed under the open source Apache 2.0 license. It is designed to enable massive network automation through programmatic extension while still supporting standard management interfaces and protocols (e.g. NetFlow sFlow SPAN RSPAN CLI LACP 802.1ag) </entry> | 1672 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> |
1674 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1673 | |
1675 | </row> | 1674 | <entry>HarfBuzz is an OpenType text shaping engine.</entry> |
1676 | <row> | 1675 | |
1677 | <entry>opkg-utils</entry> | 1676 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1678 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | 1677 | </row> |
1679 | <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry> | 1678 | |
1680 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1679 | <row> |
1681 | </row> | 1680 | <entry>hicolor-icon-theme</entry> |
1682 | <row> | 1681 | |
1683 | <entry>oprofile</entry> | 1682 | <entry>0.15</entry> |
1684 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | 1683 | |
1685 | <entry>OProfile is a system-wide profiler for Linux systems capable of profiling all running code at low overhead.</entry> | 1684 | <entry>Default icon theme that all icon themes automatically |
1686 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1685 | inherit from.</entry> |
1687 | </row> | 1686 | |
1688 | <row> | 1687 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1689 | <entry>oro</entry> | 1688 | </row> |
1690 | <entry>2.0.8</entry> | 1689 | |
1691 | <entry>Perl5-compatible regular expressions library for Java</entry> | 1690 | <row> |
1692 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1691 | <entry>htop</entry> |
1693 | </row> | 1692 | |
1694 | <row> | 1693 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> |
1695 | <entry>os-release</entry> | 1694 | |
1696 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1695 | <entry>htop process monitor.</entry> |
1697 | <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system identification data.</entry> | 1696 | |
1698 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1697 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1699 | </row> | 1698 | </row> |
1700 | <row> | 1699 | |
1701 | <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry> | 1700 | <row> |
1702 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1701 | <entry>icedtea7</entry> |
1703 | <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the system</entry> | 1702 | |
1704 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1703 | <entry>2.1.3</entry> |
1705 | </row> | 1704 | |
1706 | <row> | 1705 | <entry>Harness to build the source code from OpenJDK using Free |
1707 | <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry> | 1706 | Software build tools</entry> |
1708 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1707 | |
1709 | <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry> | 1708 | <entry></entry> |
1710 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1709 | </row> |
1711 | </row> | 1710 | |
1712 | <row> | 1711 | <row> |
1713 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-docker</entry> | 1712 | <entry>icu</entry> |
1714 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1713 | |
1715 | <entry>Packagegroup for Docker.</entry> | 1714 | <entry>58.2</entry> |
1716 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1715 | |
1717 | </row> | 1716 | <entry>The International Component for Unicode (ICU) is a mature |
1718 | <row> | 1717 | portable set of C/C++ and Java libraries for Unicode support |
1719 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry> | 1718 | software internationalization (I18N) and globalization (G11N) |
1720 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1719 | giving applications the same results on all platforms.</entry> |
1721 | <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry> | 1720 | |
1722 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1721 | <entry>ICU</entry> |
1723 | </row> | 1722 | </row> |
1724 | <row> | 1723 | |
1725 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-element-odm</entry> | 1724 | <row> |
1726 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1725 | <entry>inetlib</entry> |
1727 | <entry>Packagegroup for Element ODM.</entry> | 1726 | |
1728 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1727 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> |
1729 | </row> | 1728 | |
1730 | <row> | 1729 | <entry>GNU Classpath inetlib is an extension library to provide |
1731 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-host</entry> | 1730 | extra network protocol support for GNU Classpath and ClasspathX |
1732 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1731 | project but it can also used standalone to add http imap pop3 and |
1733 | <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups specific to the host side of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry> | 1732 | smtp client support applications.</entry> |
1734 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1733 | |
1735 | </row> | 1734 | <entry></entry> |
1736 | <row> | 1735 | </row> |
1737 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-libvirt</entry> | 1736 | |
1738 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1737 | <row> |
1739 | <entry>Package group for libvirt.</entry> | 1738 | <entry>initscripts</entry> |
1740 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1739 | |
1741 | </row> | 1740 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
1742 | <row> | 1741 | |
1743 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxc</entry> | 1742 | <entry>Initscripts provide the basic system startup initialization |
1744 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1743 | scripts for the system. These scripts include actions such as |
1745 | <entry>Packagegroup for LXC.</entry> | 1744 | filesystem mounting fsck RTC manipulation and other actions |
1746 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1745 | routinely performed at system startup. In addition the scripts are |
1747 | </row> | 1746 | also used during system shutdown to reverse the actions performed |
1748 | <row> | 1747 | at startup.</entry> |
1749 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxd</entry> | 1748 | |
1750 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1749 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1751 | <entry>Packagegroup for LXD.</entry> | 1750 | </row> |
1752 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1751 | |
1753 | </row> | 1752 | <row> |
1754 | <row> | 1753 | <entry>inputproto</entry> |
1755 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-ovs</entry> | 1754 | |
1756 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1755 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> |
1757 | <entry>Packagegroup for Open vSwitch.</entry> | 1756 | |
1758 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1757 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input |
1759 | </row> | 1758 | extension. The extension supports input devices other then the |
1760 | <row> | 1759 | core X keyboard and pointer.</entry> |
1761 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-qemu</entry> | 1760 | |
1762 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1761 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1763 | <entry>Packagegroup for QEMU.</entry> | 1762 | </row> |
1764 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1763 | |
1765 | </row> | 1764 | <row> |
1766 | <row> | 1765 | <entry>intel-microcode</entry> |
1767 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-tools</entry> | 1766 | |
1768 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1767 | <entry>20170511</entry> |
1769 | <entry>Enea Linux debugging tools.</entry> | 1768 | |
1770 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1769 | <entry>The microcode data file contains the latest microcode |
1771 | </row> | 1770 | definitions for all Intel processors. Intel releases microcode |
1772 | <row> | 1771 | updates to correct processor behavior as documented in the |
1773 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry> | 1772 | respective processor specification updates. While the regular |
1774 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1773 | approach to getting this microcode update is via a BIOS upgrade |
1775 | <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry> | 1774 | Intel realizes that this can be an administrative hassle. The |
1776 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1775 | Linux operating system and VMware ESX products have a mechanism to |
1777 | </row> | 1776 | update the microcode after booting. For example this file will be |
1778 | <row> | 1777 | used by the operating system mechanism if the file is placed in |
1779 | <entry>pango</entry> | 1778 | the /etc/firmware directory of the Linux system.</entry> |
1780 | <entry>1.40.3</entry> | 1779 | |
1781 | <entry>Pango is a library for laying out and rendering of text with an emphasis on internationalization. Pango can be used anywhere that text layout is needed though most of the work on Pango so far has been done in the context of the GTK+ widget toolkit. Pango forms the core of text and font handling for GTK+-2.x.</entry> | 1780 | <entry></entry> |
1782 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1781 | </row> |
1783 | </row> | 1782 | |
1784 | <row> | 1783 | <row> |
1785 | <entry>parted</entry> | 1784 | <entry>intltool</entry> |
1786 | <entry>3.2</entry> | 1785 | |
1787 | <entry>Disk partition editing/resizing utility.</entry> | 1786 | <entry>0.51.0</entry> |
1788 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1787 | |
1789 | </row> | 1788 | <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry> |
1790 | <row> | 1789 | |
1791 | <entry>partrt</entry> | 1790 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1792 | <entry>1.1</entry> | 1791 | </row> |
1793 | <entry>partrt is a tool for dividing a SMP Linux system into a real time domain and a non-real time domain.</entry> | 1792 | |
1794 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1793 | <row> |
1795 | </row> | 1794 | <entry>iproute2</entry> |
1796 | <row> | 1795 | |
1797 | <entry>pciutils</entry> | 1796 | <entry>4.10.0</entry> |
1798 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | 1797 | |
1799 | <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based on this library.</entry> | 1798 | <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP / |
1800 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1799 | IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip |
1801 | </row> | 1800 | and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6 |
1802 | <row> | 1801 | configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry> |
1803 | <entry>perf</entry> | 1802 | |
1804 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1803 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1805 | <entry>Performance counters for Linux are a new kernel-based subsystem that provide a framework for all things performance analysis. It covers hardware level (CPU/PMU Performance Monitoring Unit) features and software features (software counters tracepoints) as well.</entry> | 1804 | </row> |
1806 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1805 | |
1807 | </row> | 1806 | <row> |
1808 | <row> | 1807 | <entry>iptables</entry> |
1809 | <entry>perl</entry> | 1808 | |
1810 | <entry>5.24.1</entry> | 1809 | <entry>1.6.1</entry> |
1811 | <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry> | 1810 | |
1812 | <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | 1811 | <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to |
1813 | </row> | 1812 | configure and control network packet filtering code in |
1814 | <row> | 1813 | Linux.</entry> |
1815 | <entry>pigz</entry> | 1814 | |
1816 | <entry>2.3.4</entry> | 1815 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1817 | <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data. pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread libraries.</entry> | 1816 | </row> |
1818 | <entry> Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry> | 1817 | |
1819 | </row> | 1818 | <row> |
1820 | <row> | 1819 | <entry>iucode-tool</entry> |
1821 | <entry>pixman</entry> | 1820 | |
1822 | <entry>0.34.0</entry> | 1821 | <entry>2.1.1</entry> |
1823 | <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions -- a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry> | 1822 | |
1824 | <entry> MIT, PD</entry> | 1823 | <entry>iucode_tool is a program to manipulate Intel i686 and |
1825 | </row> | 1824 | X86-64 processor microcode update collections and to use the |
1826 | <row> | 1825 | kernel facilities to update the microcode on Intel system |
1827 | <entry>pkgconfig</entry> | 1826 | processors. It can load microcode data files in text and binary |
1828 | <entry>0.29.1</entry> | 1827 | format sort list and filter the microcode updates contained in |
1829 | <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry> | 1828 | these files write selected microcode updates to a new file in |
1830 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1829 | binary format or upload them to the kernel. It operates on |
1831 | </row> | 1830 | microcode data downloaded directly from Intel: |
1832 | <row> | 1831 | http://feeds.downloadcenter.intel.com/rss/?p=2371</entry> |
1833 | <entry>pm-utils</entry> | 1832 | |
1834 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | 1833 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1835 | <entry>Simple shell command line tools to suspend and hibernate.</entry> | 1834 | </row> |
1836 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1835 | |
1837 | </row> | 1836 | <row> |
1838 | <row> | 1837 | <entry>jacl</entry> |
1839 | <entry>polkit</entry> | 1838 | |
1840 | <entry>0.113</entry> | 1839 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> |
1841 | <entry>The polkit package is an application-level toolkit for defining and handling the policy that allows unprivileged processes to speak to privileged processes.</entry> | 1840 | |
1842 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1841 | <entry>Tcl interpreter for Java</entry> |
1843 | </row> | 1842 | |
1844 | <row> | 1843 | <entry>, , ,</entry> |
1845 | <entry>popt</entry> | 1844 | </row> |
1846 | <entry>1.16</entry> | 1845 | |
1847 | <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry> | 1846 | <row> |
1848 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1847 | <entry>jamvm</entry> |
1849 | </row> | 1848 | |
1850 | <row> | 1849 | <entry>2.0.0-devel</entry> |
1851 | <entry>pps-tools</entry> | 1850 | |
1852 | <entry>0.0.0</entry> | 1851 | <entry>A compact Java Virtual Machine which conforms to the JVM |
1853 | <entry>User-space tools for LinuxPPS.</entry> | 1852 | specification version 2.</entry> |
1854 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1853 | |
1855 | </row> | 1854 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1856 | <row> | 1855 | </row> |
1857 | <entry>prelink</entry> | 1856 | |
1858 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1857 | <row> |
1859 | <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up faster.</entry> | 1858 | <entry>jansson</entry> |
1860 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1859 | |
1861 | </row> | 1860 | <entry>2.9</entry> |
1862 | <row> | 1861 | |
1863 | <entry>procps</entry> | 1862 | <entry>Jansson is a C library for encoding decoding and |
1864 | <entry>3.3.12</entry> | 1863 | manipulating JSON data.</entry> |
1865 | <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and skill.</entry> | 1864 | |
1866 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1865 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1867 | </row> | 1866 | </row> |
1868 | <row> | 1867 | |
1869 | <entry>pseudo</entry> | 1868 | <row> |
1870 | <entry>1.8.2</entry> | 1869 | <entry>jaxp1.3</entry> |
1871 | <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal user.</entry> | 1870 | |
1872 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1871 | <entry>1.4.01</entry> |
1873 | </row> | 1872 | |
1874 | <row> | 1873 | <entry>Java XML parser and transformer APIs (DOM SAX JAXP |
1875 | <entry>ptest-runner</entry> | 1874 | TrAX)</entry> |
1876 | <entry>2.0.2</entry> | 1875 | |
1877 | <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them in sequence.</entry> | 1876 | <entry>Apache-2.0, PD</entry> |
1878 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1877 | </row> |
1879 | </row> | 1878 | |
1880 | <row> | 1879 | <row> |
1881 | <entry>python-futures</entry> | 1880 | <entry>jdepend</entry> |
1882 | <entry>3.0.5</entry> | 1881 | |
1883 | <entry>The concurrent.futures module provides a high-level interface for asynchronously executing callables.</entry> | 1882 | <entry>2.9.1</entry> |
1884 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1883 | |
1885 | </row> | 1884 | <entry>Design quality metrics generator for each Java</entry> |
1886 | <row> | 1885 | |
1887 | <entry>python-netaddr</entry> | 1886 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1888 | <entry>0.7.19</entry> | 1887 | </row> |
1889 | <entry>A network address manipulation library for Python..</entry> | 1888 | |
1890 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1889 | <row> |
1891 | </row> | 1890 | <entry>jikes-initial</entry> |
1892 | <row> | 1891 | |
1893 | <entry>python-netifaces</entry> | 1892 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
1894 | <entry>0.10.6</entry> | 1893 | |
1895 | <entry>Portable network interface information..</entry> | 1894 | <entry>Initial Java 1.4-compatible (and not higher) |
1896 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1895 | compiler.</entry> |
1897 | </row> | 1896 | |
1898 | <row> | 1897 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1899 | <entry>python-pip</entry> | 1898 | </row> |
1900 | <entry>9.0.1</entry> | 1899 | |
1901 | <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python packages.</entry> | 1900 | <row> |
1902 | <entry> MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1901 | <entry>jikes</entry> |
1903 | </row> | 1902 | |
1904 | <row> | 1903 | <entry>1.22</entry> |
1905 | <entry>python-psutil</entry> | 1904 | |
1906 | <entry>5.2.0</entry> | 1905 | <entry>Java compiler adhering to language and VM |
1907 | <entry>A cross-platform process and system utilities module for Python.</entry> | 1906 | specifications</entry> |
1908 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1907 | |
1909 | </row> | 1908 | <entry></entry> |
1910 | <row> | 1909 | </row> |
1911 | <entry>python-setuptools</entry> | 1910 | |
1912 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | 1911 | <row> |
1913 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python packages.</entry> | 1912 | <entry>jlex</entry> |
1914 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1913 | |
1915 | </row> | 1914 | <entry>1.2.6</entry> |
1916 | <row> | 1915 | |
1917 | <entry>python-six</entry> | 1916 | <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry> |
1918 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | 1917 | |
1919 | <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities</entry> | 1918 | <entry></entry> |
1920 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1919 | </row> |
1921 | </row> | 1920 | |
1922 | <row> | 1921 | <row> |
1923 | <entry>python-twisted</entry> | 1922 | <entry>jsch</entry> |
1924 | <entry>13.2.0</entry> | 1923 | |
1925 | <entry>Twisted is an event-driven networking framework written in Python and licensed under the LGPL. Twisted supports TCP UDP SSL/TLS multicast Unix sockets a large number of protocols (including HTTP NNTP IMAP SSH IRC FTP and others) and much more.</entry> | 1924 | <entry>0.1.40</entry> |
1926 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1925 | |
1927 | </row> | 1926 | <entry>SSH implementation in Java</entry> |
1928 | <row> | 1927 | |
1929 | <entry>python-zopeinterface</entry> | 1928 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1930 | <entry>4.3.3</entry> | 1929 | </row> |
1931 | <entry>Interface definitions for Zope products.</entry> | 1930 | |
1932 | <entry> </entry> | 1931 | <row> |
1933 | </row> | 1932 | <entry>json-c</entry> |
1934 | <row> | 1933 | |
1935 | <entry>python</entry> | 1934 | <entry>0.12</entry> |
1936 | <entry>2.7.13</entry> | 1935 | |
1937 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | 1936 | <entry>JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that |
1938 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 1937 | allows you to easily construct JSON objects in C.</entry> |
1939 | </row> | 1938 | |
1940 | <row> | 1939 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1941 | <entry>python3-setuptools</entry> | 1940 | </row> |
1942 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | 1941 | |
1943 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python packages.</entry> | 1942 | <row> |
1944 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1943 | <entry>junit</entry> |
1945 | </row> | 1944 | |
1946 | <row> | 1945 | <entry>3.8.2</entry> |
1947 | <entry>python3</entry> | 1946 | |
1948 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | 1947 | <entry>JUnit is a testing framework for Java</entry> |
1949 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | 1948 | |
1950 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 1949 | <entry></entry> |
1951 | </row> | 1950 | </row> |
1952 | <row> | 1951 | |
1953 | <entry>qemu</entry> | 1952 | <row> |
1954 | <entry>2.8.0</entry> | 1953 | <entry>jzlib</entry> |
1955 | <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry> | 1954 | |
1956 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1955 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> |
1957 | </row> | 1956 | |
1958 | <row> | 1957 | <entry>zlib implementation in Java</entry> |
1959 | <entry>qemuwrapper</entry> | 1958 | |
1960 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1959 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1961 | <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry> | 1960 | </row> |
1962 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1961 | |
1963 | </row> | 1962 | <row> |
1964 | <row> | 1963 | <entry>kbd</entry> |
1965 | <entry>quilt</entry> | 1964 | |
1966 | <entry>0.65</entry> | 1965 | <entry>2.0.4</entry> |
1967 | <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry> | 1966 | |
1968 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1967 | <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry> |
1969 | </row> | 1968 | |
1970 | <row> | 1969 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1971 | <entry>randrproto</entry> | 1970 | </row> |
1972 | <entry>1.5.0</entry> | 1971 | |
1973 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry> | 1972 | <row> |
1974 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1973 | <entry>kbproto</entry> |
1975 | </row> | 1974 | |
1976 | <row> | 1975 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> |
1977 | <entry>readline</entry> | 1976 | |
1978 | <entry>7.0</entry> | 1977 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard |
1979 | <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous commands.</entry> | 1978 | extension. This extension is used to control options related to |
1980 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1979 | keyboard handling and layout.</entry> |
1981 | </row> | 1980 | |
1982 | <row> | 1981 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1983 | <entry>recordproto</entry> | 1982 | </row> |
1984 | <entry>1.14.2</entry> | 1983 | |
1985 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Record extension. This extension is used to record and play back event sequences.</entry> | 1984 | <row> |
1986 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1985 | <entry>kern-tools</entry> |
1987 | </row> | 1986 | |
1988 | <row> | 1987 | <entry>0.2</entry> |
1989 | <entry>regexp</entry> | 1988 | |
1990 | <entry>1.5</entry> | 1989 | <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched |
1991 | <entry>Java Regular Expression package</entry> | 1990 | kernels.</entry> |
1992 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1991 | |
1993 | </row> | 1992 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1994 | <row> | 1993 | </row> |
1995 | <entry>renderproto</entry> | 1994 | |
1996 | <entry>0.11.1</entry> | 1995 | <row> |
1997 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X window system.</entry> | 1996 | <entry>kernel-devsrc</entry> |
1998 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1997 | |
1999 | </row> | 1998 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2000 | <row> | 1999 | |
2001 | <entry>rhino</entry> | 2000 | <entry>Development source linux kernel. When built this recipe |
2002 | <entry>1.7r4</entry> | 2001 | packages the source of the preferred virtual/kernel provider and |
2003 | <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry> | 2002 | makes it available for full kernel development or external module |
2004 | <entry>MPL-2.0</entry> | 2003 | builds</entry> |
2005 | </row> | 2004 | |
2006 | <row> | 2005 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2007 | <entry>rpm</entry> | 2006 | </row> |
2008 | <entry>4.13.90</entry> | 2007 | |
2009 | <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line driven package management system capable of installing uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages. Each software package consists of an archive of files along with information about the package like its version a description etc.</entry> | 2008 | <row> |
2010 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2009 | <entry>keymaps</entry> |
2011 | </row> | 2010 | |
2012 | <row> | 2011 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2013 | <entry>rsync</entry> | 2012 | |
2014 | <entry>3.1.2</entry> | 2013 | <entry>Keymaps and initscript to set the keymap on bootup.</entry> |
2015 | <entry>File synchronization tool.</entry> | 2014 | |
2016 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2015 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2017 | </row> | 2016 | </row> |
2018 | <row> | 2017 | |
2019 | <entry>run-postinsts</entry> | 2018 | <row> |
2020 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2019 | <entry>kmod</entry> |
2021 | <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target device.</entry> | 2020 | |
2022 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2021 | <entry>23</entry> |
2023 | </row> | 2022 | |
2024 | <row> | 2023 | <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux |
2025 | <entry>runc-docker</entry> | 2024 | kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve |
2026 | <entry>1.0.0-rc2</entry> | 2025 | dependencies and aliases.</entry> |
2027 | <entry>runc is a CLI tool for spawning and running containers according to the OCI specification.</entry> | 2026 | |
2028 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2027 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2029 | </row> | 2028 | </row> |
2030 | <row> | 2029 | |
2031 | <entry>sed</entry> | 2030 | <row> |
2032 | <entry>4.2.2</entry> | 2031 | <entry>krb5</entry> |
2033 | <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry> | 2032 | |
2034 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2033 | <entry>1.15.1</entry> |
2035 | </row> | 2034 | |
2036 | <row> | 2035 | <entry>"Kerberos is a system for authenticating users and services |
2037 | <entry>servlet2.3</entry> | 2036 | on a network. Kerberos is a trusted third-party service. That |
2038 | <entry>4.1.37</entry> | 2037 | means that there is a third party (the Kerberos server) that is |
2039 | <entry>Servlet API 2.3 (from Tomcat 4.1)</entry> | 2038 | trusted by all the entities on the network (users and services |
2040 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2039 | usually called ""principals""). . This is the MIT reference |
2041 | </row> | 2040 | implementation of Kerberos V5. . This package contains the |
2042 | <row> | 2041 | Kerberos key server (KDC). The KDC manages all authentication |
2043 | <entry>shadow-securetty</entry> | 2042 | credentials for a Kerberos realm holds the master keys for the |
2044 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 2043 | realm and responds to authentication requests. This package should |
2045 | <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry> | 2044 | be installed on both master and slave KDCs."</entry> |
2046 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2045 | |
2047 | </row> | 2046 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2048 | <row> | 2047 | </row> |
2049 | <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry> | 2048 | |
2050 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 2049 | <row> |
2051 | <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry> | 2050 | <entry>latencytop</entry> |
2052 | <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | 2051 | |
2053 | </row> | 2052 | <entry>0.5</entry> |
2054 | <row> | 2053 | |
2055 | <entry>shadow</entry> | 2054 | <entry>Linux tool for measuring and fixing latency.</entry> |
2056 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 2055 | |
2057 | <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group data.</entry> | 2056 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2058 | <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | 2057 | </row> |
2059 | </row> | 2058 | |
2060 | <row> | 2059 | <row> |
2061 | <entry>shared-mime-info</entry> | 2060 | <entry>ldconfig</entry> |
2062 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 2061 | |
2063 | <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry> | 2062 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> |
2064 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 2063 | |
2065 | </row> | 2064 | <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry> |
2066 | <row> | 2065 | |
2067 | <entry>simpleproxy</entry> | 2066 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2068 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2067 | </row> |
2069 | <entry>Simpleproxy.</entry> | 2068 | |
2070 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2069 | <row> |
2071 | </row> | 2070 | <entry>less</entry> |
2072 | <row> | 2071 | |
2073 | <entry>slang</entry> | 2072 | <entry>487</entry> |
2074 | <entry>2.3.1a</entry> | 2073 | |
2075 | <entry>S-Lang is an interpreted language and a programming library. The S-Lang language was designed so that it can be easily embedded into a program to provide the program with a powerful extension language. The S-Lang library provided in this package provides the S-Lang extension language. S-Lang's syntax resembles C which makes it easy to recode S-Lang procedures in C if you need to.</entry> | 2074 | <entry>Less is a program similar to more i.e. a terminal based |
2076 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2075 | program for viewing text files and the output from other programs. |
2077 | </row> | 2076 | Less offers many features beyond those that more does.</entry> |
2078 | <row> | 2077 | |
2079 | <entry>sqlite3</entry> | 2078 | <entry>GPL-3.0, BSD-2-Clause</entry> |
2080 | <entry>3.17.0</entry> | 2079 | </row> |
2081 | <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry> | 2080 | |
2082 | <entry>PD</entry> | 2081 | <row> |
2083 | </row> | 2082 | <entry>libaio</entry> |
2084 | <row> | 2083 | |
2085 | <entry>squashfs-tools</entry> | 2084 | <entry>0.3.110</entry> |
2086 | <entry>4.3</entry> | 2085 | |
2087 | <entry>Tools for manipulating SquashFS filesystems.</entry> | 2086 | <entry>Asynchronous input/output library that uses the kernels |
2088 | <entry> GPL-2.0, PD</entry> | 2087 | native interface</entry> |
2089 | </row> | 2088 | |
2090 | <row> | 2089 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2091 | <entry>sysfsutils</entry> | 2090 | </row> |
2092 | <entry>2.1.0</entry> | 2091 | |
2093 | <entry>Tools for working with the sysfs virtual filesystem. The tool 'systool' can query devices by bus class and topology.</entry> | 2092 | <row> |
2094 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2093 | <entry>libarchive</entry> |
2095 | </row> | 2094 | |
2096 | <row> | 2095 | <entry>3.2.2</entry> |
2097 | <entry>syslinux</entry> | 2096 | |
2098 | <entry>6.03</entry> | 2097 | <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing |
2099 | <entry>Multi-purpose linux bootloader.</entry> | 2098 | tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry> |
2100 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2099 | |
2101 | </row> | 2100 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
2102 | <row> | 2101 | </row> |
2103 | <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry> | 2102 | |
2104 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2103 | <row> |
2105 | <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit scripts.</entry> | 2104 | <entry>libatomic-ops</entry> |
2106 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2105 | |
2107 | </row> | 2106 | <entry>7.4.4</entry> |
2108 | <row> | 2107 | |
2109 | <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry> | 2108 | <entry>A library for atomic integer operations.</entry> |
2110 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2109 | |
2111 | <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry> | 2110 | <entry>GPL-2.0, MIT</entry> |
2112 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2111 | </row> |
2113 | </row> | 2112 | |
2114 | <row> | 2113 | <row> |
2115 | <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry> | 2114 | <entry>libbsd</entry> |
2116 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2115 | |
2117 | <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry> | 2116 | <entry>0.8.3</entry> |
2118 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2117 | |
2119 | </row> | 2118 | <entry>This library provides useful functions commonly found on |
2120 | <row> | 2119 | BSD systems and lacking on others like GNU systems thus making it |
2121 | <entry>systemd</entry> | 2120 | easier to port projects with strong BSD origins without needing to |
2122 | <entry>232</entry> | 2121 | embed the same code over and over again on each project.</entry> |
2123 | <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and automount points and implements an elaborate transactional dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in replacement for sysvinit.</entry> | 2122 | |
2124 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2123 | <entry>BSD-4-Clause, ISC, PD</entry> |
2125 | </row> | 2124 | </row> |
2126 | <row> | 2125 | |
2127 | <entry>systemtap</entry> | 2126 | <row> |
2128 | <entry>3.1</entry> | 2127 | <entry>libcap</entry> |
2129 | <entry>Script-directed dynamic tracing and performance analysis tool for Linux.</entry> | 2128 | |
2130 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2129 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
2131 | </row> | 2130 | |
2132 | <row> | 2131 | <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry> |
2133 | <entry>tar</entry> | 2132 | |
2134 | <entry>1.29</entry> | 2133 | <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> |
2135 | <entry>GNU tar saves many files together into a single tape or disk archive and can restore individual files from the archive.</entry> | 2134 | </row> |
2136 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2135 | |
2137 | </row> | 2136 | <row> |
2138 | <row> | 2137 | <entry>libcgroup</entry> |
2139 | <entry>tcpdump</entry> | 2138 | |
2140 | <entry>4.9.0</entry> | 2139 | <entry>0.41</entry> |
2141 | <entry>A sophisticated network protocol analyzer.</entry> | 2140 | |
2142 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2141 | <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group |
2143 | </row> | 2142 | file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account |
2144 | <row> | 2143 | and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of |
2145 | <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry> | 2144 | processes.</entry> |
2146 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2145 | |
2147 | <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry> | 2146 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2148 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2147 | </row> |
2149 | </row> | 2148 | |
2150 | <row> | 2149 | <row> |
2151 | <entry>thin-provisioning-tools</entry> | 2150 | <entry>libcheck</entry> |
2152 | <entry>0.6.3</entry> | 2151 | |
2153 | <entry>A suite of tools for manipulating the metadata of the dm-thin device-mapper target.</entry> | 2152 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> |
2154 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2153 | |
2155 | </row> | 2154 | <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry> |
2156 | <row> | 2155 | |
2157 | <entry>tunctl</entry> | 2156 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2158 | <entry>1.5</entry> | 2157 | </row> |
2159 | <entry>Tool for controlling the Linux TUN/TAP driver.</entry> | 2158 | |
2160 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2159 | <row> |
2161 | </row> | 2160 | <entry>libcroco</entry> |
2162 | <row> | 2161 | |
2163 | <entry>tzcode</entry> | 2162 | <entry>0.6.11</entry> |
2164 | <entry>2017b</entry> | 2163 | |
2165 | <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump tzselect.</entry> | 2164 | <entry>Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) parsing and manipulation |
2166 | <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2165 | toolkit.</entry> |
2167 | </row> | 2166 | |
2168 | <row> | 2167 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2169 | <entry>tzdata</entry> | 2168 | </row> |
2170 | <entry>2017b</entry> | 2169 | |
2171 | <entry>Timezone data.</entry> | 2170 | <row> |
2172 | <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2171 | <entry>libdaemon</entry> |
2173 | </row> | 2172 | |
2174 | <row> | 2173 | <entry>0.14</entry> |
2175 | <entry>unifdef</entry> | 2174 | |
2176 | <entry>2.11</entry> | 2175 | <entry>Lightweight C library which eases the writing of UNIX |
2177 | <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry> | 2176 | daemons.</entry> |
2178 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 2177 | |
2179 | </row> | 2178 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2180 | <row> | 2179 | </row> |
2181 | <entry>unzip</entry> | 2180 | |
2182 | <entry>6.0</entry> | 2181 | <row> |
2183 | <entry>Utilities for extracting and viewing files in .zip archives.</entry> | 2182 | <entry>libdevmapper</entry> |
2184 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2183 | |
2185 | </row> | 2184 | <entry>2.02.166</entry> |
2186 | <row> | 2185 | |
2187 | <entry>update-rc.d</entry> | 2186 | <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in |
2188 | <entry>0.7</entry> | 2187 | Linux.</entry> |
2189 | <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory structure.</entry> | 2188 | |
2190 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2189 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
2191 | </row> | 2190 | </row> |
2192 | <row> | 2191 | |
2193 | <entry>util-linux</entry> | 2192 | <row> |
2194 | <entry>2.29.1</entry> | 2193 | <entry>libecj-bootstrap</entry> |
2195 | <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message management filesystem creation and system login.</entry> | 2194 | |
2196 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry> | 2195 | <entry>3.6.2</entry> |
2197 | </row> | 2196 | |
2198 | <row> | 2197 | <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Jar only</entry> |
2199 | <entry>util-macros</entry> | 2198 | |
2200 | <entry>1.19.1</entry> | 2199 | <entry>EPL-1.0</entry> |
2201 | <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry> | 2200 | </row> |
2202 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2201 | |
2203 | </row> | 2202 | <row> |
2204 | <row> | 2203 | <entry>liberation-fonts</entry> |
2205 | <entry>vala</entry> | 2204 | |
2206 | <entry>0.34.4</entry> | 2205 | <entry>1.04</entry> |
2207 | <entry>Vala is a C#-like language dedicated to ease GObject programming. Vala compiles to plain C and has no runtime environment nor penalities whatsoever.</entry> | 2206 | |
2208 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2207 | <entry>The Liberation(tm) Fonts is a font family originally |
2209 | </row> | 2208 | created by Ascender(c) which aims at metric compatibility with |
2210 | <row> | 2209 | Arial Times New Roman Courier New.</entry> |
2211 | <entry>volatile-binds</entry> | 2210 | |
2212 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2211 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2213 | <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for read-only-rootfs</entry> | 2212 | </row> |
2214 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2213 | |
2215 | </row> | 2214 | <row> |
2216 | <row> | 2215 | <entry>libevent</entry> |
2217 | <entry>xalan-j</entry> | 2216 | |
2218 | <entry>2.7.1</entry> | 2217 | <entry>2.0.22</entry> |
2219 | <entry>Java XSLT processor</entry> | 2218 | |
2220 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2219 | <entry>An asynchronous event notification library.</entry> |
2221 | </row> | 2220 | |
2222 | <row> | 2221 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
2223 | <entry>xcb-proto</entry> | 2222 | </row> |
2224 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 2223 | |
2225 | <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading support and extensibility.</entry> | 2224 | <row> |
2226 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2225 | <entry>libffi</entry> |
2227 | </row> | 2226 | |
2228 | <row> | 2227 | <entry>3.2.1</entry> |
2229 | <entry>xerces-j</entry> | 2228 | |
2230 | <entry>2.11.0</entry> | 2229 | <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level |
2231 | <entry>Reference implementation of XNI the Xerces Native Interface and also a fully conforming XML Schema processor.</entry> | 2230 | programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows |
2232 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2231 | a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface |
2233 | </row> | 2232 | description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function |
2234 | <row> | 2233 | Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for |
2235 | <entry>xextproto</entry> | 2234 | the interface that allows code written in one language to call |
2236 | <entry>7.3.0</entry> | 2235 | code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only |
2237 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also available.</entry> | 2236 | provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured |
2238 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2237 | foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that |
2239 | </row> | 2238 | handles type conversions for values passed between the two |
2240 | <row> | 2239 | languages.</entry> |
2241 | <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry> | 2240 | |
2242 | <entry>2.20</entry> | 2241 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2243 | <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window. The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based systems.</entry> | 2242 | </row> |
2244 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2243 | |
2245 | </row> | 2244 | <row> |
2246 | <row> | 2245 | <entry>libgcc</entry> |
2247 | <entry>xml-commons-resolver1.1</entry> | 2246 | |
2248 | <entry>1.2</entry> | 2247 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
2249 | <entry>Library to resolve various public or system identifiers into accessible URLs (Java)</entry> | 2248 | |
2250 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2249 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
2251 | </row> | 2250 | |
2252 | <row> | 2251 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
2253 | <entry>xmlto</entry> | 2252 | </row> |
2254 | <entry>0.0.28</entry> | 2253 | |
2255 | <entry>A shell-script tool for converting XML files to various formats.</entry> | 2254 | <row> |
2256 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2255 | <entry>libgudev</entry> |
2257 | </row> | 2256 | |
2258 | <row> | 2257 | <entry>231</entry> |
2259 | <entry>xproto</entry> | 2258 | |
2260 | <entry>7.0.31</entry> | 2259 | <entry>GObject wrapper for libudev.</entry> |
2261 | <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window System.</entry> | 2260 | |
2262 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2261 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2263 | </row> | 2262 | </row> |
2264 | <row> | 2263 | |
2265 | <entry>xtrans</entry> | 2264 | <row> |
2266 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | 2265 | <entry>libice</entry> |
2267 | <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system and transport specific code into a single place. This API should be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of transports and support for new platforms without making any changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface code.</entry> | 2266 | |
2268 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2267 | <entry>1.0.9</entry> |
2269 | </row> | 2268 | |
2270 | <row> | 2269 | <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic |
2271 | <entry>xz</entry> | 2270 | framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream |
2272 | <entry>5.2.3</entry> | 2271 | transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up |
2273 | <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry> | 2272 | and shutting down connections for performing authentication for |
2274 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry> | 2273 | negotiating versions and for reporting errors.</entry> |
2275 | </row> | 2274 | |
2276 | <row> | 2275 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2277 | <entry>yajl</entry> | 2276 | </row> |
2278 | <entry>2.1.0</entry> | 2277 | |
2279 | <entry>YAJL is a small event-driven (SAX-style) JSON parser written in ANSI C and a small validating JSON generator.</entry> | 2278 | <row> |
2280 | <entry>ISC</entry> | 2279 | <entry>libidn</entry> |
2281 | </row> | 2280 | |
2282 | <row> | 2281 | <entry>1.33</entry> |
2283 | <entry>zip</entry> | 2282 | |
2284 | <entry>3.0</entry> | 2283 | <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA |
2285 | <entry>Compressor/archiver for creating and modifying .zip files.</entry> | 2284 | specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names |
2286 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2285 | (IDN) working group.</entry> |
2287 | </row> | 2286 | |
2288 | <row> | 2287 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
2289 | <entry>zisofs-tools</entry> | 2288 | </row> |
2290 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | 2289 | |
2291 | <entry>Utilities for creating compressed CD-ROM filesystems.</entry> | 2290 | <row> |
2292 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2291 | <entry>libjpeg-turbo</entry> |
2293 | </row> | 2292 | |
2294 | <row> | 2293 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> |
2295 | <entry>zlib</entry> | 2294 | |
2296 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> | 2295 | <entry>libjpeg-turbo is a derivative of libjpeg that uses SIMD |
2297 | <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data compression library which is used by many different programs.</entry> | 2296 | instructions (MMX SSE2 NEON) to accelerate baseline JPEG |
2298 | <entry>Zlib</entry> | 2297 | compression and decompression</entry> |
2299 | </row> | 2298 | |
2300 | </tbody> | 2299 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
2301 | </tgroup> | 2300 | </row> |
2302 | </informaltable> | 2301 | |
2303 | </section> | 2302 | <row> |
2304 | <section id="open_source_license"> | 2303 | <entry>libmpc</entry> |
2305 | <title>Open Source Licenses</title> | 2304 | |
2306 | <section id="lic_0"> | 2305 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> |
2307 | <title>AFL-2.0</title> | 2306 | |
2308 | <para><programlisting> | 2307 | <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers |
2308 | with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the | ||
2309 | result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as | ||
2310 | Mpfr</entry> | ||
2311 | |||
2312 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | ||
2313 | </row> | ||
2314 | |||
2315 | <row> | ||
2316 | <entry>libndp</entry> | ||
2317 | |||
2318 | <entry>1.6</entry> | ||
2319 | |||
2320 | <entry>Library for IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol.</entry> | ||
2321 | |||
2322 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2323 | </row> | ||
2324 | |||
2325 | <row> | ||
2326 | <entry>libnewt</entry> | ||
2327 | |||
2328 | <entry>0.52.19</entry> | ||
2329 | |||
2330 | <entry>Newt is a programming library for color text mode widget | ||
2331 | based user interfaces. Newt can be used to add stacked windows | ||
2332 | entry widgets checkboxes radio buttons labels plain text fields | ||
2333 | scrollbars etc. to text mode user interfaces. This package also | ||
2334 | contains the shared library needed by programs built with newt as | ||
2335 | well as a /usr/bin/dialog replacement called whiptail. Newt is | ||
2336 | based on the slang library.</entry> | ||
2337 | |||
2338 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2339 | </row> | ||
2340 | |||
2341 | <row> | ||
2342 | <entry>libnl</entry> | ||
2343 | |||
2344 | <entry>3.2.29</entry> | ||
2345 | |||
2346 | <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink | ||
2347 | sockets.</entry> | ||
2348 | |||
2349 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2350 | </row> | ||
2351 | |||
2352 | <row> | ||
2353 | <entry>libnss-mdns</entry> | ||
2354 | |||
2355 | <entry>0.10</entry> | ||
2356 | |||
2357 | <entry>Name Service Switch module for Multicast DNS (zeroconf) | ||
2358 | name resolution.</entry> | ||
2359 | |||
2360 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2361 | </row> | ||
2362 | |||
2363 | <row> | ||
2364 | <entry>libpcap</entry> | ||
2365 | |||
2366 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> | ||
2367 | |||
2368 | <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network | ||
2369 | monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection | ||
2370 | security monitoring and network debugging.</entry> | ||
2371 | |||
2372 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
2373 | </row> | ||
2374 | |||
2375 | <row> | ||
2376 | <entry>libpciaccess</entry> | ||
2377 | |||
2378 | <entry>0.13.4</entry> | ||
2379 | |||
2380 | <entry>libpciaccess provides functionality for X to access the PCI | ||
2381 | bus and devices in a platform-independent way.</entry> | ||
2382 | |||
2383 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2384 | </row> | ||
2385 | |||
2386 | <row> | ||
2387 | <entry>libpcre</entry> | ||
2388 | |||
2389 | <entry>8.40</entry> | ||
2390 | |||
2391 | <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement | ||
2392 | regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and | ||
2393 | semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set | ||
2394 | of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular | ||
2395 | expression API.</entry> | ||
2396 | |||
2397 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
2398 | </row> | ||
2399 | |||
2400 | <row> | ||
2401 | <entry>libpng</entry> | ||
2402 | |||
2403 | <entry>1.6.28</entry> | ||
2404 | |||
2405 | <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry> | ||
2406 | |||
2407 | <entry>Libpng</entry> | ||
2408 | </row> | ||
2409 | |||
2410 | <row> | ||
2411 | <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry> | ||
2412 | |||
2413 | <entry>0.3</entry> | ||
2414 | |||
2415 | <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions | ||
2416 | not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry> | ||
2417 | |||
2418 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2419 | </row> | ||
2420 | |||
2421 | <row> | ||
2422 | <entry>librsvg</entry> | ||
2423 | |||
2424 | <entry>2.40.16</entry> | ||
2425 | |||
2426 | <entry>Library for rendering SVG files.</entry> | ||
2427 | |||
2428 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2429 | </row> | ||
2430 | |||
2431 | <row> | ||
2432 | <entry>libsdl</entry> | ||
2433 | |||
2434 | <entry>1.2.15</entry> | ||
2435 | |||
2436 | <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia | ||
2437 | library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard | ||
2438 | mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video | ||
2439 | framebuffer.</entry> | ||
2440 | |||
2441 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2442 | </row> | ||
2443 | |||
2444 | <row> | ||
2445 | <entry>libsm</entry> | ||
2446 | |||
2447 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | ||
2448 | |||
2449 | <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level | ||
2450 | \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session | ||
2451 | Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for | ||
2452 | users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of | ||
2453 | clients each of which has a particular state."</entry> | ||
2454 | |||
2455 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2456 | </row> | ||
2457 | |||
2458 | <row> | ||
2459 | <entry>libtasn1</entry> | ||
2460 | |||
2461 | <entry>4.10</entry> | ||
2462 | |||
2463 | <entry>Library for ASN.1 and DER manipulation.</entry> | ||
2464 | |||
2465 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2466 | </row> | ||
2467 | |||
2468 | <row> | ||
2469 | <entry>libtool</entry> | ||
2470 | |||
2471 | <entry>2.4.6</entry> | ||
2472 | |||
2473 | <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script. | ||
2474 | Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types | ||
2475 | (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry> | ||
2476 | |||
2477 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2478 | </row> | ||
2479 | |||
2480 | <row> | ||
2481 | <entry>libunistring</entry> | ||
2482 | |||
2483 | <entry>0.9.7</entry> | ||
2484 | |||
2485 | <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may | ||
2486 | consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese | ||
2487 | Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left | ||
2488 | writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX | ||
2489 | platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for | ||
2490 | dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In | ||
2491 | fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their | ||
2492 | base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides | ||
2493 | functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C | ||
2494 | strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains | ||
2495 | documentation.</entry> | ||
2496 | |||
2497 | <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2498 | </row> | ||
2499 | |||
2500 | <row> | ||
2501 | <entry>liburcu</entry> | ||
2502 | |||
2503 | <entry>0.9.3</entry> | ||
2504 | |||
2505 | <entry>Userspace RCU (read-copy-update) library.</entry> | ||
2506 | |||
2507 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, MIT</entry> | ||
2508 | </row> | ||
2509 | |||
2510 | <row> | ||
2511 | <entry>libusb-compat</entry> | ||
2512 | |||
2513 | <entry>0.1.5</entry> | ||
2514 | |||
2515 | <entry>libusb-0.1 compatible layer for libusb1 a drop-in | ||
2516 | replacement that aims to look feel and behave exactly like | ||
2517 | libusb-0.1</entry> | ||
2518 | |||
2519 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2520 | </row> | ||
2521 | |||
2522 | <row> | ||
2523 | <entry>libusb1</entry> | ||
2524 | |||
2525 | <entry>1.0.21</entry> | ||
2526 | |||
2527 | <entry>Userspace library to access USB (version 1.0).</entry> | ||
2528 | |||
2529 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2530 | </row> | ||
2531 | |||
2532 | <row> | ||
2533 | <entry>libvirt</entry> | ||
2534 | |||
2535 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | ||
2536 | |||
2537 | <entry>A toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities | ||
2538 | of recent versions of Linux.</entry> | ||
2539 | |||
2540 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2541 | </row> | ||
2542 | |||
2543 | <row> | ||
2544 | <entry>libx11</entry> | ||
2545 | |||
2546 | <entry>1.6.4</entry> | ||
2547 | |||
2548 | <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window | ||
2549 | System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for | ||
2550 | the basic functions of the window system.</entry> | ||
2551 | |||
2552 | <entry>MIT, BSD</entry> | ||
2553 | </row> | ||
2554 | |||
2555 | <row> | ||
2556 | <entry>libxau</entry> | ||
2557 | |||
2558 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | ||
2559 | |||
2560 | <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 | ||
2561 | authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X | ||
2562 | connections both client-side and server-side.</entry> | ||
2563 | |||
2564 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2565 | </row> | ||
2566 | |||
2567 | <row> | ||
2568 | <entry>libxcb</entry> | ||
2569 | |||
2570 | <entry>1.12</entry> | ||
2571 | |||
2572 | <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement | ||
2573 | for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access | ||
2574 | to the protocol improved threading support and | ||
2575 | extensibility.</entry> | ||
2576 | |||
2577 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2578 | </row> | ||
2579 | |||
2580 | <row> | ||
2581 | <entry>libxcomposite</entry> | ||
2582 | |||
2583 | <entry>0.4.4</entry> | ||
2584 | |||
2585 | <entry>The composite extension provides three related mechanisms: | ||
2586 | per-hierarchy storage automatic shadow update and external parent. | ||
2587 | In per-hierarchy storage the rendering of an entire hierarchy of | ||
2588 | windows is redirected to off-screen storage. In automatic shadow | ||
2589 | update when a hierarchy is rendered off-screen the X server | ||
2590 | provides an automatic mechanism for presenting those contents | ||
2591 | within the parent window. In external parent a mechanism for | ||
2592 | providing redirection of compositing transformations through a | ||
2593 | client.</entry> | ||
2594 | |||
2595 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2596 | </row> | ||
2597 | |||
2598 | <row> | ||
2599 | <entry>libxcursor</entry> | ||
2600 | |||
2601 | <entry>1.1.14</entry> | ||
2602 | |||
2603 | <entry>Xcursor is a simple library designed to help locate and | ||
2604 | load cursors. Cursors can be loaded from files or memory. A | ||
2605 | library of common cursors exists which map to the standard X | ||
2606 | cursor names. Cursors can exist in several sizes and the library | ||
2607 | automatically picks the best size.</entry> | ||
2608 | |||
2609 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2610 | </row> | ||
2611 | |||
2612 | <row> | ||
2613 | <entry>libxdamage</entry> | ||
2614 | |||
2615 | <entry>1.1.4</entry> | ||
2616 | |||
2617 | <entry>'Damage' is a term that describes changes make to pixel | ||
2618 | contents of windows and pixmaps. Damage accumulates as drawing | ||
2619 | occurs in the drawable. Each drawing operation 'damages' one or | ||
2620 | more rectangular areas within the drawable. The rectangles are | ||
2621 | guaranteed to include the set of pixels modified by each operation | ||
2622 | but may include significantly more than just those pixels. The | ||
2623 | DAMAGE extension allows applications to either receive the raw | ||
2624 | rectangles as a stream of events or to have them partially | ||
2625 | processed within the X server to reduce the amount of data | ||
2626 | transmitted as well as reduce the processing latency once the | ||
2627 | repaint operation has started.</entry> | ||
2628 | |||
2629 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2630 | </row> | ||
2631 | |||
2632 | <row> | ||
2633 | <entry>libxdmcp</entry> | ||
2634 | |||
2635 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> | ||
2636 | |||
2637 | <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol | ||
2638 | (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous | ||
2639 | display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal | ||
2640 | (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime | ||
2641 | example of an autonomous display.</entry> | ||
2642 | |||
2643 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2644 | </row> | ||
2645 | |||
2646 | <row> | ||
2647 | <entry>libxext</entry> | ||
2648 | |||
2649 | <entry>1.3.3</entry> | ||
2650 | |||
2651 | <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to | ||
2652 | several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol | ||
2653 | extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX | ||
2654 | MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC | ||
2655 | TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small | ||
2656 | set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X | ||
2657 | protocol extensions.</entry> | ||
2658 | |||
2659 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2660 | </row> | ||
2661 | |||
2662 | <row> | ||
2663 | <entry>libxfixes</entry> | ||
2664 | |||
2665 | <entry>5.0.3</entry> | ||
2666 | |||
2667 | <entry>X applications have often needed to work around various | ||
2668 | shortcomings in the core X window system. This extension is | ||
2669 | designed to provide the minimal server-side support necessary to | ||
2670 | eliminate problems caused by these workarounds.</entry> | ||
2671 | |||
2672 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2673 | </row> | ||
2674 | |||
2675 | <row> | ||
2676 | <entry>libxft</entry> | ||
2677 | |||
2678 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> | ||
2679 | |||
2680 | <entry>Xft was designed to provide good support for scalable fonts | ||
2681 | and to do so efficiently. Unlike the core fonts system it supports | ||
2682 | features such as anti-aliasing and sub-pixel rasterisation. | ||
2683 | Perhaps more importantly it gives applications full control over | ||
2684 | the way glyphs are rendered making fine typesetting and WYSIWIG | ||
2685 | display possible. Finally it allows applications to use fonts that | ||
2686 | are not installed system-wide for displaying documents with | ||
2687 | embedded fonts. Xft is not compatible with the core fonts system: | ||
2688 | usage of Xft requires fairly extensive changes to toolkits | ||
2689 | (user-interface libraries).</entry> | ||
2690 | |||
2691 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2692 | </row> | ||
2693 | |||
2694 | <row> | ||
2695 | <entry>libxi</entry> | ||
2696 | |||
2697 | <entry>1.7.9</entry> | ||
2698 | |||
2699 | <entry>libxi is an extension to the X11 protocol to support input | ||
2700 | devices other than the core X keyboard and pointer. It allows | ||
2701 | client programs to select input from these devices independently | ||
2702 | from each other and independently from the core devices.</entry> | ||
2703 | |||
2704 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2705 | </row> | ||
2706 | |||
2707 | <row> | ||
2708 | <entry>libxkbcommon</entry> | ||
2709 | |||
2710 | <entry>0.7.1</entry> | ||
2711 | |||
2712 | <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which | ||
2713 | processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB | ||
2714 | specification.</entry> | ||
2715 | |||
2716 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2717 | </row> | ||
2718 | |||
2719 | <row> | ||
2720 | <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry> | ||
2721 | |||
2722 | <entry>2.44</entry> | ||
2723 | |||
2724 | <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML | ||
2725 | documents.</entry> | ||
2726 | |||
2727 | <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | ||
2728 | </row> | ||
2729 | |||
2730 | <row> | ||
2731 | <entry>libxml2</entry> | ||
2732 | |||
2733 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | ||
2734 | |||
2735 | <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML | ||
2736 | files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for | ||
2737 | both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a | ||
2738 | parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2 | ||
2739 | includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It | ||
2740 | also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible | ||
2741 | with Expat.</entry> | ||
2742 | |||
2743 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2744 | </row> | ||
2745 | |||
2746 | <row> | ||
2747 | <entry>libxrandr</entry> | ||
2748 | |||
2749 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | ||
2750 | |||
2751 | <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for | ||
2752 | short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root | ||
2753 | window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate | ||
2754 | Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix | ||
2755 | Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry> | ||
2756 | |||
2757 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2758 | </row> | ||
2759 | |||
2760 | <row> | ||
2761 | <entry>libxrender</entry> | ||
2762 | |||
2763 | <entry>0.9.10</entry> | ||
2764 | |||
2765 | <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image | ||
2766 | composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the | ||
2767 | X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by | ||
2768 | client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text | ||
2769 | is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of | ||
2770 | them.</entry> | ||
2771 | |||
2772 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2773 | </row> | ||
2774 | |||
2775 | <row> | ||
2776 | <entry>libxslt</entry> | ||
2777 | |||
2778 | <entry>1.1.29</entry> | ||
2779 | |||
2780 | <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry> | ||
2781 | |||
2782 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2783 | </row> | ||
2784 | |||
2785 | <row> | ||
2786 | <entry>libxt</entry> | ||
2787 | |||
2788 | <entry>1.1.5</entry> | ||
2789 | |||
2790 | <entry>The Intrinsics are a programming library tailored to the | ||
2791 | special requirements of user interface construction within a | ||
2792 | network window system specifically the X Window System. The | ||
2793 | Intrinsics and a widget set make up an X Toolkit. The Intrinsics | ||
2794 | provide the base mechanism necessary to build a wide variety of | ||
2795 | interoperating widget sets and application environments. The | ||
2796 | Intrinsics are a layer on top of Xlib the C Library X Interface. | ||
2797 | They extend the fundamental abstractions provided by the X Window | ||
2798 | System while still remaining independent of any particular user | ||
2799 | interface policy or style.</entry> | ||
2800 | |||
2801 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2802 | </row> | ||
2803 | |||
2804 | <row> | ||
2805 | <entry>libxtst</entry> | ||
2806 | |||
2807 | <entry>1.2.3</entry> | ||
2808 | |||
2809 | <entry>This extension is a minimal set of client and server | ||
2810 | extensions required to completely test the X11 server with no user | ||
2811 | intervention.</entry> | ||
2812 | |||
2813 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2814 | </row> | ||
2815 | |||
2816 | <row> | ||
2817 | <entry>linux-intel-dev</entry> | ||
2818 | |||
2819 | <entry>4.9.47</entry> | ||
2820 | |||
2821 | <entry>Linux kernel.</entry> | ||
2822 | |||
2823 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2824 | </row> | ||
2825 | |||
2826 | <row> | ||
2827 | <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry> | ||
2828 | |||
2829 | <entry>4.10</entry> | ||
2830 | |||
2831 | <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's | ||
2832 | use.</entry> | ||
2833 | |||
2834 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2835 | </row> | ||
2836 | |||
2837 | <row> | ||
2838 | <entry>log4j1.2</entry> | ||
2839 | |||
2840 | <entry>1.2.17</entry> | ||
2841 | |||
2842 | <entry>Java library to help the programmer output log statements | ||
2843 | to a variety of output targets</entry> | ||
2844 | |||
2845 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
2846 | </row> | ||
2847 | |||
2848 | <row> | ||
2849 | <entry>logkit</entry> | ||
2850 | |||
2851 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | ||
2852 | |||
2853 | <entry>Logging toolkit designed for secure performance orientated | ||
2854 | logging in Java applications</entry> | ||
2855 | |||
2856 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
2857 | </row> | ||
2858 | |||
2859 | <row> | ||
2860 | <entry>lsb</entry> | ||
2861 | |||
2862 | <entry>4.1</entry> | ||
2863 | |||
2864 | <entry>LSB support for OpenEmbedded.</entry> | ||
2865 | |||
2866 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2867 | </row> | ||
2868 | |||
2869 | <row> | ||
2870 | <entry>lsbinitscripts</entry> | ||
2871 | |||
2872 | <entry>9.68</entry> | ||
2873 | |||
2874 | <entry>SysV init scripts which are only used in an LSB | ||
2875 | image.</entry> | ||
2876 | |||
2877 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2878 | </row> | ||
2879 | |||
2880 | <row> | ||
2881 | <entry>lttng-modules</entry> | ||
2882 | |||
2883 | <entry>2.9.1</entry> | ||
2884 | |||
2885 | <entry>The lttng-modules 2.0 package contains the kernel tracer | ||
2886 | modules</entry> | ||
2887 | |||
2888 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0, MIT</entry> | ||
2889 | </row> | ||
2890 | |||
2891 | <row> | ||
2892 | <entry>lttng-tools</entry> | ||
2893 | |||
2894 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | ||
2895 | |||
2896 | <entry>The Linux trace toolkit is a suite of tools designed to | ||
2897 | extract program execution details from the Linux operating system | ||
2898 | and interpret them.</entry> | ||
2899 | |||
2900 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2901 | </row> | ||
2902 | |||
2903 | <row> | ||
2904 | <entry>lttng-ust</entry> | ||
2905 | |||
2906 | <entry>2.9.0</entry> | ||
2907 | |||
2908 | <entry>The LTTng UST 2.x package contains the userspace tracer | ||
2909 | library to trace userspace codes.</entry> | ||
2910 | |||
2911 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2912 | </row> | ||
2913 | |||
2914 | <row> | ||
2915 | <entry>lvm2</entry> | ||
2916 | |||
2917 | <entry>2.02.166</entry> | ||
2918 | |||
2919 | <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in | ||
2920 | Linux.</entry> | ||
2921 | |||
2922 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2923 | </row> | ||
2924 | |||
2925 | <row> | ||
2926 | <entry>lxc</entry> | ||
2927 | |||
2928 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> | ||
2929 | |||
2930 | <entry>lxc aims to use these new functionnalities to provide an | ||
2931 | userspace container object</entry> | ||
2932 | |||
2933 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2934 | </row> | ||
2935 | |||
2936 | <row> | ||
2937 | <entry>lxd</entry> | ||
2938 | |||
2939 | <entry>git</entry> | ||
2940 | |||
2941 | <entry>"LXD is a container ""hypervisor"" and a new user | ||
2942 | experience for LXC Specifically it's made of three components: - A | ||
2943 | system-wide daemon (lxd) - A command line client (lxc) - An | ||
2944 | OpenStack Nova plugin (nova-compute-lxd)"</entry> | ||
2945 | |||
2946 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
2947 | </row> | ||
2948 | |||
2949 | <row> | ||
2950 | <entry>lz4</entry> | ||
2951 | |||
2952 | <entry>131</entry> | ||
2953 | |||
2954 | <entry>LZ4 is a very fast lossless compression algorithm providing | ||
2955 | compression speed at 400 MB/s per core scalable with multi-cores | ||
2956 | CPU. It also features an extremely fast decoder with speed in | ||
2957 | multiple GB/s per core typically reaching RAM speed limits on | ||
2958 | multi-core systems.</entry> | ||
2959 | |||
2960 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
2961 | </row> | ||
2962 | |||
2963 | <row> | ||
2964 | <entry>lzo</entry> | ||
2965 | |||
2966 | <entry>2.09</entry> | ||
2967 | |||
2968 | <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry> | ||
2969 | |||
2970 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2971 | </row> | ||
2972 | |||
2973 | <row> | ||
2974 | <entry>lzop</entry> | ||
2975 | |||
2976 | <entry>1.03</entry> | ||
2977 | |||
2978 | <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a | ||
2979 | companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression | ||
2980 | library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher | ||
2981 | compression and decompression speed at the cost of some | ||
2982 | \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed | ||
2983 | with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with | ||
2984 | reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry> | ||
2985 | |||
2986 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2987 | </row> | ||
2988 | |||
2989 | <row> | ||
2990 | <entry>m4</entry> | ||
2991 | |||
2992 | <entry>1.4.18</entry> | ||
2993 | |||
2994 | <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro | ||
2995 | processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some | ||
2996 | extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters | ||
2997 | to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files | ||
2998 | running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry> | ||
2999 | |||
3000 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3001 | </row> | ||
3002 | |||
3003 | <row> | ||
3004 | <entry>make</entry> | ||
3005 | |||
3006 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
3007 | |||
3008 | <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables | ||
3009 | and other non-source files of a program from the program's source | ||
3010 | files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a | ||
3011 | file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files | ||
3012 | and how to compute it from other files.</entry> | ||
3013 | |||
3014 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3015 | </row> | ||
3016 | |||
3017 | <row> | ||
3018 | <entry>makedepend</entry> | ||
3019 | |||
3020 | <entry>1.0.5</entry> | ||
3021 | |||
3022 | <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence | ||
3023 | and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include | ||
3024 | #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else | ||
3025 | directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives | ||
3026 | would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can | ||
3027 | reference files having other #include directives and parsing will | ||
3028 | occur in these files as well.</entry> | ||
3029 | |||
3030 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3031 | </row> | ||
3032 | |||
3033 | <row> | ||
3034 | <entry>makedevs</entry> | ||
3035 | |||
3036 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> | ||
3037 | |||
3038 | <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry> | ||
3039 | |||
3040 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3041 | </row> | ||
3042 | |||
3043 | <row> | ||
3044 | <entry>man</entry> | ||
3045 | |||
3046 | <entry>1.6g</entry> | ||
3047 | |||
3048 | <entry>A set of documentation tools: man apropos and | ||
3049 | whatis</entry> | ||
3050 | |||
3051 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3052 | </row> | ||
3053 | |||
3054 | <row> | ||
3055 | <entry>mklibs</entry> | ||
3056 | |||
3057 | <entry>0.1.43</entry> | ||
3058 | |||
3059 | <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only | ||
3060 | the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry> | ||
3061 | |||
3062 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3063 | </row> | ||
3064 | |||
3065 | <row> | ||
3066 | <entry>mozjs</entry> | ||
3067 | |||
3068 | <entry>17.0.0</entry> | ||
3069 | |||
3070 | <entry>SpiderMonkey is Mozilla's JavaScript engine written in | ||
3071 | C/C++.</entry> | ||
3072 | |||
3073 | <entry>MPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3074 | </row> | ||
3075 | |||
3076 | <row> | ||
3077 | <entry>mpfr</entry> | ||
3078 | |||
3079 | <entry>3.1.5</entry> | ||
3080 | |||
3081 | <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point | ||
3082 | computations with exact rounding.</entry> | ||
3083 | |||
3084 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3085 | </row> | ||
3086 | |||
3087 | <row> | ||
3088 | <entry>mtools</entry> | ||
3089 | |||
3090 | <entry>4.0.18</entry> | ||
3091 | |||
3092 | <entry>Mtools is a collection of utilities to access MS-DOS disks | ||
3093 | from GNU and Unix without mounting them.</entry> | ||
3094 | |||
3095 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3096 | </row> | ||
3097 | |||
3098 | <row> | ||
3099 | <entry>nasm</entry> | ||
3100 | |||
3101 | <entry>2.12.02</entry> | ||
3102 | |||
3103 | <entry>General-purpose x86 assembler.</entry> | ||
3104 | |||
3105 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | ||
3106 | </row> | ||
3107 | |||
3108 | <row> | ||
3109 | <entry>ncurses</entry> | ||
3110 | |||
3111 | <entry>6.0</entry> | ||
3112 | |||
3113 | <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo | ||
3114 | tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple | ||
3115 | highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of | ||
3116 | keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable | ||
3117 | windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using | ||
3118 | the gpm library.</entry> | ||
3119 | |||
3120 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3121 | </row> | ||
3122 | |||
3123 | <row> | ||
3124 | <entry>net-snmp</entry> | ||
3125 | |||
3126 | <entry>5.7.3</entry> | ||
3127 | |||
3128 | <entry>Various tools relating to the Simple Network Management | ||
3129 | Protocol.</entry> | ||
3130 | |||
3131 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3132 | </row> | ||
3133 | |||
3134 | <row> | ||
3135 | <entry>netbase</entry> | ||
3136 | |||
3137 | <entry>5.4</entry> | ||
3138 | |||
3139 | <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for | ||
3140 | basic TCP/IP based networking</entry> | ||
3141 | |||
3142 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3143 | </row> | ||
3144 | |||
3145 | <row> | ||
3146 | <entry>netcat-openbsd</entry> | ||
3147 | |||
3148 | <entry>1.105</entry> | ||
3149 | |||
3150 | <entry>A simple Unix utility which reads and writes data across | ||
3151 | network connections using TCP or UDP protocol. It is designed to | ||
3152 | be a reliable 'back-end' tool that can be used directly or easily | ||
3153 | driven by other programs and scripts. At the same time it is a | ||
3154 | feature-rich network debugging and exploration tool since it can | ||
3155 | create almost any kind of connection you would need and has | ||
3156 | several interesting built-in capabilities.</entry> | ||
3157 | |||
3158 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
3159 | </row> | ||
3160 | |||
3161 | <row> | ||
3162 | <entry>nettle</entry> | ||
3163 | |||
3164 | <entry>3.3</entry> | ||
3165 | |||
3166 | <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry> | ||
3167 | |||
3168 | <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3169 | </row> | ||
3170 | |||
3171 | <row> | ||
3172 | <entry>networkmanager</entry> | ||
3173 | |||
3174 | <entry>1.4.4</entry> | ||
3175 | |||
3176 | <entry>NetworkManager.</entry> | ||
3177 | |||
3178 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3179 | </row> | ||
3180 | |||
3181 | <row> | ||
3182 | <entry>notary</entry> | ||
3183 | |||
3184 | <entry>0.4.2</entry> | ||
3185 | |||
3186 | <entry>Notary is a Docker project that allows anyone to have trust | ||
3187 | over arbitrary collections of data</entry> | ||
3188 | |||
3189 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3190 | </row> | ||
3191 | |||
3192 | <row> | ||
3193 | <entry>nspr</entry> | ||
3194 | |||
3195 | <entry>4.13.1</entry> | ||
3196 | |||
3197 | <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry> | ||
3198 | |||
3199 | <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
3200 | </row> | ||
3201 | |||
3202 | <row> | ||
3203 | <entry>nss</entry> | ||
3204 | |||
3205 | <entry>3.28.1</entry> | ||
3206 | |||
3207 | <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries | ||
3208 | designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled | ||
3209 | client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can | ||
3210 | support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME | ||
3211 | X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry> | ||
3212 | |||
3213 | <entry>MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
3214 | </row> | ||
3215 | |||
3216 | <row> | ||
3217 | <entry>ntp</entry> | ||
3218 | |||
3219 | <entry>4.2.8p10</entry> | ||
3220 | |||
3221 | <entry>The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is used to synchronize the | ||
3222 | time of a computer client or server to another server or reference | ||
3223 | time source such as a radio or satellite receiver or | ||
3224 | modem.</entry> | ||
3225 | |||
3226 | <entry>NTP</entry> | ||
3227 | </row> | ||
3228 | |||
3229 | <row> | ||
3230 | <entry>numactl</entry> | ||
3231 | |||
3232 | <entry>2.0.11</entry> | ||
3233 | |||
3234 | <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl | ||
3235 | program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a | ||
3236 | libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in | ||
3237 | applications.</entry> | ||
3238 | |||
3239 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
3240 | </row> | ||
3241 | |||
3242 | <row> | ||
3243 | <entry>openjdk-8</entry> | ||
3244 | |||
3245 | <entry>102b14</entry> | ||
3246 | |||
3247 | <entry>Java runtime based upon the OpenJDK Project</entry> | ||
3248 | |||
3249 | <entry></entry> | ||
3250 | </row> | ||
3251 | |||
3252 | <row> | ||
3253 | <entry>openjre-8</entry> | ||
3254 | |||
3255 | <entry>102b14</entry> | ||
3256 | |||
3257 | <entry>Java runtime based upon the OpenJDK Project</entry> | ||
3258 | |||
3259 | <entry></entry> | ||
3260 | </row> | ||
3261 | |||
3262 | <row> | ||
3263 | <entry>openssh</entry> | ||
3264 | |||
3265 | <entry>7.4p1</entry> | ||
3266 | |||
3267 | <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh | ||
3268 | (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and | ||
3269 | for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry> | ||
3270 | |||
3271 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3272 | </row> | ||
3273 | |||
3274 | <row> | ||
3275 | <entry>openssl</entry> | ||
3276 | |||
3277 | <entry>1.0.2k</entry> | ||
3278 | |||
3279 | <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic | ||
3280 | tools.</entry> | ||
3281 | |||
3282 | <entry>OpenSSL</entry> | ||
3283 | </row> | ||
3284 | |||
3285 | <row> | ||
3286 | <entry>openvswitch</entry> | ||
3287 | |||
3288 | <entry>2.8.1</entry> | ||
3289 | |||
3290 | <entry>Open vSwitch is a production quality multilayer virtual | ||
3291 | switch licensed under the open source Apache 2.0 license. It is | ||
3292 | designed to enable massive network automation through programmatic | ||
3293 | extension while still supporting standard management interfaces | ||
3294 | and protocols (e.g. NetFlow sFlow SPAN RSPAN CLI LACP | ||
3295 | 802.1ag)</entry> | ||
3296 | |||
3297 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3298 | </row> | ||
3299 | |||
3300 | <row> | ||
3301 | <entry>opkg-utils</entry> | ||
3302 | |||
3303 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | ||
3304 | |||
3305 | <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry> | ||
3306 | |||
3307 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3308 | </row> | ||
3309 | |||
3310 | <row> | ||
3311 | <entry>oprofile</entry> | ||
3312 | |||
3313 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | ||
3314 | |||
3315 | <entry>OProfile is a system-wide profiler for Linux systems | ||
3316 | capable of profiling all running code at low overhead.</entry> | ||
3317 | |||
3318 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3319 | </row> | ||
3320 | |||
3321 | <row> | ||
3322 | <entry>oro</entry> | ||
3323 | |||
3324 | <entry>2.0.8</entry> | ||
3325 | |||
3326 | <entry>Perl5-compatible regular expressions library for | ||
3327 | Java</entry> | ||
3328 | |||
3329 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3330 | </row> | ||
3331 | |||
3332 | <row> | ||
3333 | <entry>os-release</entry> | ||
3334 | |||
3335 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3336 | |||
3337 | <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system | ||
3338 | identification data.</entry> | ||
3339 | |||
3340 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3341 | </row> | ||
3342 | |||
3343 | <row> | ||
3344 | <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry> | ||
3345 | |||
3346 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3347 | |||
3348 | <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the | ||
3349 | system</entry> | ||
3350 | |||
3351 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3352 | </row> | ||
3353 | |||
3354 | <row> | ||
3355 | <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry> | ||
3356 | |||
3357 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3358 | |||
3359 | <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry> | ||
3360 | |||
3361 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3362 | </row> | ||
3363 | |||
3364 | <row> | ||
3365 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-docker</entry> | ||
3366 | |||
3367 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3368 | |||
3369 | <entry>Packagegroup for Docker.</entry> | ||
3370 | |||
3371 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3372 | </row> | ||
3373 | |||
3374 | <row> | ||
3375 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry> | ||
3376 | |||
3377 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3378 | |||
3379 | <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry> | ||
3380 | |||
3381 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3382 | </row> | ||
3383 | |||
3384 | <row> | ||
3385 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-element-odm</entry> | ||
3386 | |||
3387 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3388 | |||
3389 | <entry>Packagegroup for Element ODM.</entry> | ||
3390 | |||
3391 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3392 | </row> | ||
3393 | |||
3394 | <row> | ||
3395 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-host</entry> | ||
3396 | |||
3397 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3398 | |||
3399 | <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups | ||
3400 | specific to the host side of the Enea Linux Virtualization | ||
3401 | Profile.</entry> | ||
3402 | |||
3403 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3404 | </row> | ||
3405 | |||
3406 | <row> | ||
3407 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-libvirt</entry> | ||
3408 | |||
3409 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3410 | |||
3411 | <entry>Package group for libvirt.</entry> | ||
3412 | |||
3413 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3414 | </row> | ||
3415 | |||
3416 | <row> | ||
3417 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxc</entry> | ||
3418 | |||
3419 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3420 | |||
3421 | <entry>Packagegroup for LXC.</entry> | ||
3422 | |||
3423 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3424 | </row> | ||
3425 | |||
3426 | <row> | ||
3427 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxd</entry> | ||
3428 | |||
3429 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3430 | |||
3431 | <entry>Packagegroup for LXD.</entry> | ||
3432 | |||
3433 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3434 | </row> | ||
3435 | |||
3436 | <row> | ||
3437 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-ovs</entry> | ||
3438 | |||
3439 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3440 | |||
3441 | <entry>Packagegroup for Open vSwitch.</entry> | ||
3442 | |||
3443 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3444 | </row> | ||
3445 | |||
3446 | <row> | ||
3447 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-qemu</entry> | ||
3448 | |||
3449 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3450 | |||
3451 | <entry>Packagegroup for QEMU.</entry> | ||
3452 | |||
3453 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3454 | </row> | ||
3455 | |||
3456 | <row> | ||
3457 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-tools</entry> | ||
3458 | |||
3459 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3460 | |||
3461 | <entry>Enea Linux debugging tools.</entry> | ||
3462 | |||
3463 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3464 | </row> | ||
3465 | |||
3466 | <row> | ||
3467 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry> | ||
3468 | |||
3469 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3470 | |||
3471 | <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups | ||
3472 | required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux | ||
3473 | Virtualization Profile.</entry> | ||
3474 | |||
3475 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3476 | </row> | ||
3477 | |||
3478 | <row> | ||
3479 | <entry>pango</entry> | ||
3480 | |||
3481 | <entry>1.40.3</entry> | ||
3482 | |||
3483 | <entry>Pango is a library for laying out and rendering of text | ||
3484 | with an emphasis on internationalization. Pango can be used | ||
3485 | anywhere that text layout is needed though most of the work on | ||
3486 | Pango so far has been done in the context of the GTK+ widget | ||
3487 | toolkit. Pango forms the core of text and font handling for | ||
3488 | GTK+-2.x.</entry> | ||
3489 | |||
3490 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3491 | </row> | ||
3492 | |||
3493 | <row> | ||
3494 | <entry>parted</entry> | ||
3495 | |||
3496 | <entry>3.2</entry> | ||
3497 | |||
3498 | <entry>Disk partition editing/resizing utility.</entry> | ||
3499 | |||
3500 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3501 | </row> | ||
3502 | |||
3503 | <row> | ||
3504 | <entry>partrt</entry> | ||
3505 | |||
3506 | <entry>1.1</entry> | ||
3507 | |||
3508 | <entry>partrt is a tool for dividing a SMP Linux system into a | ||
3509 | real time domain and a non-real time domain.</entry> | ||
3510 | |||
3511 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3512 | </row> | ||
3513 | |||
3514 | <row> | ||
3515 | <entry>pciutils</entry> | ||
3516 | |||
3517 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | ||
3518 | |||
3519 | <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable | ||
3520 | access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based | ||
3521 | on this library.</entry> | ||
3522 | |||
3523 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3524 | </row> | ||
3525 | |||
3526 | <row> | ||
3527 | <entry>perf</entry> | ||
3528 | |||
3529 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3530 | |||
3531 | <entry>Performance counters for Linux are a new kernel-based | ||
3532 | subsystem that provide a framework for all things performance | ||
3533 | analysis. It covers hardware level (CPU/PMU Performance Monitoring | ||
3534 | Unit) features and software features (software counters | ||
3535 | tracepoints) as well.</entry> | ||
3536 | |||
3537 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3538 | </row> | ||
3539 | |||
3540 | <row> | ||
3541 | <entry>perl</entry> | ||
3542 | |||
3543 | <entry>5.24.1</entry> | ||
3544 | |||
3545 | <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry> | ||
3546 | |||
3547 | <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | ||
3548 | </row> | ||
3549 | |||
3550 | <row> | ||
3551 | <entry>pigz</entry> | ||
3552 | |||
3553 | <entry>2.3.4</entry> | ||
3554 | |||
3555 | <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a | ||
3556 | fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple | ||
3557 | processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data. | ||
3558 | pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread | ||
3559 | libraries.</entry> | ||
3560 | |||
3561 | <entry>Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3562 | </row> | ||
3563 | |||
3564 | <row> | ||
3565 | <entry>pixman</entry> | ||
3566 | |||
3567 | <entry>0.34.0</entry> | ||
3568 | |||
3569 | <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions -- | ||
3570 | a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the | ||
3571 | Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric | ||
3572 | primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry> | ||
3573 | |||
3574 | <entry>MIT, PD</entry> | ||
3575 | </row> | ||
3576 | |||
3577 | <row> | ||
3578 | <entry>pkgconfig</entry> | ||
3579 | |||
3580 | <entry>0.29.1</entry> | ||
3581 | |||
3582 | <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling | ||
3583 | applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct | ||
3584 | compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry> | ||
3585 | |||
3586 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3587 | </row> | ||
3588 | |||
3589 | <row> | ||
3590 | <entry>pm-utils</entry> | ||
3591 | |||
3592 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | ||
3593 | |||
3594 | <entry>Simple shell command line tools to suspend and | ||
3595 | hibernate.</entry> | ||
3596 | |||
3597 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3598 | </row> | ||
3599 | |||
3600 | <row> | ||
3601 | <entry>polkit</entry> | ||
3602 | |||
3603 | <entry>0.113</entry> | ||
3604 | |||
3605 | <entry>The polkit package is an application-level toolkit for | ||
3606 | defining and handling the policy that allows unprivileged | ||
3607 | processes to speak to privileged processes.</entry> | ||
3608 | |||
3609 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3610 | </row> | ||
3611 | |||
3612 | <row> | ||
3613 | <entry>popt</entry> | ||
3614 | |||
3615 | <entry>1.16</entry> | ||
3616 | |||
3617 | <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry> | ||
3618 | |||
3619 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3620 | </row> | ||
3621 | |||
3622 | <row> | ||
3623 | <entry>pps-tools</entry> | ||
3624 | |||
3625 | <entry>0.0.0</entry> | ||
3626 | |||
3627 | <entry>User-space tools for LinuxPPS.</entry> | ||
3628 | |||
3629 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3630 | </row> | ||
3631 | |||
3632 | <row> | ||
3633 | <entry>prelink</entry> | ||
3634 | |||
3635 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3636 | |||
3637 | <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF | ||
3638 | shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations | ||
3639 | need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up | ||
3640 | faster.</entry> | ||
3641 | |||
3642 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3643 | </row> | ||
3644 | |||
3645 | <row> | ||
3646 | <entry>procps</entry> | ||
3647 | |||
3648 | <entry>3.3.12</entry> | ||
3649 | |||
3650 | <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide | ||
3651 | system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The | ||
3652 | package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and | ||
3653 | skill.</entry> | ||
3654 | |||
3655 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3656 | </row> | ||
3657 | |||
3658 | <row> | ||
3659 | <entry>pseudo</entry> | ||
3660 | |||
3661 | <entry>1.8.2</entry> | ||
3662 | |||
3663 | <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal | ||
3664 | user.</entry> | ||
3665 | |||
3666 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
3667 | </row> | ||
3668 | |||
3669 | <row> | ||
3670 | <entry>ptest-runner</entry> | ||
3671 | |||
3672 | <entry>2.0.2</entry> | ||
3673 | |||
3674 | <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program | ||
3675 | which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them | ||
3676 | in sequence.</entry> | ||
3677 | |||
3678 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3679 | </row> | ||
3680 | |||
3681 | <row> | ||
3682 | <entry>python-futures</entry> | ||
3683 | |||
3684 | <entry>3.0.5</entry> | ||
3685 | |||
3686 | <entry>The concurrent.futures module provides a high-level | ||
3687 | interface for asynchronously executing callables.</entry> | ||
3688 | |||
3689 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3690 | </row> | ||
3691 | |||
3692 | <row> | ||
3693 | <entry>python-netaddr</entry> | ||
3694 | |||
3695 | <entry>0.7.19</entry> | ||
3696 | |||
3697 | <entry>A network address manipulation library for Python..</entry> | ||
3698 | |||
3699 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3700 | </row> | ||
3701 | |||
3702 | <row> | ||
3703 | <entry>python-netifaces</entry> | ||
3704 | |||
3705 | <entry>0.10.6</entry> | ||
3706 | |||
3707 | <entry>Portable network interface information..</entry> | ||
3708 | |||
3709 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3710 | </row> | ||
3711 | |||
3712 | <row> | ||
3713 | <entry>python-pip</entry> | ||
3714 | |||
3715 | <entry>9.0.1</entry> | ||
3716 | |||
3717 | <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python | ||
3718 | packages.</entry> | ||
3719 | |||
3720 | <entry>MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
3721 | </row> | ||
3722 | |||
3723 | <row> | ||
3724 | <entry>python-psutil</entry> | ||
3725 | |||
3726 | <entry>5.2.0</entry> | ||
3727 | |||
3728 | <entry>A cross-platform process and system utilities module for | ||
3729 | Python.</entry> | ||
3730 | |||
3731 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3732 | </row> | ||
3733 | |||
3734 | <row> | ||
3735 | <entry>python-setuptools</entry> | ||
3736 | |||
3737 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | ||
3738 | |||
3739 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python | ||
3740 | packages.</entry> | ||
3741 | |||
3742 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3743 | </row> | ||
3744 | |||
3745 | <row> | ||
3746 | <entry>python-six</entry> | ||
3747 | |||
3748 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | ||
3749 | |||
3750 | <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities</entry> | ||
3751 | |||
3752 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3753 | </row> | ||
3754 | |||
3755 | <row> | ||
3756 | <entry>python-twisted</entry> | ||
3757 | |||
3758 | <entry>13.2.0</entry> | ||
3759 | |||
3760 | <entry>Twisted is an event-driven networking framework written in | ||
3761 | Python and licensed under the LGPL. Twisted supports TCP UDP | ||
3762 | SSL/TLS multicast Unix sockets a large number of protocols | ||
3763 | (including HTTP NNTP IMAP SSH IRC FTP and others) and much | ||
3764 | more.</entry> | ||
3765 | |||
3766 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3767 | </row> | ||
3768 | |||
3769 | <row> | ||
3770 | <entry>python-zopeinterface</entry> | ||
3771 | |||
3772 | <entry>4.3.3</entry> | ||
3773 | |||
3774 | <entry>Interface definitions for Zope products.</entry> | ||
3775 | |||
3776 | <entry></entry> | ||
3777 | </row> | ||
3778 | |||
3779 | <row> | ||
3780 | <entry>python</entry> | ||
3781 | |||
3782 | <entry>2.7.13</entry> | ||
3783 | |||
3784 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | ||
3785 | |||
3786 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | ||
3787 | </row> | ||
3788 | |||
3789 | <row> | ||
3790 | <entry>python3-setuptools</entry> | ||
3791 | |||
3792 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | ||
3793 | |||
3794 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python | ||
3795 | packages.</entry> | ||
3796 | |||
3797 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3798 | </row> | ||
3799 | |||
3800 | <row> | ||
3801 | <entry>python3</entry> | ||
3802 | |||
3803 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | ||
3804 | |||
3805 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | ||
3806 | |||
3807 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | ||
3808 | </row> | ||
3809 | |||
3810 | <row> | ||
3811 | <entry>qemu</entry> | ||
3812 | |||
3813 | <entry>2.8.0</entry> | ||
3814 | |||
3815 | <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry> | ||
3816 | |||
3817 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
3818 | </row> | ||
3819 | |||
3820 | <row> | ||
3821 | <entry>qemuwrapper</entry> | ||
3822 | |||
3823 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3824 | |||
3825 | <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry> | ||
3826 | |||
3827 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3828 | </row> | ||
3829 | |||
3830 | <row> | ||
3831 | <entry>quilt</entry> | ||
3832 | |||
3833 | <entry>0.65</entry> | ||
3834 | |||
3835 | <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry> | ||
3836 | |||
3837 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3838 | </row> | ||
3839 | |||
3840 | <row> | ||
3841 | <entry>randrproto</entry> | ||
3842 | |||
3843 | <entry>1.5.0</entry> | ||
3844 | |||
3845 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize | ||
3846 | Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability | ||
3847 | to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry> | ||
3848 | |||
3849 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3850 | </row> | ||
3851 | |||
3852 | <row> | ||
3853 | <entry>readline</entry> | ||
3854 | |||
3855 | <entry>7.0</entry> | ||
3856 | |||
3857 | <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for | ||
3858 | use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they | ||
3859 | are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The | ||
3860 | Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list | ||
3861 | of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit | ||
3862 | those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous | ||
3863 | commands.</entry> | ||
3864 | |||
3865 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3866 | </row> | ||
3867 | |||
3868 | <row> | ||
3869 | <entry>recordproto</entry> | ||
3870 | |||
3871 | <entry>1.14.2</entry> | ||
3872 | |||
3873 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Record | ||
3874 | extension. This extension is used to record and play back event | ||
3875 | sequences.</entry> | ||
3876 | |||
3877 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3878 | </row> | ||
3879 | |||
3880 | <row> | ||
3881 | <entry>regexp</entry> | ||
3882 | |||
3883 | <entry>1.5</entry> | ||
3884 | |||
3885 | <entry>Java Regular Expression package</entry> | ||
3886 | |||
3887 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3888 | </row> | ||
3889 | |||
3890 | <row> | ||
3891 | <entry>renderproto</entry> | ||
3892 | |||
3893 | <entry>0.11.1</entry> | ||
3894 | |||
3895 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering | ||
3896 | extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X | ||
3897 | window system.</entry> | ||
3898 | |||
3899 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3900 | </row> | ||
3901 | |||
3902 | <row> | ||
3903 | <entry>rhino</entry> | ||
3904 | |||
3905 | <entry>1.7r4</entry> | ||
3906 | |||
3907 | <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry> | ||
3908 | |||
3909 | <entry>MPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3910 | </row> | ||
3911 | |||
3912 | <row> | ||
3913 | <entry>rpm</entry> | ||
3914 | |||
3915 | <entry>4.13.90</entry> | ||
3916 | |||
3917 | <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line | ||
3918 | driven package management system capable of installing | ||
3919 | uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages. | ||
3920 | Each software package consists of an archive of files along with | ||
3921 | information about the package like its version a description | ||
3922 | etc.</entry> | ||
3923 | |||
3924 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3925 | </row> | ||
3926 | |||
3927 | <row> | ||
3928 | <entry>rsync</entry> | ||
3929 | |||
3930 | <entry>3.1.2</entry> | ||
3931 | |||
3932 | <entry>File synchronization tool.</entry> | ||
3933 | |||
3934 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3935 | </row> | ||
3936 | |||
3937 | <row> | ||
3938 | <entry>run-postinsts</entry> | ||
3939 | |||
3940 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3941 | |||
3942 | <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target | ||
3943 | device.</entry> | ||
3944 | |||
3945 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3946 | </row> | ||
3947 | |||
3948 | <row> | ||
3949 | <entry>runc-docker</entry> | ||
3950 | |||
3951 | <entry>1.0.0-rc2</entry> | ||
3952 | |||
3953 | <entry>runc is a CLI tool for spawning and running containers | ||
3954 | according to the OCI specification.</entry> | ||
3955 | |||
3956 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3957 | </row> | ||
3958 | |||
3959 | <row> | ||
3960 | <entry>sed</entry> | ||
3961 | |||
3962 | <entry>4.2.2</entry> | ||
3963 | |||
3964 | <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry> | ||
3965 | |||
3966 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3967 | </row> | ||
3968 | |||
3969 | <row> | ||
3970 | <entry>servlet2.3</entry> | ||
3971 | |||
3972 | <entry>4.1.37</entry> | ||
3973 | |||
3974 | <entry>Servlet API 2.3 (from Tomcat 4.1)</entry> | ||
3975 | |||
3976 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3977 | </row> | ||
3978 | |||
3979 | <row> | ||
3980 | <entry>shadow-securetty</entry> | ||
3981 | |||
3982 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
3983 | |||
3984 | <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry> | ||
3985 | |||
3986 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3987 | </row> | ||
3988 | |||
3989 | <row> | ||
3990 | <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry> | ||
3991 | |||
3992 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
3993 | |||
3994 | <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry> | ||
3995 | |||
3996 | <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | ||
3997 | </row> | ||
3998 | |||
3999 | <row> | ||
4000 | <entry>shadow</entry> | ||
4001 | |||
4002 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
4003 | |||
4004 | <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group | ||
4005 | data.</entry> | ||
4006 | |||
4007 | <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | ||
4008 | </row> | ||
4009 | |||
4010 | <row> | ||
4011 | <entry>shared-mime-info</entry> | ||
4012 | |||
4013 | <entry>1.8</entry> | ||
4014 | |||
4015 | <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry> | ||
4016 | |||
4017 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4018 | </row> | ||
4019 | |||
4020 | <row> | ||
4021 | <entry>simpleproxy</entry> | ||
4022 | |||
4023 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
4024 | |||
4025 | <entry>Simpleproxy.</entry> | ||
4026 | |||
4027 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4028 | </row> | ||
4029 | |||
4030 | <row> | ||
4031 | <entry>slang</entry> | ||
4032 | |||
4033 | <entry>2.3.1a</entry> | ||
4034 | |||
4035 | <entry>S-Lang is an interpreted language and a programming | ||
4036 | library. The S-Lang language was designed so that it can be easily | ||
4037 | embedded into a program to provide the program with a powerful | ||
4038 | extension language. The S-Lang library provided in this package | ||
4039 | provides the S-Lang extension language. S-Lang's syntax resembles | ||
4040 | C which makes it easy to recode S-Lang procedures in C if you need | ||
4041 | to.</entry> | ||
4042 | |||
4043 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4044 | </row> | ||
4045 | |||
4046 | <row> | ||
4047 | <entry>sqlite3</entry> | ||
4048 | |||
4049 | <entry>3.17.0</entry> | ||
4050 | |||
4051 | <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry> | ||
4052 | |||
4053 | <entry>PD</entry> | ||
4054 | </row> | ||
4055 | |||
4056 | <row> | ||
4057 | <entry>squashfs-tools</entry> | ||
4058 | |||
4059 | <entry>4.3</entry> | ||
4060 | |||
4061 | <entry>Tools for manipulating SquashFS filesystems.</entry> | ||
4062 | |||
4063 | <entry>GPL-2.0, PD</entry> | ||
4064 | </row> | ||
4065 | |||
4066 | <row> | ||
4067 | <entry>sysfsutils</entry> | ||
4068 | |||
4069 | <entry>2.1.0</entry> | ||
4070 | |||
4071 | <entry>Tools for working with the sysfs virtual filesystem. The | ||
4072 | tool 'systool' can query devices by bus class and | ||
4073 | topology.</entry> | ||
4074 | |||
4075 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
4076 | </row> | ||
4077 | |||
4078 | <row> | ||
4079 | <entry>syslinux</entry> | ||
4080 | |||
4081 | <entry>6.03</entry> | ||
4082 | |||
4083 | <entry>Multi-purpose linux bootloader.</entry> | ||
4084 | |||
4085 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4086 | </row> | ||
4087 | |||
4088 | <row> | ||
4089 | <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry> | ||
4090 | |||
4091 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
4092 | |||
4093 | <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit | ||
4094 | scripts.</entry> | ||
4095 | |||
4096 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4097 | </row> | ||
4098 | |||
4099 | <row> | ||
4100 | <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry> | ||
4101 | |||
4102 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
4103 | |||
4104 | <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry> | ||
4105 | |||
4106 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4107 | </row> | ||
4108 | |||
4109 | <row> | ||
4110 | <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry> | ||
4111 | |||
4112 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
4113 | |||
4114 | <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry> | ||
4115 | |||
4116 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4117 | </row> | ||
4118 | |||
4119 | <row> | ||
4120 | <entry>systemd</entry> | ||
4121 | |||
4122 | <entry>232</entry> | ||
4123 | |||
4124 | <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux | ||
4125 | compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides | ||
4126 | aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus | ||
4127 | activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of | ||
4128 | daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports | ||
4129 | snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and | ||
4130 | automount points and implements an elaborate transactional | ||
4131 | dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in | ||
4132 | replacement for sysvinit.</entry> | ||
4133 | |||
4134 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
4135 | </row> | ||
4136 | |||
4137 | <row> | ||
4138 | <entry>systemtap</entry> | ||
4139 | |||
4140 | <entry>3.1</entry> | ||
4141 | |||
4142 | <entry>Script-directed dynamic tracing and performance analysis | ||
4143 | tool for Linux.</entry> | ||
4144 | |||
4145 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4146 | </row> | ||
4147 | |||
4148 | <row> | ||
4149 | <entry>tar</entry> | ||
4150 | |||
4151 | <entry>1.29</entry> | ||
4152 | |||
4153 | <entry>GNU tar saves many files together into a single tape or | ||
4154 | disk archive and can restore individual files from the | ||
4155 | archive.</entry> | ||
4156 | |||
4157 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
4158 | </row> | ||
4159 | |||
4160 | <row> | ||
4161 | <entry>tcpdump</entry> | ||
4162 | |||
4163 | <entry>4.9.0</entry> | ||
4164 | |||
4165 | <entry>A sophisticated network protocol analyzer.</entry> | ||
4166 | |||
4167 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4168 | </row> | ||
4169 | |||
4170 | <row> | ||
4171 | <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry> | ||
4172 | |||
4173 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
4174 | |||
4175 | <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry> | ||
4176 | |||
4177 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4178 | </row> | ||
4179 | |||
4180 | <row> | ||
4181 | <entry>thin-provisioning-tools</entry> | ||
4182 | |||
4183 | <entry>0.6.3</entry> | ||
4184 | |||
4185 | <entry>A suite of tools for manipulating the metadata of the | ||
4186 | dm-thin device-mapper target.</entry> | ||
4187 | |||
4188 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
4189 | </row> | ||
4190 | |||
4191 | <row> | ||
4192 | <entry>tunctl</entry> | ||
4193 | |||
4194 | <entry>1.5</entry> | ||
4195 | |||
4196 | <entry>Tool for controlling the Linux TUN/TAP driver.</entry> | ||
4197 | |||
4198 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4199 | </row> | ||
4200 | |||
4201 | <row> | ||
4202 | <entry>tzcode</entry> | ||
4203 | |||
4204 | <entry>2017b</entry> | ||
4205 | |||
4206 | <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump | ||
4207 | tzselect.</entry> | ||
4208 | |||
4209 | <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
4210 | </row> | ||
4211 | |||
4212 | <row> | ||
4213 | <entry>tzdata</entry> | ||
4214 | |||
4215 | <entry>2017b</entry> | ||
4216 | |||
4217 | <entry>Timezone data.</entry> | ||
4218 | |||
4219 | <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
4220 | </row> | ||
4221 | |||
4222 | <row> | ||
4223 | <entry>unifdef</entry> | ||
4224 | |||
4225 | <entry>2.11</entry> | ||
4226 | |||
4227 | <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry> | ||
4228 | |||
4229 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | ||
4230 | </row> | ||
4231 | |||
4232 | <row> | ||
4233 | <entry>unzip</entry> | ||
4234 | |||
4235 | <entry>6.0</entry> | ||
4236 | |||
4237 | <entry>Utilities for extracting and viewing files in .zip | ||
4238 | archives.</entry> | ||
4239 | |||
4240 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
4241 | </row> | ||
4242 | |||
4243 | <row> | ||
4244 | <entry>update-rc.d</entry> | ||
4245 | |||
4246 | <entry>0.7</entry> | ||
4247 | |||
4248 | <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of | ||
4249 | symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory | ||
4250 | structure.</entry> | ||
4251 | |||
4252 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4253 | </row> | ||
4254 | |||
4255 | <row> | ||
4256 | <entry>util-linux</entry> | ||
4257 | |||
4258 | <entry>2.29.1</entry> | ||
4259 | |||
4260 | <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration | ||
4261 | utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more | ||
4262 | important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message | ||
4263 | management filesystem creation and system login.</entry> | ||
4264 | |||
4265 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry> | ||
4266 | </row> | ||
4267 | |||
4268 | <row> | ||
4269 | <entry>util-macros</entry> | ||
4270 | |||
4271 | <entry>1.19.1</entry> | ||
4272 | |||
4273 | <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry> | ||
4274 | |||
4275 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4276 | </row> | ||
4277 | |||
4278 | <row> | ||
4279 | <entry>vala</entry> | ||
4280 | |||
4281 | <entry>0.34.4</entry> | ||
4282 | |||
4283 | <entry>Vala is a C#-like language dedicated to ease GObject | ||
4284 | programming. Vala compiles to plain C and has no runtime | ||
4285 | environment nor penalities whatsoever.</entry> | ||
4286 | |||
4287 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
4288 | </row> | ||
4289 | |||
4290 | <row> | ||
4291 | <entry>volatile-binds</entry> | ||
4292 | |||
4293 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
4294 | |||
4295 | <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for | ||
4296 | read-only-rootfs</entry> | ||
4297 | |||
4298 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4299 | </row> | ||
4300 | |||
4301 | <row> | ||
4302 | <entry>xalan-j</entry> | ||
4303 | |||
4304 | <entry>2.7.1</entry> | ||
4305 | |||
4306 | <entry>Java XSLT processor</entry> | ||
4307 | |||
4308 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4309 | </row> | ||
4310 | |||
4311 | <row> | ||
4312 | <entry>xcb-proto</entry> | ||
4313 | |||
4314 | <entry>1.12</entry> | ||
4315 | |||
4316 | <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding | ||
4317 | (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint | ||
4318 | latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading | ||
4319 | support and extensibility.</entry> | ||
4320 | |||
4321 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4322 | </row> | ||
4323 | |||
4324 | <row> | ||
4325 | <entry>xerces-j</entry> | ||
4326 | |||
4327 | <entry>2.11.0</entry> | ||
4328 | |||
4329 | <entry>Reference implementation of XNI the Xerces Native Interface | ||
4330 | and also a fully conforming XML Schema processor.</entry> | ||
4331 | |||
4332 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4333 | </row> | ||
4334 | |||
4335 | <row> | ||
4336 | <entry>xextproto</entry> | ||
4337 | |||
4338 | <entry>7.3.0</entry> | ||
4339 | |||
4340 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X | ||
4341 | extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS | ||
4342 | Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD | ||
4343 | Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC | ||
4344 | XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also | ||
4345 | available.</entry> | ||
4346 | |||
4347 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4348 | </row> | ||
4349 | |||
4350 | <row> | ||
4351 | <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry> | ||
4352 | |||
4353 | <entry>2.20</entry> | ||
4354 | |||
4355 | <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window. | ||
4356 | The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently | ||
4357 | released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window | ||
4358 | System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based | ||
4359 | systems.</entry> | ||
4360 | |||
4361 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4362 | </row> | ||
4363 | |||
4364 | <row> | ||
4365 | <entry>xml-commons-resolver1.1</entry> | ||
4366 | |||
4367 | <entry>1.2</entry> | ||
4368 | |||
4369 | <entry>Library to resolve various public or system identifiers | ||
4370 | into accessible URLs (Java)</entry> | ||
4371 | |||
4372 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4373 | </row> | ||
4374 | |||
4375 | <row> | ||
4376 | <entry>xmlto</entry> | ||
4377 | |||
4378 | <entry>0.0.28</entry> | ||
4379 | |||
4380 | <entry>A shell-script tool for converting XML files to various | ||
4381 | formats.</entry> | ||
4382 | |||
4383 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4384 | </row> | ||
4385 | |||
4386 | <row> | ||
4387 | <entry>xproto</entry> | ||
4388 | |||
4389 | <entry>7.0.31</entry> | ||
4390 | |||
4391 | <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window | ||
4392 | System.</entry> | ||
4393 | |||
4394 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4395 | </row> | ||
4396 | |||
4397 | <row> | ||
4398 | <entry>xtrans</entry> | ||
4399 | |||
4400 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | ||
4401 | |||
4402 | <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system | ||
4403 | and transport specific code into a single place. This API should | ||
4404 | be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window | ||
4405 | System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of | ||
4406 | transports and support for new platforms without making any | ||
4407 | changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface | ||
4408 | code.</entry> | ||
4409 | |||
4410 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4411 | </row> | ||
4412 | |||
4413 | <row> | ||
4414 | <entry>xz</entry> | ||
4415 | |||
4416 | <entry>5.2.3</entry> | ||
4417 | |||
4418 | <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry> | ||
4419 | |||
4420 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry> | ||
4421 | </row> | ||
4422 | |||
4423 | <row> | ||
4424 | <entry>yajl</entry> | ||
4425 | |||
4426 | <entry>2.1.0</entry> | ||
4427 | |||
4428 | <entry>YAJL is a small event-driven (SAX-style) JSON parser | ||
4429 | written in ANSI C and a small validating JSON generator.</entry> | ||
4430 | |||
4431 | <entry>ISC</entry> | ||
4432 | </row> | ||
4433 | |||
4434 | <row> | ||
4435 | <entry>zip</entry> | ||
4436 | |||
4437 | <entry>3.0</entry> | ||
4438 | |||
4439 | <entry>Compressor/archiver for creating and modifying .zip | ||
4440 | files.</entry> | ||
4441 | |||
4442 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
4443 | </row> | ||
4444 | |||
4445 | <row> | ||
4446 | <entry>zisofs-tools</entry> | ||
4447 | |||
4448 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | ||
4449 | |||
4450 | <entry>Utilities for creating compressed CD-ROM | ||
4451 | filesystems.</entry> | ||
4452 | |||
4453 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4454 | </row> | ||
4455 | |||
4456 | <row> | ||
4457 | <entry>zlib</entry> | ||
4458 | |||
4459 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> | ||
4460 | |||
4461 | <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data | ||
4462 | compression library which is used by many different | ||
4463 | programs.</entry> | ||
4464 | |||
4465 | <entry>Zlib</entry> | ||
4466 | </row> | ||
4467 | </tbody> | ||
4468 | </tgroup> | ||
4469 | </informaltable> | ||
4470 | </section> | ||
4471 | |||
4472 | <section id="open_source_license"> | ||
4473 | <title>Open Source Licenses</title> | ||
4474 | |||
4475 | <section id="lic_0"> | ||
4476 | <title>AFL-2.0</title> | ||
4477 | |||
4478 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2309 | 4479 | ||
2310 | The Academic Free License | 4480 | The Academic Free License |
2311 | v. 2.0 | 4481 | v. 2.0 |
@@ -2446,11 +4616,13 @@ Permission is hereby granted to copy and distribute this license without modific | |||
2446 | This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its | 4616 | This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its |
2447 | copyright owner. | 4617 | copyright owner. |
2448 | 4618 | ||
2449 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4619 | </programlisting></para> |
4620 | </section> | ||
4621 | |||
4622 | <section id="lic_1"> | ||
4623 | <title>Apache-2.0</title> | ||
2450 | 4624 | ||
2451 | <section id="lic_1"> | 4625 | <para><programlisting> |
2452 | <title>Apache-2.0</title> | ||
2453 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2454 | 4626 | ||
2455 | 4627 | ||
2456 | Apache License | 4628 | Apache License |
@@ -2655,11 +4827,13 @@ copyright owner. | |||
2655 | See the License for the specific language governing permissions and | 4827 | See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
2656 | limitations under the License. | 4828 | limitations under the License. |
2657 | 4829 | ||
2658 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4830 | </programlisting></para> |
4831 | </section> | ||
2659 | 4832 | ||
2660 | <section id="lic_2"> | 4833 | <section id="lic_2"> |
2661 | <title>Artistic-1.0</title> | 4834 | <title>Artistic-1.0</title> |
2662 | <para><programlisting> | 4835 | |
4836 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2663 | 4837 | ||
2664 | The Artistic License | 4838 | The Artistic License |
2665 | Preamble | 4839 | Preamble |
@@ -2752,11 +4926,13 @@ FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. | |||
2752 | 4926 | ||
2753 | The End | 4927 | The End |
2754 | 4928 | ||
2755 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4929 | </programlisting></para> |
4930 | </section> | ||
4931 | |||
4932 | <section id="lic_3"> | ||
4933 | <title>BSD</title> | ||
2756 | 4934 | ||
2757 | <section id="lic_3"> | 4935 | <para><programlisting> |
2758 | <title>BSD</title> | ||
2759 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2760 | Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. | 4936 | Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. |
2761 | All rights reserved. | 4937 | All rights reserved. |
2762 | 4938 | ||
@@ -2783,11 +4959,13 @@ HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT | |||
2783 | LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY | 4959 | LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY |
2784 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF | 4960 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF |
2785 | SUCH DAMAGE. | 4961 | SUCH DAMAGE. |
2786 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4962 | </programlisting></para> |
4963 | </section> | ||
4964 | |||
4965 | <section id="lic_4"> | ||
4966 | <title>BSD-2-Clause</title> | ||
2787 | 4967 | ||
2788 | <section id="lic_4"> | 4968 | <para><programlisting> |
2789 | <title>BSD-2-Clause</title> | ||
2790 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2791 | 4969 | ||
2792 | The FreeBSD Copyright | 4970 | The FreeBSD Copyright |
2793 | 4971 | ||
@@ -2815,11 +4993,13 @@ The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation are those | |||
2815 | authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either | 4993 | authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either |
2816 | expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. | 4994 | expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. |
2817 | 4995 | ||
2818 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4996 | </programlisting></para> |
4997 | </section> | ||
2819 | 4998 | ||
2820 | <section id="lic_5"> | 4999 | <section id="lic_5"> |
2821 | <title>BSD-3-Clause</title> | 5000 | <title>BSD-3-Clause</title> |
2822 | <para><programlisting> | 5001 | |
5002 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2823 | 5003 | ||
2824 | Copyright (c) <YEAR>, <OWNER> | 5004 | Copyright (c) <YEAR>, <OWNER> |
2825 | All rights reserved. | 5005 | All rights reserved. |
@@ -2846,11 +5026,13 @@ CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING | |||
2846 | WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH | 5026 | WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH |
2847 | DAMAGE. | 5027 | DAMAGE. |
2848 | 5028 | ||
2849 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5029 | </programlisting></para> |
5030 | </section> | ||
5031 | |||
5032 | <section id="lic_6"> | ||
5033 | <title>BSD-4-Clause</title> | ||
2850 | 5034 | ||
2851 | <section id="lic_6"> | 5035 | <para><programlisting> |
2852 | <title>BSD-4-Clause</title> | ||
2853 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2854 | 5036 | ||
2855 | Copyright (c) <year>, <copyright holder> | 5037 | Copyright (c) <year>, <copyright holder> |
2856 | All rights reserved. | 5038 | All rights reserved. |
@@ -2880,11 +5062,13 @@ ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT | |||
2880 | (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS | 5062 | (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS |
2881 | SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. | 5063 | SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
2882 | 5064 | ||
2883 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5065 | </programlisting></para> |
5066 | </section> | ||
5067 | |||
5068 | <section id="lic_7"> | ||
5069 | <title>BSL-1.0</title> | ||
2884 | 5070 | ||
2885 | <section id="lic_7"> | 5071 | <para><programlisting> |
2886 | <title>BSL-1.0</title> | ||
2887 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2888 | 5072 | ||
2889 | Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003 | 5073 | Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003 |
2890 | 5074 | ||
@@ -2910,11 +5094,13 @@ FOR ANY DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, | |||
2910 | ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER | 5094 | ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER |
2911 | DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. | 5095 | DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. |
2912 | 5096 | ||
2913 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5097 | </programlisting></para> |
5098 | </section> | ||
2914 | 5099 | ||
2915 | <section id="lic_8"> | 5100 | <section id="lic_8"> |
2916 | <title>EPL-1.0</title> | 5101 | <title>EPL-1.0</title> |
2917 | <para><programlisting> | 5102 | |
5103 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2918 | 5104 | ||
2919 | Eclipse Public License - v 1.0 | 5105 | Eclipse Public License - v 1.0 |
2920 | 5106 | ||
@@ -3102,11 +5288,13 @@ property laws of the United States of America. No party to this Agreement will b | |||
3102 | legal action under this Agreement more than one year after the cause of action arose. | 5288 | legal action under this Agreement more than one year after the cause of action arose. |
3103 | Each party waives its rights to a jury trial in any resulting litigation. | 5289 | Each party waives its rights to a jury trial in any resulting litigation. |
3104 | 5290 | ||
3105 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5291 | </programlisting></para> |
5292 | </section> | ||
5293 | |||
5294 | <section id="lic_9"> | ||
5295 | <title>Elfutils-Exception</title> | ||
3106 | 5296 | ||
3107 | <section id="lic_9"> | 5297 | <para><programlisting> |
3108 | <title>Elfutils-Exception</title> | ||
3109 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3110 | This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed | 5298 | This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed |
3111 | to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. | 5299 | to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. |
3112 | For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files | 5300 | For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files |
@@ -3119,20 +5307,24 @@ Each party waives its rights to a jury trial in any resulting litigation. | |||
3119 | libdw.h | 5307 | libdw.h |
3120 | libdwfl.h | 5308 | libdwfl.h |
3121 | 5309 | ||
3122 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5310 | </programlisting></para> |
5311 | </section> | ||
5312 | |||
5313 | <section id="lic_10"> | ||
5314 | <title>FSF-Unlimited</title> | ||
3123 | 5315 | ||
3124 | <section id="lic_10"> | 5316 | <para><programlisting> |
3125 | <title>FSF-Unlimited</title> | ||
3126 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3127 | Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. | 5317 | Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
3128 | This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation | 5318 | This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation |
3129 | gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, | 5319 | gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, |
3130 | with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. | 5320 | with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. |
3131 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5321 | </programlisting></para> |
5322 | </section> | ||
3132 | 5323 | ||
3133 | <section id="lic_11"> | 5324 | <section id="lic_11"> |
3134 | <title>FreeType</title> | 5325 | <title>FreeType</title> |
3135 | <para><programlisting> | 5326 | |
5327 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3136 | The FreeType Project LICENSE | 5328 | The FreeType Project LICENSE |
3137 | ---------------------------- | 5329 | ---------------------------- |
3138 | 5330 | ||
@@ -3303,11 +5495,13 @@ Legal Terms | |||
3303 | 5495 | ||
3304 | --- end of FTL.TXT --- | 5496 | --- end of FTL.TXT --- |
3305 | 5497 | ||
3306 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5498 | </programlisting></para> |
5499 | </section> | ||
5500 | |||
5501 | <section id="lic_12"> | ||
5502 | <title>GPL-1.0</title> | ||
3307 | 5503 | ||
3308 | <section id="lic_12"> | 5504 | <para><programlisting> |
3309 | <title>GPL-1.0</title> | ||
3310 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3311 | 5505 | ||
3312 | GNU General Public License, version 1 | 5506 | GNU General Public License, version 1 |
3313 | 5507 | ||
@@ -3560,11 +5754,13 @@ necessary. Here a sample; alter the names: | |||
3560 | 5754 | ||
3561 | That`s all there is to it! | 5755 | That`s all there is to it! |
3562 | 5756 | ||
3563 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5757 | </programlisting></para> |
5758 | </section> | ||
5759 | |||
5760 | <section id="lic_13"> | ||
5761 | <title>GPL-2.0</title> | ||
3564 | 5762 | ||
3565 | <section id="lic_13"> | 5763 | <para><programlisting> |
3566 | <title>GPL-2.0</title> | ||
3567 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3568 | 5764 | ||
3569 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 5765 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
3570 | 5766 | ||
@@ -3863,16 +6059,18 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this | |||
3863 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this | 6059 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this |
3864 | License. | 6060 | License. |
3865 | 6061 | ||
3866 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6062 | </programlisting></para> |
6063 | </section> | ||
3867 | 6064 | ||
3868 | <section id="lic_14"> | 6065 | <section id="lic_14"> |
3869 | <title>GPL-3.0</title> | 6066 | <title>GPL-3.0</title> |
3870 | <para><programlisting> | 6067 | |
6068 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3871 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 6069 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
3872 | 6070 | ||
3873 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 | 6071 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 |
3874 | 6072 | ||
3875 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> | 6073 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> |
3876 | 6074 | ||
3877 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, | 6075 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, |
3878 | but changing it is not allowed. | 6076 | but changing it is not allowed. |
@@ -4441,11 +6639,13 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this | |||
4441 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this | 6639 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this |
4442 | License. But first, please read | 6640 | License. But first, please read |
4443 | <http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>. | 6641 | <http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>. |
4444 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6642 | </programlisting></para> |
6643 | </section> | ||
6644 | |||
6645 | <section id="lic_15"> | ||
6646 | <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title> | ||
4445 | 6647 | ||
4446 | <section id="lic_15"> | 6648 | <para><programlisting> |
4447 | <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title> | ||
4448 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4449 | 6649 | ||
4450 | insert GPL v3 text here | 6650 | insert GPL v3 text here |
4451 | 6651 | ||
@@ -4501,11 +6701,13 @@ consistent with the licensing of the Independent Modules. | |||
4501 | The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that | 6701 | The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that |
4502 | third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. | 6702 | third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. |
4503 | 6703 | ||
4504 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6704 | </programlisting></para> |
6705 | </section> | ||
6706 | |||
6707 | <section id="lic_16"> | ||
6708 | <title>ICU</title> | ||
4505 | 6709 | ||
4506 | <section id="lic_16"> | 6710 | <para><programlisting> |
4507 | <title>ICU</title> | ||
4508 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4509 | COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE | 6711 | COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE |
4510 | 6712 | ||
4511 | Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others | 6713 | Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others |
@@ -4536,16 +6738,18 @@ Software without prior written authorization of the copyright holder. | |||
4536 | 6738 | ||
4537 | All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their | 6739 | All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their |
4538 | respective owners. | 6740 | respective owners. |
4539 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6741 | </programlisting></para> |
6742 | </section> | ||
4540 | 6743 | ||
4541 | <section id="lic_17"> | 6744 | <section id="lic_17"> |
4542 | <title>ISC</title> | 6745 | <title>ISC</title> |
4543 | <para><programlisting> | 6746 | |
6747 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4544 | 6748 | ||
4545 | ISC License: | 6749 | ISC License: |
4546 | 6750 | ||
4547 | Copyright © 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") | 6751 | Copyright © 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") |
4548 | Copyright © 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium | 6752 | Copyright © 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium |
4549 | 6753 | ||
4550 | Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with | 6754 | Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with |
4551 | or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this | 6755 | or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this |
@@ -4558,11 +6762,13 @@ DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN AC | |||
4558 | OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH | 6762 | OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH |
4559 | THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. | 6763 | THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. |
4560 | 6764 | ||
4561 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6765 | </programlisting></para> |
6766 | </section> | ||
6767 | |||
6768 | <section id="lic_18"> | ||
6769 | <title>LGPL-2.0</title> | ||
4562 | 6770 | ||
4563 | <section id="lic_18"> | 6771 | <para><programlisting> |
4564 | <title>LGPL-2.0</title> | ||
4565 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4566 | GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 6772 | GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
4567 | 6773 | ||
4568 | 6774 | ||
@@ -5146,11 +7352,13 @@ Ty Coon, President of Vice | |||
5146 | 7352 | ||
5147 | That's all there is to it! | 7353 | That's all there is to it! |
5148 | 7354 | ||
5149 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7355 | </programlisting></para> |
7356 | </section> | ||
7357 | |||
7358 | <section id="lic_19"> | ||
7359 | <title>LGPL-2.1</title> | ||
5150 | 7360 | ||
5151 | <section id="lic_19"> | 7361 | <para><programlisting> |
5152 | <title>LGPL-2.1</title> | ||
5153 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5154 | 7362 | ||
5155 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 7363 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
5156 | 7364 | ||
@@ -5578,16 +7786,18 @@ signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1990 | |||
5578 | Ty Coon, President of Vice | 7786 | Ty Coon, President of Vice |
5579 | That`s all there is to it! | 7787 | That`s all there is to it! |
5580 | 7788 | ||
5581 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7789 | </programlisting></para> |
7790 | </section> | ||
5582 | 7791 | ||
5583 | <section id="lic_20"> | 7792 | <section id="lic_20"> |
5584 | <title>LGPL-3.0</title> | 7793 | <title>LGPL-3.0</title> |
5585 | <para><programlisting> | 7794 | |
7795 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5586 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 7796 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
5587 | 7797 | ||
5588 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 | 7798 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 |
5589 | 7799 | ||
5590 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> | 7800 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> |
5591 | 7801 | ||
5592 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, | 7802 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, |
5593 | but changing it is not allowed. | 7803 | but changing it is not allowed. |
@@ -5718,11 +7928,13 @@ If the Library as you received it specifies that a proxy can decide whether futu | |||
5718 | versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public | 7928 | versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public |
5719 | statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose | 7929 | statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose |
5720 | that version for the Library. | 7930 | that version for the Library. |
5721 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7931 | </programlisting></para> |
7932 | </section> | ||
7933 | |||
7934 | <section id="lic_21"> | ||
7935 | <title>Libpng</title> | ||
5722 | 7936 | ||
5723 | <section id="lic_21"> | 7937 | <para><programlisting> |
5724 | <title>Libpng</title> | ||
5725 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5726 | 7938 | ||
5727 | This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of | 7939 | This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of |
5728 | any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is | 7940 | any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is |
@@ -5835,11 +8047,13 @@ Glenn Randers-Pehrson | |||
5835 | glennrp at users.sourceforge.net | 8047 | glennrp at users.sourceforge.net |
5836 | December 9, 2010 | 8048 | December 9, 2010 |
5837 | 8049 | ||
5838 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8050 | </programlisting></para> |
8051 | </section> | ||
8052 | |||
8053 | <section id="lic_22"> | ||
8054 | <title>MIT</title> | ||
5839 | 8055 | ||
5840 | <section id="lic_22"> | 8056 | <para><programlisting> |
5841 | <title>MIT</title> | ||
5842 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5843 | 8057 | ||
5844 | MIT License | 8058 | MIT License |
5845 | 8059 | ||
@@ -5863,11 +8077,13 @@ LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, | |||
5863 | OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN | 8077 | OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN |
5864 | THE SOFTWARE. | 8078 | THE SOFTWARE. |
5865 | 8079 | ||
5866 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8080 | </programlisting></para> |
8081 | </section> | ||
5867 | 8082 | ||
5868 | <section id="lic_23"> | 8083 | <section id="lic_23"> |
5869 | <title>MPL-1.0</title> | 8084 | <title>MPL-1.0</title> |
5870 | <para><programlisting> | 8085 | |
8086 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5871 | 8087 | ||
5872 | MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE | 8088 | MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE |
5873 | Version 1.0 | 8089 | Version 1.0 |
@@ -6160,11 +8376,13 @@ All Rights Reserved. | |||
6160 | 8376 | ||
6161 | Contributor(s): ______________________________________.`` | 8377 | Contributor(s): ______________________________________.`` |
6162 | 8378 | ||
6163 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8379 | </programlisting></para> |
8380 | </section> | ||
8381 | |||
8382 | <section id="lic_24"> | ||
8383 | <title>MPL-2.0</title> | ||
6164 | 8384 | ||
6165 | <section id="lic_24"> | 8385 | <para><programlisting> |
6166 | <title>MPL-2.0</title> | ||
6167 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6168 | Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 | 8386 | Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 |
6169 | ================================== | 8387 | ================================== |
6170 | 8388 | ||
@@ -6538,11 +8756,13 @@ Exhibit B - "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses" Notice | |||
6538 | 8756 | ||
6539 | This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as | 8757 | This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as |
6540 | defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. | 8758 | defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. |
6541 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8759 | </programlisting></para> |
8760 | </section> | ||
8761 | |||
8762 | <section id="lic_25"> | ||
8763 | <title>NTP</title> | ||
6542 | 8764 | ||
6543 | <section id="lic_25"> | 8765 | <para><programlisting> |
6544 | <title>NTP</title> | ||
6545 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6546 | 8766 | ||
6547 | NTP License (NTP) | 8767 | NTP License (NTP) |
6548 | 8768 | ||
@@ -6557,11 +8777,13 @@ of the software without specific, written prior permission. (TrademarkedName) ma | |||
6557 | representations about the suitability this software for any purpose. It is provided | 8777 | representations about the suitability this software for any purpose. It is provided |
6558 | "as is" without express or implied warranty. | 8778 | "as is" without express or implied warranty. |
6559 | 8779 | ||
6560 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8780 | </programlisting></para> |
8781 | </section> | ||
6561 | 8782 | ||
6562 | <section id="lic_26"> | 8783 | <section id="lic_26"> |
6563 | <title>OASIS</title> | 8784 | <title>OASIS</title> |
6564 | <para><programlisting> | 8785 | |
8786 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6565 | Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute the DocBook DTD and | 8787 | Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute the DocBook DTD and |
6566 | its accompanying documentation for any purpose and without fee is | 8788 | its accompanying documentation for any purpose and without fee is |
6567 | hereby granted in perpetuity, provided that the above copyright | 8789 | hereby granted in perpetuity, provided that the above copyright |
@@ -6575,11 +8797,13 @@ representations about the suitability this software for any purpose. It is provi | |||
6575 | additional notations, label your DTD as a variant of DocBook. See | 8797 | additional notations, label your DTD as a variant of DocBook. See |
6576 | the maintenance documentation for more information. | 8798 | the maintenance documentation for more information. |
6577 | 8799 | ||
6578 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8800 | </programlisting></para> |
8801 | </section> | ||
8802 | |||
8803 | <section id="lic_27"> | ||
8804 | <title>OpenSSL</title> | ||
6579 | 8805 | ||
6580 | <section id="lic_27"> | 8806 | <para><programlisting> |
6581 | <title>OpenSSL</title> | ||
6582 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6583 | 8807 | ||
6584 | OpenSSL License | 8808 | OpenSSL License |
6585 | 8809 | ||
@@ -6696,17 +8920,21 @@ put under another distribution licence | |||
6696 | 8920 | ||
6697 | 8921 | ||
6698 | 8922 | ||
6699 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8923 | </programlisting></para> |
8924 | </section> | ||
8925 | |||
8926 | <section id="lic_28"> | ||
8927 | <title>PD</title> | ||
6700 | 8928 | ||
6701 | <section id="lic_28"> | 8929 | <para><programlisting> |
6702 | <title>PD</title> | ||
6703 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6704 | This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License | 8930 | This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License |
6705 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8931 | </programlisting></para> |
8932 | </section> | ||
6706 | 8933 | ||
6707 | <section id="lic_29"> | 8934 | <section id="lic_29"> |
6708 | <title>Python-2.0</title> | 8935 | <title>Python-2.0</title> |
6709 | <para><programlisting> | 8936 | |
8937 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6710 | 8938 | ||
6711 | PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 | 8939 | PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 |
6712 | -------------------------------------------- | 8940 | -------------------------------------------- |
@@ -6899,11 +9127,13 @@ WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN | |||
6899 | ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT | 9127 | ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT |
6900 | OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. | 9128 | OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. |
6901 | 9129 | ||
6902 | </programlisting></para></section> | 9130 | </programlisting></para> |
9131 | </section> | ||
9132 | |||
9133 | <section id="lic_30"> | ||
9134 | <title>Sleepycat</title> | ||
6903 | 9135 | ||
6904 | <section id="lic_30"> | 9136 | <para><programlisting> |
6905 | <title>Sleepycat</title> | ||
6906 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6907 | 9137 | ||
6908 | The Sleepycat License | 9138 | The Sleepycat License |
6909 | Copyright (c) 1990-1999 | 9139 | Copyright (c) 1990-1999 |
@@ -6994,11 +9224,13 @@ LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY | |||
6994 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF | 9224 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF |
6995 | SUCH DAMAGE. | 9225 | SUCH DAMAGE. |
6996 | 9226 | ||
6997 | </programlisting></para></section> | 9227 | </programlisting></para> |
9228 | </section> | ||
9229 | |||
9230 | <section id="lic_31"> | ||
9231 | <title>Zlib</title> | ||
6998 | 9232 | ||
6999 | <section id="lic_31"> | 9233 | <para><programlisting> |
7000 | <title>Zlib</title> | ||
7001 | <para><programlisting> | ||
7002 | 9234 | ||
7003 | zlib License | 9235 | zlib License |
7004 | 9236 | ||
@@ -7020,10 +9252,11 @@ zlib License | |||
7020 | 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. | 9252 | 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. |
7021 | 9253 | ||
7022 | 9254 | ||
7023 | </programlisting></para></section> | 9255 | </programlisting></para> |
9256 | </section> | ||
9257 | </section> | ||
7024 | 9258 | ||
7025 | </section> | 9259 | <section id="proprietary_license"> |
7026 | <section id="proprietary_license"> | 9260 | <title>Proprietary Licenses</title> |
7027 | <title>Proprietary Licenses</title> | 9261 | </section> |
7028 | </section> | 9262 | </chapter> \ No newline at end of file |
7029 | </chapter> | ||
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-guest-dev-open-source/licenses.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-guest-dev-open-source/doc/licenses.xml index 1f6ba72..8c4b2d0 100644 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-guest-dev-open-source/licenses.xml +++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-guest-dev-open-source/doc/licenses.xml | |||
@@ -3,1535 +3,2994 @@ | |||
3 | "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> | 3 | "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> |
4 | <chapter id="enea_linux_packages"> | 4 | <chapter id="enea_linux_packages"> |
5 | <title>Packages and Licenses</title> | 5 | <title>Packages and Licenses</title> |
6 | <section id="licenses_packages"> | ||
7 | 6 | ||
8 | <title>Packages</title> | 7 | <section id="licenses_packages"> |
8 | <title>Packages</title> | ||
9 | 9 | ||
10 | 10 | <!--This chapter contains a generated list of all packages that Enea Linux | |
11 | <!--This chapter contains a generated list of all packages that Enea Linux | ||
12 | supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package | 11 | supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package |
13 | specific documentation.--> | 12 | specific documentation.--> |
14 | 13 | ||
15 | <informaltable> | 14 | <informaltable> |
16 | <tgroup cols="4"> | 15 | <tgroup cols="4"> |
17 | <colspec colwidth="2*"/> | 16 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
18 | <colspec colwidth="1*"/> | 17 | |
19 | <colspec colwidth="5*"/> | 18 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
20 | <colspec colwidth="2*"/> | 19 | |
21 | 20 | <colspec colwidth="5*" /> | |
22 | <thead> | 21 | |
23 | <row> | 22 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
24 | <entry align="center">Package Name</entry> | 23 | |
25 | <entry align="center">Version</entry> | 24 | <thead> |
26 | <entry align="center">Description</entry> | 25 | <row> |
27 | <entry align="center">License</entry> | 26 | <entry align="center">Package Name</entry> |
28 | </row> | 27 | |
29 | </thead> | 28 | <entry align="center">Version</entry> |
30 | 29 | ||
31 | <tbody valign="top"> | 30 | <entry align="center">Description</entry> |
32 | <row> | 31 | |
33 | <entry>acl</entry> | 32 | <entry align="center">License</entry> |
34 | <entry>2.2.52</entry> | 33 | </row> |
35 | <entry>Utilities for managing POSIX Access Control Lists.</entry> | 34 | </thead> |
36 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 35 | |
37 | </row> | 36 | <tbody valign="top"> |
38 | <row> | 37 | <row> |
39 | <entry>apt</entry> | 38 | <entry>acl</entry> |
40 | <entry>1.2.12</entry> | 39 | |
41 | <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> | 40 | <entry>2.2.52</entry> |
42 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 41 | |
43 | </row> | 42 | <entry>Utilities for managing POSIX Access Control Lists.</entry> |
44 | <row> | 43 | |
45 | <entry>asciidoc</entry> | 44 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> |
46 | <entry>8.6.9</entry> | 45 | </row> |
47 | <entry>AsciiDoc is a text document format for writing short documents articles books and UNIX man pages.</entry> | 46 | |
48 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 47 | <row> |
49 | </row> | 48 | <entry>apt</entry> |
50 | <row> | 49 | |
51 | <entry>atk</entry> | 50 | <entry>1.2.12</entry> |
52 | <entry>2.22.0</entry> | 51 | |
53 | <entry>Accessibility toolkit for GNOME.</entry> | 52 | <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> |
54 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 53 | |
55 | </row> | 54 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
56 | <row> | 55 | </row> |
57 | <entry>attr</entry> | 56 | |
58 | <entry>2.4.47</entry> | 57 | <row> |
59 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended attributes.</entry> | 58 | <entry>asciidoc</entry> |
60 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 59 | |
61 | </row> | 60 | <entry>8.6.9</entry> |
62 | <row> | 61 | |
63 | <entry>autoconf</entry> | 62 | <entry>AsciiDoc is a text document format for writing short |
64 | <entry>2.69</entry> | 63 | documents articles books and UNIX man pages.</entry> |
65 | <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce shell scripts to automatically configure software source code packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package from a template file that lists the operating system features that the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> | 64 | |
66 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 65 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
67 | </row> | 66 | </row> |
68 | <row> | 67 | |
69 | <entry>automake</entry> | 68 | <row> |
70 | <entry>1.15</entry> | 69 | <entry>atk</entry> |
71 | <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> | 70 | |
72 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 71 | <entry>2.22.0</entry> |
73 | </row> | 72 | |
74 | <row> | 73 | <entry>Accessibility toolkit for GNOME.</entry> |
75 | <entry>babeltrace</entry> | 74 | |
76 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> | 75 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
77 | <entry>Babeltrace provides trace read and write libraries in host side as well as a trace converter which used to convert LTTng 2.0 traces into human-readable log.</entry> | 76 | </row> |
78 | <entry> MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> | 77 | |
79 | </row> | 78 | <row> |
80 | <row> | 79 | <entry>attr</entry> |
81 | <entry>base-files</entry> | 80 | |
82 | <entry>3.0.14</entry> | 81 | <entry>2.4.47</entry> |
83 | <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for the system.</entry> | 82 | |
84 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 83 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended |
85 | </row> | 84 | attributes.</entry> |
86 | <row> | 85 | |
87 | <entry>base-passwd</entry> | 86 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> |
88 | <entry>3.5.29</entry> | 87 | </row> |
89 | <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> | 88 | |
90 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 89 | <row> |
91 | </row> | 90 | <entry>autoconf</entry> |
92 | <row> | 91 | |
93 | <entry>bash-completion</entry> | 92 | <entry>2.69</entry> |
94 | <entry>2.5</entry> | 93 | |
95 | <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> | 94 | <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce |
96 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 95 | shell scripts to automatically configure software source code |
97 | </row> | 96 | packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package |
98 | <row> | 97 | from a template file that lists the operating system features that |
99 | <entry>bash</entry> | 98 | the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> |
100 | <entry>4.3.30</entry> | 99 | |
101 | <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> | 100 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
102 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 101 | </row> |
103 | </row> | 102 | |
104 | <row> | 103 | <row> |
105 | <entry>bc</entry> | 104 | <entry>automake</entry> |
106 | <entry>1.06</entry> | 105 | |
107 | <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> | 106 | <entry>1.15</entry> |
108 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 107 | |
109 | </row> | 108 | <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating |
110 | <row> | 109 | `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. |
111 | <entry>binutils-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> | 110 | Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> |
112 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 111 | |
113 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 112 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
114 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 113 | </row> |
115 | </row> | 114 | |
116 | <row> | 115 | <row> |
117 | <entry>binutils-cross-x86_64</entry> | 116 | <entry>babeltrace</entry> |
118 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 117 | |
119 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 118 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> |
120 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 119 | |
121 | </row> | 120 | <entry>Babeltrace provides trace read and write libraries in host |
122 | <row> | 121 | side as well as a trace converter which used to convert LTTng 2.0 |
123 | <entry>binutils-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> | 122 | traces into human-readable log.</entry> |
124 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 123 | |
125 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 124 | <entry>MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> |
126 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 125 | </row> |
127 | </row> | 126 | |
128 | <row> | 127 | <row> |
129 | <entry>binutils</entry> | 128 | <entry>base-files</entry> |
130 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 129 | |
131 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 130 | <entry>3.0.14</entry> |
132 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 131 | |
133 | </row> | 132 | <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory |
134 | <row> | 133 | structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for |
135 | <entry>bison</entry> | 134 | the system.</entry> |
136 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> | 135 | |
137 | <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with little trouble.</entry> | 136 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
138 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 137 | </row> |
139 | </row> | 138 | |
140 | <row> | 139 | <row> |
141 | <entry>bjam</entry> | 140 | <entry>base-passwd</entry> |
142 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> | 141 | |
143 | <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry> | 142 | <entry>3.5.29</entry> |
144 | <entry> BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> | 143 | |
145 | </row> | 144 | <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd |
146 | <row> | 145 | and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep |
147 | <entry>boost</entry> | 146 | the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> |
148 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> | 147 | |
149 | <entry>Free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.</entry> | 148 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
150 | <entry> BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> | 149 | </row> |
151 | </row> | 150 | |
152 | <row> | 151 | <row> |
153 | <entry>busybox</entry> | 152 | <entry>bash-completion</entry> |
154 | <entry>1.24.1</entry> | 153 | |
155 | <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the options that are included provide the expected functionality and behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded system.</entry> | 154 | <entry>2.5</entry> |
156 | <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> | 155 | |
157 | </row> | 156 | <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> |
158 | <row> | 157 | |
159 | <entry>bzip2</entry> | 158 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
160 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> | 159 | </row> |
161 | <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> | 160 | |
162 | <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry> | 161 | <row> |
163 | </row> | 162 | <entry>bash</entry> |
164 | <row> | 163 | |
165 | <entry>ca-certificates</entry> | 164 | <entry>4.3.30</entry> |
166 | <entry>20161130</entry> | 165 | |
167 | <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> | 166 | <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> |
168 | <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> | 167 | |
169 | </row> | 168 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
170 | <row> | 169 | </row> |
171 | <entry>cairo</entry> | 170 | |
172 | <entry>1.14.8</entry> | 171 | <row> |
173 | <entry>Cairo is a multi-platform library providing anti-aliased vector-based rendering for multiple target backends. Paths consist of line segments and cubic splines and can be rendered at any width with various join and cap styles. All colors may be specified with optional translucence (opacity/alpha) and combined using the extended Porter/Duff compositing algebra as found in the X Render Extension.</entry> | 172 | <entry>bc</entry> |
174 | <entry> MPL-1.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry> | 173 | |
175 | </row> | 174 | <entry>1.06</entry> |
176 | <row> | 175 | |
177 | <entry>cantarell-fonts</entry> | 176 | <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> |
178 | <entry>0.0.24</entry> | 177 | |
179 | <entry>The Cantarell font typeface is designed as a contemporary Humanist sans serif and was developed for on-screen reading; in particular reading web pages on an HTC Dream mobile phone.</entry> | 178 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
180 | <entry>OFL-1.1</entry> | 179 | </row> |
181 | </row> | 180 | |
182 | <row> | 181 | <row> |
183 | <entry>chrpath</entry> | 182 | <entry>binutils-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> |
184 | <entry>0.16</entry> | 183 | |
185 | <entry>chrpath allows you to change the rpath (where the application looks for libraries) in an application. It does not (yet) allow you to add an rpath if there isn't one already.</entry> | 184 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
186 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 185 | |
187 | </row> | 186 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
188 | <row> | 187 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
189 | <entry>cmake</entry> | 188 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
190 | <entry>3.7.2</entry> | 189 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
191 | <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> | 190 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
192 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 191 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
193 | </row> | 192 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
194 | <row> | 193 | |
195 | <entry>compositeproto</entry> | 194 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
196 | <entry>0.4.2</entry> | 195 | </row> |
197 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X composite extension. The X composite extension provides three related mechanisms for compositing and off-screen storage.</entry> | 196 | |
198 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 197 | <row> |
199 | </row> | 198 | <entry>binutils-cross-x86_64</entry> |
200 | <row> | 199 | |
201 | <entry>coreutils</entry> | 200 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
202 | <entry>8.26</entry> | 201 | |
203 | <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which are expected to exist on every system.</entry> | 202 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
204 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 203 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
205 | </row> | 204 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
206 | <row> | 205 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
207 | <entry>cross-localedef</entry> | 206 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
208 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 207 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
209 | <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> | 208 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
210 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 209 | |
211 | </row> | 210 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
212 | <row> | 211 | </row> |
213 | <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry> | 212 | |
214 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 213 | <row> |
215 | <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> | 214 | <entry>binutils-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> |
216 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 215 | |
217 | </row> | 216 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
218 | <row> | 217 | |
219 | <entry>curl</entry> | 218 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
220 | <entry>7.53.1</entry> | 219 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
221 | <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL transfers.</entry> | 220 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
222 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 221 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
223 | </row> | 222 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
224 | <row> | 223 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
225 | <entry>damageproto</entry> | 224 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
226 | <entry>1.2.1</entry> | 225 | |
227 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the DAMAGE extension. The DAMAGE extension allows applications to receive information about changes made to pixel contents of windows and pixmaps.</entry> | 226 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
228 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 227 | </row> |
229 | </row> | 228 | |
230 | <row> | 229 | <row> |
231 | <entry>db</entry> | 230 | <entry>binutils</entry> |
232 | <entry>5.3.28</entry> | 231 | |
233 | <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> | 232 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
234 | <entry>Sleepycat</entry> | 233 | |
235 | </row> | 234 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
236 | <row> | 235 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
237 | <entry>dbus-test</entry> | 236 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
238 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> | 237 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
239 | <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing only).</entry> | 238 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
240 | <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 239 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
241 | </row> | 240 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
242 | <row> | 241 | |
243 | <entry>dbus</entry> | 242 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
244 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> | 243 | </row> |
245 | <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when their services are needed."</entry> | 244 | |
246 | <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 245 | <row> |
247 | </row> | 246 | <entry>bison</entry> |
248 | <row> | 247 | |
249 | <entry>debianutils</entry> | 248 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> |
250 | <entry>4.8.1</entry> | 249 | |
251 | <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> | 250 | <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts |
252 | <entry> GPL-2.0</entry> | 251 | an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser |
253 | </row> | 252 | for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all |
254 | <row> | 253 | properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no |
255 | <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> | 254 | change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with |
256 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 255 | little trouble.</entry> |
257 | <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency indexer.</entry> | 256 | |
258 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 257 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
259 | </row> | 258 | </row> |
260 | <row> | 259 | |
261 | <entry>diffutils</entry> | 260 | <row> |
262 | <entry>3.5</entry> | 261 | <entry>bjam</entry> |
263 | <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch files.</entry> | 262 | |
264 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 263 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> |
265 | </row> | 264 | |
266 | <row> | 265 | <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry> |
267 | <entry>dnf</entry> | 266 | |
268 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> | 267 | <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> |
269 | <entry>Package manager forked from Yum using libsolv as a dependency resolver.</entry> | 268 | </row> |
270 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 269 | |
271 | </row> | 270 | <row> |
272 | <row> | 271 | <entry>boost</entry> |
273 | <entry>docbook-xml-dtd4</entry> | 272 | |
274 | <entry>4.5</entry> | 273 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> |
275 | <entry>Document type definitions for verification of XML data files against the DocBook rule set it ships with the latest DocBook 4.5 XML DTD as well as a selected set of legacy DTDs for use with older documents including 4.0 4.1.2 4.2 4.3 and 4.4</entry> | 274 | |
276 | <entry>OASIS</entry> | 275 | <entry>Free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.</entry> |
277 | </row> | 276 | |
278 | <row> | 277 | <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> |
279 | <entry>docbook-xsl-stylesheets</entry> | 278 | </row> |
280 | <entry>1.79.1</entry> | 279 | |
281 | <entry>XSL stylesheets for processing DocBook XML to various output formats.</entry> | 280 | <row> |
282 | <entry>XSL</entry> | 281 | <entry>busybox</entry> |
283 | </row> | 282 | |
284 | <row> | 283 | <entry>1.24.1</entry> |
285 | <entry>dosfstools</entry> | 284 | |
286 | <entry>4.1</entry> | 285 | <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX |
287 | <entry>DOS FAT Filesystem Utilities.</entry> | 286 | utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist |
288 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 287 | replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU |
289 | </row> | 288 | fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have |
290 | <row> | 289 | fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the |
291 | <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> | 290 | options that are included provide the expected functionality and |
292 | <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry> | 291 | behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a |
293 | <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> | 292 | fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded |
294 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 293 | system.</entry> |
295 | </row> | 294 | |
296 | <row> | 295 | <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> |
297 | <entry>dpdk</entry> | 296 | </row> |
298 | <entry>17.08</entry> | 297 | |
299 | <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry> | 298 | <row> |
300 | <entry> BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 299 | <entry>bzip2</entry> |
301 | </row> | 300 | |
302 | <row> | 301 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> |
303 | <entry>dpkg</entry> | 302 | |
304 | <entry>1.18.10</entry> | 303 | <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler |
305 | <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> | 304 | block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. |
306 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 305 | Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by |
307 | </row> | 306 | more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the |
308 | <row> | 307 | performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> |
309 | <entry>dtc</entry> | 308 | |
310 | <entry>1.4.2</entry> | 309 | <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry> |
311 | <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> | 310 | </row> |
312 | <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> | 311 | |
313 | </row> | 312 | <row> |
314 | <row> | 313 | <entry>ca-certificates</entry> |
315 | <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> | 314 | |
316 | <entry>1.43.4</entry> | 315 | <entry>20161130</entry> |
317 | <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> | 316 | |
318 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> | 317 | <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow |
319 | </row> | 318 | SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL |
320 | <row> | 319 | connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> |
321 | <entry>elfutils</entry> | 320 | |
322 | <entry>0.168</entry> | 321 | <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> |
323 | <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object files.</entry> | 322 | </row> |
324 | <entry> GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> | 323 | |
325 | </row> | 324 | <row> |
326 | <row> | 325 | <entry>cairo</entry> |
327 | <entry>enea-nfv-access-guest-dev</entry> | 326 | |
328 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 327 | <entry>1.14.8</entry> |
329 | <entry>Image for the guest side of the Enea NFV Access Platform</entry> | 328 | |
330 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 329 | <entry>Cairo is a multi-platform library providing anti-aliased |
331 | </row> | 330 | vector-based rendering for multiple target backends. Paths consist |
332 | <row> | 331 | of line segments and cubic splines and can be rendered at any |
333 | <entry>expat</entry> | 332 | width with various join and cap styles. All colors may be |
334 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> | 333 | specified with optional translucence (opacity/alpha) and combined |
335 | <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start tags)</entry> | 334 | using the extended Porter/Duff compositing algebra as found in the |
336 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 335 | X Render Extension.</entry> |
337 | </row> | 336 | |
338 | <row> | 337 | <entry>MPL-1.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry> |
339 | <entry>file</entry> | 338 | </row> |
340 | <entry>5.30</entry> | 339 | |
341 | <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> | 340 | <row> |
342 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 341 | <entry>cantarell-fonts</entry> |
343 | </row> | 342 | |
344 | <row> | 343 | <entry>0.0.24</entry> |
345 | <entry>fixesproto</entry> | 344 | |
346 | <entry>5.0</entry> | 345 | <entry>The Cantarell font typeface is designed as a contemporary |
347 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Fixes extension. This extension is designed to provide server-side support for application work arounds to shortcomings in the core X window system.</entry> | 346 | Humanist sans serif and was developed for on-screen reading; in |
348 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 347 | particular reading web pages on an HTC Dream mobile phone.</entry> |
349 | </row> | 348 | |
350 | <row> | 349 | <entry>OFL-1.1</entry> |
351 | <entry>flex</entry> | 350 | </row> |
352 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> | 351 | |
353 | <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in text.</entry> | 352 | <row> |
354 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 353 | <entry>chrpath</entry> |
355 | </row> | 354 | |
356 | <row> | 355 | <entry>0.16</entry> |
357 | <entry>fontconfig</entry> | 356 | |
358 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> | 357 | <entry>chrpath allows you to change the rpath (where the |
359 | <entry>Fontconfig is a font configuration and customization library which does not depend on the X Window System. It is designed to locate fonts within the system and select them according to requirements specified by applications. Fontconfig is not a rasterization library nor does it impose a particular rasterization library on the application. The X-specific library 'Xft' uses fontconfig along with freetype to specify and rasterize fonts.</entry> | 358 | application looks for libraries) in an application. It does not |
360 | <entry> MIT, PD</entry> | 359 | (yet) allow you to add an rpath if there isn't one |
361 | </row> | 360 | already.</entry> |
362 | <row> | 361 | |
363 | <entry>freetype</entry> | 362 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
364 | <entry>2.7.1</entry> | 363 | </row> |
365 | <entry>FreeType is a software font engine that is designed to be small efficient highly customizable and portable while capable of producing high-quality output (glyph images). It can be used in graphics libraries display servers font conversion tools text image generation tools and many other products as well.</entry> | 364 | |
366 | <entry> FreeType, GPL-2.0</entry> | 365 | <row> |
367 | </row> | 366 | <entry>cmake</entry> |
368 | <row> | 367 | |
369 | <entry>fuse</entry> | 368 | <entry>3.7.2</entry> |
370 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | 369 | |
371 | <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem implementations.</entry> | 370 | <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> |
372 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 371 | |
373 | </row> | 372 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
374 | <row> | 373 | </row> |
375 | <entry>gawk</entry> | 374 | |
376 | <entry>4.1.4</entry> | 375 | <row> |
377 | <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> | 376 | <entry>compositeproto</entry> |
378 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 377 | |
379 | </row> | 378 | <entry>0.4.2</entry> |
380 | <row> | 379 | |
381 | <entry>gcc-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> | 380 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X composite |
382 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 381 | extension. The X composite extension provides three related |
383 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers (cross-canadian for x86_64 target).</entry> | 382 | mechanisms for compositing and off-screen storage.</entry> |
384 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 383 | |
385 | </row> | 384 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
386 | <row> | 385 | </row> |
387 | <entry>gcc-cross-initial-x86_64</entry> | 386 | |
388 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 387 | <row> |
389 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 388 | <entry>coreutils</entry> |
390 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 389 | |
391 | </row> | 390 | <entry>8.26</entry> |
392 | <row> | 391 | |
393 | <entry>gcc-cross-x86_64</entry> | 392 | <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and |
394 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 393 | text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which |
395 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 394 | are expected to exist on every system.</entry> |
396 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 395 | |
397 | </row> | 396 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
398 | <row> | 397 | </row> |
399 | <entry>gcc-crosssdk-initial-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> | 398 | |
400 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 399 | <row> |
401 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 400 | <entry>cross-localedef</entry> |
402 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 401 | |
403 | </row> | 402 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
404 | <row> | 403 | |
405 | <entry>gcc-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> | 404 | <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> |
406 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 405 | |
407 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 406 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
408 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 407 | </row> |
409 | </row> | 408 | |
410 | <row> | 409 | <row> |
411 | <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> | 410 | <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry> |
412 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 411 | |
413 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 412 | <entry>1.8</entry> |
414 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 413 | |
415 | </row> | 414 | <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> |
416 | <row> | 415 | |
417 | <entry>gcc</entry> | 416 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
418 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 417 | </row> |
419 | <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry> | 418 | |
420 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> | 419 | <row> |
421 | </row> | 420 | <entry>curl</entry> |
422 | <row> | 421 | |
423 | <entry>gdb-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> | 422 | <entry>7.53.1</entry> |
424 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> | 423 | |
425 | <entry>GNU debugger (cross-canadian gdb for x86_64 target).</entry> | 424 | <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL |
426 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 425 | transfers.</entry> |
427 | </row> | 426 | |
428 | <row> | 427 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
429 | <entry>gdb</entry> | 428 | </row> |
430 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> | 429 | |
431 | <entry>GNU debugger.</entry> | 430 | <row> |
432 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 431 | <entry>damageproto</entry> |
433 | </row> | 432 | |
434 | <row> | 433 | <entry>1.2.1</entry> |
435 | <entry>gdbm</entry> | 434 | |
436 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 435 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the DAMAGE |
437 | <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> | 436 | extension. The DAMAGE extension allows applications to receive |
438 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 437 | information about changes made to pixel contents of windows and |
439 | </row> | 438 | pixmaps.</entry> |
440 | <row> | 439 | |
441 | <entry>gdk-pixbuf</entry> | 440 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
442 | <entry>2.36.5</entry> | 441 | </row> |
443 | <entry>Image loading library for GTK+.</entry> | 442 | |
444 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 443 | <row> |
445 | </row> | 444 | <entry>db</entry> |
446 | <row> | 445 | |
447 | <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> | 446 | <entry>5.3.28</entry> |
448 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> | 447 | |
449 | <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> | 448 | <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> |
450 | <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> | 449 | |
451 | </row> | 450 | <entry>Sleepycat</entry> |
452 | <row> | 451 | </row> |
453 | <entry>gettext</entry> | 452 | |
454 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> | 453 | <row> |
455 | <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools include a set of conventions about how programs should be written to support message catalogs a directory and file naming organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of translatable and already translated strings.</entry> | 454 | <entry>dbus-test</entry> |
456 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 455 | |
457 | </row> | 456 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> |
458 | <row> | 457 | |
459 | <entry>glib-2.0</entry> | 458 | <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing |
460 | <entry>2.50.3</entry> | 459 | only).</entry> |
461 | <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> | 460 | |
462 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> | 461 | <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
463 | </row> | 462 | </row> |
464 | <row> | 463 | |
465 | <entry>glibc-locale</entry> | 464 | <row> |
466 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 465 | <entry>dbus</entry> |
467 | <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> | 466 | |
468 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 467 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> |
469 | </row> | 468 | |
470 | <row> | 469 | <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for |
471 | <entry>glibc</entry> | 470 | applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess |
472 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 471 | communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes |
473 | <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> | 472 | it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application |
474 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 473 | or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when |
475 | </row> | 474 | their services are needed."</entry> |
476 | <row> | 475 | |
477 | <entry>gmp</entry> | 476 | <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
478 | <entry>6.1.2</entry> | 477 | </row> |
479 | <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point numbers</entry> | 478 | |
480 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 479 | <row> |
481 | </row> | 480 | <entry>debianutils</entry> |
482 | <row> | 481 | |
483 | <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> | 482 | <entry>4.8.1</entry> |
484 | <entry>2014.1</entry> | 483 | |
485 | <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> | 484 | <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> |
486 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 485 | |
487 | </row> | 486 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
488 | <row> | 487 | </row> |
489 | <entry>gnome-themes-standard</entry> | 488 | |
490 | <entry>3.22.2</entry> | 489 | <row> |
491 | <entry>GTK+2 standard themes.</entry> | 490 | <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> |
492 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 491 | |
493 | </row> | 492 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
494 | <row> | 493 | |
495 | <entry>gnu-config</entry> | 494 | <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency |
496 | <entry>20150728</entry> | 495 | indexer.</entry> |
497 | <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a directory tree</entry> | 496 | |
498 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-autoconf-exception</entry> | 497 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
499 | </row> | 498 | </row> |
500 | <row> | 499 | |
501 | <entry>gnutls</entry> | 500 | <row> |
502 | <entry>3.5.9</entry> | 501 | <entry>diffutils</entry> |
503 | <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> | 502 | |
504 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 503 | <entry>3.5</entry> |
505 | </row> | 504 | |
506 | <row> | 505 | <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp |
507 | <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> | 506 | utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch |
508 | <entry>1.50.0</entry> | 507 | files.</entry> |
509 | <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and language bindings.</entry> | 508 | |
510 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 509 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
511 | </row> | 510 | </row> |
512 | <row> | 511 | |
513 | <entry>gperf</entry> | 512 | <row> |
514 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> | 513 | <entry>dnf</entry> |
515 | <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> | 514 | |
516 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 515 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> |
517 | </row> | 516 | |
518 | <row> | 517 | <entry>Package manager forked from Yum using libsolv as a |
519 | <entry>gpgme</entry> | 518 | dependency resolver.</entry> |
520 | <entry>1.8.0</entry> | 519 | |
521 | <entry>GnuPG Made Easy (GPGME) is a library designed to make access to GnuPG easier for applications. It provides a High-Level Crypto API for encryption decryption signing signature verification and key management</entry> | 520 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
522 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 521 | </row> |
523 | </row> | 522 | |
524 | <row> | 523 | <row> |
525 | <entry>grep</entry> | 524 | <entry>docbook-xml-dtd4</entry> |
526 | <entry>3.0</entry> | 525 | |
527 | <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> | 526 | <entry>4.5</entry> |
528 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 527 | |
529 | </row> | 528 | <entry>Document type definitions for verification of XML data |
530 | <row> | 529 | files against the DocBook rule set it ships with the latest |
531 | <entry>groff</entry> | 530 | DocBook 4.5 XML DTD as well as a selected set of legacy DTDs for |
532 | <entry>1.22.3</entry> | 531 | use with older documents including 4.0 4.1.2 4.2 4.3 and |
533 | <entry>The groff (GNU troff) software is a typesetting package which reads plain text mixed with formatting commands and produces formatted output.</entry> | 532 | 4.4</entry> |
534 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 533 | |
535 | </row> | 534 | <entry>OASIS</entry> |
536 | <row> | 535 | </row> |
537 | <entry>gtk+</entry> | 536 | |
538 | <entry>2.24.31</entry> | 537 | <row> |
539 | <entry>GTK+ is a multi-platform toolkit for creating graphical user interfaces. Offering a complete set of widgets GTK+ is suitable for projects ranging from small one-off projects to complete application suites.</entry> | 538 | <entry>docbook-xsl-stylesheets</entry> |
540 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 539 | |
541 | </row> | 540 | <entry>1.79.1</entry> |
542 | <row> | 541 | |
543 | <entry>gtk-doc</entry> | 542 | <entry>XSL stylesheets for processing DocBook XML to various |
544 | <entry>1.25</entry> | 543 | output formats.</entry> |
545 | <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of html documentation files from them</entry> | 544 | |
546 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 545 | <entry>XSL</entry> |
547 | </row> | 546 | </row> |
548 | <row> | 547 | |
549 | <entry>gtk-icon-utils</entry> | 548 | <row> |
550 | <entry>3.22.8</entry> | 549 | <entry>dosfstools</entry> |
551 | <entry>gtk-update-icon-cache and gtk-encode-symbolic-svg built from GTK+ natively for build time and on-host postinst script execution.</entry> | 550 | |
552 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 551 | <entry>4.1</entry> |
553 | </row> | 552 | |
554 | <row> | 553 | <entry>DOS FAT Filesystem Utilities.</entry> |
555 | <entry>harfbuzz</entry> | 554 | |
556 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | 555 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
557 | <entry>HarfBuzz is an OpenType text shaping engine.</entry> | 556 | </row> |
558 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 557 | |
559 | </row> | 558 | <row> |
560 | <row> | 559 | <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> |
561 | <entry>hicolor-icon-theme</entry> | 560 | |
562 | <entry>0.15</entry> | 561 | <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry> |
563 | <entry>Default icon theme that all icon themes automatically inherit from.</entry> | 562 | |
564 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 563 | <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> |
565 | </row> | 564 | |
566 | <row> | 565 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
567 | <entry>icu</entry> | 566 | </row> |
568 | <entry>58.2</entry> | 567 | |
569 | <entry>The International Component for Unicode (ICU) is a mature portable set of C/C++ and Java libraries for Unicode support software internationalization (I18N) and globalization (G11N) giving applications the same results on all platforms.</entry> | 568 | <row> |
570 | <entry>ICU</entry> | 569 | <entry>dpdk</entry> |
571 | </row> | 570 | |
572 | <row> | 571 | <entry>17.08</entry> |
573 | <entry>inputproto</entry> | 572 | |
574 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> | 573 | <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry> |
575 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input extension. The extension supports input devices other then the core X keyboard and pointer.</entry> | 574 | |
576 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 575 | <entry>BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
577 | </row> | 576 | </row> |
578 | <row> | 577 | |
579 | <entry>intltool</entry> | 578 | <row> |
580 | <entry>0.51.0</entry> | 579 | <entry>dpkg</entry> |
581 | <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry> | 580 | |
582 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 581 | <entry>1.18.10</entry> |
583 | </row> | 582 | |
584 | <row> | 583 | <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> |
585 | <entry>iproute2</entry> | 584 | |
586 | <entry>4.10.0</entry> | 585 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
587 | <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP / IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6 configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry> | 586 | </row> |
588 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 587 | |
589 | </row> | 588 | <row> |
590 | <row> | 589 | <entry>dtc</entry> |
591 | <entry>iptables</entry> | 590 | |
592 | <entry>1.6.1</entry> | 591 | <entry>1.4.2</entry> |
593 | <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to configure and control network packet filtering code in Linux.</entry> | 592 | |
594 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 593 | <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the |
595 | </row> | 594 | Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> |
596 | <row> | 595 | |
597 | <entry>json-c</entry> | 596 | <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> |
598 | <entry>0.12</entry> | 597 | </row> |
599 | <entry>JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that allows you to easily construct JSON objects in C.</entry> | 598 | |
600 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 599 | <row> |
601 | </row> | 600 | <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> |
602 | <row> | 601 | |
603 | <entry>kbd</entry> | 602 | <entry>1.43.4</entry> |
604 | <entry>2.0.4</entry> | 603 | |
605 | <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry> | 604 | <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of |
606 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 605 | the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and |
607 | </row> | 606 | debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> |
608 | <row> | 607 | |
609 | <entry>kbproto</entry> | 608 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> |
610 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> | 609 | </row> |
611 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard extension. This extension is used to control options related to keyboard handling and layout.</entry> | 610 | |
612 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 611 | <row> |
613 | </row> | 612 | <entry>elfutils</entry> |
614 | <row> | 613 | |
615 | <entry>kern-tools</entry> | 614 | <entry>0.168</entry> |
616 | <entry>0.2</entry> | 615 | |
617 | <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched kernels.</entry> | 616 | <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object |
618 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 617 | files.</entry> |
619 | </row> | 618 | |
620 | <row> | 619 | <entry>GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> |
621 | <entry>kernel-devsrc</entry> | 620 | </row> |
622 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 621 | |
623 | <entry>Development source linux kernel. When built this recipe packages the source of the preferred virtual/kernel provider and makes it available for full kernel development or external module builds</entry> | 622 | <row> |
624 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 623 | <entry>enea-nfv-access-guest-dev</entry> |
625 | </row> | 624 | |
626 | <row> | 625 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
627 | <entry>kmod</entry> | 626 | |
628 | <entry>23</entry> | 627 | <entry>Image for the guest side of the Enea NFV Access |
629 | <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve dependencies and aliases.</entry> | 628 | Platform</entry> |
630 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 629 | |
631 | </row> | 630 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
632 | <row> | 631 | </row> |
633 | <entry>latencytop</entry> | 632 | |
634 | <entry>0.5</entry> | 633 | <row> |
635 | <entry>Linux tool for measuring and fixing latency.</entry> | 634 | <entry>expat</entry> |
636 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 635 | |
637 | </row> | 636 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> |
638 | <row> | 637 | |
639 | <entry>ldconfig</entry> | 638 | <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a |
640 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> | 639 | stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers |
641 | <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry> | 640 | for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start |
642 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 641 | tags)</entry> |
643 | </row> | 642 | |
644 | <row> | 643 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
645 | <entry>less</entry> | 644 | </row> |
646 | <entry>487</entry> | 645 | |
647 | <entry>Less is a program similar to more i.e. a terminal based program for viewing text files and the output from other programs. Less offers many features beyond those that more does.</entry> | 646 | <row> |
648 | <entry> GPL-3.0, BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 647 | <entry>file</entry> |
649 | </row> | 648 | |
650 | <row> | 649 | <entry>5.30</entry> |
651 | <entry>libarchive</entry> | 650 | |
652 | <entry>3.2.2</entry> | 651 | <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents |
653 | <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry> | 652 | and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> |
654 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 653 | |
655 | </row> | 654 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
656 | <row> | 655 | </row> |
657 | <entry>libassuan</entry> | 656 | |
658 | <entry>2.4.3</entry> | 657 | <row> |
659 | <entry>IPC library used by GnuPG and GPGME.</entry> | 658 | <entry>fixesproto</entry> |
660 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 659 | |
661 | </row> | 660 | <entry>5.0</entry> |
662 | <row> | 661 | |
663 | <entry>libcap</entry> | 662 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Fixes |
664 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 663 | extension. This extension is designed to provide server-side |
665 | <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry> | 664 | support for application work arounds to shortcomings in the core X |
666 | <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> | 665 | window system.</entry> |
667 | </row> | 666 | |
668 | <row> | 667 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
669 | <entry>libcgroup</entry> | 668 | </row> |
670 | <entry>0.41</entry> | 669 | |
671 | <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of processes.</entry> | 670 | <row> |
672 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 671 | <entry>flex</entry> |
673 | </row> | 672 | |
674 | <row> | 673 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> |
675 | <entry>libcheck</entry> | 674 | |
676 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> | 675 | <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool |
677 | <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry> | 676 | for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in |
678 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 677 | text.</entry> |
679 | </row> | 678 | |
680 | <row> | 679 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
681 | <entry>libcomps</entry> | 680 | </row> |
682 | <entry>0.1.8</entry> | 681 | |
683 | <entry>Libcomps is alternative for yum.comps library (which is for managing rpm package groups)..</entry> | 682 | <row> |
684 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 683 | <entry>fontconfig</entry> |
685 | </row> | 684 | |
686 | <row> | 685 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> |
687 | <entry>libcroco</entry> | 686 | |
688 | <entry>0.6.11</entry> | 687 | <entry>Fontconfig is a font configuration and customization |
689 | <entry>Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) parsing and manipulation toolkit.</entry> | 688 | library which does not depend on the X Window System. It is |
690 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 689 | designed to locate fonts within the system and select them |
691 | </row> | 690 | according to requirements specified by applications. Fontconfig is |
692 | <row> | 691 | not a rasterization library nor does it impose a particular |
693 | <entry>libdnf</entry> | 692 | rasterization library on the application. The X-specific library |
694 | <entry>0.2.3</entry> | 693 | 'Xft' uses fontconfig along with freetype to specify and rasterize |
695 | <entry>Library providing simplified C and Python API to libsolv.</entry> | 694 | fonts.</entry> |
696 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 695 | |
697 | </row> | 696 | <entry>MIT, PD</entry> |
698 | <row> | 697 | </row> |
699 | <entry>liberation-fonts</entry> | 698 | |
700 | <entry>1.04</entry> | 699 | <row> |
701 | <entry>The Liberation(tm) Fonts is a font family originally created by Ascender(c) which aims at metric compatibility with Arial Times New Roman Courier New.</entry> | 700 | <entry>freetype</entry> |
702 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 701 | |
703 | </row> | 702 | <entry>2.7.1</entry> |
704 | <row> | 703 | |
705 | <entry>libffi</entry> | 704 | <entry>FreeType is a software font engine that is designed to be |
706 | <entry>3.2.1</entry> | 705 | small efficient highly customizable and portable while capable of |
707 | <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for the interface that allows code written in one language to call code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that handles type conversions for values passed between the two languages.</entry> | 706 | producing high-quality output (glyph images). It can be used in |
708 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 707 | graphics libraries display servers font conversion tools text |
709 | </row> | 708 | image generation tools and many other products as well.</entry> |
710 | <row> | 709 | |
711 | <entry>libgcc</entry> | 710 | <entry>FreeType, GPL-2.0</entry> |
712 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 711 | </row> |
713 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 712 | |
714 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> | 713 | <row> |
715 | </row> | 714 | <entry>fuse</entry> |
716 | <row> | 715 | |
717 | <entry>libgpg-error</entry> | 716 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> |
718 | <entry>1.26</entry> | 717 | |
719 | <entry>Small library that defines common error values for all GnuPG components.</entry> | 718 | <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for |
720 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 719 | userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux |
721 | </row> | 720 | kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non |
722 | <row> | 721 | privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem |
723 | <entry>libice</entry> | 722 | implementations.</entry> |
724 | <entry>1.0.9</entry> | 723 | |
725 | <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up and shutting down connections for performing authentication for negotiating versions and for reporting errors. </entry> | 724 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
726 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 725 | </row> |
727 | </row> | 726 | |
728 | <row> | 727 | <row> |
729 | <entry>libidn</entry> | 728 | <entry>gawk</entry> |
730 | <entry>1.33</entry> | 729 | |
731 | <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) working group.</entry> | 730 | <entry>4.1.4</entry> |
732 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 731 | |
733 | </row> | 732 | <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk |
734 | <row> | 733 | interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and |
735 | <entry>libjpeg-turbo</entry> | 734 | easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> |
736 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | 735 | |
737 | <entry>libjpeg-turbo is a derivative of libjpeg that uses SIMD instructions (MMX SSE2 NEON) to accelerate baseline JPEG compression and decompression</entry> | 736 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
738 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 737 | </row> |
739 | </row> | 738 | |
740 | <row> | 739 | <row> |
741 | <entry>libmpc</entry> | 740 | <entry>gcc-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> |
742 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> | 741 | |
743 | <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as Mpfr</entry> | 742 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
744 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | 743 | |
745 | </row> | 744 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers (cross-canadian for x86_64 |
746 | <row> | 745 | target).</entry> |
747 | <entry>libnewt</entry> | 746 | |
748 | <entry>0.52.19</entry> | 747 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
749 | <entry>Newt is a programming library for color text mode widget based user interfaces. Newt can be used to add stacked windows entry widgets checkboxes radio buttons labels plain text fields scrollbars etc. to text mode user interfaces. This package also contains the shared library needed by programs built with newt as well as a /usr/bin/dialog replacement called whiptail. Newt is based on the slang library.</entry> | 748 | </row> |
750 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 749 | |
751 | </row> | 750 | <row> |
752 | <row> | 751 | <entry>gcc-cross-initial-x86_64</entry> |
753 | <entry>libnl</entry> | 752 | |
754 | <entry>3.2.29</entry> | 753 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
755 | <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink sockets.</entry> | 754 | |
756 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 755 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
757 | </row> | 756 | |
758 | <row> | 757 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
759 | <entry>libpcap</entry> | 758 | </row> |
760 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> | 759 | |
761 | <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection security monitoring and network debugging.</entry> | 760 | <row> |
762 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 761 | <entry>gcc-cross-x86_64</entry> |
763 | </row> | 762 | |
764 | <row> | 763 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
765 | <entry>libpcre</entry> | 764 | |
766 | <entry>8.40</entry> | 765 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
767 | <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular expression API.</entry> | 766 | |
768 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 767 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
769 | </row> | 768 | </row> |
770 | <row> | 769 | |
771 | <entry>libpng</entry> | 770 | <row> |
772 | <entry>1.6.28</entry> | 771 | <entry>gcc-crosssdk-initial-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> |
773 | <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry> | 772 | |
774 | <entry>Libpng</entry> | 773 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
775 | </row> | 774 | |
776 | <row> | 775 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
777 | <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry> | 776 | |
778 | <entry>0.3</entry> | 777 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
779 | <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry> | 778 | </row> |
780 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 779 | |
781 | </row> | 780 | <row> |
782 | <row> | 781 | <entry>gcc-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> |
783 | <entry>librepo</entry> | 782 | |
784 | <entry>1.7.20</entry> | 783 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
785 | <entry> A library providing C and Python (libcURL like) API for downloading linux repository metadata and packages..</entry> | 784 | |
786 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 785 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
787 | </row> | 786 | |
788 | <row> | 787 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
789 | <entry>librsvg</entry> | 788 | </row> |
790 | <entry>2.40.16</entry> | 789 | |
791 | <entry>Library for rendering SVG files.</entry> | 790 | <row> |
792 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 791 | <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> |
793 | </row> | 792 | |
794 | <row> | 793 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
795 | <entry>libsdl</entry> | 794 | |
796 | <entry>1.2.15</entry> | 795 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
797 | <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video framebuffer.</entry> | 796 | |
798 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 797 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
799 | </row> | 798 | </row> |
800 | <row> | 799 | |
801 | <entry>libsm</entry> | 800 | <row> |
802 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | 801 | <entry>gcc</entry> |
803 | <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of clients each of which has a particular state."</entry> | 802 | |
804 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 803 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
805 | </row> | 804 | |
806 | <row> | 805 | <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry> |
807 | <entry>libsolv</entry> | 806 | |
808 | <entry>0.6.26</entry> | 807 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> |
809 | <entry>Library for solving packages and reading repositories.</entry> | 808 | </row> |
810 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 809 | |
811 | </row> | 810 | <row> |
812 | <row> | 811 | <entry>gdb-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> |
813 | <entry>libtool</entry> | 812 | |
814 | <entry>2.4.6</entry> | 813 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> |
815 | <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script. Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry> | 814 | |
816 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 815 | <entry>GNU debugger (cross-canadian gdb for x86_64 |
817 | </row> | 816 | target).</entry> |
818 | <row> | 817 | |
819 | <entry>libunistring</entry> | 818 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> |
820 | <entry>0.9.7</entry> | 819 | </row> |
821 | <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains documentation.</entry> | 820 | |
822 | <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 821 | <row> |
823 | </row> | 822 | <entry>gdb</entry> |
824 | <row> | 823 | |
825 | <entry>liburcu</entry> | 824 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> |
826 | <entry>0.9.3</entry> | 825 | |
827 | <entry>Userspace RCU (read-copy-update) library.</entry> | 826 | <entry>GNU debugger.</entry> |
828 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, MIT</entry> | 827 | |
829 | </row> | 828 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> |
830 | <row> | 829 | </row> |
831 | <entry>libx11</entry> | 830 | |
832 | <entry>1.6.4</entry> | 831 | <row> |
833 | <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for the basic functions of the window system.</entry> | 832 | <entry>gdbm</entry> |
834 | <entry> MIT, BSD</entry> | 833 | |
835 | </row> | 834 | <entry>1.12</entry> |
836 | <row> | 835 | |
837 | <entry>libxau</entry> | 836 | <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> |
838 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | 837 | |
839 | <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X connections both client-side and server-side.</entry> | 838 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
840 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 839 | </row> |
841 | </row> | 840 | |
842 | <row> | 841 | <row> |
843 | <entry>libxcb</entry> | 842 | <entry>gdk-pixbuf</entry> |
844 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 843 | |
845 | <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading support and extensibility.</entry> | 844 | <entry>2.36.5</entry> |
846 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 845 | |
847 | </row> | 846 | <entry>Image loading library for GTK+.</entry> |
848 | <row> | 847 | |
849 | <entry>libxcomposite</entry> | 848 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> |
850 | <entry>0.4.4</entry> | 849 | </row> |
851 | <entry>The composite extension provides three related mechanisms: per-hierarchy storage automatic shadow update and external parent. In per-hierarchy storage the rendering of an entire hierarchy of windows is redirected to off-screen storage. In automatic shadow update when a hierarchy is rendered off-screen the X server provides an automatic mechanism for presenting those contents within the parent window. In external parent a mechanism for providing redirection of compositing transformations through a client.</entry> | 850 | |
852 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 851 | <row> |
853 | </row> | 852 | <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> |
854 | <row> | 853 | |
855 | <entry>libxcursor</entry> | 854 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> |
856 | <entry>1.1.14</entry> | 855 | |
857 | <entry>Xcursor is a simple library designed to help locate and load cursors. Cursors can be loaded from files or memory. A library of common cursors exists which map to the standard X cursor names. Cursors can exist in several sizes and the library automatically picks the best size.</entry> | 856 | <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building |
858 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 857 | autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup |
859 | </row> | 858 | by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now |
860 | <row> | 859 | only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> |
861 | <entry>libxdamage</entry> | 860 | |
862 | <entry>1.1.4</entry> | 861 | <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> |
863 | <entry>'Damage' is a term that describes changes make to pixel contents of windows and pixmaps. Damage accumulates as drawing occurs in the drawable. Each drawing operation 'damages' one or more rectangular areas within the drawable. The rectangles are guaranteed to include the set of pixels modified by each operation but may include significantly more than just those pixels. The DAMAGE extension allows applications to either receive the raw rectangles as a stream of events or to have them partially processed within the X server to reduce the amount of data transmitted as well as reduce the processing latency once the repaint operation has started.</entry> | 862 | </row> |
864 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 863 | |
865 | </row> | 864 | <row> |
866 | <row> | 865 | <entry>gettext</entry> |
867 | <entry>libxdmcp</entry> | 866 | |
868 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> | 867 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> |
869 | <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime example of an autonomous display.</entry> | 868 | |
870 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 869 | <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to |
871 | </row> | 870 | help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools |
872 | <row> | 871 | include a set of conventions about how programs should be written |
873 | <entry>libxext</entry> | 872 | to support message catalogs a directory and file naming |
874 | <entry>1.3.3</entry> | 873 | organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library |
875 | <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X protocol extensions.</entry> | 874 | supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few |
876 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 875 | stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of |
877 | </row> | 876 | translatable and already translated strings.</entry> |
878 | <row> | 877 | |
879 | <entry>libxfixes</entry> | 878 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
880 | <entry>5.0.3</entry> | 879 | </row> |
881 | <entry>X applications have often needed to work around various shortcomings in the core X window system. This extension is designed to provide the minimal server-side support necessary to eliminate problems caused by these workarounds.</entry> | 880 | |
882 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 881 | <row> |
883 | </row> | 882 | <entry>glib-2.0</entry> |
884 | <row> | 883 | |
885 | <entry>libxft</entry> | 884 | <entry>2.50.3</entry> |
886 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> | 885 | |
887 | <entry>Xft was designed to provide good support for scalable fonts and to do so efficiently. Unlike the core fonts system it supports features such as anti-aliasing and sub-pixel rasterisation. Perhaps more importantly it gives applications full control over the way glyphs are rendered making fine typesetting and WYSIWIG display possible. Finally it allows applications to use fonts that are not installed system-wide for displaying documents with embedded fonts. Xft is not compatible with the core fonts system: usage of Xft requires fairly extensive changes to toolkits (user-interface libraries).</entry> | 886 | <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides |
888 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 887 | many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities |
889 | </row> | 888 | file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> |
890 | <row> | 889 | |
891 | <entry>libxkbcommon</entry> | 890 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> |
892 | <entry>0.7.1</entry> | 891 | </row> |
893 | <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB specification.</entry> | 892 | |
894 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 893 | <row> |
895 | </row> | 894 | <entry>glibc-locale</entry> |
896 | <row> | 895 | |
897 | <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry> | 896 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
898 | <entry>2.44</entry> | 897 | |
899 | <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML documents.</entry> | 898 | <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> |
900 | <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | 899 | |
901 | </row> | 900 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
902 | <row> | 901 | </row> |
903 | <entry>libxml2</entry> | 902 | |
904 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | 903 | <row> |
905 | <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2 includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible with Expat.</entry> | 904 | <entry>glibc</entry> |
906 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 905 | |
907 | </row> | 906 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
908 | <row> | 907 | |
909 | <entry>libxrandr</entry> | 908 | <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most |
910 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | 909 | systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> |
911 | <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry> | 910 | |
912 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 911 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
913 | </row> | 912 | </row> |
914 | <row> | 913 | |
915 | <entry>libxrender</entry> | 914 | <row> |
916 | <entry>0.9.10</entry> | 915 | <entry>gmp</entry> |
917 | <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of them.</entry> | 916 | |
918 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 917 | <entry>6.1.2</entry> |
919 | </row> | 918 | |
920 | <row> | 919 | <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic |
921 | <entry>libxslt</entry> | 920 | operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point |
922 | <entry>1.1.29</entry> | 921 | numbers</entry> |
923 | <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry> | 922 | |
924 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 923 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> |
925 | </row> | 924 | </row> |
926 | <row> | 925 | |
927 | <entry>linux-intel-guest</entry> | 926 | <row> |
928 | <entry>4.9.47</entry> | 927 | <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> |
929 | <entry>Linux kernel.</entry> | 928 | |
930 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 929 | <entry>2014.1</entry> |
931 | </row> | 930 | |
932 | <row> | 931 | <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> |
933 | <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry> | 932 | |
934 | <entry>4.10</entry> | 933 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> |
935 | <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's use.</entry> | 934 | </row> |
936 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 935 | |
937 | </row> | 936 | <row> |
938 | <row> | 937 | <entry>gnome-themes-standard</entry> |
939 | <entry>lttng-modules</entry> | 938 | |
940 | <entry>2.9.1</entry> | 939 | <entry>3.22.2</entry> |
941 | <entry>The lttng-modules 2.0 package contains the kernel tracer modules</entry> | 940 | |
942 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0, MIT</entry> | 941 | <entry>GTK+2 standard themes.</entry> |
943 | </row> | 942 | |
944 | <row> | 943 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
945 | <entry>lttng-tools</entry> | 944 | </row> |
946 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | 945 | |
947 | <entry>The Linux trace toolkit is a suite of tools designed to extract program execution details from the Linux operating system and interpret them.</entry> | 946 | <row> |
948 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 947 | <entry>gnu-config</entry> |
949 | </row> | 948 | |
950 | <row> | 949 | <entry>20150728</entry> |
951 | <entry>lttng-ust</entry> | 950 | |
952 | <entry>2.9.0</entry> | 951 | <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a |
953 | <entry>The LTTng UST 2.x package contains the userspace tracer library to trace userspace codes.</entry> | 952 | directory tree</entry> |
954 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> | 953 | |
955 | </row> | 954 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-autoconf-exception</entry> |
956 | <row> | 955 | </row> |
957 | <entry>lzo</entry> | 956 | |
958 | <entry>2.09</entry> | 957 | <row> |
959 | <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry> | 958 | <entry>gnutls</entry> |
960 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 959 | |
961 | </row> | 960 | <entry>3.5.9</entry> |
962 | <row> | 961 | |
963 | <entry>lzop</entry> | 962 | <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> |
964 | <entry>1.03</entry> | 963 | |
965 | <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher compression and decompression speed at the cost of some \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry> | 964 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
966 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 965 | </row> |
967 | </row> | 966 | |
968 | <row> | 967 | <row> |
969 | <entry>m4</entry> | 968 | <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> |
970 | <entry>1.4.18</entry> | 969 | |
971 | <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry> | 970 | <entry>1.50.0</entry> |
972 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 971 | |
973 | </row> | 972 | <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and |
974 | <row> | 973 | language bindings.</entry> |
975 | <entry>make</entry> | 974 | |
976 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 975 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
977 | <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables and other non-source files of a program from the program's source files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files and how to compute it from other files.</entry> | 976 | </row> |
978 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 977 | |
979 | </row> | 978 | <row> |
980 | <row> | 979 | <entry>gperf</entry> |
981 | <entry>makedepend</entry> | 980 | |
982 | <entry>1.0.5</entry> | 981 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> |
983 | <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can reference files having other #include directives and parsing will occur in these files as well.</entry> | 982 | |
984 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 983 | <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> |
985 | </row> | 984 | |
986 | <row> | 985 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
987 | <entry>makedevs</entry> | 986 | </row> |
988 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> | 987 | |
989 | <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry> | 988 | <row> |
990 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 989 | <entry>gpgme</entry> |
991 | </row> | 990 | |
992 | <row> | 991 | <entry>1.8.0</entry> |
993 | <entry>man</entry> | 992 | |
994 | <entry>1.6g</entry> | 993 | <entry>GnuPG Made Easy (GPGME) is a library designed to make |
995 | <entry>A set of documentation tools: man apropos and whatis</entry> | 994 | access to GnuPG easier for applications. It provides a High-Level |
996 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 995 | Crypto API for encryption decryption signing signature |
997 | </row> | 996 | verification and key management</entry> |
998 | <row> | 997 | |
999 | <entry>meta-environment-qemux86-64</entry> | 998 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1000 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 999 | </row> |
1001 | <entry>Package of environment files for SDK.</entry> | 1000 | |
1002 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1001 | <row> |
1003 | </row> | 1002 | <entry>grep</entry> |
1004 | <row> | 1003 | |
1005 | <entry>meta-toolchain</entry> | 1004 | <entry>3.0</entry> |
1006 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1005 | |
1007 | <entry>Meta package for building a installable toolchain.</entry> | 1006 | <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> |
1008 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1007 | |
1009 | </row> | 1008 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1010 | <row> | 1009 | </row> |
1011 | <entry>mklibs</entry> | 1010 | |
1012 | <entry>0.1.43</entry> | 1011 | <row> |
1013 | <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry> | 1012 | <entry>groff</entry> |
1014 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1013 | |
1015 | </row> | 1014 | <entry>1.22.3</entry> |
1016 | <row> | 1015 | |
1017 | <entry>mpfr</entry> | 1016 | <entry>The groff (GNU troff) software is a typesetting package |
1018 | <entry>3.1.5</entry> | 1017 | which reads plain text mixed with formatting commands and produces |
1019 | <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point computations with exact rounding.</entry> | 1018 | formatted output.</entry> |
1020 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 1019 | |
1021 | </row> | 1020 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1022 | <row> | 1021 | </row> |
1023 | <entry>nasm</entry> | 1022 | |
1024 | <entry>2.12.02</entry> | 1023 | <row> |
1025 | <entry>General-purpose x86 assembler.</entry> | 1024 | <entry>gtk+</entry> |
1026 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 1025 | |
1027 | </row> | 1026 | <entry>2.24.31</entry> |
1028 | <row> | 1027 | |
1029 | <entry>ncurses</entry> | 1028 | <entry>GTK+ is a multi-platform toolkit for creating graphical |
1030 | <entry>6.0</entry> | 1029 | user interfaces. Offering a complete set of widgets GTK+ is |
1031 | <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using the gpm library.</entry> | 1030 | suitable for projects ranging from small one-off projects to |
1032 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1031 | complete application suites.</entry> |
1033 | </row> | 1032 | |
1034 | <row> | 1033 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1035 | <entry>netbase</entry> | 1034 | </row> |
1036 | <entry>5.4</entry> | 1035 | |
1037 | <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for basic TCP/IP based networking</entry> | 1036 | <row> |
1038 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1037 | <entry>gtk-doc</entry> |
1039 | </row> | 1038 | |
1040 | <row> | 1039 | <entry>1.25</entry> |
1041 | <entry>nettle</entry> | 1040 | |
1042 | <entry>3.3</entry> | 1041 | <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially |
1043 | <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry> | 1042 | formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of |
1044 | <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1043 | html documentation files from them</entry> |
1045 | </row> | 1044 | |
1046 | <row> | 1045 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1047 | <entry>nspr</entry> | 1046 | </row> |
1048 | <entry>4.13.1</entry> | 1047 | |
1049 | <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry> | 1048 | <row> |
1050 | <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1049 | <entry>gtk-icon-utils</entry> |
1051 | </row> | 1050 | |
1052 | <row> | 1051 | <entry>3.22.8</entry> |
1053 | <entry>nss</entry> | 1052 | |
1054 | <entry>3.28.1</entry> | 1053 | <entry>gtk-update-icon-cache and gtk-encode-symbolic-svg built |
1055 | <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry> | 1054 | from GTK+ natively for build time and on-host postinst script |
1056 | <entry> MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1055 | execution.</entry> |
1057 | </row> | 1056 | |
1058 | <row> | 1057 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1059 | <entry>numactl</entry> | 1058 | </row> |
1060 | <entry>2.0.11</entry> | 1059 | |
1061 | <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in applications.</entry> | 1060 | <row> |
1062 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1061 | <entry>harfbuzz</entry> |
1063 | </row> | 1062 | |
1064 | <row> | 1063 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> |
1065 | <entry>openssh</entry> | 1064 | |
1066 | <entry>7.4p1</entry> | 1065 | <entry>HarfBuzz is an OpenType text shaping engine.</entry> |
1067 | <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry> | 1066 | |
1068 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1067 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1069 | </row> | 1068 | </row> |
1070 | <row> | 1069 | |
1071 | <entry>openssl</entry> | 1070 | <row> |
1072 | <entry>1.0.2k</entry> | 1071 | <entry>hicolor-icon-theme</entry> |
1073 | <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic tools.</entry> | 1072 | |
1074 | <entry>OpenSSL</entry> | 1073 | <entry>0.15</entry> |
1075 | </row> | 1074 | |
1076 | <row> | 1075 | <entry>Default icon theme that all icon themes automatically |
1077 | <entry>opkg-utils</entry> | 1076 | inherit from.</entry> |
1078 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | 1077 | |
1079 | <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry> | 1078 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1080 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1079 | </row> |
1081 | </row> | 1080 | |
1082 | <row> | 1081 | <row> |
1083 | <entry>opkg</entry> | 1082 | <entry>icu</entry> |
1084 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | 1083 | |
1085 | <entry>Open Package Manager.</entry> | 1084 | <entry>58.2</entry> |
1086 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1085 | |
1087 | </row> | 1086 | <entry>The International Component for Unicode (ICU) is a mature |
1088 | <row> | 1087 | portable set of C/C++ and Java libraries for Unicode support |
1089 | <entry>oprofile</entry> | 1088 | software internationalization (I18N) and globalization (G11N) |
1090 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | 1089 | giving applications the same results on all platforms.</entry> |
1091 | <entry>OProfile is a system-wide profiler for Linux systems capable of profiling all running code at low overhead.</entry> | 1090 | |
1092 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1091 | <entry>ICU</entry> |
1093 | </row> | 1092 | </row> |
1094 | <row> | 1093 | |
1095 | <entry>os-release</entry> | 1094 | <row> |
1096 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1095 | <entry>inputproto</entry> |
1097 | <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system identification data.</entry> | 1096 | |
1098 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1097 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> |
1099 | </row> | 1098 | |
1100 | <row> | 1099 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input |
1101 | <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry> | 1100 | extension. The extension supports input devices other then the |
1102 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1101 | core X keyboard and pointer.</entry> |
1103 | <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the system</entry> | 1102 | |
1104 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1103 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1105 | </row> | 1104 | </row> |
1106 | <row> | 1105 | |
1107 | <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry> | 1106 | <row> |
1108 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1107 | <entry>intltool</entry> |
1109 | <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry> | 1108 | |
1110 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1109 | <entry>0.51.0</entry> |
1111 | </row> | 1110 | |
1112 | <row> | 1111 | <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry> |
1113 | <entry>packagegroup-core-standalone-sdk-target</entry> | 1112 | |
1114 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1113 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1115 | <entry>Target packages for the standalone SDK.</entry> | 1114 | </row> |
1116 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1115 | |
1117 | </row> | 1116 | <row> |
1118 | <row> | 1117 | <entry>iproute2</entry> |
1119 | <entry>packagegroup-cross-canadian-qemux86-64</entry> | 1118 | |
1120 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1119 | <entry>4.10.0</entry> |
1121 | <entry>Host SDK package for cross canadian toolchain.</entry> | 1120 | |
1122 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1121 | <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP / |
1123 | </row> | 1122 | IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip |
1124 | <row> | 1123 | and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6 |
1125 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry> | 1124 | configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry> |
1126 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1125 | |
1127 | <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry> | 1126 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1128 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1127 | </row> |
1129 | </row> | 1128 | |
1130 | <row> | 1129 | <row> |
1131 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-guest</entry> | 1130 | <entry>iptables</entry> |
1132 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1131 | |
1133 | <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups specific to the guest side of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry> | 1132 | <entry>1.6.1</entry> |
1134 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1133 | |
1135 | </row> | 1134 | <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to |
1136 | <row> | 1135 | configure and control network packet filtering code in |
1137 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-tools</entry> | 1136 | Linux.</entry> |
1138 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1137 | |
1139 | <entry>Enea Linux debugging tools.</entry> | 1138 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1140 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1139 | </row> |
1141 | </row> | 1140 | |
1142 | <row> | 1141 | <row> |
1143 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry> | 1142 | <entry>json-c</entry> |
1144 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1143 | |
1145 | <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry> | 1144 | <entry>0.12</entry> |
1146 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1145 | |
1147 | </row> | 1146 | <entry>JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that |
1148 | <row> | 1147 | allows you to easily construct JSON objects in C.</entry> |
1149 | <entry>packagegroup-sdk-host</entry> | 1148 | |
1150 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1149 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1151 | <entry>Host packages for the standalone SDK or external toolchain.</entry> | 1150 | </row> |
1152 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1151 | |
1153 | </row> | 1152 | <row> |
1154 | <row> | 1153 | <entry>kbd</entry> |
1155 | <entry>pango</entry> | 1154 | |
1156 | <entry>1.40.3</entry> | 1155 | <entry>2.0.4</entry> |
1157 | <entry>Pango is a library for laying out and rendering of text with an emphasis on internationalization. Pango can be used anywhere that text layout is needed though most of the work on Pango so far has been done in the context of the GTK+ widget toolkit. Pango forms the core of text and font handling for GTK+-2.x.</entry> | 1156 | |
1158 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1157 | <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry> |
1159 | </row> | 1158 | |
1160 | <row> | 1159 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1161 | <entry>pciutils</entry> | 1160 | </row> |
1162 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | 1161 | |
1163 | <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based on this library.</entry> | 1162 | <row> |
1164 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1163 | <entry>kbproto</entry> |
1165 | </row> | 1164 | |
1166 | <row> | 1165 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> |
1167 | <entry>perf</entry> | 1166 | |
1168 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1167 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard |
1169 | <entry>Performance counters for Linux are a new kernel-based subsystem that provide a framework for all things performance analysis. It covers hardware level (CPU/PMU Performance Monitoring Unit) features and software features (software counters tracepoints) as well.</entry> | 1168 | extension. This extension is used to control options related to |
1170 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1169 | keyboard handling and layout.</entry> |
1171 | </row> | 1170 | |
1172 | <row> | 1171 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1173 | <entry>perl</entry> | 1172 | </row> |
1174 | <entry>5.24.1</entry> | 1173 | |
1175 | <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry> | 1174 | <row> |
1176 | <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | 1175 | <entry>kern-tools</entry> |
1177 | </row> | 1176 | |
1178 | <row> | 1177 | <entry>0.2</entry> |
1179 | <entry>pigz</entry> | 1178 | |
1180 | <entry>2.3.4</entry> | 1179 | <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched |
1181 | <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data. pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread libraries.</entry> | 1180 | kernels.</entry> |
1182 | <entry> Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry> | 1181 | |
1183 | </row> | 1182 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1184 | <row> | 1183 | </row> |
1185 | <entry>pixman</entry> | 1184 | |
1186 | <entry>0.34.0</entry> | 1185 | <row> |
1187 | <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions -- a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry> | 1186 | <entry>kernel-devsrc</entry> |
1188 | <entry> MIT, PD</entry> | 1187 | |
1189 | </row> | 1188 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
1190 | <row> | 1189 | |
1191 | <entry>pixz</entry> | 1190 | <entry>Development source linux kernel. When built this recipe |
1192 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> | 1191 | packages the source of the preferred virtual/kernel provider and |
1193 | <entry>Parallel indexed xz compressor.</entry> | 1192 | makes it available for full kernel development or external module |
1194 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 1193 | builds</entry> |
1195 | </row> | 1194 | |
1196 | <row> | 1195 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1197 | <entry>pkgconfig</entry> | 1196 | </row> |
1198 | <entry>0.29.1</entry> | 1197 | |
1199 | <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry> | 1198 | <row> |
1200 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1199 | <entry>kmod</entry> |
1201 | </row> | 1200 | |
1202 | <row> | 1201 | <entry>23</entry> |
1203 | <entry>popt</entry> | 1202 | |
1204 | <entry>1.16</entry> | 1203 | <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux |
1205 | <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry> | 1204 | kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve |
1206 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1205 | dependencies and aliases.</entry> |
1207 | </row> | 1206 | |
1208 | <row> | 1207 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1209 | <entry>postinst-intercept</entry> | 1208 | </row> |
1210 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1209 | |
1211 | <entry>Postinstall scriptlets.</entry> | 1210 | <row> |
1212 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1211 | <entry>latencytop</entry> |
1213 | </row> | 1212 | |
1214 | <row> | 1213 | <entry>0.5</entry> |
1215 | <entry>prelink</entry> | 1214 | |
1216 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1215 | <entry>Linux tool for measuring and fixing latency.</entry> |
1217 | <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up faster.</entry> | 1216 | |
1218 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1217 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1219 | </row> | 1218 | </row> |
1220 | <row> | 1219 | |
1221 | <entry>procps</entry> | 1220 | <row> |
1222 | <entry>3.3.12</entry> | 1221 | <entry>ldconfig</entry> |
1223 | <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and skill.</entry> | 1222 | |
1224 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1223 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> |
1225 | </row> | 1224 | |
1226 | <row> | 1225 | <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry> |
1227 | <entry>pseudo</entry> | 1226 | |
1228 | <entry>1.8.2</entry> | 1227 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1229 | <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal user.</entry> | 1228 | </row> |
1230 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1229 | |
1231 | </row> | 1230 | <row> |
1232 | <row> | 1231 | <entry>less</entry> |
1233 | <entry>ptest-runner</entry> | 1232 | |
1234 | <entry>2.0.2</entry> | 1233 | <entry>487</entry> |
1235 | <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them in sequence.</entry> | 1234 | |
1236 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1235 | <entry>Less is a program similar to more i.e. a terminal based |
1237 | </row> | 1236 | program for viewing text files and the output from other programs. |
1238 | <row> | 1237 | Less offers many features beyond those that more does.</entry> |
1239 | <entry>python-pip</entry> | 1238 | |
1240 | <entry>9.0.1</entry> | 1239 | <entry>GPL-3.0, BSD-2-Clause</entry> |
1241 | <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python packages.</entry> | 1240 | </row> |
1242 | <entry> MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1241 | |
1243 | </row> | 1242 | <row> |
1244 | <row> | 1243 | <entry>libarchive</entry> |
1245 | <entry>python-setuptools</entry> | 1244 | |
1246 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | 1245 | <entry>3.2.2</entry> |
1247 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python packages.</entry> | 1246 | |
1248 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1247 | <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing |
1249 | </row> | 1248 | tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry> |
1250 | <row> | 1249 | |
1251 | <entry>python</entry> | 1250 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1252 | <entry>2.7.13</entry> | 1251 | </row> |
1253 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | 1252 | |
1254 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 1253 | <row> |
1255 | </row> | 1254 | <entry>libassuan</entry> |
1256 | <row> | 1255 | |
1257 | <entry>python3-iniparse</entry> | 1256 | <entry>2.4.3</entry> |
1258 | <entry>0.4</entry> | 1257 | |
1259 | <entry>Accessing and Modifying INI files.</entry> | 1258 | <entry>IPC library used by GnuPG and GPGME.</entry> |
1260 | <entry> MIT, Python-2.0</entry> | 1259 | |
1261 | </row> | 1260 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1262 | <row> | 1261 | </row> |
1263 | <entry>python3-pygpgme</entry> | 1262 | |
1264 | <entry>0.3</entry> | 1263 | <row> |
1265 | <entry>A Python module for working with OpenPGP messages.</entry> | 1264 | <entry>libcap</entry> |
1266 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1265 | |
1267 | </row> | 1266 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
1268 | <row> | 1267 | |
1269 | <entry>python3-setuptools</entry> | 1268 | <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry> |
1270 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | 1269 | |
1271 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python packages.</entry> | 1270 | <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> |
1272 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1271 | </row> |
1273 | </row> | 1272 | |
1274 | <row> | 1273 | <row> |
1275 | <entry>python3-six</entry> | 1274 | <entry>libcgroup</entry> |
1276 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | 1275 | |
1277 | <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility library.</entry> | 1276 | <entry>0.41</entry> |
1278 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1277 | |
1279 | </row> | 1278 | <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group |
1280 | <row> | 1279 | file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account |
1281 | <entry>python3</entry> | 1280 | and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of |
1282 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | 1281 | processes.</entry> |
1283 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | 1282 | |
1284 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 1283 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1285 | </row> | 1284 | </row> |
1286 | <row> | 1285 | |
1287 | <entry>qemu-helper</entry> | 1286 | <row> |
1288 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1287 | <entry>libcheck</entry> |
1289 | <entry>Helper utilities needed by the runqemu script.</entry> | 1288 | |
1290 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1289 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> |
1291 | </row> | 1290 | |
1292 | <row> | 1291 | <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry> |
1293 | <entry>qemu</entry> | 1292 | |
1294 | <entry>2.8.0</entry> | 1293 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1295 | <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry> | 1294 | </row> |
1296 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1295 | |
1297 | </row> | 1296 | <row> |
1298 | <row> | 1297 | <entry>libcomps</entry> |
1299 | <entry>qemuwrapper</entry> | 1298 | |
1300 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1299 | <entry>0.1.8</entry> |
1301 | <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry> | 1300 | |
1302 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1301 | <entry>Libcomps is alternative for yum.comps library (which is for |
1303 | </row> | 1302 | managing rpm package groups)..</entry> |
1304 | <row> | 1303 | |
1305 | <entry>quilt</entry> | 1304 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1306 | <entry>0.65</entry> | 1305 | </row> |
1307 | <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry> | 1306 | |
1308 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1307 | <row> |
1309 | </row> | 1308 | <entry>libcroco</entry> |
1310 | <row> | 1309 | |
1311 | <entry>randrproto</entry> | 1310 | <entry>0.6.11</entry> |
1312 | <entry>1.5.0</entry> | 1311 | |
1313 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry> | 1312 | <entry>Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) parsing and manipulation |
1314 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1313 | toolkit.</entry> |
1315 | </row> | 1314 | |
1316 | <row> | 1315 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1317 | <entry>readline</entry> | 1316 | </row> |
1318 | <entry>7.0</entry> | 1317 | |
1319 | <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous commands.</entry> | 1318 | <row> |
1320 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1319 | <entry>libdnf</entry> |
1321 | </row> | 1320 | |
1322 | <row> | 1321 | <entry>0.2.3</entry> |
1323 | <entry>renderproto</entry> | 1322 | |
1324 | <entry>0.11.1</entry> | 1323 | <entry>Library providing simplified C and Python API to |
1325 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X window system.</entry> | 1324 | libsolv.</entry> |
1326 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1325 | |
1327 | </row> | 1326 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1328 | <row> | 1327 | </row> |
1329 | <entry>rpm</entry> | 1328 | |
1330 | <entry>4.13.90</entry> | 1329 | <row> |
1331 | <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line driven package management system capable of installing uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages. Each software package consists of an archive of files along with information about the package like its version a description etc.</entry> | 1330 | <entry>liberation-fonts</entry> |
1332 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1331 | |
1333 | </row> | 1332 | <entry>1.04</entry> |
1334 | <row> | 1333 | |
1335 | <entry>run-postinsts</entry> | 1334 | <entry>The Liberation(tm) Fonts is a font family originally |
1336 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1335 | created by Ascender(c) which aims at metric compatibility with |
1337 | <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target device.</entry> | 1336 | Arial Times New Roman Courier New.</entry> |
1338 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1337 | |
1339 | </row> | 1338 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1340 | <row> | 1339 | </row> |
1341 | <entry>sed</entry> | 1340 | |
1342 | <entry>4.2.2</entry> | 1341 | <row> |
1343 | <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry> | 1342 | <entry>libffi</entry> |
1344 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1343 | |
1345 | </row> | 1344 | <entry>3.2.1</entry> |
1346 | <row> | 1345 | |
1347 | <entry>shadow-securetty</entry> | 1346 | <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level |
1348 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 1347 | programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows |
1349 | <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry> | 1348 | a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface |
1350 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1349 | description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function |
1351 | </row> | 1350 | Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for |
1352 | <row> | 1351 | the interface that allows code written in one language to call |
1353 | <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry> | 1352 | code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only |
1354 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 1353 | provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured |
1355 | <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry> | 1354 | foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that |
1356 | <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | 1355 | handles type conversions for values passed between the two |
1357 | </row> | 1356 | languages.</entry> |
1358 | <row> | 1357 | |
1359 | <entry>shadow</entry> | 1358 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1360 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 1359 | </row> |
1361 | <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group data.</entry> | 1360 | |
1362 | <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | 1361 | <row> |
1363 | </row> | 1362 | <entry>libgcc</entry> |
1364 | <row> | 1363 | |
1365 | <entry>shared-mime-info</entry> | 1364 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
1366 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 1365 | |
1367 | <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry> | 1366 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
1368 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1367 | |
1369 | </row> | 1368 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> |
1370 | <row> | 1369 | </row> |
1371 | <entry>slang</entry> | 1370 | |
1372 | <entry>2.3.1a</entry> | 1371 | <row> |
1373 | <entry>S-Lang is an interpreted language and a programming library. The S-Lang language was designed so that it can be easily embedded into a program to provide the program with a powerful extension language. The S-Lang library provided in this package provides the S-Lang extension language. S-Lang's syntax resembles C which makes it easy to recode S-Lang procedures in C if you need to.</entry> | 1372 | <entry>libgpg-error</entry> |
1374 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1373 | |
1375 | </row> | 1374 | <entry>1.26</entry> |
1376 | <row> | 1375 | |
1377 | <entry>sqlite3</entry> | 1376 | <entry>Small library that defines common error values for all |
1378 | <entry>3.17.0</entry> | 1377 | GnuPG components.</entry> |
1379 | <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry> | 1378 | |
1380 | <entry>PD</entry> | 1379 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1381 | </row> | 1380 | </row> |
1382 | <row> | 1381 | |
1383 | <entry>swig</entry> | 1382 | <row> |
1384 | <entry>3.0.12</entry> | 1383 | <entry>libice</entry> |
1385 | <entry>SWIG - Simplified Wrapper and Interface Generator.</entry> | 1384 | |
1386 | <entry> BSD, GPL-3.0</entry> | 1385 | <entry>1.0.9</entry> |
1387 | </row> | 1386 | |
1388 | <row> | 1387 | <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic |
1389 | <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry> | 1388 | framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream |
1390 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1389 | transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up |
1391 | <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit scripts.</entry> | 1390 | and shutting down connections for performing authentication for |
1392 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1391 | negotiating versions and for reporting errors.</entry> |
1393 | </row> | 1392 | |
1394 | <row> | 1393 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1395 | <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry> | 1394 | </row> |
1396 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1395 | |
1397 | <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry> | 1396 | <row> |
1398 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1397 | <entry>libidn</entry> |
1399 | </row> | 1398 | |
1400 | <row> | 1399 | <entry>1.33</entry> |
1401 | <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry> | 1400 | |
1402 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1401 | <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA |
1403 | <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry> | 1402 | specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names |
1404 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1403 | (IDN) working group.</entry> |
1405 | </row> | 1404 | |
1406 | <row> | 1405 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
1407 | <entry>systemd</entry> | 1406 | </row> |
1408 | <entry>232</entry> | 1407 | |
1409 | <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and automount points and implements an elaborate transactional dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in replacement for sysvinit.</entry> | 1408 | <row> |
1410 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1409 | <entry>libjpeg-turbo</entry> |
1411 | </row> | 1410 | |
1412 | <row> | 1411 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> |
1413 | <entry>systemtap</entry> | 1412 | |
1414 | <entry>3.1</entry> | 1413 | <entry>libjpeg-turbo is a derivative of libjpeg that uses SIMD |
1415 | <entry>Script-directed dynamic tracing and performance analysis tool for Linux.</entry> | 1414 | instructions (MMX SSE2 NEON) to accelerate baseline JPEG |
1416 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1415 | compression and decompression</entry> |
1417 | </row> | 1416 | |
1418 | <row> | 1417 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
1419 | <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry> | 1418 | </row> |
1420 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1419 | |
1421 | <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry> | 1420 | <row> |
1422 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1421 | <entry>libmpc</entry> |
1423 | </row> | 1422 | |
1424 | <row> | 1423 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> |
1425 | <entry>tzcode</entry> | 1424 | |
1426 | <entry>2017b</entry> | 1425 | <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers |
1427 | <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump tzselect.</entry> | 1426 | with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the |
1428 | <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1427 | result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as |
1429 | </row> | 1428 | Mpfr</entry> |
1430 | <row> | 1429 | |
1431 | <entry>tzdata</entry> | 1430 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> |
1432 | <entry>2017b</entry> | 1431 | </row> |
1433 | <entry>Timezone data.</entry> | 1432 | |
1434 | <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1433 | <row> |
1435 | </row> | 1434 | <entry>libnewt</entry> |
1436 | <row> | 1435 | |
1437 | <entry>unfs3</entry> | 1436 | <entry>0.52.19</entry> |
1438 | <entry>0.9.22.r497</entry> | 1437 | |
1439 | <entry>Userspace NFS server v3 protocol.</entry> | 1438 | <entry>Newt is a programming library for color text mode widget |
1440 | <entry>unfs3</entry> | 1439 | based user interfaces. Newt can be used to add stacked windows |
1441 | </row> | 1440 | entry widgets checkboxes radio buttons labels plain text fields |
1442 | <row> | 1441 | scrollbars etc. to text mode user interfaces. This package also |
1443 | <entry>unifdef</entry> | 1442 | contains the shared library needed by programs built with newt as |
1444 | <entry>2.11</entry> | 1443 | well as a /usr/bin/dialog replacement called whiptail. Newt is |
1445 | <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry> | 1444 | based on the slang library.</entry> |
1446 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 1445 | |
1447 | </row> | 1446 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> |
1448 | <row> | 1447 | </row> |
1449 | <entry>update-rc.d</entry> | 1448 | |
1450 | <entry>0.7</entry> | 1449 | <row> |
1451 | <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory structure.</entry> | 1450 | <entry>libnl</entry> |
1452 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1451 | |
1453 | </row> | 1452 | <entry>3.2.29</entry> |
1454 | <row> | 1453 | |
1455 | <entry>util-linux</entry> | 1454 | <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink |
1456 | <entry>2.29.1</entry> | 1455 | sockets.</entry> |
1457 | <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message management filesystem creation and system login.</entry> | 1456 | |
1458 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry> | 1457 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1459 | </row> | 1458 | </row> |
1460 | <row> | 1459 | |
1461 | <entry>util-macros</entry> | 1460 | <row> |
1462 | <entry>1.19.1</entry> | 1461 | <entry>libpcap</entry> |
1463 | <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry> | 1462 | |
1464 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1463 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> |
1465 | </row> | 1464 | |
1466 | <row> | 1465 | <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network |
1467 | <entry>v86d</entry> | 1466 | monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection |
1468 | <entry>0.1.10</entry> | 1467 | security monitoring and network debugging.</entry> |
1469 | <entry>User support binary for the uvesafb kernel module.</entry> | 1468 | |
1470 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1469 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1471 | </row> | 1470 | </row> |
1472 | <row> | 1471 | |
1473 | <entry>volatile-binds</entry> | 1472 | <row> |
1474 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1473 | <entry>libpcre</entry> |
1475 | <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for read-only-rootfs</entry> | 1474 | |
1476 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1475 | <entry>8.40</entry> |
1477 | </row> | 1476 | |
1478 | <row> | 1477 | <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement |
1479 | <entry>xcb-proto</entry> | 1478 | regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and |
1480 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 1479 | semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set |
1481 | <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading support and extensibility.</entry> | 1480 | of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular |
1482 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1481 | expression API.</entry> |
1483 | </row> | 1482 | |
1484 | <row> | 1483 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1485 | <entry>xextproto</entry> | 1484 | </row> |
1486 | <entry>7.3.0</entry> | 1485 | |
1487 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also available.</entry> | 1486 | <row> |
1488 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1487 | <entry>libpng</entry> |
1489 | </row> | 1488 | |
1490 | <row> | 1489 | <entry>1.6.28</entry> |
1491 | <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry> | 1490 | |
1492 | <entry>2.20</entry> | 1491 | <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry> |
1493 | <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window. The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based systems.</entry> | 1492 | |
1494 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1493 | <entry>Libpng</entry> |
1495 | </row> | 1494 | </row> |
1496 | <row> | 1495 | |
1497 | <entry>xmlto</entry> | 1496 | <row> |
1498 | <entry>0.0.28</entry> | 1497 | <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry> |
1499 | <entry>A shell-script tool for converting XML files to various formats.</entry> | 1498 | |
1500 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1499 | <entry>0.3</entry> |
1501 | </row> | 1500 | |
1502 | <row> | 1501 | <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions |
1503 | <entry>xproto</entry> | 1502 | not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry> |
1504 | <entry>7.0.31</entry> | 1503 | |
1505 | <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window System.</entry> | 1504 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1506 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1505 | </row> |
1507 | </row> | 1506 | |
1508 | <row> | 1507 | <row> |
1509 | <entry>xtrans</entry> | 1508 | <entry>librepo</entry> |
1510 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | 1509 | |
1511 | <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system and transport specific code into a single place. This API should be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of transports and support for new platforms without making any changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface code.</entry> | 1510 | <entry>1.7.20</entry> |
1512 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1511 | |
1513 | </row> | 1512 | <entry>A library providing C and Python (libcURL like) API for |
1514 | <row> | 1513 | downloading linux repository metadata and packages..</entry> |
1515 | <entry>xz</entry> | 1514 | |
1516 | <entry>5.2.3</entry> | 1515 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1517 | <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry> | 1516 | </row> |
1518 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry> | 1517 | |
1519 | </row> | 1518 | <row> |
1520 | <row> | 1519 | <entry>librsvg</entry> |
1521 | <entry>zlib</entry> | 1520 | |
1522 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> | 1521 | <entry>2.40.16</entry> |
1523 | <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data compression library which is used by many different programs.</entry> | 1522 | |
1524 | <entry>Zlib</entry> | 1523 | <entry>Library for rendering SVG files.</entry> |
1525 | </row> | 1524 | |
1526 | </tbody> | 1525 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> |
1527 | </tgroup> | 1526 | </row> |
1528 | </informaltable> | 1527 | |
1529 | </section> | 1528 | <row> |
1530 | <section id="open_source_license"> | 1529 | <entry>libsdl</entry> |
1531 | <title>Open Source Licenses</title> | 1530 | |
1532 | <section id="lic_0"> | 1531 | <entry>1.2.15</entry> |
1533 | <title>AFL-2.0</title> | 1532 | |
1534 | <para><programlisting> | 1533 | <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia |
1534 | library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard | ||
1535 | mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video | ||
1536 | framebuffer.</entry> | ||
1537 | |||
1538 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
1539 | </row> | ||
1540 | |||
1541 | <row> | ||
1542 | <entry>libsm</entry> | ||
1543 | |||
1544 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | ||
1545 | |||
1546 | <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level | ||
1547 | \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session | ||
1548 | Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for | ||
1549 | users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of | ||
1550 | clients each of which has a particular state."</entry> | ||
1551 | |||
1552 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1553 | </row> | ||
1554 | |||
1555 | <row> | ||
1556 | <entry>libsolv</entry> | ||
1557 | |||
1558 | <entry>0.6.26</entry> | ||
1559 | |||
1560 | <entry>Library for solving packages and reading | ||
1561 | repositories.</entry> | ||
1562 | |||
1563 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
1564 | </row> | ||
1565 | |||
1566 | <row> | ||
1567 | <entry>libtool</entry> | ||
1568 | |||
1569 | <entry>2.4.6</entry> | ||
1570 | |||
1571 | <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script. | ||
1572 | Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types | ||
1573 | (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry> | ||
1574 | |||
1575 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
1576 | </row> | ||
1577 | |||
1578 | <row> | ||
1579 | <entry>libunistring</entry> | ||
1580 | |||
1581 | <entry>0.9.7</entry> | ||
1582 | |||
1583 | <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may | ||
1584 | consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese | ||
1585 | Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left | ||
1586 | writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX | ||
1587 | platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for | ||
1588 | dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In | ||
1589 | fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their | ||
1590 | base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides | ||
1591 | functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C | ||
1592 | strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains | ||
1593 | documentation.</entry> | ||
1594 | |||
1595 | <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1596 | </row> | ||
1597 | |||
1598 | <row> | ||
1599 | <entry>liburcu</entry> | ||
1600 | |||
1601 | <entry>0.9.3</entry> | ||
1602 | |||
1603 | <entry>Userspace RCU (read-copy-update) library.</entry> | ||
1604 | |||
1605 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, MIT</entry> | ||
1606 | </row> | ||
1607 | |||
1608 | <row> | ||
1609 | <entry>libx11</entry> | ||
1610 | |||
1611 | <entry>1.6.4</entry> | ||
1612 | |||
1613 | <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window | ||
1614 | System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for | ||
1615 | the basic functions of the window system.</entry> | ||
1616 | |||
1617 | <entry>MIT, BSD</entry> | ||
1618 | </row> | ||
1619 | |||
1620 | <row> | ||
1621 | <entry>libxau</entry> | ||
1622 | |||
1623 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | ||
1624 | |||
1625 | <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 | ||
1626 | authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X | ||
1627 | connections both client-side and server-side.</entry> | ||
1628 | |||
1629 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1630 | </row> | ||
1631 | |||
1632 | <row> | ||
1633 | <entry>libxcb</entry> | ||
1634 | |||
1635 | <entry>1.12</entry> | ||
1636 | |||
1637 | <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement | ||
1638 | for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access | ||
1639 | to the protocol improved threading support and | ||
1640 | extensibility.</entry> | ||
1641 | |||
1642 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1643 | </row> | ||
1644 | |||
1645 | <row> | ||
1646 | <entry>libxcomposite</entry> | ||
1647 | |||
1648 | <entry>0.4.4</entry> | ||
1649 | |||
1650 | <entry>The composite extension provides three related mechanisms: | ||
1651 | per-hierarchy storage automatic shadow update and external parent. | ||
1652 | In per-hierarchy storage the rendering of an entire hierarchy of | ||
1653 | windows is redirected to off-screen storage. In automatic shadow | ||
1654 | update when a hierarchy is rendered off-screen the X server | ||
1655 | provides an automatic mechanism for presenting those contents | ||
1656 | within the parent window. In external parent a mechanism for | ||
1657 | providing redirection of compositing transformations through a | ||
1658 | client.</entry> | ||
1659 | |||
1660 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1661 | </row> | ||
1662 | |||
1663 | <row> | ||
1664 | <entry>libxcursor</entry> | ||
1665 | |||
1666 | <entry>1.1.14</entry> | ||
1667 | |||
1668 | <entry>Xcursor is a simple library designed to help locate and | ||
1669 | load cursors. Cursors can be loaded from files or memory. A | ||
1670 | library of common cursors exists which map to the standard X | ||
1671 | cursor names. Cursors can exist in several sizes and the library | ||
1672 | automatically picks the best size.</entry> | ||
1673 | |||
1674 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1675 | </row> | ||
1676 | |||
1677 | <row> | ||
1678 | <entry>libxdamage</entry> | ||
1679 | |||
1680 | <entry>1.1.4</entry> | ||
1681 | |||
1682 | <entry>'Damage' is a term that describes changes make to pixel | ||
1683 | contents of windows and pixmaps. Damage accumulates as drawing | ||
1684 | occurs in the drawable. Each drawing operation 'damages' one or | ||
1685 | more rectangular areas within the drawable. The rectangles are | ||
1686 | guaranteed to include the set of pixels modified by each operation | ||
1687 | but may include significantly more than just those pixels. The | ||
1688 | DAMAGE extension allows applications to either receive the raw | ||
1689 | rectangles as a stream of events or to have them partially | ||
1690 | processed within the X server to reduce the amount of data | ||
1691 | transmitted as well as reduce the processing latency once the | ||
1692 | repaint operation has started.</entry> | ||
1693 | |||
1694 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1695 | </row> | ||
1696 | |||
1697 | <row> | ||
1698 | <entry>libxdmcp</entry> | ||
1699 | |||
1700 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> | ||
1701 | |||
1702 | <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol | ||
1703 | (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous | ||
1704 | display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal | ||
1705 | (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime | ||
1706 | example of an autonomous display.</entry> | ||
1707 | |||
1708 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1709 | </row> | ||
1710 | |||
1711 | <row> | ||
1712 | <entry>libxext</entry> | ||
1713 | |||
1714 | <entry>1.3.3</entry> | ||
1715 | |||
1716 | <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to | ||
1717 | several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol | ||
1718 | extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX | ||
1719 | MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC | ||
1720 | TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small | ||
1721 | set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X | ||
1722 | protocol extensions.</entry> | ||
1723 | |||
1724 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1725 | </row> | ||
1726 | |||
1727 | <row> | ||
1728 | <entry>libxfixes</entry> | ||
1729 | |||
1730 | <entry>5.0.3</entry> | ||
1731 | |||
1732 | <entry>X applications have often needed to work around various | ||
1733 | shortcomings in the core X window system. This extension is | ||
1734 | designed to provide the minimal server-side support necessary to | ||
1735 | eliminate problems caused by these workarounds.</entry> | ||
1736 | |||
1737 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1738 | </row> | ||
1739 | |||
1740 | <row> | ||
1741 | <entry>libxft</entry> | ||
1742 | |||
1743 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> | ||
1744 | |||
1745 | <entry>Xft was designed to provide good support for scalable fonts | ||
1746 | and to do so efficiently. Unlike the core fonts system it supports | ||
1747 | features such as anti-aliasing and sub-pixel rasterisation. | ||
1748 | Perhaps more importantly it gives applications full control over | ||
1749 | the way glyphs are rendered making fine typesetting and WYSIWIG | ||
1750 | display possible. Finally it allows applications to use fonts that | ||
1751 | are not installed system-wide for displaying documents with | ||
1752 | embedded fonts. Xft is not compatible with the core fonts system: | ||
1753 | usage of Xft requires fairly extensive changes to toolkits | ||
1754 | (user-interface libraries).</entry> | ||
1755 | |||
1756 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1757 | </row> | ||
1758 | |||
1759 | <row> | ||
1760 | <entry>libxkbcommon</entry> | ||
1761 | |||
1762 | <entry>0.7.1</entry> | ||
1763 | |||
1764 | <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which | ||
1765 | processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB | ||
1766 | specification.</entry> | ||
1767 | |||
1768 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1769 | </row> | ||
1770 | |||
1771 | <row> | ||
1772 | <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry> | ||
1773 | |||
1774 | <entry>2.44</entry> | ||
1775 | |||
1776 | <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML | ||
1777 | documents.</entry> | ||
1778 | |||
1779 | <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | ||
1780 | </row> | ||
1781 | |||
1782 | <row> | ||
1783 | <entry>libxml2</entry> | ||
1784 | |||
1785 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | ||
1786 | |||
1787 | <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML | ||
1788 | files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for | ||
1789 | both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a | ||
1790 | parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2 | ||
1791 | includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It | ||
1792 | also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible | ||
1793 | with Expat.</entry> | ||
1794 | |||
1795 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1796 | </row> | ||
1797 | |||
1798 | <row> | ||
1799 | <entry>libxrandr</entry> | ||
1800 | |||
1801 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | ||
1802 | |||
1803 | <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for | ||
1804 | short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root | ||
1805 | window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate | ||
1806 | Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix | ||
1807 | Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry> | ||
1808 | |||
1809 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1810 | </row> | ||
1811 | |||
1812 | <row> | ||
1813 | <entry>libxrender</entry> | ||
1814 | |||
1815 | <entry>0.9.10</entry> | ||
1816 | |||
1817 | <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image | ||
1818 | composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the | ||
1819 | X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by | ||
1820 | client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text | ||
1821 | is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of | ||
1822 | them.</entry> | ||
1823 | |||
1824 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1825 | </row> | ||
1826 | |||
1827 | <row> | ||
1828 | <entry>libxslt</entry> | ||
1829 | |||
1830 | <entry>1.1.29</entry> | ||
1831 | |||
1832 | <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry> | ||
1833 | |||
1834 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1835 | </row> | ||
1836 | |||
1837 | <row> | ||
1838 | <entry>linux-intel-guest</entry> | ||
1839 | |||
1840 | <entry>4.9.47</entry> | ||
1841 | |||
1842 | <entry>Linux kernel.</entry> | ||
1843 | |||
1844 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1845 | </row> | ||
1846 | |||
1847 | <row> | ||
1848 | <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry> | ||
1849 | |||
1850 | <entry>4.10</entry> | ||
1851 | |||
1852 | <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's | ||
1853 | use.</entry> | ||
1854 | |||
1855 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1856 | </row> | ||
1857 | |||
1858 | <row> | ||
1859 | <entry>lttng-modules</entry> | ||
1860 | |||
1861 | <entry>2.9.1</entry> | ||
1862 | |||
1863 | <entry>The lttng-modules 2.0 package contains the kernel tracer | ||
1864 | modules</entry> | ||
1865 | |||
1866 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0, MIT</entry> | ||
1867 | </row> | ||
1868 | |||
1869 | <row> | ||
1870 | <entry>lttng-tools</entry> | ||
1871 | |||
1872 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | ||
1873 | |||
1874 | <entry>The Linux trace toolkit is a suite of tools designed to | ||
1875 | extract program execution details from the Linux operating system | ||
1876 | and interpret them.</entry> | ||
1877 | |||
1878 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
1879 | </row> | ||
1880 | |||
1881 | <row> | ||
1882 | <entry>lttng-ust</entry> | ||
1883 | |||
1884 | <entry>2.9.0</entry> | ||
1885 | |||
1886 | <entry>The LTTng UST 2.x package contains the userspace tracer | ||
1887 | library to trace userspace codes.</entry> | ||
1888 | |||
1889 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1890 | </row> | ||
1891 | |||
1892 | <row> | ||
1893 | <entry>lzo</entry> | ||
1894 | |||
1895 | <entry>2.09</entry> | ||
1896 | |||
1897 | <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry> | ||
1898 | |||
1899 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1900 | </row> | ||
1901 | |||
1902 | <row> | ||
1903 | <entry>lzop</entry> | ||
1904 | |||
1905 | <entry>1.03</entry> | ||
1906 | |||
1907 | <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a | ||
1908 | companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression | ||
1909 | library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher | ||
1910 | compression and decompression speed at the cost of some | ||
1911 | \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed | ||
1912 | with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with | ||
1913 | reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry> | ||
1914 | |||
1915 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1916 | </row> | ||
1917 | |||
1918 | <row> | ||
1919 | <entry>m4</entry> | ||
1920 | |||
1921 | <entry>1.4.18</entry> | ||
1922 | |||
1923 | <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro | ||
1924 | processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some | ||
1925 | extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters | ||
1926 | to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files | ||
1927 | running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry> | ||
1928 | |||
1929 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
1930 | </row> | ||
1931 | |||
1932 | <row> | ||
1933 | <entry>make</entry> | ||
1934 | |||
1935 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
1936 | |||
1937 | <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables | ||
1938 | and other non-source files of a program from the program's source | ||
1939 | files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a | ||
1940 | file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files | ||
1941 | and how to compute it from other files.</entry> | ||
1942 | |||
1943 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1944 | </row> | ||
1945 | |||
1946 | <row> | ||
1947 | <entry>makedepend</entry> | ||
1948 | |||
1949 | <entry>1.0.5</entry> | ||
1950 | |||
1951 | <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence | ||
1952 | and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include | ||
1953 | #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else | ||
1954 | directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives | ||
1955 | would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can | ||
1956 | reference files having other #include directives and parsing will | ||
1957 | occur in these files as well.</entry> | ||
1958 | |||
1959 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1960 | </row> | ||
1961 | |||
1962 | <row> | ||
1963 | <entry>makedevs</entry> | ||
1964 | |||
1965 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> | ||
1966 | |||
1967 | <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry> | ||
1968 | |||
1969 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1970 | </row> | ||
1971 | |||
1972 | <row> | ||
1973 | <entry>man</entry> | ||
1974 | |||
1975 | <entry>1.6g</entry> | ||
1976 | |||
1977 | <entry>A set of documentation tools: man apropos and | ||
1978 | whatis</entry> | ||
1979 | |||
1980 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1981 | </row> | ||
1982 | |||
1983 | <row> | ||
1984 | <entry>meta-environment-qemux86-64</entry> | ||
1985 | |||
1986 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1987 | |||
1988 | <entry>Package of environment files for SDK.</entry> | ||
1989 | |||
1990 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1991 | </row> | ||
1992 | |||
1993 | <row> | ||
1994 | <entry>meta-toolchain</entry> | ||
1995 | |||
1996 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1997 | |||
1998 | <entry>Meta package for building a installable toolchain.</entry> | ||
1999 | |||
2000 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2001 | </row> | ||
2002 | |||
2003 | <row> | ||
2004 | <entry>mklibs</entry> | ||
2005 | |||
2006 | <entry>0.1.43</entry> | ||
2007 | |||
2008 | <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only | ||
2009 | the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry> | ||
2010 | |||
2011 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2012 | </row> | ||
2013 | |||
2014 | <row> | ||
2015 | <entry>mpfr</entry> | ||
2016 | |||
2017 | <entry>3.1.5</entry> | ||
2018 | |||
2019 | <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point | ||
2020 | computations with exact rounding.</entry> | ||
2021 | |||
2022 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | ||
2023 | </row> | ||
2024 | |||
2025 | <row> | ||
2026 | <entry>nasm</entry> | ||
2027 | |||
2028 | <entry>2.12.02</entry> | ||
2029 | |||
2030 | <entry>General-purpose x86 assembler.</entry> | ||
2031 | |||
2032 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | ||
2033 | </row> | ||
2034 | |||
2035 | <row> | ||
2036 | <entry>ncurses</entry> | ||
2037 | |||
2038 | <entry>6.0</entry> | ||
2039 | |||
2040 | <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo | ||
2041 | tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple | ||
2042 | highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of | ||
2043 | keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable | ||
2044 | windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using | ||
2045 | the gpm library.</entry> | ||
2046 | |||
2047 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2048 | </row> | ||
2049 | |||
2050 | <row> | ||
2051 | <entry>netbase</entry> | ||
2052 | |||
2053 | <entry>5.4</entry> | ||
2054 | |||
2055 | <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for | ||
2056 | basic TCP/IP based networking</entry> | ||
2057 | |||
2058 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2059 | </row> | ||
2060 | |||
2061 | <row> | ||
2062 | <entry>nettle</entry> | ||
2063 | |||
2064 | <entry>3.3</entry> | ||
2065 | |||
2066 | <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry> | ||
2067 | |||
2068 | <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2069 | </row> | ||
2070 | |||
2071 | <row> | ||
2072 | <entry>nspr</entry> | ||
2073 | |||
2074 | <entry>4.13.1</entry> | ||
2075 | |||
2076 | <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry> | ||
2077 | |||
2078 | <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2079 | </row> | ||
2080 | |||
2081 | <row> | ||
2082 | <entry>nss</entry> | ||
2083 | |||
2084 | <entry>3.28.1</entry> | ||
2085 | |||
2086 | <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries | ||
2087 | designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled | ||
2088 | client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can | ||
2089 | support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME | ||
2090 | X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry> | ||
2091 | |||
2092 | <entry>MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2093 | </row> | ||
2094 | |||
2095 | <row> | ||
2096 | <entry>numactl</entry> | ||
2097 | |||
2098 | <entry>2.0.11</entry> | ||
2099 | |||
2100 | <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl | ||
2101 | program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a | ||
2102 | libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in | ||
2103 | applications.</entry> | ||
2104 | |||
2105 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2106 | </row> | ||
2107 | |||
2108 | <row> | ||
2109 | <entry>openssh</entry> | ||
2110 | |||
2111 | <entry>7.4p1</entry> | ||
2112 | |||
2113 | <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh | ||
2114 | (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and | ||
2115 | for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry> | ||
2116 | |||
2117 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
2118 | </row> | ||
2119 | |||
2120 | <row> | ||
2121 | <entry>openssl</entry> | ||
2122 | |||
2123 | <entry>1.0.2k</entry> | ||
2124 | |||
2125 | <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic | ||
2126 | tools.</entry> | ||
2127 | |||
2128 | <entry>OpenSSL</entry> | ||
2129 | </row> | ||
2130 | |||
2131 | <row> | ||
2132 | <entry>opkg-utils</entry> | ||
2133 | |||
2134 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | ||
2135 | |||
2136 | <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry> | ||
2137 | |||
2138 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2139 | </row> | ||
2140 | |||
2141 | <row> | ||
2142 | <entry>opkg</entry> | ||
2143 | |||
2144 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | ||
2145 | |||
2146 | <entry>Open Package Manager.</entry> | ||
2147 | |||
2148 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2149 | </row> | ||
2150 | |||
2151 | <row> | ||
2152 | <entry>oprofile</entry> | ||
2153 | |||
2154 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | ||
2155 | |||
2156 | <entry>OProfile is a system-wide profiler for Linux systems | ||
2157 | capable of profiling all running code at low overhead.</entry> | ||
2158 | |||
2159 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2160 | </row> | ||
2161 | |||
2162 | <row> | ||
2163 | <entry>os-release</entry> | ||
2164 | |||
2165 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2166 | |||
2167 | <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system | ||
2168 | identification data.</entry> | ||
2169 | |||
2170 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2171 | </row> | ||
2172 | |||
2173 | <row> | ||
2174 | <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry> | ||
2175 | |||
2176 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2177 | |||
2178 | <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the | ||
2179 | system</entry> | ||
2180 | |||
2181 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2182 | </row> | ||
2183 | |||
2184 | <row> | ||
2185 | <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry> | ||
2186 | |||
2187 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2188 | |||
2189 | <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry> | ||
2190 | |||
2191 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2192 | </row> | ||
2193 | |||
2194 | <row> | ||
2195 | <entry>packagegroup-core-standalone-sdk-target</entry> | ||
2196 | |||
2197 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2198 | |||
2199 | <entry>Target packages for the standalone SDK.</entry> | ||
2200 | |||
2201 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2202 | </row> | ||
2203 | |||
2204 | <row> | ||
2205 | <entry>packagegroup-cross-canadian-qemux86-64</entry> | ||
2206 | |||
2207 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2208 | |||
2209 | <entry>Host SDK package for cross canadian toolchain.</entry> | ||
2210 | |||
2211 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2212 | </row> | ||
2213 | |||
2214 | <row> | ||
2215 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry> | ||
2216 | |||
2217 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2218 | |||
2219 | <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry> | ||
2220 | |||
2221 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2222 | </row> | ||
2223 | |||
2224 | <row> | ||
2225 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-guest</entry> | ||
2226 | |||
2227 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2228 | |||
2229 | <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups | ||
2230 | specific to the guest side of the Enea Linux Virtualization | ||
2231 | Profile.</entry> | ||
2232 | |||
2233 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2234 | </row> | ||
2235 | |||
2236 | <row> | ||
2237 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-tools</entry> | ||
2238 | |||
2239 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2240 | |||
2241 | <entry>Enea Linux debugging tools.</entry> | ||
2242 | |||
2243 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2244 | </row> | ||
2245 | |||
2246 | <row> | ||
2247 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry> | ||
2248 | |||
2249 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2250 | |||
2251 | <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups | ||
2252 | required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux | ||
2253 | Virtualization Profile.</entry> | ||
2254 | |||
2255 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2256 | </row> | ||
2257 | |||
2258 | <row> | ||
2259 | <entry>packagegroup-sdk-host</entry> | ||
2260 | |||
2261 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2262 | |||
2263 | <entry>Host packages for the standalone SDK or external | ||
2264 | toolchain.</entry> | ||
2265 | |||
2266 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2267 | </row> | ||
2268 | |||
2269 | <row> | ||
2270 | <entry>pango</entry> | ||
2271 | |||
2272 | <entry>1.40.3</entry> | ||
2273 | |||
2274 | <entry>Pango is a library for laying out and rendering of text | ||
2275 | with an emphasis on internationalization. Pango can be used | ||
2276 | anywhere that text layout is needed though most of the work on | ||
2277 | Pango so far has been done in the context of the GTK+ widget | ||
2278 | toolkit. Pango forms the core of text and font handling for | ||
2279 | GTK+-2.x.</entry> | ||
2280 | |||
2281 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2282 | </row> | ||
2283 | |||
2284 | <row> | ||
2285 | <entry>pciutils</entry> | ||
2286 | |||
2287 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | ||
2288 | |||
2289 | <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable | ||
2290 | access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based | ||
2291 | on this library.</entry> | ||
2292 | |||
2293 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2294 | </row> | ||
2295 | |||
2296 | <row> | ||
2297 | <entry>perf</entry> | ||
2298 | |||
2299 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2300 | |||
2301 | <entry>Performance counters for Linux are a new kernel-based | ||
2302 | subsystem that provide a framework for all things performance | ||
2303 | analysis. It covers hardware level (CPU/PMU Performance Monitoring | ||
2304 | Unit) features and software features (software counters | ||
2305 | tracepoints) as well.</entry> | ||
2306 | |||
2307 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2308 | </row> | ||
2309 | |||
2310 | <row> | ||
2311 | <entry>perl</entry> | ||
2312 | |||
2313 | <entry>5.24.1</entry> | ||
2314 | |||
2315 | <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry> | ||
2316 | |||
2317 | <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | ||
2318 | </row> | ||
2319 | |||
2320 | <row> | ||
2321 | <entry>pigz</entry> | ||
2322 | |||
2323 | <entry>2.3.4</entry> | ||
2324 | |||
2325 | <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a | ||
2326 | fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple | ||
2327 | processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data. | ||
2328 | pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread | ||
2329 | libraries.</entry> | ||
2330 | |||
2331 | <entry>Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
2332 | </row> | ||
2333 | |||
2334 | <row> | ||
2335 | <entry>pixman</entry> | ||
2336 | |||
2337 | <entry>0.34.0</entry> | ||
2338 | |||
2339 | <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions -- | ||
2340 | a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the | ||
2341 | Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric | ||
2342 | primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry> | ||
2343 | |||
2344 | <entry>MIT, PD</entry> | ||
2345 | </row> | ||
2346 | |||
2347 | <row> | ||
2348 | <entry>pixz</entry> | ||
2349 | |||
2350 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> | ||
2351 | |||
2352 | <entry>Parallel indexed xz compressor.</entry> | ||
2353 | |||
2354 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | ||
2355 | </row> | ||
2356 | |||
2357 | <row> | ||
2358 | <entry>pkgconfig</entry> | ||
2359 | |||
2360 | <entry>0.29.1</entry> | ||
2361 | |||
2362 | <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling | ||
2363 | applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct | ||
2364 | compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry> | ||
2365 | |||
2366 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2367 | </row> | ||
2368 | |||
2369 | <row> | ||
2370 | <entry>popt</entry> | ||
2371 | |||
2372 | <entry>1.16</entry> | ||
2373 | |||
2374 | <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry> | ||
2375 | |||
2376 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2377 | </row> | ||
2378 | |||
2379 | <row> | ||
2380 | <entry>postinst-intercept</entry> | ||
2381 | |||
2382 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2383 | |||
2384 | <entry>Postinstall scriptlets.</entry> | ||
2385 | |||
2386 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2387 | </row> | ||
2388 | |||
2389 | <row> | ||
2390 | <entry>prelink</entry> | ||
2391 | |||
2392 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2393 | |||
2394 | <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF | ||
2395 | shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations | ||
2396 | need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up | ||
2397 | faster.</entry> | ||
2398 | |||
2399 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2400 | </row> | ||
2401 | |||
2402 | <row> | ||
2403 | <entry>procps</entry> | ||
2404 | |||
2405 | <entry>3.3.12</entry> | ||
2406 | |||
2407 | <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide | ||
2408 | system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The | ||
2409 | package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and | ||
2410 | skill.</entry> | ||
2411 | |||
2412 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2413 | </row> | ||
2414 | |||
2415 | <row> | ||
2416 | <entry>pseudo</entry> | ||
2417 | |||
2418 | <entry>1.8.2</entry> | ||
2419 | |||
2420 | <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal | ||
2421 | user.</entry> | ||
2422 | |||
2423 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2424 | </row> | ||
2425 | |||
2426 | <row> | ||
2427 | <entry>ptest-runner</entry> | ||
2428 | |||
2429 | <entry>2.0.2</entry> | ||
2430 | |||
2431 | <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program | ||
2432 | which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them | ||
2433 | in sequence.</entry> | ||
2434 | |||
2435 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2436 | </row> | ||
2437 | |||
2438 | <row> | ||
2439 | <entry>python-pip</entry> | ||
2440 | |||
2441 | <entry>9.0.1</entry> | ||
2442 | |||
2443 | <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python | ||
2444 | packages.</entry> | ||
2445 | |||
2446 | <entry>MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2447 | </row> | ||
2448 | |||
2449 | <row> | ||
2450 | <entry>python-setuptools</entry> | ||
2451 | |||
2452 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | ||
2453 | |||
2454 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python | ||
2455 | packages.</entry> | ||
2456 | |||
2457 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2458 | </row> | ||
2459 | |||
2460 | <row> | ||
2461 | <entry>python</entry> | ||
2462 | |||
2463 | <entry>2.7.13</entry> | ||
2464 | |||
2465 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | ||
2466 | |||
2467 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | ||
2468 | </row> | ||
2469 | |||
2470 | <row> | ||
2471 | <entry>python3-iniparse</entry> | ||
2472 | |||
2473 | <entry>0.4</entry> | ||
2474 | |||
2475 | <entry>Accessing and Modifying INI files.</entry> | ||
2476 | |||
2477 | <entry>MIT, Python-2.0</entry> | ||
2478 | </row> | ||
2479 | |||
2480 | <row> | ||
2481 | <entry>python3-pygpgme</entry> | ||
2482 | |||
2483 | <entry>0.3</entry> | ||
2484 | |||
2485 | <entry>A Python module for working with OpenPGP messages.</entry> | ||
2486 | |||
2487 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2488 | </row> | ||
2489 | |||
2490 | <row> | ||
2491 | <entry>python3-setuptools</entry> | ||
2492 | |||
2493 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | ||
2494 | |||
2495 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python | ||
2496 | packages.</entry> | ||
2497 | |||
2498 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2499 | </row> | ||
2500 | |||
2501 | <row> | ||
2502 | <entry>python3-six</entry> | ||
2503 | |||
2504 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | ||
2505 | |||
2506 | <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility library.</entry> | ||
2507 | |||
2508 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2509 | </row> | ||
2510 | |||
2511 | <row> | ||
2512 | <entry>python3</entry> | ||
2513 | |||
2514 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | ||
2515 | |||
2516 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | ||
2517 | |||
2518 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | ||
2519 | </row> | ||
2520 | |||
2521 | <row> | ||
2522 | <entry>qemu-helper</entry> | ||
2523 | |||
2524 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2525 | |||
2526 | <entry>Helper utilities needed by the runqemu script.</entry> | ||
2527 | |||
2528 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2529 | </row> | ||
2530 | |||
2531 | <row> | ||
2532 | <entry>qemu</entry> | ||
2533 | |||
2534 | <entry>2.8.0</entry> | ||
2535 | |||
2536 | <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry> | ||
2537 | |||
2538 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2539 | </row> | ||
2540 | |||
2541 | <row> | ||
2542 | <entry>qemuwrapper</entry> | ||
2543 | |||
2544 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2545 | |||
2546 | <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry> | ||
2547 | |||
2548 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2549 | </row> | ||
2550 | |||
2551 | <row> | ||
2552 | <entry>quilt</entry> | ||
2553 | |||
2554 | <entry>0.65</entry> | ||
2555 | |||
2556 | <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry> | ||
2557 | |||
2558 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2559 | </row> | ||
2560 | |||
2561 | <row> | ||
2562 | <entry>randrproto</entry> | ||
2563 | |||
2564 | <entry>1.5.0</entry> | ||
2565 | |||
2566 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize | ||
2567 | Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability | ||
2568 | to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry> | ||
2569 | |||
2570 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2571 | </row> | ||
2572 | |||
2573 | <row> | ||
2574 | <entry>readline</entry> | ||
2575 | |||
2576 | <entry>7.0</entry> | ||
2577 | |||
2578 | <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for | ||
2579 | use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they | ||
2580 | are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The | ||
2581 | Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list | ||
2582 | of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit | ||
2583 | those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous | ||
2584 | commands.</entry> | ||
2585 | |||
2586 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
2587 | </row> | ||
2588 | |||
2589 | <row> | ||
2590 | <entry>renderproto</entry> | ||
2591 | |||
2592 | <entry>0.11.1</entry> | ||
2593 | |||
2594 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering | ||
2595 | extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X | ||
2596 | window system.</entry> | ||
2597 | |||
2598 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2599 | </row> | ||
2600 | |||
2601 | <row> | ||
2602 | <entry>rpm</entry> | ||
2603 | |||
2604 | <entry>4.13.90</entry> | ||
2605 | |||
2606 | <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line | ||
2607 | driven package management system capable of installing | ||
2608 | uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages. | ||
2609 | Each software package consists of an archive of files along with | ||
2610 | information about the package like its version a description | ||
2611 | etc.</entry> | ||
2612 | |||
2613 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2614 | </row> | ||
2615 | |||
2616 | <row> | ||
2617 | <entry>run-postinsts</entry> | ||
2618 | |||
2619 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2620 | |||
2621 | <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target | ||
2622 | device.</entry> | ||
2623 | |||
2624 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2625 | </row> | ||
2626 | |||
2627 | <row> | ||
2628 | <entry>sed</entry> | ||
2629 | |||
2630 | <entry>4.2.2</entry> | ||
2631 | |||
2632 | <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry> | ||
2633 | |||
2634 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
2635 | </row> | ||
2636 | |||
2637 | <row> | ||
2638 | <entry>shadow-securetty</entry> | ||
2639 | |||
2640 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
2641 | |||
2642 | <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry> | ||
2643 | |||
2644 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2645 | </row> | ||
2646 | |||
2647 | <row> | ||
2648 | <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry> | ||
2649 | |||
2650 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
2651 | |||
2652 | <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry> | ||
2653 | |||
2654 | <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | ||
2655 | </row> | ||
2656 | |||
2657 | <row> | ||
2658 | <entry>shadow</entry> | ||
2659 | |||
2660 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
2661 | |||
2662 | <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group | ||
2663 | data.</entry> | ||
2664 | |||
2665 | <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | ||
2666 | </row> | ||
2667 | |||
2668 | <row> | ||
2669 | <entry>shared-mime-info</entry> | ||
2670 | |||
2671 | <entry>1.8</entry> | ||
2672 | |||
2673 | <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry> | ||
2674 | |||
2675 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2676 | </row> | ||
2677 | |||
2678 | <row> | ||
2679 | <entry>slang</entry> | ||
2680 | |||
2681 | <entry>2.3.1a</entry> | ||
2682 | |||
2683 | <entry>S-Lang is an interpreted language and a programming | ||
2684 | library. The S-Lang language was designed so that it can be easily | ||
2685 | embedded into a program to provide the program with a powerful | ||
2686 | extension language. The S-Lang library provided in this package | ||
2687 | provides the S-Lang extension language. S-Lang's syntax resembles | ||
2688 | C which makes it easy to recode S-Lang procedures in C if you need | ||
2689 | to.</entry> | ||
2690 | |||
2691 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2692 | </row> | ||
2693 | |||
2694 | <row> | ||
2695 | <entry>sqlite3</entry> | ||
2696 | |||
2697 | <entry>3.17.0</entry> | ||
2698 | |||
2699 | <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry> | ||
2700 | |||
2701 | <entry>PD</entry> | ||
2702 | </row> | ||
2703 | |||
2704 | <row> | ||
2705 | <entry>swig</entry> | ||
2706 | |||
2707 | <entry>3.0.12</entry> | ||
2708 | |||
2709 | <entry>SWIG - Simplified Wrapper and Interface Generator.</entry> | ||
2710 | |||
2711 | <entry>BSD, GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
2712 | </row> | ||
2713 | |||
2714 | <row> | ||
2715 | <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry> | ||
2716 | |||
2717 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2718 | |||
2719 | <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit | ||
2720 | scripts.</entry> | ||
2721 | |||
2722 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2723 | </row> | ||
2724 | |||
2725 | <row> | ||
2726 | <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry> | ||
2727 | |||
2728 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2729 | |||
2730 | <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry> | ||
2731 | |||
2732 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2733 | </row> | ||
2734 | |||
2735 | <row> | ||
2736 | <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry> | ||
2737 | |||
2738 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2739 | |||
2740 | <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry> | ||
2741 | |||
2742 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2743 | </row> | ||
2744 | |||
2745 | <row> | ||
2746 | <entry>systemd</entry> | ||
2747 | |||
2748 | <entry>232</entry> | ||
2749 | |||
2750 | <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux | ||
2751 | compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides | ||
2752 | aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus | ||
2753 | activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of | ||
2754 | daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports | ||
2755 | snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and | ||
2756 | automount points and implements an elaborate transactional | ||
2757 | dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in | ||
2758 | replacement for sysvinit.</entry> | ||
2759 | |||
2760 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2761 | </row> | ||
2762 | |||
2763 | <row> | ||
2764 | <entry>systemtap</entry> | ||
2765 | |||
2766 | <entry>3.1</entry> | ||
2767 | |||
2768 | <entry>Script-directed dynamic tracing and performance analysis | ||
2769 | tool for Linux.</entry> | ||
2770 | |||
2771 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2772 | </row> | ||
2773 | |||
2774 | <row> | ||
2775 | <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry> | ||
2776 | |||
2777 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2778 | |||
2779 | <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry> | ||
2780 | |||
2781 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2782 | </row> | ||
2783 | |||
2784 | <row> | ||
2785 | <entry>tzcode</entry> | ||
2786 | |||
2787 | <entry>2017b</entry> | ||
2788 | |||
2789 | <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump | ||
2790 | tzselect.</entry> | ||
2791 | |||
2792 | <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
2793 | </row> | ||
2794 | |||
2795 | <row> | ||
2796 | <entry>tzdata</entry> | ||
2797 | |||
2798 | <entry>2017b</entry> | ||
2799 | |||
2800 | <entry>Timezone data.</entry> | ||
2801 | |||
2802 | <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
2803 | </row> | ||
2804 | |||
2805 | <row> | ||
2806 | <entry>unfs3</entry> | ||
2807 | |||
2808 | <entry>0.9.22.r497</entry> | ||
2809 | |||
2810 | <entry>Userspace NFS server v3 protocol.</entry> | ||
2811 | |||
2812 | <entry>unfs3</entry> | ||
2813 | </row> | ||
2814 | |||
2815 | <row> | ||
2816 | <entry>unifdef</entry> | ||
2817 | |||
2818 | <entry>2.11</entry> | ||
2819 | |||
2820 | <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry> | ||
2821 | |||
2822 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | ||
2823 | </row> | ||
2824 | |||
2825 | <row> | ||
2826 | <entry>update-rc.d</entry> | ||
2827 | |||
2828 | <entry>0.7</entry> | ||
2829 | |||
2830 | <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of | ||
2831 | symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory | ||
2832 | structure.</entry> | ||
2833 | |||
2834 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2835 | </row> | ||
2836 | |||
2837 | <row> | ||
2838 | <entry>util-linux</entry> | ||
2839 | |||
2840 | <entry>2.29.1</entry> | ||
2841 | |||
2842 | <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration | ||
2843 | utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more | ||
2844 | important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message | ||
2845 | management filesystem creation and system login.</entry> | ||
2846 | |||
2847 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry> | ||
2848 | </row> | ||
2849 | |||
2850 | <row> | ||
2851 | <entry>util-macros</entry> | ||
2852 | |||
2853 | <entry>1.19.1</entry> | ||
2854 | |||
2855 | <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry> | ||
2856 | |||
2857 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2858 | </row> | ||
2859 | |||
2860 | <row> | ||
2861 | <entry>v86d</entry> | ||
2862 | |||
2863 | <entry>0.1.10</entry> | ||
2864 | |||
2865 | <entry>User support binary for the uvesafb kernel module.</entry> | ||
2866 | |||
2867 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2868 | </row> | ||
2869 | |||
2870 | <row> | ||
2871 | <entry>volatile-binds</entry> | ||
2872 | |||
2873 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2874 | |||
2875 | <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for | ||
2876 | read-only-rootfs</entry> | ||
2877 | |||
2878 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2879 | </row> | ||
2880 | |||
2881 | <row> | ||
2882 | <entry>xcb-proto</entry> | ||
2883 | |||
2884 | <entry>1.12</entry> | ||
2885 | |||
2886 | <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding | ||
2887 | (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint | ||
2888 | latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading | ||
2889 | support and extensibility.</entry> | ||
2890 | |||
2891 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2892 | </row> | ||
2893 | |||
2894 | <row> | ||
2895 | <entry>xextproto</entry> | ||
2896 | |||
2897 | <entry>7.3.0</entry> | ||
2898 | |||
2899 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X | ||
2900 | extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS | ||
2901 | Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD | ||
2902 | Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC | ||
2903 | XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also | ||
2904 | available.</entry> | ||
2905 | |||
2906 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2907 | </row> | ||
2908 | |||
2909 | <row> | ||
2910 | <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry> | ||
2911 | |||
2912 | <entry>2.20</entry> | ||
2913 | |||
2914 | <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window. | ||
2915 | The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently | ||
2916 | released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window | ||
2917 | System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based | ||
2918 | systems.</entry> | ||
2919 | |||
2920 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2921 | </row> | ||
2922 | |||
2923 | <row> | ||
2924 | <entry>xmlto</entry> | ||
2925 | |||
2926 | <entry>0.0.28</entry> | ||
2927 | |||
2928 | <entry>A shell-script tool for converting XML files to various | ||
2929 | formats.</entry> | ||
2930 | |||
2931 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2932 | </row> | ||
2933 | |||
2934 | <row> | ||
2935 | <entry>xproto</entry> | ||
2936 | |||
2937 | <entry>7.0.31</entry> | ||
2938 | |||
2939 | <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window | ||
2940 | System.</entry> | ||
2941 | |||
2942 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2943 | </row> | ||
2944 | |||
2945 | <row> | ||
2946 | <entry>xtrans</entry> | ||
2947 | |||
2948 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | ||
2949 | |||
2950 | <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system | ||
2951 | and transport specific code into a single place. This API should | ||
2952 | be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window | ||
2953 | System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of | ||
2954 | transports and support for new platforms without making any | ||
2955 | changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface | ||
2956 | code.</entry> | ||
2957 | |||
2958 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2959 | </row> | ||
2960 | |||
2961 | <row> | ||
2962 | <entry>xz</entry> | ||
2963 | |||
2964 | <entry>5.2.3</entry> | ||
2965 | |||
2966 | <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry> | ||
2967 | |||
2968 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry> | ||
2969 | </row> | ||
2970 | |||
2971 | <row> | ||
2972 | <entry>zlib</entry> | ||
2973 | |||
2974 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> | ||
2975 | |||
2976 | <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data | ||
2977 | compression library which is used by many different | ||
2978 | programs.</entry> | ||
2979 | |||
2980 | <entry>Zlib</entry> | ||
2981 | </row> | ||
2982 | </tbody> | ||
2983 | </tgroup> | ||
2984 | </informaltable> | ||
2985 | </section> | ||
2986 | |||
2987 | <section id="open_source_license"> | ||
2988 | <title>Open Source Licenses</title> | ||
2989 | |||
2990 | <section id="lic_0"> | ||
2991 | <title>AFL-2.0</title> | ||
2992 | |||
2993 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1535 | 2994 | ||
1536 | The Academic Free License | 2995 | The Academic Free License |
1537 | v. 2.0 | 2996 | v. 2.0 |
@@ -1672,11 +3131,13 @@ Permission is hereby granted to copy and distribute this license without modific | |||
1672 | This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its | 3131 | This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its |
1673 | copyright owner. | 3132 | copyright owner. |
1674 | 3133 | ||
1675 | </programlisting></para></section> | 3134 | </programlisting></para> |
3135 | </section> | ||
3136 | |||
3137 | <section id="lic_1"> | ||
3138 | <title>Apache-2.0</title> | ||
1676 | 3139 | ||
1677 | <section id="lic_1"> | 3140 | <para><programlisting> |
1678 | <title>Apache-2.0</title> | ||
1679 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1680 | 3141 | ||
1681 | 3142 | ||
1682 | Apache License | 3143 | Apache License |
@@ -1881,11 +3342,13 @@ copyright owner. | |||
1881 | See the License for the specific language governing permissions and | 3342 | See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
1882 | limitations under the License. | 3343 | limitations under the License. |
1883 | 3344 | ||
1884 | </programlisting></para></section> | 3345 | </programlisting></para> |
3346 | </section> | ||
1885 | 3347 | ||
1886 | <section id="lic_2"> | 3348 | <section id="lic_2"> |
1887 | <title>Artistic-1.0</title> | 3349 | <title>Artistic-1.0</title> |
1888 | <para><programlisting> | 3350 | |
3351 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1889 | 3352 | ||
1890 | The Artistic License | 3353 | The Artistic License |
1891 | Preamble | 3354 | Preamble |
@@ -1978,11 +3441,13 @@ FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. | |||
1978 | 3441 | ||
1979 | The End | 3442 | The End |
1980 | 3443 | ||
1981 | </programlisting></para></section> | 3444 | </programlisting></para> |
3445 | </section> | ||
3446 | |||
3447 | <section id="lic_3"> | ||
3448 | <title>BSD</title> | ||
1982 | 3449 | ||
1983 | <section id="lic_3"> | 3450 | <para><programlisting> |
1984 | <title>BSD</title> | ||
1985 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1986 | Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. | 3451 | Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. |
1987 | All rights reserved. | 3452 | All rights reserved. |
1988 | 3453 | ||
@@ -2009,11 +3474,13 @@ HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT | |||
2009 | LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY | 3474 | LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY |
2010 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF | 3475 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF |
2011 | SUCH DAMAGE. | 3476 | SUCH DAMAGE. |
2012 | </programlisting></para></section> | 3477 | </programlisting></para> |
3478 | </section> | ||
2013 | 3479 | ||
2014 | <section id="lic_4"> | 3480 | <section id="lic_4"> |
2015 | <title>BSD-2-Clause</title> | 3481 | <title>BSD-2-Clause</title> |
2016 | <para><programlisting> | 3482 | |
3483 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2017 | 3484 | ||
2018 | The FreeBSD Copyright | 3485 | The FreeBSD Copyright |
2019 | 3486 | ||
@@ -2041,11 +3508,13 @@ The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation are those | |||
2041 | authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either | 3508 | authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either |
2042 | expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. | 3509 | expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. |
2043 | 3510 | ||
2044 | </programlisting></para></section> | 3511 | </programlisting></para> |
3512 | </section> | ||
3513 | |||
3514 | <section id="lic_5"> | ||
3515 | <title>BSD-3-Clause</title> | ||
2045 | 3516 | ||
2046 | <section id="lic_5"> | 3517 | <para><programlisting> |
2047 | <title>BSD-3-Clause</title> | ||
2048 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2049 | 3518 | ||
2050 | Copyright (c) <YEAR>, <OWNER> | 3519 | Copyright (c) <YEAR>, <OWNER> |
2051 | All rights reserved. | 3520 | All rights reserved. |
@@ -2072,11 +3541,13 @@ CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING | |||
2072 | WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH | 3541 | WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH |
2073 | DAMAGE. | 3542 | DAMAGE. |
2074 | 3543 | ||
2075 | </programlisting></para></section> | 3544 | </programlisting></para> |
3545 | </section> | ||
2076 | 3546 | ||
2077 | <section id="lic_6"> | 3547 | <section id="lic_6"> |
2078 | <title>BSD-4-Clause</title> | 3548 | <title>BSD-4-Clause</title> |
2079 | <para><programlisting> | 3549 | |
3550 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2080 | 3551 | ||
2081 | Copyright (c) <year>, <copyright holder> | 3552 | Copyright (c) <year>, <copyright holder> |
2082 | All rights reserved. | 3553 | All rights reserved. |
@@ -2106,11 +3577,13 @@ ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT | |||
2106 | (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS | 3577 | (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS |
2107 | SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. | 3578 | SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
2108 | 3579 | ||
2109 | </programlisting></para></section> | 3580 | </programlisting></para> |
3581 | </section> | ||
3582 | |||
3583 | <section id="lic_7"> | ||
3584 | <title>BSL-1.0</title> | ||
2110 | 3585 | ||
2111 | <section id="lic_7"> | 3586 | <para><programlisting> |
2112 | <title>BSL-1.0</title> | ||
2113 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2114 | 3587 | ||
2115 | Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003 | 3588 | Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003 |
2116 | 3589 | ||
@@ -2136,11 +3609,13 @@ FOR ANY DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, | |||
2136 | ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER | 3609 | ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER |
2137 | DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. | 3610 | DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. |
2138 | 3611 | ||
2139 | </programlisting></para></section> | 3612 | </programlisting></para> |
3613 | </section> | ||
2140 | 3614 | ||
2141 | <section id="lic_8"> | 3615 | <section id="lic_8"> |
2142 | <title>Elfutils-Exception</title> | 3616 | <title>Elfutils-Exception</title> |
2143 | <para><programlisting> | 3617 | |
3618 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2144 | This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed | 3619 | This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed |
2145 | to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. | 3620 | to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. |
2146 | For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files | 3621 | For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files |
@@ -2153,20 +3628,24 @@ DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. | |||
2153 | libdw.h | 3628 | libdw.h |
2154 | libdwfl.h | 3629 | libdwfl.h |
2155 | 3630 | ||
2156 | </programlisting></para></section> | 3631 | </programlisting></para> |
3632 | </section> | ||
3633 | |||
3634 | <section id="lic_9"> | ||
3635 | <title>FSF-Unlimited</title> | ||
2157 | 3636 | ||
2158 | <section id="lic_9"> | 3637 | <para><programlisting> |
2159 | <title>FSF-Unlimited</title> | ||
2160 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2161 | Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. | 3638 | Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
2162 | This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation | 3639 | This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation |
2163 | gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, | 3640 | gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, |
2164 | with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. | 3641 | with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. |
2165 | </programlisting></para></section> | 3642 | </programlisting></para> |
3643 | </section> | ||
2166 | 3644 | ||
2167 | <section id="lic_10"> | 3645 | <section id="lic_10"> |
2168 | <title>FreeType</title> | 3646 | <title>FreeType</title> |
2169 | <para><programlisting> | 3647 | |
3648 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2170 | The FreeType Project LICENSE | 3649 | The FreeType Project LICENSE |
2171 | ---------------------------- | 3650 | ---------------------------- |
2172 | 3651 | ||
@@ -2337,11 +3816,13 @@ Legal Terms | |||
2337 | 3816 | ||
2338 | --- end of FTL.TXT --- | 3817 | --- end of FTL.TXT --- |
2339 | 3818 | ||
2340 | </programlisting></para></section> | 3819 | </programlisting></para> |
3820 | </section> | ||
3821 | |||
3822 | <section id="lic_11"> | ||
3823 | <title>GPL-1.0</title> | ||
2341 | 3824 | ||
2342 | <section id="lic_11"> | 3825 | <para><programlisting> |
2343 | <title>GPL-1.0</title> | ||
2344 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2345 | 3826 | ||
2346 | GNU General Public License, version 1 | 3827 | GNU General Public License, version 1 |
2347 | 3828 | ||
@@ -2594,11 +4075,13 @@ necessary. Here a sample; alter the names: | |||
2594 | 4075 | ||
2595 | That`s all there is to it! | 4076 | That`s all there is to it! |
2596 | 4077 | ||
2597 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4078 | </programlisting></para> |
4079 | </section> | ||
2598 | 4080 | ||
2599 | <section id="lic_12"> | 4081 | <section id="lic_12"> |
2600 | <title>GPL-2.0</title> | 4082 | <title>GPL-2.0</title> |
2601 | <para><programlisting> | 4083 | |
4084 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2602 | 4085 | ||
2603 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 4086 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
2604 | 4087 | ||
@@ -2897,16 +4380,18 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this | |||
2897 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this | 4380 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this |
2898 | License. | 4381 | License. |
2899 | 4382 | ||
2900 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4383 | </programlisting></para> |
4384 | </section> | ||
4385 | |||
4386 | <section id="lic_13"> | ||
4387 | <title>GPL-3.0</title> | ||
2901 | 4388 | ||
2902 | <section id="lic_13"> | 4389 | <para><programlisting> |
2903 | <title>GPL-3.0</title> | ||
2904 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2905 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 4390 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
2906 | 4391 | ||
2907 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 | 4392 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 |
2908 | 4393 | ||
2909 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> | 4394 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> |
2910 | 4395 | ||
2911 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, | 4396 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, |
2912 | but changing it is not allowed. | 4397 | but changing it is not allowed. |
@@ -3475,11 +4960,13 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this | |||
3475 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this | 4960 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this |
3476 | License. But first, please read | 4961 | License. But first, please read |
3477 | <http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>. | 4962 | <http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>. |
3478 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4963 | </programlisting></para> |
4964 | </section> | ||
3479 | 4965 | ||
3480 | <section id="lic_14"> | 4966 | <section id="lic_14"> |
3481 | <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title> | 4967 | <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title> |
3482 | <para><programlisting> | 4968 | |
4969 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3483 | 4970 | ||
3484 | insert GPL v3 text here | 4971 | insert GPL v3 text here |
3485 | 4972 | ||
@@ -3535,11 +5022,13 @@ consistent with the licensing of the Independent Modules. | |||
3535 | The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that | 5022 | The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that |
3536 | third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. | 5023 | third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. |
3537 | 5024 | ||
3538 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5025 | </programlisting></para> |
5026 | </section> | ||
5027 | |||
5028 | <section id="lic_15"> | ||
5029 | <title>ICU</title> | ||
3539 | 5030 | ||
3540 | <section id="lic_15"> | 5031 | <para><programlisting> |
3541 | <title>ICU</title> | ||
3542 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3543 | COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE | 5032 | COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE |
3544 | 5033 | ||
3545 | Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others | 5034 | Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others |
@@ -3570,11 +5059,13 @@ Software without prior written authorization of the copyright holder. | |||
3570 | 5059 | ||
3571 | All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their | 5060 | All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their |
3572 | respective owners. | 5061 | respective owners. |
3573 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5062 | </programlisting></para> |
5063 | </section> | ||
3574 | 5064 | ||
3575 | <section id="lic_16"> | 5065 | <section id="lic_16"> |
3576 | <title>LGPL-2.0</title> | 5066 | <title>LGPL-2.0</title> |
3577 | <para><programlisting> | 5067 | |
5068 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3578 | GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 5069 | GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
3579 | 5070 | ||
3580 | 5071 | ||
@@ -4158,11 +5649,13 @@ Ty Coon, President of Vice | |||
4158 | 5649 | ||
4159 | That's all there is to it! | 5650 | That's all there is to it! |
4160 | 5651 | ||
4161 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5652 | </programlisting></para> |
5653 | </section> | ||
5654 | |||
5655 | <section id="lic_17"> | ||
5656 | <title>LGPL-2.1</title> | ||
4162 | 5657 | ||
4163 | <section id="lic_17"> | 5658 | <para><programlisting> |
4164 | <title>LGPL-2.1</title> | ||
4165 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4166 | 5659 | ||
4167 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 5660 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
4168 | 5661 | ||
@@ -4590,16 +6083,18 @@ signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1990 | |||
4590 | Ty Coon, President of Vice | 6083 | Ty Coon, President of Vice |
4591 | That`s all there is to it! | 6084 | That`s all there is to it! |
4592 | 6085 | ||
4593 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6086 | </programlisting></para> |
6087 | </section> | ||
4594 | 6088 | ||
4595 | <section id="lic_18"> | 6089 | <section id="lic_18"> |
4596 | <title>LGPL-3.0</title> | 6090 | <title>LGPL-3.0</title> |
4597 | <para><programlisting> | 6091 | |
6092 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4598 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 6093 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
4599 | 6094 | ||
4600 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 | 6095 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 |
4601 | 6096 | ||
4602 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> | 6097 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> |
4603 | 6098 | ||
4604 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, | 6099 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, |
4605 | but changing it is not allowed. | 6100 | but changing it is not allowed. |
@@ -4730,11 +6225,13 @@ If the Library as you received it specifies that a proxy can decide whether futu | |||
4730 | versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public | 6225 | versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public |
4731 | statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose | 6226 | statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose |
4732 | that version for the Library. | 6227 | that version for the Library. |
4733 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6228 | </programlisting></para> |
6229 | </section> | ||
6230 | |||
6231 | <section id="lic_19"> | ||
6232 | <title>Libpng</title> | ||
4734 | 6233 | ||
4735 | <section id="lic_19"> | 6234 | <para><programlisting> |
4736 | <title>Libpng</title> | ||
4737 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4738 | 6235 | ||
4739 | This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of | 6236 | This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of |
4740 | any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is | 6237 | any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is |
@@ -4847,11 +6344,13 @@ Glenn Randers-Pehrson | |||
4847 | glennrp at users.sourceforge.net | 6344 | glennrp at users.sourceforge.net |
4848 | December 9, 2010 | 6345 | December 9, 2010 |
4849 | 6346 | ||
4850 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6347 | </programlisting></para> |
6348 | </section> | ||
4851 | 6349 | ||
4852 | <section id="lic_20"> | 6350 | <section id="lic_20"> |
4853 | <title>MIT</title> | 6351 | <title>MIT</title> |
4854 | <para><programlisting> | 6352 | |
6353 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4855 | 6354 | ||
4856 | MIT License | 6355 | MIT License |
4857 | 6356 | ||
@@ -4875,11 +6374,13 @@ LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, | |||
4875 | OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN | 6374 | OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN |
4876 | THE SOFTWARE. | 6375 | THE SOFTWARE. |
4877 | 6376 | ||
4878 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6377 | </programlisting></para> |
6378 | </section> | ||
6379 | |||
6380 | <section id="lic_21"> | ||
6381 | <title>MPL-1.0</title> | ||
4879 | 6382 | ||
4880 | <section id="lic_21"> | 6383 | <para><programlisting> |
4881 | <title>MPL-1.0</title> | ||
4882 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4883 | 6384 | ||
4884 | MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE | 6385 | MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE |
4885 | Version 1.0 | 6386 | Version 1.0 |
@@ -5172,11 +6673,13 @@ All Rights Reserved. | |||
5172 | 6673 | ||
5173 | Contributor(s): ______________________________________.`` | 6674 | Contributor(s): ______________________________________.`` |
5174 | 6675 | ||
5175 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6676 | </programlisting></para> |
6677 | </section> | ||
5176 | 6678 | ||
5177 | <section id="lic_22"> | 6679 | <section id="lic_22"> |
5178 | <title>MPL-2.0</title> | 6680 | <title>MPL-2.0</title> |
5179 | <para><programlisting> | 6681 | |
6682 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5180 | Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 | 6683 | Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 |
5181 | ================================== | 6684 | ================================== |
5182 | 6685 | ||
@@ -5550,11 +7053,13 @@ Exhibit B - "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses" Notice | |||
5550 | 7053 | ||
5551 | This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as | 7054 | This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as |
5552 | defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. | 7055 | defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. |
5553 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7056 | </programlisting></para> |
7057 | </section> | ||
7058 | |||
7059 | <section id="lic_23"> | ||
7060 | <title>OASIS</title> | ||
5554 | 7061 | ||
5555 | <section id="lic_23"> | 7062 | <para><programlisting> |
5556 | <title>OASIS</title> | ||
5557 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5558 | Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute the DocBook DTD and | 7063 | Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute the DocBook DTD and |
5559 | its accompanying documentation for any purpose and without fee is | 7064 | its accompanying documentation for any purpose and without fee is |
5560 | hereby granted in perpetuity, provided that the above copyright | 7065 | hereby granted in perpetuity, provided that the above copyright |
@@ -5568,48 +7073,50 @@ Exhibit B - "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses" Notice | |||
5568 | additional notations, label your DTD as a variant of DocBook. See | 7073 | additional notations, label your DTD as a variant of DocBook. See |
5569 | the maintenance documentation for more information. | 7074 | the maintenance documentation for more information. |
5570 | 7075 | ||
5571 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7076 | </programlisting></para> |
7077 | </section> | ||
5572 | 7078 | ||
5573 | <section id="lic_24"> | 7079 | <section id="lic_24"> |
5574 | <title>OpenSSL</title> | 7080 | <title>OpenSSL</title> |
5575 | <para><programlisting> | 7081 | |
7082 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5576 | 7083 | ||
5577 | OpenSSL License | 7084 | OpenSSL License |
5578 | 7085 | ||
5579 | ==================================================================== | 7086 | ==================================================================== |
5580 | Copyright (c) 1998-2008 The OpenSSL Project. All rights reserved. | 7087 | Copyright (c) 1998-2008 The OpenSSL Project. All rights reserved. |
5581 | 7088 | ||
5582 | Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without | 7089 | Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without |
5583 | modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions | 7090 | modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions |
5584 | are met: | 7091 | are met: |
5585 | 7092 | ||
5586 | 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright | 7093 | 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright |
5587 | notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. | 7094 | notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. |
5588 | 7095 | ||
5589 | 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright | 7096 | 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright |
5590 | notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in | 7097 | notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in |
5591 | the documentation and/or other materials provided with the | 7098 | the documentation and/or other materials provided with the |
5592 | distribution. | 7099 | distribution. |
5593 | 7100 | ||
5594 | 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this | 7101 | 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this |
5595 | software must display the following acknowledgment: | 7102 | software must display the following acknowledgment: |
5596 | "This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project | 7103 | "This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project |
5597 | for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit. (http://www.openssl.org/)" | 7104 | for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit. (http://www.openssl.org/)" |
5598 | 7105 | ||
5599 | 4. The names "OpenSSL Toolkit" and "OpenSSL Project" must not be used to | 7106 | 4. The names "OpenSSL Toolkit" and "OpenSSL Project" must not be used to |
5600 | endorse or promote products derived from this software without | 7107 | endorse or promote products derived from this software without |
5601 | prior written permission. For written permission, please contact | 7108 | prior written permission. For written permission, please contact |
5602 | openssl-core@openssl.org. | 7109 | openssl-core@openssl.org. |
5603 | 7110 | ||
5604 | 5. Products derived from this software may not be called "OpenSSL" | 7111 | 5. Products derived from this software may not be called "OpenSSL" |
5605 | nor may "OpenSSL" appear in their names without prior written | 7112 | nor may "OpenSSL" appear in their names without prior written |
5606 | permission of the OpenSSL Project. | 7113 | permission of the OpenSSL Project. |
5607 | 7114 | ||
5608 | 6. Redistributions of any form whatsoever must retain the following | 7115 | 6. Redistributions of any form whatsoever must retain the following |
5609 | acknowledgment: | 7116 | acknowledgment: |
5610 | "This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project | 7117 | "This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project |
5611 | for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit (http://www.openssl.org/)" | 7118 | for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit (http://www.openssl.org/)" |
5612 | 7119 | ||
5613 | THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE OpenSSL PROJECT ``AS IS`` AND ANY | 7120 | THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE OpenSSL PROJECT ``AS IS`` AND ANY |
5614 | EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE | 7121 | EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE |
5615 | IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR | 7122 | IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR |
@@ -5623,36 +7130,36 @@ OpenSSL License | |||
5623 | ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED | 7130 | ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED |
5624 | OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. | 7131 | OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
5625 | ==================================================================== | 7132 | ==================================================================== |
5626 | 7133 | ||
5627 | This product includes cryptographic software written by Eric Young | 7134 | This product includes cryptographic software written by Eric Young |
5628 | (eay@cryptsoft.com). This product includes software written by Tim | 7135 | (eay@cryptsoft.com). This product includes software written by Tim |
5629 | Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com). | 7136 | Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com). |
5630 | 7137 | ||
5631 | 7138 | ||
5632 | Original SSLeay License | 7139 | Original SSLeay License |
5633 | ----------------------- | 7140 | ----------------------- |
5634 | 7141 | ||
5635 | Copyright (C) 1995-1998 Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com) | 7142 | Copyright (C) 1995-1998 Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com) |
5636 | All rights reserved. | 7143 | All rights reserved. |
5637 | 7144 | ||
5638 | This package is an SSL implementation written | 7145 | This package is an SSL implementation written |
5639 | by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com). | 7146 | by Eric Young (eay@cryptsoft.com). |
5640 | The implementation was written so as to conform with Netscapes SSL. | 7147 | The implementation was written so as to conform with Netscapes SSL. |
5641 | 7148 | ||
5642 | This library is free for commercial and non-commercial use as long as | 7149 | This library is free for commercial and non-commercial use as long as |
5643 | the following conditions are aheared to. The following conditions | 7150 | the following conditions are aheared to. The following conditions |
5644 | apply to all code found in this distribution, be it the RC4, RSA, | 7151 | apply to all code found in this distribution, be it the RC4, RSA, |
5645 | lhash, DES, etc., code; not just the SSL code. The SSL documentation | 7152 | lhash, DES, etc., code; not just the SSL code. The SSL documentation |
5646 | included with this distribution is covered by the same copyright terms | 7153 | included with this distribution is covered by the same copyright terms |
5647 | except that the holder is Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com). | 7154 | except that the holder is Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com). |
5648 | 7155 | ||
5649 | Copyright remains Eric Young`s, and as such any Copyright notices in | 7156 | Copyright remains Eric Young`s, and as such any Copyright notices in |
5650 | the code are not to be removed. | 7157 | the code are not to be removed. |
5651 | If this package is used in a product, Eric Young should be given attribution | 7158 | If this package is used in a product, Eric Young should be given attribution |
5652 | as the author of the parts of the library used. | 7159 | as the author of the parts of the library used. |
5653 | This can be in the form of a textual message at program startup or | 7160 | This can be in the form of a textual message at program startup or |
5654 | in documentation (online or textual) provided with the package. | 7161 | in documentation (online or textual) provided with the package. |
5655 | 7162 | ||
5656 | Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without | 7163 | Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without |
5657 | modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions | 7164 | modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions |
5658 | are met: | 7165 | are met: |
@@ -5670,7 +7177,7 @@ All rights reserved. | |||
5670 | 4. If you include any Windows specific code (or a derivative thereof) from | 7177 | 4. If you include any Windows specific code (or a derivative thereof) from |
5671 | the apps directory (application code) you must include an acknowledgement: | 7178 | the apps directory (application code) you must include an acknowledgement: |
5672 | "This product includes software written by Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com)" | 7179 | "This product includes software written by Tim Hudson (tjh@cryptsoft.com)" |
5673 | 7180 | ||
5674 | THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY ERIC YOUNG ``AS IS`` AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED | 7181 | THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY ERIC YOUNG ``AS IS`` AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED |
5675 | WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY | 7182 | WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY |
5676 | AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR | 7183 | AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR |
@@ -5680,26 +7187,30 @@ OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) | |||
5680 | HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, | 7187 | HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, |
5681 | OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS | 7188 | OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS |
5682 | SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. | 7189 | SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
5683 | 7190 | ||
5684 | The licence and distribution terms for any publically available version or | 7191 | The licence and distribution terms for any publically available version or |
5685 | derivative of this code cannot be changed. i.e. this code cannot simply be copied and | 7192 | derivative of this code cannot be changed. i.e. this code cannot simply be copied and |
5686 | put under another distribution licence | 7193 | put under another distribution licence |
5687 | [including the GNU Public Licence.] | 7194 | [including the GNU Public Licence.] |
5688 | |||
5689 | 7195 | ||
5690 | 7196 | ||
5691 | 7197 | ||
5692 | </programlisting></para></section> | ||
5693 | 7198 | ||
5694 | <section id="lic_25"> | 7199 | </programlisting></para> |
5695 | <title>PD</title> | 7200 | </section> |
5696 | <para><programlisting> | 7201 | |
7202 | <section id="lic_25"> | ||
7203 | <title>PD</title> | ||
7204 | |||
7205 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5697 | This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License | 7206 | This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License |
5698 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7207 | </programlisting></para> |
7208 | </section> | ||
7209 | |||
7210 | <section id="lic_26"> | ||
7211 | <title>Python-2.0</title> | ||
5699 | 7212 | ||
5700 | <section id="lic_26"> | 7213 | <para><programlisting> |
5701 | <title>Python-2.0</title> | ||
5702 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5703 | 7214 | ||
5704 | PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 | 7215 | PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 |
5705 | -------------------------------------------- | 7216 | -------------------------------------------- |
@@ -5892,11 +7403,13 @@ WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN | |||
5892 | ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT | 7403 | ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT |
5893 | OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. | 7404 | OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. |
5894 | 7405 | ||
5895 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7406 | </programlisting></para> |
7407 | </section> | ||
5896 | 7408 | ||
5897 | <section id="lic_27"> | 7409 | <section id="lic_27"> |
5898 | <title>Sleepycat</title> | 7410 | <title>Sleepycat</title> |
5899 | <para><programlisting> | 7411 | |
7412 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5900 | 7413 | ||
5901 | The Sleepycat License | 7414 | The Sleepycat License |
5902 | Copyright (c) 1990-1999 | 7415 | Copyright (c) 1990-1999 |
@@ -5987,11 +7500,13 @@ LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY | |||
5987 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF | 7500 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF |
5988 | SUCH DAMAGE. | 7501 | SUCH DAMAGE. |
5989 | 7502 | ||
5990 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7503 | </programlisting></para> |
7504 | </section> | ||
7505 | |||
7506 | <section id="lic_28"> | ||
7507 | <title>Zlib</title> | ||
5991 | 7508 | ||
5992 | <section id="lic_28"> | 7509 | <para><programlisting> |
5993 | <title>Zlib</title> | ||
5994 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5995 | 7510 | ||
5996 | zlib License | 7511 | zlib License |
5997 | 7512 | ||
@@ -6013,11 +7528,13 @@ zlib License | |||
6013 | 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. | 7528 | 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. |
6014 | 7529 | ||
6015 | 7530 | ||
6016 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7531 | </programlisting></para> |
7532 | </section> | ||
6017 | 7533 | ||
6018 | <section id="lic_29"> | 7534 | <section id="lic_29"> |
6019 | <title>unfs3</title> | 7535 | <title>unfs3</title> |
6020 | <para><programlisting> | 7536 | |
7537 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6021 | UNFS3 user-space NFSv3 server | 7538 | UNFS3 user-space NFSv3 server |
6022 | (C) 2003, Pascal Schmidt <unfs3-server@ewetel.net> | 7539 | (C) 2003, Pascal Schmidt <unfs3-server@ewetel.net> |
6023 | 7540 | ||
@@ -6042,10 +7559,11 @@ OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, | |||
6042 | WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR | 7559 | WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR |
6043 | OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF | 7560 | OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF |
6044 | ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. | 7561 | ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
6045 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7562 | </programlisting></para> |
6046 | 7563 | </section> | |
6047 | </section> | 7564 | </section> |
6048 | <section id="proprietary_license"> | 7565 | |
6049 | <title>Proprietary Licenses</title> | 7566 | <section id="proprietary_license"> |
6050 | </section> | 7567 | <title>Proprietary Licenses</title> |
6051 | </chapter> | 7568 | </section> |
7569 | </chapter> \ No newline at end of file | ||
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-guest-open-source/doc/licenses.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-guest-open-source/doc/licenses.xml index 010cb66..e3b665b 100644 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-guest-open-source/doc/licenses.xml +++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-guest-open-source/doc/licenses.xml | |||
@@ -3,1217 +3,2342 @@ | |||
3 | "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> | 3 | "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> |
4 | <chapter id="enea_linux_packages"> | 4 | <chapter id="enea_linux_packages"> |
5 | <title>Packages and Licenses</title> | 5 | <title>Packages and Licenses</title> |
6 | <section id="licenses_packages"> | ||
7 | 6 | ||
8 | <title>Packages</title> | 7 | <section id="licenses_packages"> |
8 | <title>Packages</title> | ||
9 | 9 | ||
10 | 10 | <!--This chapter contains a generated list of all packages that Enea Linux | |
11 | <!--This chapter contains a generated list of all packages that Enea Linux | ||
12 | supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package | 11 | supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package |
13 | specific documentation.--> | 12 | specific documentation.--> |
14 | 13 | ||
15 | <informaltable> | 14 | <informaltable> |
16 | <tgroup cols="4"> | 15 | <tgroup cols="4"> |
17 | <colspec colwidth="2*"/> | 16 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
18 | <colspec colwidth="1*"/> | 17 | |
19 | <colspec colwidth="5*"/> | 18 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
20 | <colspec colwidth="2*"/> | 19 | |
21 | 20 | <colspec colwidth="5*" /> | |
22 | <thead> | 21 | |
23 | <row> | 22 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
24 | <entry align="center">Package Name</entry> | 23 | |
25 | <entry align="center">Version</entry> | 24 | <thead> |
26 | <entry align="center">Description</entry> | 25 | <row> |
27 | <entry align="center">License</entry> | 26 | <entry align="center">Package Name</entry> |
28 | </row> | 27 | |
29 | </thead> | 28 | <entry align="center">Version</entry> |
30 | 29 | ||
31 | <tbody valign="top"> | 30 | <entry align="center">Description</entry> |
32 | <row> | 31 | |
33 | <entry>acl</entry> | 32 | <entry align="center">License</entry> |
34 | <entry>2.2.52</entry> | 33 | </row> |
35 | <entry>Utilities for managing POSIX Access Control Lists.</entry> | 34 | </thead> |
36 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 35 | |
37 | </row> | 36 | <tbody valign="top"> |
38 | <row> | 37 | <row> |
39 | <entry>apt</entry> | 38 | <entry>acl</entry> |
40 | <entry>1.2.12</entry> | 39 | |
41 | <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> | 40 | <entry>2.2.52</entry> |
42 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 41 | |
43 | </row> | 42 | <entry>Utilities for managing POSIX Access Control Lists.</entry> |
44 | <row> | 43 | |
45 | <entry>attr</entry> | 44 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> |
46 | <entry>2.4.47</entry> | 45 | </row> |
47 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended attributes.</entry> | 46 | |
48 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 47 | <row> |
49 | </row> | 48 | <entry>apt</entry> |
50 | <row> | 49 | |
51 | <entry>autoconf</entry> | 50 | <entry>1.2.12</entry> |
52 | <entry>2.69</entry> | 51 | |
53 | <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce shell scripts to automatically configure software source code packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package from a template file that lists the operating system features that the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> | 52 | <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> |
54 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 53 | |
55 | </row> | 54 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
56 | <row> | 55 | </row> |
57 | <entry>automake</entry> | 56 | |
58 | <entry>1.15</entry> | 57 | <row> |
59 | <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> | 58 | <entry>attr</entry> |
60 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 59 | |
61 | </row> | 60 | <entry>2.4.47</entry> |
62 | <row> | 61 | |
63 | <entry>base-files</entry> | 62 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended |
64 | <entry>3.0.14</entry> | 63 | attributes.</entry> |
65 | <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for the system.</entry> | 64 | |
66 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 65 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> |
67 | </row> | 66 | </row> |
68 | <row> | 67 | |
69 | <entry>base-passwd</entry> | 68 | <row> |
70 | <entry>3.5.29</entry> | 69 | <entry>autoconf</entry> |
71 | <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> | 70 | |
72 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 71 | <entry>2.69</entry> |
73 | </row> | 72 | |
74 | <row> | 73 | <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce |
75 | <entry>bash-completion</entry> | 74 | shell scripts to automatically configure software source code |
76 | <entry>2.5</entry> | 75 | packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package |
77 | <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> | 76 | from a template file that lists the operating system features that |
78 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 77 | the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> |
79 | </row> | 78 | |
80 | <row> | 79 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
81 | <entry>bash</entry> | 80 | </row> |
82 | <entry>4.3.30</entry> | 81 | |
83 | <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> | 82 | <row> |
84 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 83 | <entry>automake</entry> |
85 | </row> | 84 | |
86 | <row> | 85 | <entry>1.15</entry> |
87 | <entry>bc</entry> | 86 | |
88 | <entry>1.06</entry> | 87 | <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating |
89 | <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> | 88 | `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. |
90 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 89 | Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> |
91 | </row> | 90 | |
92 | <row> | 91 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
93 | <entry>binutils-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> | 92 | </row> |
94 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 93 | |
95 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 94 | <row> |
96 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 95 | <entry>base-files</entry> |
97 | </row> | 96 | |
98 | <row> | 97 | <entry>3.0.14</entry> |
99 | <entry>binutils-cross-x86_64</entry> | 98 | |
100 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 99 | <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory |
101 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 100 | structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for |
102 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 101 | the system.</entry> |
103 | </row> | 102 | |
104 | <row> | 103 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
105 | <entry>binutils-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> | 104 | </row> |
106 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 105 | |
107 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 106 | <row> |
108 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 107 | <entry>base-passwd</entry> |
109 | </row> | 108 | |
110 | <row> | 109 | <entry>3.5.29</entry> |
111 | <entry>binutils</entry> | 110 | |
112 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 111 | <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd |
113 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 112 | and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep |
114 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 113 | the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> |
115 | </row> | 114 | |
116 | <row> | 115 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
117 | <entry>bison</entry> | 116 | </row> |
118 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> | 117 | |
119 | <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with little trouble.</entry> | 118 | <row> |
120 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 119 | <entry>bash-completion</entry> |
121 | </row> | 120 | |
122 | <row> | 121 | <entry>2.5</entry> |
123 | <entry>busybox</entry> | 122 | |
124 | <entry>1.24.1</entry> | 123 | <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> |
125 | <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the options that are included provide the expected functionality and behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded system.</entry> | 124 | |
126 | <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> | 125 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
127 | </row> | 126 | </row> |
128 | <row> | 127 | |
129 | <entry>bzip2</entry> | 128 | <row> |
130 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> | 129 | <entry>bash</entry> |
131 | <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> | 130 | |
132 | <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry> | 131 | <entry>4.3.30</entry> |
133 | </row> | 132 | |
134 | <row> | 133 | <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> |
135 | <entry>ca-certificates</entry> | 134 | |
136 | <entry>20161130</entry> | 135 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
137 | <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> | 136 | </row> |
138 | <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> | 137 | |
139 | </row> | 138 | <row> |
140 | <row> | 139 | <entry>bc</entry> |
141 | <entry>chrpath</entry> | 140 | |
142 | <entry>0.16</entry> | 141 | <entry>1.06</entry> |
143 | <entry>chrpath allows you to change the rpath (where the application looks for libraries) in an application. It does not (yet) allow you to add an rpath if there isn't one already.</entry> | 142 | |
144 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 143 | <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> |
145 | </row> | 144 | |
146 | <row> | 145 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
147 | <entry>cmake</entry> | 146 | </row> |
148 | <entry>3.7.2</entry> | 147 | |
149 | <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> | 148 | <row> |
150 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 149 | <entry>binutils-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> |
151 | </row> | 150 | |
152 | <row> | 151 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
153 | <entry>coreutils</entry> | 152 | |
154 | <entry>8.26</entry> | 153 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
155 | <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which are expected to exist on every system.</entry> | 154 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
156 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 155 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
157 | </row> | 156 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
158 | <row> | 157 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
159 | <entry>cross-localedef</entry> | 158 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
160 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 159 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
161 | <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> | 160 | |
162 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 161 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
163 | </row> | 162 | </row> |
164 | <row> | 163 | |
165 | <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry> | 164 | <row> |
166 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 165 | <entry>binutils-cross-x86_64</entry> |
167 | <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> | 166 | |
168 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 167 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
169 | </row> | 168 | |
170 | <row> | 169 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
171 | <entry>curl</entry> | 170 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
172 | <entry>7.53.1</entry> | 171 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
173 | <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL transfers.</entry> | 172 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
174 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 173 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
175 | </row> | 174 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
176 | <row> | 175 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
177 | <entry>db</entry> | 176 | |
178 | <entry>5.3.28</entry> | 177 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
179 | <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> | 178 | </row> |
180 | <entry>Sleepycat</entry> | 179 | |
181 | </row> | 180 | <row> |
182 | <row> | 181 | <entry>binutils-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> |
183 | <entry>dbus-test</entry> | 182 | |
184 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> | 183 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
185 | <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing only).</entry> | 184 | |
186 | <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 185 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
187 | </row> | 186 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
188 | <row> | 187 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
189 | <entry>dbus</entry> | 188 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
190 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> | 189 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
191 | <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when their services are needed."</entry> | 190 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
192 | <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 191 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
193 | </row> | 192 | |
194 | <row> | 193 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
195 | <entry>debianutils</entry> | 194 | </row> |
196 | <entry>4.8.1</entry> | 195 | |
197 | <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> | 196 | <row> |
198 | <entry> GPL-2.0</entry> | 197 | <entry>binutils</entry> |
199 | </row> | 198 | |
200 | <row> | 199 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
201 | <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> | 200 | |
202 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 201 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
203 | <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency indexer.</entry> | 202 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
204 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 203 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
205 | </row> | 204 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
206 | <row> | 205 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
207 | <entry>diffutils</entry> | 206 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
208 | <entry>3.5</entry> | 207 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
209 | <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch files.</entry> | 208 | |
210 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 209 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
211 | </row> | 210 | </row> |
212 | <row> | 211 | |
213 | <entry>dnf</entry> | 212 | <row> |
214 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> | 213 | <entry>bison</entry> |
215 | <entry>Package manager forked from Yum using libsolv as a dependency resolver.</entry> | 214 | |
216 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 215 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> |
217 | </row> | 216 | |
218 | <row> | 217 | <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts |
219 | <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> | 218 | an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser |
220 | <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry> | 219 | for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all |
221 | <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> | 220 | properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no |
222 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 221 | change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with |
223 | </row> | 222 | little trouble.</entry> |
224 | <row> | 223 | |
225 | <entry>dpdk</entry> | 224 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
226 | <entry>17.08</entry> | 225 | </row> |
227 | <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry> | 226 | |
228 | <entry> BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 227 | <row> |
229 | </row> | 228 | <entry>busybox</entry> |
230 | <row> | 229 | |
231 | <entry>dpkg</entry> | 230 | <entry>1.24.1</entry> |
232 | <entry>1.18.10</entry> | 231 | |
233 | <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> | 232 | <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX |
234 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 233 | utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist |
235 | </row> | 234 | replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU |
236 | <row> | 235 | fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have |
237 | <entry>dtc</entry> | 236 | fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the |
238 | <entry>1.4.2</entry> | 237 | options that are included provide the expected functionality and |
239 | <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> | 238 | behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a |
240 | <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> | 239 | fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded |
241 | </row> | 240 | system.</entry> |
242 | <row> | 241 | |
243 | <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> | 242 | <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> |
244 | <entry>1.43.4</entry> | 243 | </row> |
245 | <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> | 244 | |
246 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> | 245 | <row> |
247 | </row> | 246 | <entry>bzip2</entry> |
248 | <row> | 247 | |
249 | <entry>elfutils</entry> | 248 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> |
250 | <entry>0.168</entry> | 249 | |
251 | <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object files.</entry> | 250 | <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler |
252 | <entry> GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> | 251 | block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. |
253 | </row> | 252 | Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by |
254 | <row> | 253 | more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the |
255 | <entry>enea-nfv-access-guest</entry> | 254 | performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> |
256 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 255 | |
257 | <entry>Image for the guest side of the Enea NFV Access Platform</entry> | 256 | <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry> |
258 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 257 | </row> |
259 | </row> | 258 | |
260 | <row> | 259 | <row> |
261 | <entry>expat</entry> | 260 | <entry>ca-certificates</entry> |
262 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> | 261 | |
263 | <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start tags)</entry> | 262 | <entry>20161130</entry> |
264 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 263 | |
265 | </row> | 264 | <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow |
266 | <row> | 265 | SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL |
267 | <entry>file</entry> | 266 | connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> |
268 | <entry>5.30</entry> | 267 | |
269 | <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> | 268 | <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> |
270 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 269 | </row> |
271 | </row> | 270 | |
272 | <row> | 271 | <row> |
273 | <entry>flex</entry> | 272 | <entry>chrpath</entry> |
274 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> | 273 | |
275 | <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in text.</entry> | 274 | <entry>0.16</entry> |
276 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 275 | |
277 | </row> | 276 | <entry>chrpath allows you to change the rpath (where the |
278 | <row> | 277 | application looks for libraries) in an application. It does not |
279 | <entry>fuse</entry> | 278 | (yet) allow you to add an rpath if there isn't one |
280 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | 279 | already.</entry> |
281 | <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem implementations.</entry> | 280 | |
282 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 281 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
283 | </row> | 282 | </row> |
284 | <row> | 283 | |
285 | <entry>gawk</entry> | 284 | <row> |
286 | <entry>4.1.4</entry> | 285 | <entry>cmake</entry> |
287 | <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> | 286 | |
288 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 287 | <entry>3.7.2</entry> |
289 | </row> | 288 | |
290 | <row> | 289 | <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> |
291 | <entry>gcc-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> | 290 | |
292 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 291 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
293 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers (cross-canadian for x86_64 target).</entry> | 292 | </row> |
294 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 293 | |
295 | </row> | 294 | <row> |
296 | <row> | 295 | <entry>coreutils</entry> |
297 | <entry>gcc-cross-initial-x86_64</entry> | 296 | |
298 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 297 | <entry>8.26</entry> |
299 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 298 | |
300 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 299 | <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and |
301 | </row> | 300 | text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which |
302 | <row> | 301 | are expected to exist on every system.</entry> |
303 | <entry>gcc-cross-x86_64</entry> | 302 | |
304 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 303 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
305 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 304 | </row> |
306 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 305 | |
307 | </row> | 306 | <row> |
308 | <row> | 307 | <entry>cross-localedef</entry> |
309 | <entry>gcc-crosssdk-initial-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> | 308 | |
310 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 309 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
311 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 310 | |
312 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 311 | <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> |
313 | </row> | 312 | |
314 | <row> | 313 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
315 | <entry>gcc-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> | 314 | </row> |
316 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 315 | |
317 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 316 | <row> |
318 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 317 | <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry> |
319 | </row> | 318 | |
320 | <row> | 319 | <entry>1.8</entry> |
321 | <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> | 320 | |
322 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 321 | <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> |
323 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 322 | |
324 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 323 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
325 | </row> | 324 | </row> |
326 | <row> | 325 | |
327 | <entry>gcc</entry> | 326 | <row> |
328 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 327 | <entry>curl</entry> |
329 | <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry> | 328 | |
330 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> | 329 | <entry>7.53.1</entry> |
331 | </row> | 330 | |
332 | <row> | 331 | <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL |
333 | <entry>gdb-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> | 332 | transfers.</entry> |
334 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> | 333 | |
335 | <entry>GNU debugger (cross-canadian gdb for x86_64 target).</entry> | 334 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
336 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 335 | </row> |
337 | </row> | 336 | |
338 | <row> | 337 | <row> |
339 | <entry>gdbm</entry> | 338 | <entry>db</entry> |
340 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 339 | |
341 | <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> | 340 | <entry>5.3.28</entry> |
342 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 341 | |
343 | </row> | 342 | <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> |
344 | <row> | 343 | |
345 | <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> | 344 | <entry>Sleepycat</entry> |
346 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> | 345 | </row> |
347 | <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> | 346 | |
348 | <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> | 347 | <row> |
349 | </row> | 348 | <entry>dbus-test</entry> |
350 | <row> | 349 | |
351 | <entry>gettext</entry> | 350 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> |
352 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> | 351 | |
353 | <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools include a set of conventions about how programs should be written to support message catalogs a directory and file naming organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of translatable and already translated strings.</entry> | 352 | <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing |
354 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 353 | only).</entry> |
355 | </row> | 354 | |
356 | <row> | 355 | <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
357 | <entry>glib-2.0</entry> | 356 | </row> |
358 | <entry>2.50.3</entry> | 357 | |
359 | <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> | 358 | <row> |
360 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> | 359 | <entry>dbus</entry> |
361 | </row> | 360 | |
362 | <row> | 361 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> |
363 | <entry>glibc-locale</entry> | 362 | |
364 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 363 | <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for |
365 | <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> | 364 | applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess |
366 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 365 | communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes |
367 | </row> | 366 | it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application |
368 | <row> | 367 | or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when |
369 | <entry>glibc</entry> | 368 | their services are needed."</entry> |
370 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 369 | |
371 | <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> | 370 | <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
372 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 371 | </row> |
373 | </row> | 372 | |
374 | <row> | 373 | <row> |
375 | <entry>gmp</entry> | 374 | <entry>debianutils</entry> |
376 | <entry>6.1.2</entry> | 375 | |
377 | <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point numbers</entry> | 376 | <entry>4.8.1</entry> |
378 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 377 | |
379 | </row> | 378 | <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> |
380 | <row> | 379 | |
381 | <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> | 380 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
382 | <entry>2014.1</entry> | 381 | </row> |
383 | <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> | 382 | |
384 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 383 | <row> |
385 | </row> | 384 | <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> |
386 | <row> | 385 | |
387 | <entry>gnu-config</entry> | 386 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
388 | <entry>20150728</entry> | 387 | |
389 | <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a directory tree</entry> | 388 | <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency |
390 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 389 | indexer.</entry> |
391 | </row> | 390 | |
392 | <row> | 391 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
393 | <entry>gnutls</entry> | 392 | </row> |
394 | <entry>3.5.9</entry> | 393 | |
395 | <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> | 394 | <row> |
396 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 395 | <entry>diffutils</entry> |
397 | </row> | 396 | |
398 | <row> | 397 | <entry>3.5</entry> |
399 | <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> | 398 | |
400 | <entry>1.50.0</entry> | 399 | <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp |
401 | <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and language bindings.</entry> | 400 | utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch |
402 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 401 | files.</entry> |
403 | </row> | 402 | |
404 | <row> | 403 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
405 | <entry>gperf</entry> | 404 | </row> |
406 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> | 405 | |
407 | <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> | 406 | <row> |
408 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 407 | <entry>dnf</entry> |
409 | </row> | 408 | |
410 | <row> | 409 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> |
411 | <entry>gpgme</entry> | 410 | |
412 | <entry>1.8.0</entry> | 411 | <entry>Package manager forked from Yum using libsolv as a |
413 | <entry>GnuPG Made Easy (GPGME) is a library designed to make access to GnuPG easier for applications. It provides a High-Level Crypto API for encryption decryption signing signature verification and key management</entry> | 412 | dependency resolver.</entry> |
414 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 413 | |
415 | </row> | 414 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
416 | <row> | 415 | </row> |
417 | <entry>grep</entry> | 416 | |
418 | <entry>3.0</entry> | 417 | <row> |
419 | <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> | 418 | <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> |
420 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 419 | |
421 | </row> | 420 | <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry> |
422 | <row> | 421 | |
423 | <entry>gtk-doc</entry> | 422 | <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> |
424 | <entry>1.25</entry> | 423 | |
425 | <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of html documentation files from them</entry> | 424 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
426 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 425 | </row> |
427 | </row> | 426 | |
428 | <row> | 427 | <row> |
429 | <entry>inputproto</entry> | 428 | <entry>dpdk</entry> |
430 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> | 429 | |
431 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input extension. The extension supports input devices other then the core X keyboard and pointer.</entry> | 430 | <entry>17.08</entry> |
432 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 431 | |
433 | </row> | 432 | <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry> |
434 | <row> | 433 | |
435 | <entry>intltool</entry> | 434 | <entry>BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
436 | <entry>0.51.0</entry> | 435 | </row> |
437 | <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry> | 436 | |
438 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 437 | <row> |
439 | </row> | 438 | <entry>dpkg</entry> |
440 | <row> | 439 | |
441 | <entry>iproute2</entry> | 440 | <entry>1.18.10</entry> |
442 | <entry>4.10.0</entry> | 441 | |
443 | <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP / IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6 configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry> | 442 | <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> |
444 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 443 | |
445 | </row> | 444 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
446 | <row> | 445 | </row> |
447 | <entry>iptables</entry> | 446 | |
448 | <entry>1.6.1</entry> | 447 | <row> |
449 | <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to configure and control network packet filtering code in Linux.</entry> | 448 | <entry>dtc</entry> |
450 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 449 | |
451 | </row> | 450 | <entry>1.4.2</entry> |
452 | <row> | 451 | |
453 | <entry>kbd</entry> | 452 | <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the |
454 | <entry>2.0.4</entry> | 453 | Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> |
455 | <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry> | 454 | |
456 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 455 | <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> |
457 | </row> | 456 | </row> |
458 | <row> | 457 | |
459 | <entry>kbproto</entry> | 458 | <row> |
460 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> | 459 | <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> |
461 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard extension. This extension is used to control options related to keyboard handling and layout.</entry> | 460 | |
462 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 461 | <entry>1.43.4</entry> |
463 | </row> | 462 | |
464 | <row> | 463 | <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of |
465 | <entry>kern-tools</entry> | 464 | the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and |
466 | <entry>0.2</entry> | 465 | debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> |
467 | <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched kernels.</entry> | 466 | |
468 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 467 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> |
469 | </row> | 468 | </row> |
470 | <row> | 469 | |
471 | <entry>kmod</entry> | 470 | <row> |
472 | <entry>23</entry> | 471 | <entry>elfutils</entry> |
473 | <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve dependencies and aliases.</entry> | 472 | |
474 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 473 | <entry>0.168</entry> |
475 | </row> | 474 | |
476 | <row> | 475 | <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object |
477 | <entry>ldconfig</entry> | 476 | files.</entry> |
478 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> | 477 | |
479 | <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry> | 478 | <entry>GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> |
480 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 479 | </row> |
481 | </row> | 480 | |
482 | <row> | 481 | <row> |
483 | <entry>libarchive</entry> | 482 | <entry>enea-nfv-access-guest</entry> |
484 | <entry>3.2.2</entry> | 483 | |
485 | <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry> | 484 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
486 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 485 | |
487 | </row> | 486 | <entry>Image for the guest side of the Enea NFV Access |
488 | <row> | 487 | Platform</entry> |
489 | <entry>libassuan</entry> | 488 | |
490 | <entry>2.4.3</entry> | 489 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
491 | <entry>IPC library used by GnuPG and GPGME.</entry> | 490 | </row> |
492 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 491 | |
493 | </row> | 492 | <row> |
494 | <row> | 493 | <entry>expat</entry> |
495 | <entry>libcap</entry> | 494 | |
496 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 495 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> |
497 | <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry> | 496 | |
498 | <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> | 497 | <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a |
499 | </row> | 498 | stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers |
500 | <row> | 499 | for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start |
501 | <entry>libcgroup</entry> | 500 | tags)</entry> |
502 | <entry>0.41</entry> | 501 | |
503 | <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of processes.</entry> | 502 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
504 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 503 | </row> |
505 | </row> | 504 | |
506 | <row> | 505 | <row> |
507 | <entry>libcheck</entry> | 506 | <entry>file</entry> |
508 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> | 507 | |
509 | <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry> | 508 | <entry>5.30</entry> |
510 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 509 | |
511 | </row> | 510 | <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents |
512 | <row> | 511 | and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> |
513 | <entry>libcomps</entry> | 512 | |
514 | <entry>0.1.8</entry> | 513 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
515 | <entry>Libcomps is alternative for yum.comps library (which is for managing rpm package groups)..</entry> | 514 | </row> |
516 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 515 | |
517 | </row> | 516 | <row> |
518 | <row> | 517 | <entry>flex</entry> |
519 | <entry>libdnf</entry> | 518 | |
520 | <entry>0.2.3</entry> | 519 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> |
521 | <entry>Library providing simplified C and Python API to libsolv.</entry> | 520 | |
522 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 521 | <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool |
523 | </row> | 522 | for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in |
524 | <row> | 523 | text.</entry> |
525 | <entry>libffi</entry> | 524 | |
526 | <entry>3.2.1</entry> | 525 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
527 | <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for the interface that allows code written in one language to call code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that handles type conversions for values passed between the two languages.</entry> | 526 | </row> |
528 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 527 | |
529 | </row> | 528 | <row> |
530 | <row> | 529 | <entry>fuse</entry> |
531 | <entry>libgcc</entry> | 530 | |
532 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 531 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> |
533 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 532 | |
534 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 533 | <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for |
535 | </row> | 534 | userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux |
536 | <row> | 535 | kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non |
537 | <entry>libgpg-error</entry> | 536 | privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem |
538 | <entry>1.26</entry> | 537 | implementations.</entry> |
539 | <entry>Small library that defines common error values for all GnuPG components.</entry> | 538 | |
540 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 539 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
541 | </row> | 540 | </row> |
542 | <row> | 541 | |
543 | <entry>libice</entry> | 542 | <row> |
544 | <entry>1.0.9</entry> | 543 | <entry>gawk</entry> |
545 | <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up and shutting down connections for performing authentication for negotiating versions and for reporting errors. </entry> | 544 | |
546 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 545 | <entry>4.1.4</entry> |
547 | </row> | 546 | |
548 | <row> | 547 | <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk |
549 | <entry>libidn</entry> | 548 | interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and |
550 | <entry>1.33</entry> | 549 | easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> |
551 | <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) working group.</entry> | 550 | |
552 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 551 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
553 | </row> | 552 | </row> |
554 | <row> | 553 | |
555 | <entry>libmpc</entry> | 554 | <row> |
556 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> | 555 | <entry>gcc-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> |
557 | <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as Mpfr</entry> | 556 | |
558 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | 557 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
559 | </row> | 558 | |
560 | <row> | 559 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers (cross-canadian for x86_64 |
561 | <entry>libnl</entry> | 560 | target).</entry> |
562 | <entry>3.2.29</entry> | 561 | |
563 | <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink sockets.</entry> | 562 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
564 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 563 | </row> |
565 | </row> | 564 | |
566 | <row> | 565 | <row> |
567 | <entry>libpcap</entry> | 566 | <entry>gcc-cross-initial-x86_64</entry> |
568 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> | 567 | |
569 | <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection security monitoring and network debugging.</entry> | 568 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
570 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 569 | |
571 | </row> | 570 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
572 | <row> | 571 | |
573 | <entry>libpcre</entry> | 572 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
574 | <entry>8.40</entry> | 573 | </row> |
575 | <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular expression API.</entry> | 574 | |
576 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 575 | <row> |
577 | </row> | 576 | <entry>gcc-cross-x86_64</entry> |
578 | <row> | 577 | |
579 | <entry>libpng</entry> | 578 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
580 | <entry>1.6.28</entry> | 579 | |
581 | <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry> | 580 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
582 | <entry>Libpng</entry> | 581 | |
583 | </row> | 582 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
584 | <row> | 583 | </row> |
585 | <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry> | 584 | |
586 | <entry>0.3</entry> | 585 | <row> |
587 | <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry> | 586 | <entry>gcc-crosssdk-initial-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> |
588 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 587 | |
589 | </row> | 588 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
590 | <row> | 589 | |
591 | <entry>librepo</entry> | 590 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
592 | <entry>1.7.20</entry> | 591 | |
593 | <entry> A library providing C and Python (libcURL like) API for downloading linux repository metadata and packages..</entry> | 592 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
594 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 593 | </row> |
595 | </row> | 594 | |
596 | <row> | 595 | <row> |
597 | <entry>libsdl</entry> | 596 | <entry>gcc-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> |
598 | <entry>1.2.15</entry> | 597 | |
599 | <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video framebuffer.</entry> | 598 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
600 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 599 | |
601 | </row> | 600 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
602 | <row> | 601 | |
603 | <entry>libsm</entry> | 602 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
604 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | 603 | </row> |
605 | <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of clients each of which has a particular state."</entry> | 604 | |
606 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 605 | <row> |
607 | </row> | 606 | <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> |
608 | <row> | 607 | |
609 | <entry>libsolv</entry> | 608 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
610 | <entry>0.6.26</entry> | 609 | |
611 | <entry>Library for solving packages and reading repositories.</entry> | 610 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
612 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 611 | |
613 | </row> | 612 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
614 | <row> | 613 | </row> |
615 | <entry>libtool</entry> | 614 | |
616 | <entry>2.4.6</entry> | 615 | <row> |
617 | <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script. Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry> | 616 | <entry>gcc</entry> |
618 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 617 | |
619 | </row> | 618 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
620 | <row> | 619 | |
621 | <entry>libunistring</entry> | 620 | <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry> |
622 | <entry>0.9.7</entry> | 621 | |
623 | <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains documentation.</entry> | 622 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> |
624 | <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 623 | </row> |
625 | </row> | 624 | |
626 | <row> | 625 | <row> |
627 | <entry>libx11</entry> | 626 | <entry>gdb-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> |
628 | <entry>1.6.4</entry> | 627 | |
629 | <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for the basic functions of the window system.</entry> | 628 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> |
630 | <entry> MIT, BSD</entry> | 629 | |
631 | </row> | 630 | <entry>GNU debugger (cross-canadian gdb for x86_64 |
632 | <row> | 631 | target).</entry> |
633 | <entry>libxau</entry> | 632 | |
634 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | 633 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> |
635 | <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X connections both client-side and server-side.</entry> | 634 | </row> |
636 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 635 | |
637 | </row> | 636 | <row> |
638 | <row> | 637 | <entry>gdbm</entry> |
639 | <entry>libxcb</entry> | 638 | |
640 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 639 | <entry>1.12</entry> |
641 | <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading support and extensibility.</entry> | 640 | |
642 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 641 | <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> |
643 | </row> | 642 | |
644 | <row> | 643 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
645 | <entry>libxdmcp</entry> | 644 | </row> |
646 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> | 645 | |
647 | <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime example of an autonomous display.</entry> | 646 | <row> |
648 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 647 | <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> |
649 | </row> | 648 | |
650 | <row> | 649 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> |
651 | <entry>libxext</entry> | 650 | |
652 | <entry>1.3.3</entry> | 651 | <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building |
653 | <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X protocol extensions.</entry> | 652 | autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup |
654 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 653 | by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now |
655 | </row> | 654 | only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> |
656 | <row> | 655 | |
657 | <entry>libxkbcommon</entry> | 656 | <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> |
658 | <entry>0.7.1</entry> | 657 | </row> |
659 | <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB specification.</entry> | 658 | |
660 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 659 | <row> |
661 | </row> | 660 | <entry>gettext</entry> |
662 | <row> | 661 | |
663 | <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry> | 662 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> |
664 | <entry>2.44</entry> | 663 | |
665 | <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML documents.</entry> | 664 | <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to |
666 | <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | 665 | help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools |
667 | </row> | 666 | include a set of conventions about how programs should be written |
668 | <row> | 667 | to support message catalogs a directory and file naming |
669 | <entry>libxml2</entry> | 668 | organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library |
670 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | 669 | supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few |
671 | <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2 includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible with Expat.</entry> | 670 | stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of |
672 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 671 | translatable and already translated strings.</entry> |
673 | </row> | 672 | |
674 | <row> | 673 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
675 | <entry>libxrandr</entry> | 674 | </row> |
676 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | 675 | |
677 | <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry> | 676 | <row> |
678 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 677 | <entry>glib-2.0</entry> |
679 | </row> | 678 | |
680 | <row> | 679 | <entry>2.50.3</entry> |
681 | <entry>libxrender</entry> | 680 | |
682 | <entry>0.9.10</entry> | 681 | <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides |
683 | <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of them.</entry> | 682 | many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities |
684 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 683 | file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> |
685 | </row> | 684 | |
686 | <row> | 685 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> |
687 | <entry>libxslt</entry> | 686 | </row> |
688 | <entry>1.1.29</entry> | 687 | |
689 | <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry> | 688 | <row> |
690 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 689 | <entry>glibc-locale</entry> |
691 | </row> | 690 | |
692 | <row> | 691 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
693 | <entry>linux-intel-guest</entry> | 692 | |
694 | <entry>4.9.47</entry> | 693 | <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> |
695 | <entry>Linux kernel.</entry> | 694 | |
696 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 695 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
697 | </row> | 696 | </row> |
698 | <row> | 697 | |
699 | <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry> | 698 | <row> |
700 | <entry>4.10</entry> | 699 | <entry>glibc</entry> |
701 | <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's use.</entry> | 700 | |
702 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 701 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
703 | </row> | 702 | |
704 | <row> | 703 | <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most |
705 | <entry>lzo</entry> | 704 | systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> |
706 | <entry>2.09</entry> | 705 | |
707 | <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry> | 706 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
708 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 707 | </row> |
709 | </row> | 708 | |
710 | <row> | 709 | <row> |
711 | <entry>lzop</entry> | 710 | <entry>gmp</entry> |
712 | <entry>1.03</entry> | 711 | |
713 | <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher compression and decompression speed at the cost of some \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry> | 712 | <entry>6.1.2</entry> |
714 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 713 | |
715 | </row> | 714 | <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic |
716 | <row> | 715 | operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point |
717 | <entry>m4</entry> | 716 | numbers</entry> |
718 | <entry>1.4.18</entry> | 717 | |
719 | <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry> | 718 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> |
720 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 719 | </row> |
721 | </row> | 720 | |
722 | <row> | 721 | <row> |
723 | <entry>make</entry> | 722 | <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> |
724 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 723 | |
725 | <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables and other non-source files of a program from the program's source files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files and how to compute it from other files.</entry> | 724 | <entry>2014.1</entry> |
726 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 725 | |
727 | </row> | 726 | <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> |
728 | <row> | 727 | |
729 | <entry>makedepend</entry> | 728 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> |
730 | <entry>1.0.5</entry> | 729 | </row> |
731 | <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can reference files having other #include directives and parsing will occur in these files as well.</entry> | 730 | |
732 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 731 | <row> |
733 | </row> | 732 | <entry>gnu-config</entry> |
734 | <row> | 733 | |
735 | <entry>makedevs</entry> | 734 | <entry>20150728</entry> |
736 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> | 735 | |
737 | <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry> | 736 | <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a |
738 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 737 | directory tree</entry> |
739 | </row> | 738 | |
740 | <row> | 739 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
741 | <entry>meta-environment-qemux86-64</entry> | 740 | </row> |
742 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 741 | |
743 | <entry>Package of environment files for SDK.</entry> | 742 | <row> |
744 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 743 | <entry>gnutls</entry> |
745 | </row> | 744 | |
746 | <row> | 745 | <entry>3.5.9</entry> |
747 | <entry>meta-toolchain</entry> | 746 | |
748 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 747 | <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> |
749 | <entry>Meta package for building a installable toolchain.</entry> | 748 | |
750 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 749 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
751 | </row> | 750 | </row> |
752 | <row> | 751 | |
753 | <entry>mklibs</entry> | 752 | <row> |
754 | <entry>0.1.43</entry> | 753 | <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> |
755 | <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry> | 754 | |
756 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 755 | <entry>1.50.0</entry> |
757 | </row> | 756 | |
758 | <row> | 757 | <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and |
759 | <entry>mpfr</entry> | 758 | language bindings.</entry> |
760 | <entry>3.1.5</entry> | 759 | |
761 | <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point computations with exact rounding.</entry> | 760 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
762 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 761 | </row> |
763 | </row> | 762 | |
764 | <row> | 763 | <row> |
765 | <entry>ncurses</entry> | 764 | <entry>gperf</entry> |
766 | <entry>6.0</entry> | 765 | |
767 | <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using the gpm library.</entry> | 766 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> |
768 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 767 | |
769 | </row> | 768 | <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> |
770 | <row> | 769 | |
771 | <entry>netbase</entry> | 770 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
772 | <entry>5.4</entry> | 771 | </row> |
773 | <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for basic TCP/IP based networking</entry> | 772 | |
774 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 773 | <row> |
775 | </row> | 774 | <entry>gpgme</entry> |
776 | <row> | 775 | |
777 | <entry>nettle</entry> | 776 | <entry>1.8.0</entry> |
778 | <entry>3.3</entry> | 777 | |
779 | <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry> | 778 | <entry>GnuPG Made Easy (GPGME) is a library designed to make |
780 | <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 779 | access to GnuPG easier for applications. It provides a High-Level |
781 | </row> | 780 | Crypto API for encryption decryption signing signature |
782 | <row> | 781 | verification and key management</entry> |
783 | <entry>nspr</entry> | 782 | |
784 | <entry>4.13.1</entry> | 783 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
785 | <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry> | 784 | </row> |
786 | <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 785 | |
787 | </row> | 786 | <row> |
788 | <row> | 787 | <entry>grep</entry> |
789 | <entry>nss</entry> | 788 | |
790 | <entry>3.28.1</entry> | 789 | <entry>3.0</entry> |
791 | <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry> | 790 | |
792 | <entry> MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 791 | <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> |
793 | </row> | 792 | |
794 | <row> | 793 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
795 | <entry>numactl</entry> | 794 | </row> |
796 | <entry>2.0.11</entry> | 795 | |
797 | <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in applications.</entry> | 796 | <row> |
798 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 797 | <entry>gtk-doc</entry> |
799 | </row> | 798 | |
800 | <row> | 799 | <entry>1.25</entry> |
801 | <entry>openssh</entry> | 800 | |
802 | <entry>7.4p1</entry> | 801 | <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially |
803 | <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry> | 802 | formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of |
804 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 803 | html documentation files from them</entry> |
805 | </row> | 804 | |
806 | <row> | 805 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
807 | <entry>openssl</entry> | 806 | </row> |
808 | <entry>1.0.2k</entry> | 807 | |
809 | <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic tools.</entry> | 808 | <row> |
810 | <entry>OpenSSL</entry> | 809 | <entry>inputproto</entry> |
811 | </row> | 810 | |
812 | <row> | 811 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> |
813 | <entry>opkg-utils</entry> | 812 | |
814 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | 813 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input |
815 | <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry> | 814 | extension. The extension supports input devices other then the |
816 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 815 | core X keyboard and pointer.</entry> |
817 | </row> | 816 | |
818 | <row> | 817 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
819 | <entry>opkg</entry> | 818 | </row> |
820 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | 819 | |
821 | <entry>Open Package Manager.</entry> | 820 | <row> |
822 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 821 | <entry>intltool</entry> |
823 | </row> | 822 | |
824 | <row> | 823 | <entry>0.51.0</entry> |
825 | <entry>os-release</entry> | 824 | |
826 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 825 | <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry> |
827 | <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system identification data.</entry> | 826 | |
828 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 827 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
829 | </row> | 828 | </row> |
830 | <row> | 829 | |
831 | <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry> | 830 | <row> |
832 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 831 | <entry>iproute2</entry> |
833 | <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the system</entry> | 832 | |
834 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 833 | <entry>4.10.0</entry> |
835 | </row> | 834 | |
836 | <row> | 835 | <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP / |
837 | <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry> | 836 | IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip |
838 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 837 | and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6 |
839 | <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry> | 838 | configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry> |
840 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 839 | |
841 | </row> | 840 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
842 | <row> | 841 | </row> |
843 | <entry>packagegroup-core-standalone-sdk-target</entry> | 842 | |
844 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 843 | <row> |
845 | <entry>Target packages for the standalone SDK.</entry> | 844 | <entry>iptables</entry> |
846 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 845 | |
847 | </row> | 846 | <entry>1.6.1</entry> |
848 | <row> | 847 | |
849 | <entry>packagegroup-cross-canadian-qemux86-64</entry> | 848 | <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to |
850 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 849 | configure and control network packet filtering code in |
851 | <entry>Host SDK package for cross canadian toolchain.</entry> | 850 | Linux.</entry> |
852 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 851 | |
853 | </row> | 852 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
854 | <row> | 853 | </row> |
855 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry> | 854 | |
856 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 855 | <row> |
857 | <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry> | 856 | <entry>kbd</entry> |
858 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 857 | |
859 | </row> | 858 | <entry>2.0.4</entry> |
860 | <row> | 859 | |
861 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-guest</entry> | 860 | <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry> |
862 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 861 | |
863 | <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups specific to the guest side of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry> | 862 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
864 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 863 | </row> |
865 | </row> | 864 | |
866 | <row> | 865 | <row> |
867 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry> | 866 | <entry>kbproto</entry> |
868 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 867 | |
869 | <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry> | 868 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> |
870 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 869 | |
871 | </row> | 870 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard |
872 | <row> | 871 | extension. This extension is used to control options related to |
873 | <entry>packagegroup-sdk-host</entry> | 872 | keyboard handling and layout.</entry> |
874 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 873 | |
875 | <entry>Host packages for the standalone SDK or external toolchain.</entry> | 874 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
876 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 875 | </row> |
877 | </row> | 876 | |
878 | <row> | 877 | <row> |
879 | <entry>pciutils</entry> | 878 | <entry>kern-tools</entry> |
880 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | 879 | |
881 | <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based on this library.</entry> | 880 | <entry>0.2</entry> |
882 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 881 | |
883 | </row> | 882 | <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched |
884 | <row> | 883 | kernels.</entry> |
885 | <entry>perl</entry> | 884 | |
886 | <entry>5.24.1</entry> | 885 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
887 | <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry> | 886 | </row> |
888 | <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | 887 | |
889 | </row> | 888 | <row> |
890 | <row> | 889 | <entry>kmod</entry> |
891 | <entry>pigz</entry> | 890 | |
892 | <entry>2.3.4</entry> | 891 | <entry>23</entry> |
893 | <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data. pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread libraries.</entry> | 892 | |
894 | <entry> Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry> | 893 | <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux |
895 | </row> | 894 | kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve |
896 | <row> | 895 | dependencies and aliases.</entry> |
897 | <entry>pixman</entry> | 896 | |
898 | <entry>0.34.0</entry> | 897 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
899 | <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions -- a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry> | 898 | </row> |
900 | <entry> MIT, PD</entry> | 899 | |
901 | </row> | 900 | <row> |
902 | <row> | 901 | <entry>ldconfig</entry> |
903 | <entry>pixz</entry> | 902 | |
904 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> | 903 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> |
905 | <entry>Parallel indexed xz compressor.</entry> | 904 | |
906 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 905 | <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry> |
907 | </row> | 906 | |
908 | <row> | 907 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
909 | <entry>pkgconfig</entry> | 908 | </row> |
910 | <entry>0.29.1</entry> | 909 | |
911 | <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry> | 910 | <row> |
912 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 911 | <entry>libarchive</entry> |
913 | </row> | 912 | |
914 | <row> | 913 | <entry>3.2.2</entry> |
915 | <entry>popt</entry> | 914 | |
916 | <entry>1.16</entry> | 915 | <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing |
917 | <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry> | 916 | tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry> |
918 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 917 | |
919 | </row> | 918 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
920 | <row> | 919 | </row> |
921 | <entry>postinst-intercept</entry> | 920 | |
922 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 921 | <row> |
923 | <entry>Postinstall scriptlets.</entry> | 922 | <entry>libassuan</entry> |
924 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 923 | |
925 | </row> | 924 | <entry>2.4.3</entry> |
926 | <row> | 925 | |
927 | <entry>prelink</entry> | 926 | <entry>IPC library used by GnuPG and GPGME.</entry> |
928 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 927 | |
929 | <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up faster.</entry> | 928 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
930 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 929 | </row> |
931 | </row> | 930 | |
932 | <row> | 931 | <row> |
933 | <entry>procps</entry> | 932 | <entry>libcap</entry> |
934 | <entry>3.3.12</entry> | 933 | |
935 | <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and skill.</entry> | 934 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
936 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 935 | |
937 | </row> | 936 | <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry> |
938 | <row> | 937 | |
939 | <entry>pseudo</entry> | 938 | <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> |
940 | <entry>1.8.2</entry> | 939 | </row> |
941 | <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal user.</entry> | 940 | |
942 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 941 | <row> |
943 | </row> | 942 | <entry>libcgroup</entry> |
944 | <row> | 943 | |
945 | <entry>ptest-runner</entry> | 944 | <entry>0.41</entry> |
946 | <entry>2.0.2</entry> | 945 | |
947 | <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them in sequence.</entry> | 946 | <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group |
948 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 947 | file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account |
949 | </row> | 948 | and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of |
950 | <row> | 949 | processes.</entry> |
951 | <entry>python</entry> | 950 | |
952 | <entry>2.7.13</entry> | 951 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
953 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | 952 | </row> |
954 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 953 | |
955 | </row> | 954 | <row> |
956 | <row> | 955 | <entry>libcheck</entry> |
957 | <entry>python3-iniparse</entry> | 956 | |
958 | <entry>0.4</entry> | 957 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> |
959 | <entry>Accessing and Modifying INI files.</entry> | 958 | |
960 | <entry> MIT, Python-2.0</entry> | 959 | <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry> |
961 | </row> | 960 | |
962 | <row> | 961 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
963 | <entry>python3-pygpgme</entry> | 962 | </row> |
964 | <entry>0.3</entry> | 963 | |
965 | <entry>A Python module for working with OpenPGP messages.</entry> | 964 | <row> |
966 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 965 | <entry>libcomps</entry> |
967 | </row> | 966 | |
968 | <row> | 967 | <entry>0.1.8</entry> |
969 | <entry>python3-setuptools</entry> | 968 | |
970 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | 969 | <entry>Libcomps is alternative for yum.comps library (which is for |
971 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python packages.</entry> | 970 | managing rpm package groups)..</entry> |
972 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 971 | |
973 | </row> | 972 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
974 | <row> | 973 | </row> |
975 | <entry>python3-six</entry> | 974 | |
976 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | 975 | <row> |
977 | <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility library.</entry> | 976 | <entry>libdnf</entry> |
978 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 977 | |
979 | </row> | 978 | <entry>0.2.3</entry> |
980 | <row> | 979 | |
981 | <entry>python3</entry> | 980 | <entry>Library providing simplified C and Python API to |
982 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | 981 | libsolv.</entry> |
983 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | 982 | |
984 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 983 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
985 | </row> | 984 | </row> |
986 | <row> | 985 | |
987 | <entry>qemu-helper</entry> | 986 | <row> |
988 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 987 | <entry>libffi</entry> |
989 | <entry>Helper utilities needed by the runqemu script.</entry> | 988 | |
990 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 989 | <entry>3.2.1</entry> |
991 | </row> | 990 | |
992 | <row> | 991 | <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level |
993 | <entry>qemu</entry> | 992 | programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows |
994 | <entry>2.8.0</entry> | 993 | a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface |
995 | <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry> | 994 | description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function |
996 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 995 | Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for |
997 | </row> | 996 | the interface that allows code written in one language to call |
998 | <row> | 997 | code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only |
999 | <entry>qemuwrapper</entry> | 998 | provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured |
1000 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 999 | foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that |
1001 | <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry> | 1000 | handles type conversions for values passed between the two |
1002 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1001 | languages.</entry> |
1003 | </row> | 1002 | |
1004 | <row> | 1003 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1005 | <entry>quilt</entry> | 1004 | </row> |
1006 | <entry>0.65</entry> | 1005 | |
1007 | <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry> | 1006 | <row> |
1008 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1007 | <entry>libgcc</entry> |
1009 | </row> | 1008 | |
1010 | <row> | 1009 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
1011 | <entry>randrproto</entry> | 1010 | |
1012 | <entry>1.5.0</entry> | 1011 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
1013 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry> | 1012 | |
1014 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1013 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
1015 | </row> | 1014 | </row> |
1016 | <row> | 1015 | |
1017 | <entry>readline</entry> | 1016 | <row> |
1018 | <entry>7.0</entry> | 1017 | <entry>libgpg-error</entry> |
1019 | <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous commands.</entry> | 1018 | |
1020 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1019 | <entry>1.26</entry> |
1021 | </row> | 1020 | |
1022 | <row> | 1021 | <entry>Small library that defines common error values for all |
1023 | <entry>renderproto</entry> | 1022 | GnuPG components.</entry> |
1024 | <entry>0.11.1</entry> | 1023 | |
1025 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X window system.</entry> | 1024 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1026 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1025 | </row> |
1027 | </row> | 1026 | |
1028 | <row> | 1027 | <row> |
1029 | <entry>rpm</entry> | 1028 | <entry>libice</entry> |
1030 | <entry>4.13.90</entry> | 1029 | |
1031 | <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line driven package management system capable of installing uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages. Each software package consists of an archive of files along with information about the package like its version a description etc.</entry> | 1030 | <entry>1.0.9</entry> |
1032 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1031 | |
1033 | </row> | 1032 | <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic |
1034 | <row> | 1033 | framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream |
1035 | <entry>run-postinsts</entry> | 1034 | transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up |
1036 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1035 | and shutting down connections for performing authentication for |
1037 | <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target device.</entry> | 1036 | negotiating versions and for reporting errors.</entry> |
1038 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1037 | |
1039 | </row> | 1038 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1040 | <row> | 1039 | </row> |
1041 | <entry>sed</entry> | 1040 | |
1042 | <entry>4.2.2</entry> | 1041 | <row> |
1043 | <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry> | 1042 | <entry>libidn</entry> |
1044 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1043 | |
1045 | </row> | 1044 | <entry>1.33</entry> |
1046 | <row> | 1045 | |
1047 | <entry>shadow-securetty</entry> | 1046 | <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA |
1048 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 1047 | specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names |
1049 | <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry> | 1048 | (IDN) working group.</entry> |
1050 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1049 | |
1051 | </row> | 1050 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
1052 | <row> | 1051 | </row> |
1053 | <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry> | 1052 | |
1054 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 1053 | <row> |
1055 | <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry> | 1054 | <entry>libmpc</entry> |
1056 | <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | 1055 | |
1057 | </row> | 1056 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> |
1058 | <row> | 1057 | |
1059 | <entry>shadow</entry> | 1058 | <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers |
1060 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 1059 | with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the |
1061 | <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group data.</entry> | 1060 | result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as |
1062 | <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | 1061 | Mpfr</entry> |
1063 | </row> | 1062 | |
1064 | <row> | 1063 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> |
1065 | <entry>shared-mime-info</entry> | 1064 | </row> |
1066 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 1065 | |
1067 | <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry> | 1066 | <row> |
1068 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1067 | <entry>libnl</entry> |
1069 | </row> | 1068 | |
1070 | <row> | 1069 | <entry>3.2.29</entry> |
1071 | <entry>sqlite3</entry> | 1070 | |
1072 | <entry>3.17.0</entry> | 1071 | <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink |
1073 | <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry> | 1072 | sockets.</entry> |
1074 | <entry>PD</entry> | 1073 | |
1075 | </row> | 1074 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1076 | <row> | 1075 | </row> |
1077 | <entry>swig</entry> | 1076 | |
1078 | <entry>3.0.12</entry> | 1077 | <row> |
1079 | <entry>SWIG - Simplified Wrapper and Interface Generator.</entry> | 1078 | <entry>libpcap</entry> |
1080 | <entry> BSD, GPL-3.0</entry> | 1079 | |
1081 | </row> | 1080 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> |
1082 | <row> | 1081 | |
1083 | <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry> | 1082 | <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network |
1084 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1083 | monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection |
1085 | <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit scripts.</entry> | 1084 | security monitoring and network debugging.</entry> |
1086 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1085 | |
1087 | </row> | 1086 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1088 | <row> | 1087 | </row> |
1089 | <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry> | 1088 | |
1090 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1089 | <row> |
1091 | <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry> | 1090 | <entry>libpcre</entry> |
1092 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1091 | |
1093 | </row> | 1092 | <entry>8.40</entry> |
1094 | <row> | 1093 | |
1095 | <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry> | 1094 | <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement |
1096 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1095 | regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and |
1097 | <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry> | 1096 | semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set |
1098 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1097 | of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular |
1099 | </row> | 1098 | expression API.</entry> |
1100 | <row> | 1099 | |
1101 | <entry>systemd</entry> | 1100 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1102 | <entry>232</entry> | 1101 | </row> |
1103 | <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and automount points and implements an elaborate transactional dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in replacement for sysvinit.</entry> | 1102 | |
1104 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1103 | <row> |
1105 | </row> | 1104 | <entry>libpng</entry> |
1106 | <row> | 1105 | |
1107 | <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry> | 1106 | <entry>1.6.28</entry> |
1108 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1107 | |
1109 | <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry> | 1108 | <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry> |
1110 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1109 | |
1111 | </row> | 1110 | <entry>Libpng</entry> |
1112 | <row> | 1111 | </row> |
1113 | <entry>tzcode</entry> | 1112 | |
1114 | <entry>2017b</entry> | 1113 | <row> |
1115 | <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump tzselect.</entry> | 1114 | <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry> |
1116 | <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1115 | |
1117 | </row> | 1116 | <entry>0.3</entry> |
1118 | <row> | 1117 | |
1119 | <entry>tzdata</entry> | 1118 | <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions |
1120 | <entry>2017b</entry> | 1119 | not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry> |
1121 | <entry>Timezone data.</entry> | 1120 | |
1122 | <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1121 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1123 | </row> | 1122 | </row> |
1124 | <row> | 1123 | |
1125 | <entry>unfs3</entry> | 1124 | <row> |
1126 | <entry>0.9.22.r497</entry> | 1125 | <entry>librepo</entry> |
1127 | <entry>Userspace NFS server v3 protocol.</entry> | 1126 | |
1128 | <entry>unfs3</entry> | 1127 | <entry>1.7.20</entry> |
1129 | </row> | 1128 | |
1130 | <row> | 1129 | <entry>A library providing C and Python (libcURL like) API for |
1131 | <entry>unifdef</entry> | 1130 | downloading linux repository metadata and packages..</entry> |
1132 | <entry>2.11</entry> | 1131 | |
1133 | <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry> | 1132 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1134 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 1133 | </row> |
1135 | </row> | 1134 | |
1136 | <row> | 1135 | <row> |
1137 | <entry>update-rc.d</entry> | 1136 | <entry>libsdl</entry> |
1138 | <entry>0.7</entry> | 1137 | |
1139 | <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory structure.</entry> | 1138 | <entry>1.2.15</entry> |
1140 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1139 | |
1141 | </row> | 1140 | <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia |
1142 | <row> | 1141 | library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard |
1143 | <entry>util-linux</entry> | 1142 | mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video |
1144 | <entry>2.29.1</entry> | 1143 | framebuffer.</entry> |
1145 | <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message management filesystem creation and system login.</entry> | 1144 | |
1146 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry> | 1145 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1147 | </row> | 1146 | </row> |
1148 | <row> | 1147 | |
1149 | <entry>util-macros</entry> | 1148 | <row> |
1150 | <entry>1.19.1</entry> | 1149 | <entry>libsm</entry> |
1151 | <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry> | 1150 | |
1152 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1151 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> |
1153 | </row> | 1152 | |
1154 | <row> | 1153 | <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level |
1155 | <entry>v86d</entry> | 1154 | \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session |
1156 | <entry>0.1.10</entry> | 1155 | Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for |
1157 | <entry>User support binary for the uvesafb kernel module.</entry> | 1156 | users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of |
1158 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1157 | clients each of which has a particular state."</entry> |
1159 | </row> | 1158 | |
1160 | <row> | 1159 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1161 | <entry>volatile-binds</entry> | 1160 | </row> |
1162 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1161 | |
1163 | <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for read-only-rootfs</entry> | 1162 | <row> |
1164 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1163 | <entry>libsolv</entry> |
1165 | </row> | 1164 | |
1166 | <row> | 1165 | <entry>0.6.26</entry> |
1167 | <entry>xcb-proto</entry> | 1166 | |
1168 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 1167 | <entry>Library for solving packages and reading |
1169 | <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading support and extensibility.</entry> | 1168 | repositories.</entry> |
1170 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1169 | |
1171 | </row> | 1170 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
1172 | <row> | 1171 | </row> |
1173 | <entry>xextproto</entry> | 1172 | |
1174 | <entry>7.3.0</entry> | 1173 | <row> |
1175 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also available.</entry> | 1174 | <entry>libtool</entry> |
1176 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1175 | |
1177 | </row> | 1176 | <entry>2.4.6</entry> |
1178 | <row> | 1177 | |
1179 | <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry> | 1178 | <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script. |
1180 | <entry>2.20</entry> | 1179 | Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types |
1181 | <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window. The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based systems.</entry> | 1180 | (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry> |
1182 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1181 | |
1183 | </row> | 1182 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1184 | <row> | 1183 | </row> |
1185 | <entry>xproto</entry> | 1184 | |
1186 | <entry>7.0.31</entry> | 1185 | <row> |
1187 | <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window System.</entry> | 1186 | <entry>libunistring</entry> |
1188 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1187 | |
1189 | </row> | 1188 | <entry>0.9.7</entry> |
1190 | <row> | 1189 | |
1191 | <entry>xtrans</entry> | 1190 | <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may |
1192 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | 1191 | consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese |
1193 | <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system and transport specific code into a single place. This API should be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of transports and support for new platforms without making any changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface code.</entry> | 1192 | Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left |
1194 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1193 | writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX |
1195 | </row> | 1194 | platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for |
1196 | <row> | 1195 | dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In |
1197 | <entry>xz</entry> | 1196 | fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their |
1198 | <entry>5.2.3</entry> | 1197 | base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides |
1199 | <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry> | 1198 | functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C |
1200 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry> | 1199 | strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains |
1201 | </row> | 1200 | documentation.</entry> |
1202 | <row> | 1201 | |
1203 | <entry>zlib</entry> | 1202 | <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
1204 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> | 1203 | </row> |
1205 | <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data compression library which is used by many different programs.</entry> | 1204 | |
1206 | <entry>Zlib</entry> | 1205 | <row> |
1207 | </row> | 1206 | <entry>libx11</entry> |
1208 | </tbody> | 1207 | |
1209 | </tgroup> | 1208 | <entry>1.6.4</entry> |
1210 | </informaltable> | 1209 | |
1211 | </section> | 1210 | <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window |
1212 | <section id="open_source_license"> | 1211 | System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for |
1213 | <title>Open Source Licenses</title> | 1212 | the basic functions of the window system.</entry> |
1214 | <section id="lic_0"> | 1213 | |
1215 | <title>AFL-2.0</title> | 1214 | <entry>MIT, BSD</entry> |
1216 | <para><programlisting> | 1215 | </row> |
1216 | |||
1217 | <row> | ||
1218 | <entry>libxau</entry> | ||
1219 | |||
1220 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | ||
1221 | |||
1222 | <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 | ||
1223 | authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X | ||
1224 | connections both client-side and server-side.</entry> | ||
1225 | |||
1226 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1227 | </row> | ||
1228 | |||
1229 | <row> | ||
1230 | <entry>libxcb</entry> | ||
1231 | |||
1232 | <entry>1.12</entry> | ||
1233 | |||
1234 | <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement | ||
1235 | for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access | ||
1236 | to the protocol improved threading support and | ||
1237 | extensibility.</entry> | ||
1238 | |||
1239 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1240 | </row> | ||
1241 | |||
1242 | <row> | ||
1243 | <entry>libxdmcp</entry> | ||
1244 | |||
1245 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> | ||
1246 | |||
1247 | <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol | ||
1248 | (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous | ||
1249 | display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal | ||
1250 | (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime | ||
1251 | example of an autonomous display.</entry> | ||
1252 | |||
1253 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1254 | </row> | ||
1255 | |||
1256 | <row> | ||
1257 | <entry>libxext</entry> | ||
1258 | |||
1259 | <entry>1.3.3</entry> | ||
1260 | |||
1261 | <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to | ||
1262 | several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol | ||
1263 | extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX | ||
1264 | MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC | ||
1265 | TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small | ||
1266 | set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X | ||
1267 | protocol extensions.</entry> | ||
1268 | |||
1269 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1270 | </row> | ||
1271 | |||
1272 | <row> | ||
1273 | <entry>libxkbcommon</entry> | ||
1274 | |||
1275 | <entry>0.7.1</entry> | ||
1276 | |||
1277 | <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which | ||
1278 | processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB | ||
1279 | specification.</entry> | ||
1280 | |||
1281 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1282 | </row> | ||
1283 | |||
1284 | <row> | ||
1285 | <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry> | ||
1286 | |||
1287 | <entry>2.44</entry> | ||
1288 | |||
1289 | <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML | ||
1290 | documents.</entry> | ||
1291 | |||
1292 | <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | ||
1293 | </row> | ||
1294 | |||
1295 | <row> | ||
1296 | <entry>libxml2</entry> | ||
1297 | |||
1298 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | ||
1299 | |||
1300 | <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML | ||
1301 | files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for | ||
1302 | both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a | ||
1303 | parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2 | ||
1304 | includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It | ||
1305 | also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible | ||
1306 | with Expat.</entry> | ||
1307 | |||
1308 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1309 | </row> | ||
1310 | |||
1311 | <row> | ||
1312 | <entry>libxrandr</entry> | ||
1313 | |||
1314 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | ||
1315 | |||
1316 | <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for | ||
1317 | short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root | ||
1318 | window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate | ||
1319 | Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix | ||
1320 | Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry> | ||
1321 | |||
1322 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1323 | </row> | ||
1324 | |||
1325 | <row> | ||
1326 | <entry>libxrender</entry> | ||
1327 | |||
1328 | <entry>0.9.10</entry> | ||
1329 | |||
1330 | <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image | ||
1331 | composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the | ||
1332 | X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by | ||
1333 | client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text | ||
1334 | is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of | ||
1335 | them.</entry> | ||
1336 | |||
1337 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1338 | </row> | ||
1339 | |||
1340 | <row> | ||
1341 | <entry>libxslt</entry> | ||
1342 | |||
1343 | <entry>1.1.29</entry> | ||
1344 | |||
1345 | <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry> | ||
1346 | |||
1347 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1348 | </row> | ||
1349 | |||
1350 | <row> | ||
1351 | <entry>linux-intel-guest</entry> | ||
1352 | |||
1353 | <entry>4.9.47</entry> | ||
1354 | |||
1355 | <entry>Linux kernel.</entry> | ||
1356 | |||
1357 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1358 | </row> | ||
1359 | |||
1360 | <row> | ||
1361 | <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry> | ||
1362 | |||
1363 | <entry>4.10</entry> | ||
1364 | |||
1365 | <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's | ||
1366 | use.</entry> | ||
1367 | |||
1368 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1369 | </row> | ||
1370 | |||
1371 | <row> | ||
1372 | <entry>lzo</entry> | ||
1373 | |||
1374 | <entry>2.09</entry> | ||
1375 | |||
1376 | <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry> | ||
1377 | |||
1378 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1379 | </row> | ||
1380 | |||
1381 | <row> | ||
1382 | <entry>lzop</entry> | ||
1383 | |||
1384 | <entry>1.03</entry> | ||
1385 | |||
1386 | <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a | ||
1387 | companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression | ||
1388 | library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher | ||
1389 | compression and decompression speed at the cost of some | ||
1390 | \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed | ||
1391 | with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with | ||
1392 | reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry> | ||
1393 | |||
1394 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1395 | </row> | ||
1396 | |||
1397 | <row> | ||
1398 | <entry>m4</entry> | ||
1399 | |||
1400 | <entry>1.4.18</entry> | ||
1401 | |||
1402 | <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro | ||
1403 | processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some | ||
1404 | extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters | ||
1405 | to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files | ||
1406 | running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry> | ||
1407 | |||
1408 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
1409 | </row> | ||
1410 | |||
1411 | <row> | ||
1412 | <entry>make</entry> | ||
1413 | |||
1414 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
1415 | |||
1416 | <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables | ||
1417 | and other non-source files of a program from the program's source | ||
1418 | files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a | ||
1419 | file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files | ||
1420 | and how to compute it from other files.</entry> | ||
1421 | |||
1422 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1423 | </row> | ||
1424 | |||
1425 | <row> | ||
1426 | <entry>makedepend</entry> | ||
1427 | |||
1428 | <entry>1.0.5</entry> | ||
1429 | |||
1430 | <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence | ||
1431 | and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include | ||
1432 | #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else | ||
1433 | directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives | ||
1434 | would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can | ||
1435 | reference files having other #include directives and parsing will | ||
1436 | occur in these files as well.</entry> | ||
1437 | |||
1438 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1439 | </row> | ||
1440 | |||
1441 | <row> | ||
1442 | <entry>makedevs</entry> | ||
1443 | |||
1444 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> | ||
1445 | |||
1446 | <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry> | ||
1447 | |||
1448 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1449 | </row> | ||
1450 | |||
1451 | <row> | ||
1452 | <entry>meta-environment-qemux86-64</entry> | ||
1453 | |||
1454 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1455 | |||
1456 | <entry>Package of environment files for SDK.</entry> | ||
1457 | |||
1458 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1459 | </row> | ||
1460 | |||
1461 | <row> | ||
1462 | <entry>meta-toolchain</entry> | ||
1463 | |||
1464 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1465 | |||
1466 | <entry>Meta package for building a installable toolchain.</entry> | ||
1467 | |||
1468 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1469 | </row> | ||
1470 | |||
1471 | <row> | ||
1472 | <entry>mklibs</entry> | ||
1473 | |||
1474 | <entry>0.1.43</entry> | ||
1475 | |||
1476 | <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only | ||
1477 | the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry> | ||
1478 | |||
1479 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1480 | </row> | ||
1481 | |||
1482 | <row> | ||
1483 | <entry>mpfr</entry> | ||
1484 | |||
1485 | <entry>3.1.5</entry> | ||
1486 | |||
1487 | <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point | ||
1488 | computations with exact rounding.</entry> | ||
1489 | |||
1490 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | ||
1491 | </row> | ||
1492 | |||
1493 | <row> | ||
1494 | <entry>ncurses</entry> | ||
1495 | |||
1496 | <entry>6.0</entry> | ||
1497 | |||
1498 | <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo | ||
1499 | tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple | ||
1500 | highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of | ||
1501 | keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable | ||
1502 | windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using | ||
1503 | the gpm library.</entry> | ||
1504 | |||
1505 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1506 | </row> | ||
1507 | |||
1508 | <row> | ||
1509 | <entry>netbase</entry> | ||
1510 | |||
1511 | <entry>5.4</entry> | ||
1512 | |||
1513 | <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for | ||
1514 | basic TCP/IP based networking</entry> | ||
1515 | |||
1516 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1517 | </row> | ||
1518 | |||
1519 | <row> | ||
1520 | <entry>nettle</entry> | ||
1521 | |||
1522 | <entry>3.3</entry> | ||
1523 | |||
1524 | <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry> | ||
1525 | |||
1526 | <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1527 | </row> | ||
1528 | |||
1529 | <row> | ||
1530 | <entry>nspr</entry> | ||
1531 | |||
1532 | <entry>4.13.1</entry> | ||
1533 | |||
1534 | <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry> | ||
1535 | |||
1536 | <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
1537 | </row> | ||
1538 | |||
1539 | <row> | ||
1540 | <entry>nss</entry> | ||
1541 | |||
1542 | <entry>3.28.1</entry> | ||
1543 | |||
1544 | <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries | ||
1545 | designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled | ||
1546 | client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can | ||
1547 | support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME | ||
1548 | X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry> | ||
1549 | |||
1550 | <entry>MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
1551 | </row> | ||
1552 | |||
1553 | <row> | ||
1554 | <entry>numactl</entry> | ||
1555 | |||
1556 | <entry>2.0.11</entry> | ||
1557 | |||
1558 | <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl | ||
1559 | program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a | ||
1560 | libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in | ||
1561 | applications.</entry> | ||
1562 | |||
1563 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
1564 | </row> | ||
1565 | |||
1566 | <row> | ||
1567 | <entry>openssh</entry> | ||
1568 | |||
1569 | <entry>7.4p1</entry> | ||
1570 | |||
1571 | <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh | ||
1572 | (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and | ||
1573 | for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry> | ||
1574 | |||
1575 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
1576 | </row> | ||
1577 | |||
1578 | <row> | ||
1579 | <entry>openssl</entry> | ||
1580 | |||
1581 | <entry>1.0.2k</entry> | ||
1582 | |||
1583 | <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic | ||
1584 | tools.</entry> | ||
1585 | |||
1586 | <entry>OpenSSL</entry> | ||
1587 | </row> | ||
1588 | |||
1589 | <row> | ||
1590 | <entry>opkg-utils</entry> | ||
1591 | |||
1592 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | ||
1593 | |||
1594 | <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry> | ||
1595 | |||
1596 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1597 | </row> | ||
1598 | |||
1599 | <row> | ||
1600 | <entry>opkg</entry> | ||
1601 | |||
1602 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | ||
1603 | |||
1604 | <entry>Open Package Manager.</entry> | ||
1605 | |||
1606 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1607 | </row> | ||
1608 | |||
1609 | <row> | ||
1610 | <entry>os-release</entry> | ||
1611 | |||
1612 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1613 | |||
1614 | <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system | ||
1615 | identification data.</entry> | ||
1616 | |||
1617 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1618 | </row> | ||
1619 | |||
1620 | <row> | ||
1621 | <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry> | ||
1622 | |||
1623 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1624 | |||
1625 | <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the | ||
1626 | system</entry> | ||
1627 | |||
1628 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1629 | </row> | ||
1630 | |||
1631 | <row> | ||
1632 | <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry> | ||
1633 | |||
1634 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1635 | |||
1636 | <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry> | ||
1637 | |||
1638 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1639 | </row> | ||
1640 | |||
1641 | <row> | ||
1642 | <entry>packagegroup-core-standalone-sdk-target</entry> | ||
1643 | |||
1644 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1645 | |||
1646 | <entry>Target packages for the standalone SDK.</entry> | ||
1647 | |||
1648 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1649 | </row> | ||
1650 | |||
1651 | <row> | ||
1652 | <entry>packagegroup-cross-canadian-qemux86-64</entry> | ||
1653 | |||
1654 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1655 | |||
1656 | <entry>Host SDK package for cross canadian toolchain.</entry> | ||
1657 | |||
1658 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1659 | </row> | ||
1660 | |||
1661 | <row> | ||
1662 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry> | ||
1663 | |||
1664 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1665 | |||
1666 | <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry> | ||
1667 | |||
1668 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1669 | </row> | ||
1670 | |||
1671 | <row> | ||
1672 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-guest</entry> | ||
1673 | |||
1674 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1675 | |||
1676 | <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups | ||
1677 | specific to the guest side of the Enea Linux Virtualization | ||
1678 | Profile.</entry> | ||
1679 | |||
1680 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1681 | </row> | ||
1682 | |||
1683 | <row> | ||
1684 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry> | ||
1685 | |||
1686 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1687 | |||
1688 | <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups | ||
1689 | required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux | ||
1690 | Virtualization Profile.</entry> | ||
1691 | |||
1692 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1693 | </row> | ||
1694 | |||
1695 | <row> | ||
1696 | <entry>packagegroup-sdk-host</entry> | ||
1697 | |||
1698 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1699 | |||
1700 | <entry>Host packages for the standalone SDK or external | ||
1701 | toolchain.</entry> | ||
1702 | |||
1703 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1704 | </row> | ||
1705 | |||
1706 | <row> | ||
1707 | <entry>pciutils</entry> | ||
1708 | |||
1709 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | ||
1710 | |||
1711 | <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable | ||
1712 | access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based | ||
1713 | on this library.</entry> | ||
1714 | |||
1715 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1716 | </row> | ||
1717 | |||
1718 | <row> | ||
1719 | <entry>perl</entry> | ||
1720 | |||
1721 | <entry>5.24.1</entry> | ||
1722 | |||
1723 | <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry> | ||
1724 | |||
1725 | <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | ||
1726 | </row> | ||
1727 | |||
1728 | <row> | ||
1729 | <entry>pigz</entry> | ||
1730 | |||
1731 | <entry>2.3.4</entry> | ||
1732 | |||
1733 | <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a | ||
1734 | fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple | ||
1735 | processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data. | ||
1736 | pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread | ||
1737 | libraries.</entry> | ||
1738 | |||
1739 | <entry>Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
1740 | </row> | ||
1741 | |||
1742 | <row> | ||
1743 | <entry>pixman</entry> | ||
1744 | |||
1745 | <entry>0.34.0</entry> | ||
1746 | |||
1747 | <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions -- | ||
1748 | a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the | ||
1749 | Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric | ||
1750 | primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry> | ||
1751 | |||
1752 | <entry>MIT, PD</entry> | ||
1753 | </row> | ||
1754 | |||
1755 | <row> | ||
1756 | <entry>pixz</entry> | ||
1757 | |||
1758 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> | ||
1759 | |||
1760 | <entry>Parallel indexed xz compressor.</entry> | ||
1761 | |||
1762 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | ||
1763 | </row> | ||
1764 | |||
1765 | <row> | ||
1766 | <entry>pkgconfig</entry> | ||
1767 | |||
1768 | <entry>0.29.1</entry> | ||
1769 | |||
1770 | <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling | ||
1771 | applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct | ||
1772 | compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry> | ||
1773 | |||
1774 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1775 | </row> | ||
1776 | |||
1777 | <row> | ||
1778 | <entry>popt</entry> | ||
1779 | |||
1780 | <entry>1.16</entry> | ||
1781 | |||
1782 | <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry> | ||
1783 | |||
1784 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1785 | </row> | ||
1786 | |||
1787 | <row> | ||
1788 | <entry>postinst-intercept</entry> | ||
1789 | |||
1790 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1791 | |||
1792 | <entry>Postinstall scriptlets.</entry> | ||
1793 | |||
1794 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1795 | </row> | ||
1796 | |||
1797 | <row> | ||
1798 | <entry>prelink</entry> | ||
1799 | |||
1800 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1801 | |||
1802 | <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF | ||
1803 | shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations | ||
1804 | need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up | ||
1805 | faster.</entry> | ||
1806 | |||
1807 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1808 | </row> | ||
1809 | |||
1810 | <row> | ||
1811 | <entry>procps</entry> | ||
1812 | |||
1813 | <entry>3.3.12</entry> | ||
1814 | |||
1815 | <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide | ||
1816 | system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The | ||
1817 | package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and | ||
1818 | skill.</entry> | ||
1819 | |||
1820 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1821 | </row> | ||
1822 | |||
1823 | <row> | ||
1824 | <entry>pseudo</entry> | ||
1825 | |||
1826 | <entry>1.8.2</entry> | ||
1827 | |||
1828 | <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal | ||
1829 | user.</entry> | ||
1830 | |||
1831 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
1832 | </row> | ||
1833 | |||
1834 | <row> | ||
1835 | <entry>ptest-runner</entry> | ||
1836 | |||
1837 | <entry>2.0.2</entry> | ||
1838 | |||
1839 | <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program | ||
1840 | which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them | ||
1841 | in sequence.</entry> | ||
1842 | |||
1843 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1844 | </row> | ||
1845 | |||
1846 | <row> | ||
1847 | <entry>python</entry> | ||
1848 | |||
1849 | <entry>2.7.13</entry> | ||
1850 | |||
1851 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | ||
1852 | |||
1853 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | ||
1854 | </row> | ||
1855 | |||
1856 | <row> | ||
1857 | <entry>python3-iniparse</entry> | ||
1858 | |||
1859 | <entry>0.4</entry> | ||
1860 | |||
1861 | <entry>Accessing and Modifying INI files.</entry> | ||
1862 | |||
1863 | <entry>MIT, Python-2.0</entry> | ||
1864 | </row> | ||
1865 | |||
1866 | <row> | ||
1867 | <entry>python3-pygpgme</entry> | ||
1868 | |||
1869 | <entry>0.3</entry> | ||
1870 | |||
1871 | <entry>A Python module for working with OpenPGP messages.</entry> | ||
1872 | |||
1873 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
1874 | </row> | ||
1875 | |||
1876 | <row> | ||
1877 | <entry>python3-setuptools</entry> | ||
1878 | |||
1879 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | ||
1880 | |||
1881 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python | ||
1882 | packages.</entry> | ||
1883 | |||
1884 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1885 | </row> | ||
1886 | |||
1887 | <row> | ||
1888 | <entry>python3-six</entry> | ||
1889 | |||
1890 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | ||
1891 | |||
1892 | <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility library.</entry> | ||
1893 | |||
1894 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1895 | </row> | ||
1896 | |||
1897 | <row> | ||
1898 | <entry>python3</entry> | ||
1899 | |||
1900 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | ||
1901 | |||
1902 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | ||
1903 | |||
1904 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | ||
1905 | </row> | ||
1906 | |||
1907 | <row> | ||
1908 | <entry>qemu-helper</entry> | ||
1909 | |||
1910 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1911 | |||
1912 | <entry>Helper utilities needed by the runqemu script.</entry> | ||
1913 | |||
1914 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1915 | </row> | ||
1916 | |||
1917 | <row> | ||
1918 | <entry>qemu</entry> | ||
1919 | |||
1920 | <entry>2.8.0</entry> | ||
1921 | |||
1922 | <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry> | ||
1923 | |||
1924 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
1925 | </row> | ||
1926 | |||
1927 | <row> | ||
1928 | <entry>qemuwrapper</entry> | ||
1929 | |||
1930 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
1931 | |||
1932 | <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry> | ||
1933 | |||
1934 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1935 | </row> | ||
1936 | |||
1937 | <row> | ||
1938 | <entry>quilt</entry> | ||
1939 | |||
1940 | <entry>0.65</entry> | ||
1941 | |||
1942 | <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry> | ||
1943 | |||
1944 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
1945 | </row> | ||
1946 | |||
1947 | <row> | ||
1948 | <entry>randrproto</entry> | ||
1949 | |||
1950 | <entry>1.5.0</entry> | ||
1951 | |||
1952 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize | ||
1953 | Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability | ||
1954 | to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry> | ||
1955 | |||
1956 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1957 | </row> | ||
1958 | |||
1959 | <row> | ||
1960 | <entry>readline</entry> | ||
1961 | |||
1962 | <entry>7.0</entry> | ||
1963 | |||
1964 | <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for | ||
1965 | use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they | ||
1966 | are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The | ||
1967 | Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list | ||
1968 | of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit | ||
1969 | those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous | ||
1970 | commands.</entry> | ||
1971 | |||
1972 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
1973 | </row> | ||
1974 | |||
1975 | <row> | ||
1976 | <entry>renderproto</entry> | ||
1977 | |||
1978 | <entry>0.11.1</entry> | ||
1979 | |||
1980 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering | ||
1981 | extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X | ||
1982 | window system.</entry> | ||
1983 | |||
1984 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
1985 | </row> | ||
1986 | |||
1987 | <row> | ||
1988 | <entry>rpm</entry> | ||
1989 | |||
1990 | <entry>4.13.90</entry> | ||
1991 | |||
1992 | <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line | ||
1993 | driven package management system capable of installing | ||
1994 | uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages. | ||
1995 | Each software package consists of an archive of files along with | ||
1996 | information about the package like its version a description | ||
1997 | etc.</entry> | ||
1998 | |||
1999 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2000 | </row> | ||
2001 | |||
2002 | <row> | ||
2003 | <entry>run-postinsts</entry> | ||
2004 | |||
2005 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2006 | |||
2007 | <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target | ||
2008 | device.</entry> | ||
2009 | |||
2010 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2011 | </row> | ||
2012 | |||
2013 | <row> | ||
2014 | <entry>sed</entry> | ||
2015 | |||
2016 | <entry>4.2.2</entry> | ||
2017 | |||
2018 | <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry> | ||
2019 | |||
2020 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
2021 | </row> | ||
2022 | |||
2023 | <row> | ||
2024 | <entry>shadow-securetty</entry> | ||
2025 | |||
2026 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
2027 | |||
2028 | <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry> | ||
2029 | |||
2030 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2031 | </row> | ||
2032 | |||
2033 | <row> | ||
2034 | <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry> | ||
2035 | |||
2036 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
2037 | |||
2038 | <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry> | ||
2039 | |||
2040 | <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | ||
2041 | </row> | ||
2042 | |||
2043 | <row> | ||
2044 | <entry>shadow</entry> | ||
2045 | |||
2046 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
2047 | |||
2048 | <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group | ||
2049 | data.</entry> | ||
2050 | |||
2051 | <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | ||
2052 | </row> | ||
2053 | |||
2054 | <row> | ||
2055 | <entry>shared-mime-info</entry> | ||
2056 | |||
2057 | <entry>1.8</entry> | ||
2058 | |||
2059 | <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry> | ||
2060 | |||
2061 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2062 | </row> | ||
2063 | |||
2064 | <row> | ||
2065 | <entry>sqlite3</entry> | ||
2066 | |||
2067 | <entry>3.17.0</entry> | ||
2068 | |||
2069 | <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry> | ||
2070 | |||
2071 | <entry>PD</entry> | ||
2072 | </row> | ||
2073 | |||
2074 | <row> | ||
2075 | <entry>swig</entry> | ||
2076 | |||
2077 | <entry>3.0.12</entry> | ||
2078 | |||
2079 | <entry>SWIG - Simplified Wrapper and Interface Generator.</entry> | ||
2080 | |||
2081 | <entry>BSD, GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
2082 | </row> | ||
2083 | |||
2084 | <row> | ||
2085 | <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry> | ||
2086 | |||
2087 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2088 | |||
2089 | <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit | ||
2090 | scripts.</entry> | ||
2091 | |||
2092 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2093 | </row> | ||
2094 | |||
2095 | <row> | ||
2096 | <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry> | ||
2097 | |||
2098 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2099 | |||
2100 | <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry> | ||
2101 | |||
2102 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2103 | </row> | ||
2104 | |||
2105 | <row> | ||
2106 | <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry> | ||
2107 | |||
2108 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2109 | |||
2110 | <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry> | ||
2111 | |||
2112 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2113 | </row> | ||
2114 | |||
2115 | <row> | ||
2116 | <entry>systemd</entry> | ||
2117 | |||
2118 | <entry>232</entry> | ||
2119 | |||
2120 | <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux | ||
2121 | compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides | ||
2122 | aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus | ||
2123 | activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of | ||
2124 | daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports | ||
2125 | snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and | ||
2126 | automount points and implements an elaborate transactional | ||
2127 | dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in | ||
2128 | replacement for sysvinit.</entry> | ||
2129 | |||
2130 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2131 | </row> | ||
2132 | |||
2133 | <row> | ||
2134 | <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry> | ||
2135 | |||
2136 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2137 | |||
2138 | <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry> | ||
2139 | |||
2140 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2141 | </row> | ||
2142 | |||
2143 | <row> | ||
2144 | <entry>tzcode</entry> | ||
2145 | |||
2146 | <entry>2017b</entry> | ||
2147 | |||
2148 | <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump | ||
2149 | tzselect.</entry> | ||
2150 | |||
2151 | <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
2152 | </row> | ||
2153 | |||
2154 | <row> | ||
2155 | <entry>tzdata</entry> | ||
2156 | |||
2157 | <entry>2017b</entry> | ||
2158 | |||
2159 | <entry>Timezone data.</entry> | ||
2160 | |||
2161 | <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
2162 | </row> | ||
2163 | |||
2164 | <row> | ||
2165 | <entry>unfs3</entry> | ||
2166 | |||
2167 | <entry>0.9.22.r497</entry> | ||
2168 | |||
2169 | <entry>Userspace NFS server v3 protocol.</entry> | ||
2170 | |||
2171 | <entry>unfs3</entry> | ||
2172 | </row> | ||
2173 | |||
2174 | <row> | ||
2175 | <entry>unifdef</entry> | ||
2176 | |||
2177 | <entry>2.11</entry> | ||
2178 | |||
2179 | <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry> | ||
2180 | |||
2181 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | ||
2182 | </row> | ||
2183 | |||
2184 | <row> | ||
2185 | <entry>update-rc.d</entry> | ||
2186 | |||
2187 | <entry>0.7</entry> | ||
2188 | |||
2189 | <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of | ||
2190 | symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory | ||
2191 | structure.</entry> | ||
2192 | |||
2193 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2194 | </row> | ||
2195 | |||
2196 | <row> | ||
2197 | <entry>util-linux</entry> | ||
2198 | |||
2199 | <entry>2.29.1</entry> | ||
2200 | |||
2201 | <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration | ||
2202 | utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more | ||
2203 | important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message | ||
2204 | management filesystem creation and system login.</entry> | ||
2205 | |||
2206 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry> | ||
2207 | </row> | ||
2208 | |||
2209 | <row> | ||
2210 | <entry>util-macros</entry> | ||
2211 | |||
2212 | <entry>1.19.1</entry> | ||
2213 | |||
2214 | <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry> | ||
2215 | |||
2216 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2217 | </row> | ||
2218 | |||
2219 | <row> | ||
2220 | <entry>v86d</entry> | ||
2221 | |||
2222 | <entry>0.1.10</entry> | ||
2223 | |||
2224 | <entry>User support binary for the uvesafb kernel module.</entry> | ||
2225 | |||
2226 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2227 | </row> | ||
2228 | |||
2229 | <row> | ||
2230 | <entry>volatile-binds</entry> | ||
2231 | |||
2232 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
2233 | |||
2234 | <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for | ||
2235 | read-only-rootfs</entry> | ||
2236 | |||
2237 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2238 | </row> | ||
2239 | |||
2240 | <row> | ||
2241 | <entry>xcb-proto</entry> | ||
2242 | |||
2243 | <entry>1.12</entry> | ||
2244 | |||
2245 | <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding | ||
2246 | (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint | ||
2247 | latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading | ||
2248 | support and extensibility.</entry> | ||
2249 | |||
2250 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2251 | </row> | ||
2252 | |||
2253 | <row> | ||
2254 | <entry>xextproto</entry> | ||
2255 | |||
2256 | <entry>7.3.0</entry> | ||
2257 | |||
2258 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X | ||
2259 | extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS | ||
2260 | Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD | ||
2261 | Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC | ||
2262 | XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also | ||
2263 | available.</entry> | ||
2264 | |||
2265 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2266 | </row> | ||
2267 | |||
2268 | <row> | ||
2269 | <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry> | ||
2270 | |||
2271 | <entry>2.20</entry> | ||
2272 | |||
2273 | <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window. | ||
2274 | The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently | ||
2275 | released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window | ||
2276 | System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based | ||
2277 | systems.</entry> | ||
2278 | |||
2279 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2280 | </row> | ||
2281 | |||
2282 | <row> | ||
2283 | <entry>xproto</entry> | ||
2284 | |||
2285 | <entry>7.0.31</entry> | ||
2286 | |||
2287 | <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window | ||
2288 | System.</entry> | ||
2289 | |||
2290 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2291 | </row> | ||
2292 | |||
2293 | <row> | ||
2294 | <entry>xtrans</entry> | ||
2295 | |||
2296 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | ||
2297 | |||
2298 | <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system | ||
2299 | and transport specific code into a single place. This API should | ||
2300 | be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window | ||
2301 | System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of | ||
2302 | transports and support for new platforms without making any | ||
2303 | changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface | ||
2304 | code.</entry> | ||
2305 | |||
2306 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2307 | </row> | ||
2308 | |||
2309 | <row> | ||
2310 | <entry>xz</entry> | ||
2311 | |||
2312 | <entry>5.2.3</entry> | ||
2313 | |||
2314 | <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry> | ||
2315 | |||
2316 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry> | ||
2317 | </row> | ||
2318 | |||
2319 | <row> | ||
2320 | <entry>zlib</entry> | ||
2321 | |||
2322 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> | ||
2323 | |||
2324 | <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data | ||
2325 | compression library which is used by many different | ||
2326 | programs.</entry> | ||
2327 | |||
2328 | <entry>Zlib</entry> | ||
2329 | </row> | ||
2330 | </tbody> | ||
2331 | </tgroup> | ||
2332 | </informaltable> | ||
2333 | </section> | ||
2334 | |||
2335 | <section id="open_source_license"> | ||
2336 | <title>Open Source Licenses</title> | ||
2337 | |||
2338 | <section id="lic_0"> | ||
2339 | <title>AFL-2.0</title> | ||
2340 | |||
2341 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1217 | 2342 | ||
1218 | The Academic Free License | 2343 | The Academic Free License |
1219 | v. 2.0 | 2344 | v. 2.0 |
@@ -1354,11 +2479,13 @@ Permission is hereby granted to copy and distribute this license without modific | |||
1354 | This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its | 2479 | This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its |
1355 | copyright owner. | 2480 | copyright owner. |
1356 | 2481 | ||
1357 | </programlisting></para></section> | 2482 | </programlisting></para> |
2483 | </section> | ||
1358 | 2484 | ||
1359 | <section id="lic_1"> | 2485 | <section id="lic_1"> |
1360 | <title>Apache-2.0</title> | 2486 | <title>Apache-2.0</title> |
1361 | <para><programlisting> | 2487 | |
2488 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1362 | 2489 | ||
1363 | 2490 | ||
1364 | Apache License | 2491 | Apache License |
@@ -1563,11 +2690,13 @@ copyright owner. | |||
1563 | See the License for the specific language governing permissions and | 2690 | See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
1564 | limitations under the License. | 2691 | limitations under the License. |
1565 | 2692 | ||
1566 | </programlisting></para></section> | 2693 | </programlisting></para> |
2694 | </section> | ||
2695 | |||
2696 | <section id="lic_2"> | ||
2697 | <title>Artistic-1.0</title> | ||
1567 | 2698 | ||
1568 | <section id="lic_2"> | 2699 | <para><programlisting> |
1569 | <title>Artistic-1.0</title> | ||
1570 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1571 | 2700 | ||
1572 | The Artistic License | 2701 | The Artistic License |
1573 | Preamble | 2702 | Preamble |
@@ -1660,11 +2789,13 @@ FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. | |||
1660 | 2789 | ||
1661 | The End | 2790 | The End |
1662 | 2791 | ||
1663 | </programlisting></para></section> | 2792 | </programlisting></para> |
2793 | </section> | ||
1664 | 2794 | ||
1665 | <section id="lic_3"> | 2795 | <section id="lic_3"> |
1666 | <title>BSD</title> | 2796 | <title>BSD</title> |
1667 | <para><programlisting> | 2797 | |
2798 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1668 | Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. | 2799 | Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. |
1669 | All rights reserved. | 2800 | All rights reserved. |
1670 | 2801 | ||
@@ -1691,11 +2822,13 @@ HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT | |||
1691 | LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY | 2822 | LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY |
1692 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF | 2823 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF |
1693 | SUCH DAMAGE. | 2824 | SUCH DAMAGE. |
1694 | </programlisting></para></section> | 2825 | </programlisting></para> |
2826 | </section> | ||
2827 | |||
2828 | <section id="lic_4"> | ||
2829 | <title>BSD-2-Clause</title> | ||
1695 | 2830 | ||
1696 | <section id="lic_4"> | 2831 | <para><programlisting> |
1697 | <title>BSD-2-Clause</title> | ||
1698 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1699 | 2832 | ||
1700 | The FreeBSD Copyright | 2833 | The FreeBSD Copyright |
1701 | 2834 | ||
@@ -1723,11 +2856,13 @@ The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation are those | |||
1723 | authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either | 2856 | authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either |
1724 | expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. | 2857 | expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. |
1725 | 2858 | ||
1726 | </programlisting></para></section> | 2859 | </programlisting></para> |
2860 | </section> | ||
1727 | 2861 | ||
1728 | <section id="lic_5"> | 2862 | <section id="lic_5"> |
1729 | <title>BSD-3-Clause</title> | 2863 | <title>BSD-3-Clause</title> |
1730 | <para><programlisting> | 2864 | |
2865 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1731 | 2866 | ||
1732 | Copyright (c) <YEAR>, <OWNER> | 2867 | Copyright (c) <YEAR>, <OWNER> |
1733 | All rights reserved. | 2868 | All rights reserved. |
@@ -1754,11 +2889,13 @@ CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING | |||
1754 | WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH | 2889 | WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH |
1755 | DAMAGE. | 2890 | DAMAGE. |
1756 | 2891 | ||
1757 | </programlisting></para></section> | 2892 | </programlisting></para> |
2893 | </section> | ||
2894 | |||
2895 | <section id="lic_6"> | ||
2896 | <title>BSD-4-Clause</title> | ||
1758 | 2897 | ||
1759 | <section id="lic_6"> | 2898 | <para><programlisting> |
1760 | <title>BSD-4-Clause</title> | ||
1761 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1762 | 2899 | ||
1763 | Copyright (c) <year>, <copyright holder> | 2900 | Copyright (c) <year>, <copyright holder> |
1764 | All rights reserved. | 2901 | All rights reserved. |
@@ -1788,11 +2925,13 @@ ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT | |||
1788 | (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS | 2925 | (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS |
1789 | SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. | 2926 | SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
1790 | 2927 | ||
1791 | </programlisting></para></section> | 2928 | </programlisting></para> |
2929 | </section> | ||
2930 | |||
2931 | <section id="lic_7"> | ||
2932 | <title>Elfutils-Exception</title> | ||
1792 | 2933 | ||
1793 | <section id="lic_7"> | 2934 | <para><programlisting> |
1794 | <title>Elfutils-Exception</title> | ||
1795 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1796 | This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed | 2935 | This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed |
1797 | to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. | 2936 | to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. |
1798 | For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files | 2937 | For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files |
@@ -1805,20 +2944,24 @@ SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. | |||
1805 | libdw.h | 2944 | libdw.h |
1806 | libdwfl.h | 2945 | libdwfl.h |
1807 | 2946 | ||
1808 | </programlisting></para></section> | 2947 | </programlisting></para> |
2948 | </section> | ||
1809 | 2949 | ||
1810 | <section id="lic_8"> | 2950 | <section id="lic_8"> |
1811 | <title>FSF-Unlimited</title> | 2951 | <title>FSF-Unlimited</title> |
1812 | <para><programlisting> | 2952 | |
2953 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1813 | Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. | 2954 | Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
1814 | This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation | 2955 | This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation |
1815 | gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, | 2956 | gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, |
1816 | with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. | 2957 | with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. |
1817 | </programlisting></para></section> | 2958 | </programlisting></para> |
2959 | </section> | ||
2960 | |||
2961 | <section id="lic_9"> | ||
2962 | <title>GPL-1.0</title> | ||
1818 | 2963 | ||
1819 | <section id="lic_9"> | 2964 | <para><programlisting> |
1820 | <title>GPL-1.0</title> | ||
1821 | <para><programlisting> | ||
1822 | 2965 | ||
1823 | GNU General Public License, version 1 | 2966 | GNU General Public License, version 1 |
1824 | 2967 | ||
@@ -2071,11 +3214,13 @@ necessary. Here a sample; alter the names: | |||
2071 | 3214 | ||
2072 | That`s all there is to it! | 3215 | That`s all there is to it! |
2073 | 3216 | ||
2074 | </programlisting></para></section> | 3217 | </programlisting></para> |
3218 | </section> | ||
3219 | |||
3220 | <section id="lic_10"> | ||
3221 | <title>GPL-2.0</title> | ||
2075 | 3222 | ||
2076 | <section id="lic_10"> | 3223 | <para><programlisting> |
2077 | <title>GPL-2.0</title> | ||
2078 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2079 | 3224 | ||
2080 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 3225 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
2081 | 3226 | ||
@@ -2374,16 +3519,18 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this | |||
2374 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this | 3519 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this |
2375 | License. | 3520 | License. |
2376 | 3521 | ||
2377 | </programlisting></para></section> | 3522 | </programlisting></para> |
3523 | </section> | ||
2378 | 3524 | ||
2379 | <section id="lic_11"> | 3525 | <section id="lic_11"> |
2380 | <title>GPL-3.0</title> | 3526 | <title>GPL-3.0</title> |
2381 | <para><programlisting> | 3527 | |
3528 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2382 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 3529 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
2383 | 3530 | ||
2384 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 | 3531 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 |
2385 | 3532 | ||
2386 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> | 3533 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> |
2387 | 3534 | ||
2388 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, | 3535 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, |
2389 | but changing it is not allowed. | 3536 | but changing it is not allowed. |
@@ -2952,11 +4099,13 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this | |||
2952 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this | 4099 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this |
2953 | License. But first, please read | 4100 | License. But first, please read |
2954 | <http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>. | 4101 | <http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>. |
2955 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4102 | </programlisting></para> |
4103 | </section> | ||
4104 | |||
4105 | <section id="lic_12"> | ||
4106 | <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title> | ||
2956 | 4107 | ||
2957 | <section id="lic_12"> | 4108 | <para><programlisting> |
2958 | <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title> | ||
2959 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2960 | 4109 | ||
2961 | insert GPL v3 text here | 4110 | insert GPL v3 text here |
2962 | 4111 | ||
@@ -3012,11 +4161,13 @@ consistent with the licensing of the Independent Modules. | |||
3012 | The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that | 4161 | The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that |
3013 | third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. | 4162 | third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. |
3014 | 4163 | ||
3015 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4164 | </programlisting></para> |
4165 | </section> | ||
4166 | |||
4167 | <section id="lic_13"> | ||
4168 | <title>LGPL-2.0</title> | ||
3016 | 4169 | ||
3017 | <section id="lic_13"> | 4170 | <para><programlisting> |
3018 | <title>LGPL-2.0</title> | ||
3019 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3020 | GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 4171 | GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
3021 | 4172 | ||
3022 | 4173 | ||
@@ -3600,11 +4751,13 @@ Ty Coon, President of Vice | |||
3600 | 4751 | ||
3601 | That's all there is to it! | 4752 | That's all there is to it! |
3602 | 4753 | ||
3603 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4754 | </programlisting></para> |
4755 | </section> | ||
3604 | 4756 | ||
3605 | <section id="lic_14"> | 4757 | <section id="lic_14"> |
3606 | <title>LGPL-2.1</title> | 4758 | <title>LGPL-2.1</title> |
3607 | <para><programlisting> | 4759 | |
4760 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3608 | 4761 | ||
3609 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 4762 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
3610 | 4763 | ||
@@ -4032,16 +5185,18 @@ signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1990 | |||
4032 | Ty Coon, President of Vice | 5185 | Ty Coon, President of Vice |
4033 | That`s all there is to it! | 5186 | That`s all there is to it! |
4034 | 5187 | ||
4035 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5188 | </programlisting></para> |
5189 | </section> | ||
5190 | |||
5191 | <section id="lic_15"> | ||
5192 | <title>LGPL-3.0</title> | ||
4036 | 5193 | ||
4037 | <section id="lic_15"> | 5194 | <para><programlisting> |
4038 | <title>LGPL-3.0</title> | ||
4039 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4040 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 5195 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
4041 | 5196 | ||
4042 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 | 5197 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 |
4043 | 5198 | ||
4044 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> | 5199 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> |
4045 | 5200 | ||
4046 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, | 5201 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, |
4047 | but changing it is not allowed. | 5202 | but changing it is not allowed. |
@@ -4172,11 +5327,13 @@ If the Library as you received it specifies that a proxy can decide whether futu | |||
4172 | versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public | 5327 | versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public |
4173 | statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose | 5328 | statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose |
4174 | that version for the Library. | 5329 | that version for the Library. |
4175 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5330 | </programlisting></para> |
5331 | </section> | ||
5332 | |||
5333 | <section id="lic_16"> | ||
5334 | <title>Libpng</title> | ||
4176 | 5335 | ||
4177 | <section id="lic_16"> | 5336 | <para><programlisting> |
4178 | <title>Libpng</title> | ||
4179 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4180 | 5337 | ||
4181 | This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of | 5338 | This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of |
4182 | any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is | 5339 | any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is |
@@ -4289,11 +5446,13 @@ Glenn Randers-Pehrson | |||
4289 | glennrp at users.sourceforge.net | 5446 | glennrp at users.sourceforge.net |
4290 | December 9, 2010 | 5447 | December 9, 2010 |
4291 | 5448 | ||
4292 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5449 | </programlisting></para> |
5450 | </section> | ||
4293 | 5451 | ||
4294 | <section id="lic_17"> | 5452 | <section id="lic_17"> |
4295 | <title>MIT</title> | 5453 | <title>MIT</title> |
4296 | <para><programlisting> | 5454 | |
5455 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4297 | 5456 | ||
4298 | MIT License | 5457 | MIT License |
4299 | 5458 | ||
@@ -4317,11 +5476,13 @@ LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, | |||
4317 | OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN | 5476 | OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN |
4318 | THE SOFTWARE. | 5477 | THE SOFTWARE. |
4319 | 5478 | ||
4320 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5479 | </programlisting></para> |
5480 | </section> | ||
5481 | |||
5482 | <section id="lic_18"> | ||
5483 | <title>MPL-2.0</title> | ||
4321 | 5484 | ||
4322 | <section id="lic_18"> | 5485 | <para><programlisting> |
4323 | <title>MPL-2.0</title> | ||
4324 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4325 | Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 | 5486 | Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 |
4326 | ================================== | 5487 | ================================== |
4327 | 5488 | ||
@@ -4695,11 +5856,13 @@ Exhibit B - "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses" Notice | |||
4695 | 5856 | ||
4696 | This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as | 5857 | This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as |
4697 | defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. | 5858 | defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. |
4698 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5859 | </programlisting></para> |
5860 | </section> | ||
5861 | |||
5862 | <section id="lic_19"> | ||
5863 | <title>OpenSSL</title> | ||
4699 | 5864 | ||
4700 | <section id="lic_19"> | 5865 | <para><programlisting> |
4701 | <title>OpenSSL</title> | ||
4702 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4703 | 5866 | ||
4704 | OpenSSL License | 5867 | OpenSSL License |
4705 | 5868 | ||
@@ -4816,17 +5979,21 @@ put under another distribution licence | |||
4816 | 5979 | ||
4817 | 5980 | ||
4818 | 5981 | ||
4819 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5982 | </programlisting></para> |
5983 | </section> | ||
4820 | 5984 | ||
4821 | <section id="lic_20"> | 5985 | <section id="lic_20"> |
4822 | <title>PD</title> | 5986 | <title>PD</title> |
4823 | <para><programlisting> | 5987 | |
5988 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4824 | This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License | 5989 | This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License |
4825 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5990 | </programlisting></para> |
5991 | </section> | ||
5992 | |||
5993 | <section id="lic_21"> | ||
5994 | <title>Python-2.0</title> | ||
4826 | 5995 | ||
4827 | <section id="lic_21"> | 5996 | <para><programlisting> |
4828 | <title>Python-2.0</title> | ||
4829 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4830 | 5997 | ||
4831 | PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 | 5998 | PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 |
4832 | -------------------------------------------- | 5999 | -------------------------------------------- |
@@ -5019,11 +6186,13 @@ WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN | |||
5019 | ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT | 6186 | ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT |
5020 | OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. | 6187 | OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. |
5021 | 6188 | ||
5022 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6189 | </programlisting></para> |
6190 | </section> | ||
6191 | |||
6192 | <section id="lic_22"> | ||
6193 | <title>Sleepycat</title> | ||
5023 | 6194 | ||
5024 | <section id="lic_22"> | 6195 | <para><programlisting> |
5025 | <title>Sleepycat</title> | ||
5026 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5027 | 6196 | ||
5028 | The Sleepycat License | 6197 | The Sleepycat License |
5029 | Copyright (c) 1990-1999 | 6198 | Copyright (c) 1990-1999 |
@@ -5114,11 +6283,13 @@ LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY | |||
5114 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF | 6283 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF |
5115 | SUCH DAMAGE. | 6284 | SUCH DAMAGE. |
5116 | 6285 | ||
5117 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6286 | </programlisting></para> |
6287 | </section> | ||
5118 | 6288 | ||
5119 | <section id="lic_23"> | 6289 | <section id="lic_23"> |
5120 | <title>Zlib</title> | 6290 | <title>Zlib</title> |
5121 | <para><programlisting> | 6291 | |
6292 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5122 | 6293 | ||
5123 | zlib License | 6294 | zlib License |
5124 | 6295 | ||
@@ -5140,11 +6311,13 @@ zlib License | |||
5140 | 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. | 6311 | 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. |
5141 | 6312 | ||
5142 | 6313 | ||
5143 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6314 | </programlisting></para> |
6315 | </section> | ||
6316 | |||
6317 | <section id="lic_24"> | ||
6318 | <title>unfs3</title> | ||
5144 | 6319 | ||
5145 | <section id="lic_24"> | 6320 | <para><programlisting> |
5146 | <title>unfs3</title> | ||
5147 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5148 | UNFS3 user-space NFSv3 server | 6321 | UNFS3 user-space NFSv3 server |
5149 | (C) 2003, Pascal Schmidt <unfs3-server@ewetel.net> | 6322 | (C) 2003, Pascal Schmidt <unfs3-server@ewetel.net> |
5150 | 6323 | ||
@@ -5169,10 +6342,11 @@ OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, | |||
5169 | WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR | 6342 | WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR |
5170 | OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF | 6343 | OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF |
5171 | ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. | 6344 | ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
5172 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6345 | </programlisting></para> |
5173 | 6346 | </section> | |
5174 | </section> | 6347 | </section> |
5175 | <section id="proprietary_license"> | 6348 | |
5176 | <title>Proprietary Licenses</title> | 6349 | <section id="proprietary_license"> |
5177 | </section> | 6350 | <title>Proprietary Licenses</title> |
5178 | </chapter> | 6351 | </section> |
6352 | </chapter> \ No newline at end of file | ||
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-open-source/doc/licenses.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-open-source/doc/licenses.xml index 8eec1fa..ee657dd 100644 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-open-source/doc/licenses.xml +++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-open-source/doc/licenses.xml | |||
@@ -3,2309 +3,4479 @@ | |||
3 | "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> | 3 | "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> |
4 | <chapter id="enea_linux_packages"> | 4 | <chapter id="enea_linux_packages"> |
5 | <title>Packages and Licenses</title> | 5 | <title>Packages and Licenses</title> |
6 | <section id="licenses_packages"> | ||
7 | 6 | ||
8 | <title>Packages</title> | 7 | <section id="licenses_packages"> |
8 | <title>Packages</title> | ||
9 | 9 | ||
10 | 10 | <!--This chapter contains a generated list of all packages that Enea Linux | |
11 | <!--This chapter contains a generated list of all packages that Enea Linux | ||
12 | supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package | 11 | supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package |
13 | specific documentation.--> | 12 | specific documentation.--> |
14 | 13 | ||
15 | <informaltable> | 14 | <informaltable> |
16 | <tgroup cols="4"> | 15 | <tgroup cols="4"> |
17 | <colspec colwidth="2*"/> | 16 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
18 | <colspec colwidth="1*"/> | 17 | |
19 | <colspec colwidth="5*"/> | 18 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
20 | <colspec colwidth="2*"/> | 19 | |
21 | 20 | <colspec colwidth="5*" /> | |
22 | <thead> | 21 | |
23 | <row> | 22 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
24 | <entry align="center">Package Name</entry> | 23 | |
25 | <entry align="center">Version</entry> | 24 | <thead> |
26 | <entry align="center">Description</entry> | 25 | <row> |
27 | <entry align="center">License</entry> | 26 | <entry align="center">Package Name</entry> |
28 | </row> | 27 | |
29 | </thead> | 28 | <entry align="center">Version</entry> |
30 | 29 | ||
31 | <tbody valign="top"> | 30 | <entry align="center">Description</entry> |
32 | <row> | 31 | |
33 | <entry>acl</entry> | 32 | <entry align="center">License</entry> |
34 | <entry>2.2.52</entry> | 33 | </row> |
35 | <entry>Utilities for managing POSIX Access Control Lists.</entry> | 34 | </thead> |
36 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 35 | |
37 | </row> | 36 | <tbody valign="top"> |
38 | <row> | 37 | <row> |
39 | <entry>alsa-lib</entry> | 38 | <entry>acl</entry> |
40 | <entry>1.1.3</entry> | 39 | |
41 | <entry>ALSA sound library.</entry> | 40 | <entry>2.2.52</entry> |
42 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 41 | |
43 | </row> | 42 | <entry>Utilities for managing POSIX Access Control Lists.</entry> |
44 | <row> | 43 | |
45 | <entry>ant</entry> | 44 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> |
46 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> | 45 | </row> |
47 | <entry>Another Neat Tool - build system for Java</entry> | 46 | |
48 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 47 | <row> |
49 | </row> | 48 | <entry>alsa-lib</entry> |
50 | <row> | 49 | |
51 | <entry>antlr</entry> | 50 | <entry>1.1.3</entry> |
52 | <entry>2.7.7</entry> | 51 | |
53 | <entry>Framework for constructing recognizers interpreters compilers and translators</entry> | 52 | <entry>ALSA sound library.</entry> |
54 | <entry>PD</entry> | 53 | |
55 | </row> | 54 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> |
56 | <row> | 55 | </row> |
57 | <entry>apache2</entry> | 56 | |
58 | <entry>2.4.25</entry> | 57 | <row> |
59 | <entry>The Apache HTTP Server is a powerful efficient and extensible web server.</entry> | 58 | <entry>ant</entry> |
60 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 59 | |
61 | </row> | 60 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> |
62 | <row> | 61 | |
63 | <entry>apr-util</entry> | 62 | <entry>Another Neat Tool - build system for Java</entry> |
64 | <entry>1.5.4</entry> | 63 | |
65 | <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) companion library.</entry> | 64 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
66 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 65 | </row> |
67 | </row> | 66 | |
68 | <row> | 67 | <row> |
69 | <entry>apr</entry> | 68 | <entry>antlr</entry> |
70 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> | 69 | |
71 | <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) library.</entry> | 70 | <entry>2.7.7</entry> |
72 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 71 | |
73 | </row> | 72 | <entry>Framework for constructing recognizers interpreters |
74 | <row> | 73 | compilers and translators</entry> |
75 | <entry>apt</entry> | 74 | |
76 | <entry>1.2.12</entry> | 75 | <entry>PD</entry> |
77 | <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> | 76 | </row> |
78 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 77 | |
79 | </row> | 78 | <row> |
80 | <row> | 79 | <entry>apache2</entry> |
81 | <entry>asciidoc</entry> | 80 | |
82 | <entry>8.6.9</entry> | 81 | <entry>2.4.25</entry> |
83 | <entry>AsciiDoc is a text document format for writing short documents articles books and UNIX man pages.</entry> | 82 | |
84 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 83 | <entry>The Apache HTTP Server is a powerful efficient and |
85 | </row> | 84 | extensible web server.</entry> |
86 | <row> | 85 | |
87 | <entry>atk</entry> | 86 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
88 | <entry>2.22.0</entry> | 87 | </row> |
89 | <entry>Accessibility toolkit for GNOME.</entry> | 88 | |
90 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 89 | <row> |
91 | </row> | 90 | <entry>apr-util</entry> |
92 | <row> | 91 | |
93 | <entry>attr</entry> | 92 | <entry>1.5.4</entry> |
94 | <entry>2.4.47</entry> | 93 | |
95 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended attributes.</entry> | 94 | <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) companion library.</entry> |
96 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 95 | |
97 | </row> | 96 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
98 | <row> | 97 | </row> |
99 | <entry>aufs-util</entry> | 98 | |
100 | <entry>3.14</entry> | 99 | <row> |
101 | <entry>Tools for managing AUFS mounts.</entry> | 100 | <entry>apr</entry> |
102 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 101 | |
103 | </row> | 102 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> |
104 | <row> | 103 | |
105 | <entry>autoconf-archive</entry> | 104 | <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) library.</entry> |
106 | <entry>2016.09.16</entry> | 105 | |
107 | <entry>autoconf-archive-native version 2016.09.16-r0.</entry> | 106 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
108 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 107 | </row> |
109 | </row> | 108 | |
110 | <row> | 109 | <row> |
111 | <entry>autoconf</entry> | 110 | <entry>apt</entry> |
112 | <entry>2.69</entry> | 111 | |
113 | <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce shell scripts to automatically configure software source code packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package from a template file that lists the operating system features that the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> | 112 | <entry>1.2.12</entry> |
114 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 113 | |
115 | </row> | 114 | <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> |
116 | <row> | 115 | |
117 | <entry>autogen</entry> | 116 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
118 | <entry>5.18.12</entry> | 117 | </row> |
119 | <entry>AutoGen is a tool designed to simplify the creation and maintenance of programs that contain large amounts of repetitious text. It is especially valuable in programs that have several blocks of text that must be kept synchronized.</entry> | 118 | |
120 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 119 | <row> |
121 | </row> | 120 | <entry>asciidoc</entry> |
122 | <row> | 121 | |
123 | <entry>automake</entry> | 122 | <entry>8.6.9</entry> |
124 | <entry>1.15</entry> | 123 | |
125 | <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> | 124 | <entry>AsciiDoc is a text document format for writing short |
126 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 125 | documents articles books and UNIX man pages.</entry> |
127 | </row> | 126 | |
128 | <row> | 127 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
129 | <entry>avahi</entry> | 128 | </row> |
130 | <entry>0.6.32</entry> | 129 | |
131 | <entry>"Avahi is a fully LGPL framework for Multicast DNS Service Discovery. It allows programs to publish and discover services and hosts running on a local network with no specific configuration. This tool implements IPv4LL ""Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses"" (IETF RFC3927) a protocol for automatic IP address configuration from the link-local 169.254.0.0/16 range without the need for a central server."</entry> | 130 | <row> |
132 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 131 | <entry>atk</entry> |
133 | </row> | 132 | |
134 | <row> | 133 | <entry>2.22.0</entry> |
135 | <entry>avalon-framework-api</entry> | 134 | |
136 | <entry>4.3</entry> | 135 | <entry>Accessibility toolkit for GNOME.</entry> |
137 | <entry>Common way for components to be created initialized configured started. (API-only)</entry> | 136 | |
138 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 137 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
139 | </row> | 138 | </row> |
140 | <row> | 139 | |
141 | <entry>babeltrace</entry> | 140 | <row> |
142 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> | 141 | <entry>attr</entry> |
143 | <entry>Babeltrace provides trace read and write libraries in host side as well as a trace converter which used to convert LTTng 2.0 traces into human-readable log.</entry> | 142 | |
144 | <entry> MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> | 143 | <entry>2.4.47</entry> |
145 | </row> | 144 | |
146 | <row> | 145 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended |
147 | <entry>base-files</entry> | 146 | attributes.</entry> |
148 | <entry>3.0.14</entry> | 147 | |
149 | <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for the system.</entry> | 148 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> |
150 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 149 | </row> |
151 | </row> | 150 | |
152 | <row> | 151 | <row> |
153 | <entry>base-passwd</entry> | 152 | <entry>aufs-util</entry> |
154 | <entry>3.5.29</entry> | 153 | |
155 | <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> | 154 | <entry>3.14</entry> |
156 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 155 | |
157 | </row> | 156 | <entry>Tools for managing AUFS mounts.</entry> |
158 | <row> | 157 | |
159 | <entry>bash-completion</entry> | 158 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
160 | <entry>2.5</entry> | 159 | </row> |
161 | <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> | 160 | |
162 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 161 | <row> |
163 | </row> | 162 | <entry>autoconf-archive</entry> |
164 | <row> | 163 | |
165 | <entry>bash</entry> | 164 | <entry>2016.09.16</entry> |
166 | <entry>4.3.30</entry> | 165 | |
167 | <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> | 166 | <entry>autoconf-archive-native version 2016.09.16-r0.</entry> |
168 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 167 | |
169 | </row> | 168 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
170 | <row> | 169 | </row> |
171 | <entry>bc</entry> | 170 | |
172 | <entry>1.06</entry> | 171 | <row> |
173 | <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> | 172 | <entry>autoconf</entry> |
174 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 173 | |
175 | </row> | 174 | <entry>2.69</entry> |
176 | <row> | 175 | |
177 | <entry>bcel</entry> | 176 | <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce |
178 | <entry>5.2</entry> | 177 | shell scripts to automatically configure software source code |
179 | <entry>Java Bytecode manipulation library</entry> | 178 | packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package |
180 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 179 | from a template file that lists the operating system features that |
181 | </row> | 180 | the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> |
182 | <row> | 181 | |
183 | <entry>bdwgc</entry> | 182 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
184 | <entry>7.6.0</entry> | 183 | </row> |
185 | <entry>The Boehm-Demers-Weiser conservative garbage collector can be used as a garbage collecting replacement for C malloc or C++ new. It allows you to allocate memory basically as you normally would without explicitly deallocating memory that is no longer useful. The collector automatically recycles memory when it determines that it can no longer be otherwise accessed. The collector is also used by a number of programming language implementations that either use C as intermediate code want to facilitate easier interoperation with C libraries or just prefer the simple collector interface. Alternatively the garbage collector may be used as a leak detector for C or C++ programs though that is not its primary goal. Empirically this collector works with most unmodified C programs simply by replacing malloc with GC_malloc calls replacing realloc with GC_realloc calls and removing free calls.</entry> | 184 | |
186 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 185 | <row> |
187 | </row> | 186 | <entry>autogen</entry> |
188 | <row> | 187 | |
189 | <entry>bind</entry> | 188 | <entry>5.18.12</entry> |
190 | <entry>9.10.3-P3</entry> | 189 | |
191 | <entry>ISC Internet Domain Name Server.</entry> | 190 | <entry>AutoGen is a tool designed to simplify the creation and |
192 | <entry> ISC, BSD</entry> | 191 | maintenance of programs that contain large amounts of repetitious |
193 | </row> | 192 | text. It is especially valuable in programs that have several |
194 | <row> | 193 | blocks of text that must be kept synchronized.</entry> |
195 | <entry>binutils-cross-x86_64</entry> | 194 | |
196 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 195 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
197 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 196 | </row> |
198 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 197 | |
199 | </row> | 198 | <row> |
200 | <row> | 199 | <entry>automake</entry> |
201 | <entry>binutils</entry> | 200 | |
202 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 201 | <entry>1.15</entry> |
203 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 202 | |
204 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 203 | <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating |
205 | </row> | 204 | `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. |
206 | <row> | 205 | Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> |
207 | <entry>bison</entry> | 206 | |
208 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> | 207 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
209 | <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with little trouble.</entry> | 208 | </row> |
210 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 209 | |
211 | </row> | 210 | <row> |
212 | <row> | 211 | <entry>avahi</entry> |
213 | <entry>bjam</entry> | 212 | |
214 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> | 213 | <entry>0.6.32</entry> |
215 | <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry> | 214 | |
216 | <entry> BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> | 215 | <entry>"Avahi is a fully LGPL framework for Multicast DNS Service |
217 | </row> | 216 | Discovery. It allows programs to publish and discover services and |
218 | <row> | 217 | hosts running on a local network with no specific configuration. |
219 | <entry>boost</entry> | 218 | This tool implements IPv4LL ""Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 |
220 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> | 219 | Link-Local Addresses"" (IETF RFC3927) a protocol for automatic IP |
221 | <entry>Free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.</entry> | 220 | address configuration from the link-local 169.254.0.0/16 range |
222 | <entry> BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> | 221 | without the need for a central server."</entry> |
223 | </row> | 222 | |
224 | <row> | 223 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
225 | <entry>bridge-utils</entry> | 224 | </row> |
226 | <entry>1.5</entry> | 225 | |
227 | <entry>Tools for ethernet bridging.</entry> | 226 | <row> |
228 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 227 | <entry>avalon-framework-api</entry> |
229 | </row> | 228 | |
230 | <row> | 229 | <entry>4.3</entry> |
231 | <entry>bsf</entry> | 230 | |
232 | <entry>2.4.0</entry> | 231 | <entry>Common way for components to be created initialized |
233 | <entry>Bean Scripting Framework package</entry> | 232 | configured started. (API-only)</entry> |
234 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 233 | |
235 | </row> | 234 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
236 | <row> | 235 | </row> |
237 | <entry>btrfs-tools</entry> | 236 | |
238 | <entry>4.9.1</entry> | 237 | <row> |
239 | <entry>Btrfs is a new copy on write filesystem for Linux aimed at implementing advanced features while focusing on fault tolerance repair and easy administration. This package contains utilities (mkfs fsck btrfsctl) used to work with btrfs and an utility (btrfs-convert) to make a btrfs filesystem from an ext3.</entry> | 238 | <entry>babeltrace</entry> |
240 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 239 | |
241 | </row> | 240 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> |
242 | <row> | 241 | |
243 | <entry>busybox</entry> | 242 | <entry>Babeltrace provides trace read and write libraries in host |
244 | <entry>1.24.1</entry> | 243 | side as well as a trace converter which used to convert LTTng 2.0 |
245 | <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the options that are included provide the expected functionality and behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded system.</entry> | 244 | traces into human-readable log.</entry> |
246 | <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> | 245 | |
247 | </row> | 246 | <entry>MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> |
248 | <row> | 247 | </row> |
249 | <entry>bzip2</entry> | 248 | |
250 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> | 249 | <row> |
251 | <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> | 250 | <entry>base-files</entry> |
252 | <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry> | 251 | |
253 | </row> | 252 | <entry>3.0.14</entry> |
254 | <row> | 253 | |
255 | <entry>ca-certificates</entry> | 254 | <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory |
256 | <entry>20161130</entry> | 255 | structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for |
257 | <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> | 256 | the system.</entry> |
258 | <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> | 257 | |
259 | </row> | 258 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
260 | <row> | 259 | </row> |
261 | <entry>cacao-initial</entry> | 260 | |
262 | <entry>0.98</entry> | 261 | <row> |
263 | <entry>CacaoVM for use as OpenEmbedded's Java VM</entry> | 262 | <entry>base-passwd</entry> |
264 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 263 | |
265 | </row> | 264 | <entry>3.5.29</entry> |
266 | <row> | 265 | |
267 | <entry>cairo</entry> | 266 | <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd |
268 | <entry>1.14.8</entry> | 267 | and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep |
269 | <entry>Cairo is a multi-platform library providing anti-aliased vector-based rendering for multiple target backends. Paths consist of line segments and cubic splines and can be rendered at any width with various join and cap styles. All colors may be specified with optional translucence (opacity/alpha) and combined using the extended Porter/Duff compositing algebra as found in the X Render Extension.</entry> | 268 | the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> |
270 | <entry> MPL-1.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry> | 269 | |
271 | </row> | 270 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
272 | <row> | 271 | </row> |
273 | <entry>cantarell-fonts</entry> | 272 | |
274 | <entry>0.0.24</entry> | 273 | <row> |
275 | <entry>The Cantarell font typeface is designed as a contemporary Humanist sans serif and was developed for on-screen reading; in particular reading web pages on an HTC Dream mobile phone.</entry> | 274 | <entry>bash-completion</entry> |
276 | <entry> </entry> | 275 | |
277 | </row> | 276 | <entry>2.5</entry> |
278 | <row> | 277 | |
279 | <entry>cdrkit</entry> | 278 | <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> |
280 | <entry>1.1.11</entry> | 279 | |
281 | <entry>CD/DVD command line tools.</entry> | 280 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
282 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 281 | </row> |
283 | </row> | 282 | |
284 | <row> | 283 | <row> |
285 | <entry>cdrtools</entry> | 284 | <entry>bash</entry> |
286 | <entry>3.01a31</entry> | 285 | |
287 | <entry>A set of tools for CD recording including cdrecord.</entry> | 286 | <entry>4.3.30</entry> |
288 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 287 | |
289 | </row> | 288 | <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> |
290 | <row> | 289 | |
291 | <entry>chrpath</entry> | 290 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
292 | <entry>0.16</entry> | 291 | </row> |
293 | <entry>chrpath allows you to change the rpath (where the application looks for libraries) in an application. It does not (yet) allow you to add an rpath if there isn't one already.</entry> | 292 | |
294 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 293 | <row> |
295 | </row> | 294 | <entry>bc</entry> |
296 | <row> | 295 | |
297 | <entry>classpath-initial</entry> | 296 | <entry>1.06</entry> |
298 | <entry>0.93</entry> | 297 | |
299 | <entry>Java1.4-compatible GNU Classpath variant that is used as bootclasspath for jikes-native.</entry> | 298 | <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> |
300 | <entry> GPL-2.0</entry> | 299 | |
301 | </row> | 300 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
302 | <row> | 301 | </row> |
303 | <entry>classpath</entry> | 302 | |
304 | <entry>0.99</entry> | 303 | <row> |
305 | <entry>GNU Classpath standard Java libraries - For native Java-dependent programs</entry> | 304 | <entry>bcel</entry> |
306 | <entry> GPL-2.0</entry> | 305 | |
307 | </row> | 306 | <entry>5.2</entry> |
308 | <row> | 307 | |
309 | <entry>cmake</entry> | 308 | <entry>Java Bytecode manipulation library</entry> |
310 | <entry>3.7.2</entry> | 309 | |
311 | <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> | 310 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
312 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 311 | </row> |
313 | </row> | 312 | |
314 | <row> | 313 | <row> |
315 | <entry>commons-logging</entry> | 314 | <entry>bdwgc</entry> |
316 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> | 315 | |
317 | <entry>Java Internet protocol suite library</entry> | 316 | <entry>7.6.0</entry> |
318 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 317 | |
319 | </row> | 318 | <entry>The Boehm-Demers-Weiser conservative garbage collector can |
320 | <row> | 319 | be used as a garbage collecting replacement for C malloc or C++ |
321 | <entry>commons-net</entry> | 320 | new. It allows you to allocate memory basically as you normally |
322 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | 321 | would without explicitly deallocating memory that is no longer |
323 | <entry>Java Internet protocol suite library</entry> | 322 | useful. The collector automatically recycles memory when it |
324 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 323 | determines that it can no longer be otherwise accessed. The |
325 | </row> | 324 | collector is also used by a number of programming language |
326 | <row> | 325 | implementations that either use C as intermediate code want to |
327 | <entry>compose-file</entry> | 326 | facilitate easier interoperation with C libraries or just prefer |
328 | <entry>3.0</entry> | 327 | the simple collector interface. Alternatively the garbage |
329 | <entry>Parser for the Compose file format (version 3)</entry> | 328 | collector may be used as a leak detector for C or C++ programs |
330 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 329 | though that is not its primary goal. Empirically this collector |
331 | </row> | 330 | works with most unmodified C programs simply by replacing malloc |
332 | <row> | 331 | with GC_malloc calls replacing realloc with GC_realloc calls and |
333 | <entry>compositeproto</entry> | 332 | removing free calls.</entry> |
334 | <entry>0.4.2</entry> | 333 | |
335 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X composite extension. The X composite extension provides three related mechanisms for compositing and off-screen storage.</entry> | 334 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
336 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 335 | </row> |
337 | </row> | 336 | |
338 | <row> | 337 | <row> |
339 | <entry>containerd-docker</entry> | 338 | <entry>bind</entry> |
340 | <entry>0.2.3</entry> | 339 | |
341 | <entry>containerd is a daemon to control runC built for performance and density. containerd leverages runC's advanced features such as seccomp and user namespace support as well as checkpoint and restore for cloning and live migration of containers.</entry> | 340 | <entry>9.10.3-P3</entry> |
342 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 341 | |
343 | </row> | 342 | <entry>ISC Internet Domain Name Server.</entry> |
344 | <row> | 343 | |
345 | <entry>coreutils</entry> | 344 | <entry>ISC, BSD</entry> |
346 | <entry>8.26</entry> | 345 | </row> |
347 | <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which are expected to exist on every system.</entry> | 346 | |
348 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 347 | <row> |
349 | </row> | 348 | <entry>binutils-cross-x86_64</entry> |
350 | <row> | 349 | |
351 | <entry>cross-localedef</entry> | 350 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
352 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 351 | |
353 | <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> | 352 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
354 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 353 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
355 | </row> | 354 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
356 | <row> | 355 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
357 | <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry> | 356 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
358 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 357 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
359 | <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> | 358 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
360 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 359 | |
361 | </row> | 360 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
362 | <row> | 361 | </row> |
363 | <entry>cup</entry> | 362 | |
364 | <entry>0.10k</entry> | 363 | <row> |
365 | <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry> | 364 | <entry>binutils</entry> |
366 | <entry> </entry> | 365 | |
367 | </row> | 366 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
368 | <row> | 367 | |
369 | <entry>cups</entry> | 368 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
370 | <entry>2.2.2</entry> | 369 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
371 | <entry>An Internet printing system for Unix.</entry> | 370 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
372 | <entry> GPL-2.0</entry> | 371 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
373 | </row> | 372 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
374 | <row> | 373 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
375 | <entry>curl</entry> | 374 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
376 | <entry>7.53.1</entry> | 375 | |
377 | <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL transfers.</entry> | 376 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
378 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 377 | </row> |
379 | </row> | 378 | |
380 | <row> | 379 | <row> |
381 | <entry>damageproto</entry> | 380 | <entry>bison</entry> |
382 | <entry>1.2.1</entry> | 381 | |
383 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the DAMAGE extension. The DAMAGE extension allows applications to receive information about changes made to pixel contents of windows and pixmaps.</entry> | 382 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> |
384 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 383 | |
385 | </row> | 384 | <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts |
386 | <row> | 385 | an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser |
387 | <entry>db</entry> | 386 | for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all |
388 | <entry>5.3.28</entry> | 387 | properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no |
389 | <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> | 388 | change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with |
390 | <entry>Sleepycat</entry> | 389 | little trouble.</entry> |
391 | </row> | 390 | |
392 | <row> | 391 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
393 | <entry>dbus-glib</entry> | 392 | </row> |
394 | <entry>0.108</entry> | 393 | |
395 | <entry>GLib bindings for the D-Bus message bus that integrate the D-Bus library with the GLib thread abstraction and main loop.</entry> | 394 | <row> |
396 | <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 395 | <entry>bjam</entry> |
397 | </row> | 396 | |
398 | <row> | 397 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> |
399 | <entry>dbus-test</entry> | 398 | |
400 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> | 399 | <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry> |
401 | <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing only).</entry> | 400 | |
402 | <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 401 | <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> |
403 | </row> | 402 | </row> |
404 | <row> | 403 | |
405 | <entry>dbus</entry> | 404 | <row> |
406 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> | 405 | <entry>boost</entry> |
407 | <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when their services are needed."</entry> | 406 | |
408 | <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 407 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> |
409 | </row> | 408 | |
410 | <row> | 409 | <entry>Free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.</entry> |
411 | <entry>debianutils</entry> | 410 | |
412 | <entry>4.8.1</entry> | 411 | <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> |
413 | <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> | 412 | </row> |
414 | <entry> GPL-2.0</entry> | 413 | |
415 | </row> | 414 | <row> |
416 | <row> | 415 | <entry>bridge-utils</entry> |
417 | <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> | 416 | |
418 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 417 | <entry>1.5</entry> |
419 | <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency indexer.</entry> | 418 | |
420 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 419 | <entry>Tools for ethernet bridging.</entry> |
421 | </row> | 420 | |
422 | <row> | 421 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
423 | <entry>dhcp</entry> | 422 | </row> |
424 | <entry>4.3.5</entry> | 423 | |
425 | <entry>DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) is a protocol which allows individual devices on an IP network to get their own network configuration information from a server. DHCP helps make it easier to administer devices.</entry> | 424 | <row> |
426 | <entry>ISC</entry> | 425 | <entry>bsf</entry> |
427 | </row> | 426 | |
428 | <row> | 427 | <entry>2.4.0</entry> |
429 | <entry>diffutils</entry> | 428 | |
430 | <entry>3.5</entry> | 429 | <entry>Bean Scripting Framework package</entry> |
431 | <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch files.</entry> | 430 | |
432 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 431 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
433 | </row> | 432 | </row> |
434 | <row> | 433 | |
435 | <entry>dmidecode</entry> | 434 | <row> |
436 | <entry>3.0</entry> | 435 | <entry>btrfs-tools</entry> |
437 | <entry>DMI (Desktop Management Interface) table related utilities.</entry> | 436 | |
438 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 437 | <entry>4.9.1</entry> |
439 | </row> | 438 | |
440 | <row> | 439 | <entry>Btrfs is a new copy on write filesystem for Linux aimed at |
441 | <entry>dnsmasq</entry> | 440 | implementing advanced features while focusing on fault tolerance |
442 | <entry>2.76</entry> | 441 | repair and easy administration. This package contains utilities |
443 | <entry>Lightweight easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP server.</entry> | 442 | (mkfs fsck btrfsctl) used to work with btrfs and an utility |
444 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 443 | (btrfs-convert) to make a btrfs filesystem from an ext3.</entry> |
445 | </row> | 444 | |
446 | <row> | 445 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
447 | <entry>docbook-xml-dtd4</entry> | 446 | </row> |
448 | <entry>4.5</entry> | 447 | |
449 | <entry>Document type definitions for verification of XML data files against the DocBook rule set it ships with the latest DocBook 4.5 XML DTD as well as a selected set of legacy DTDs for use with older documents including 4.0 4.1.2 4.2 4.3 and 4.4</entry> | 448 | <row> |
450 | <entry>OASIS</entry> | 449 | <entry>busybox</entry> |
451 | </row> | 450 | |
452 | <row> | 451 | <entry>1.24.1</entry> |
453 | <entry>docbook-xsl-stylesheets</entry> | 452 | |
454 | <entry>1.79.1</entry> | 453 | <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX |
455 | <entry>XSL stylesheets for processing DocBook XML to various output formats.</entry> | 454 | utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist |
456 | <entry> </entry> | 455 | replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU |
457 | </row> | 456 | fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have |
458 | <row> | 457 | fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the |
459 | <entry>docker</entry> | 458 | options that are included provide the expected functionality and |
460 | <entry>1.13.0</entry> | 459 | behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a |
461 | <entry>Linux container runtime Docker complements kernel namespacing with a high-level API which operates at the process level. It runs unix processes with strong guarantees of isolation and repeatability across servers. . Docker is a great building block for automating distributed systems: large-scale web deployments database clusters continuous deployment systems private PaaS service-oriented architectures etc. . This package contains the daemon and client. Using docker.io is officially supported on x86_64 and arm (32-bit) hosts. Other architectures are considered experimental. . Also note that kernel version 3.10 or above is required for proper operation of the daemon process and that any lower versions may have subtle and/or glaring issues. </entry> | 460 | fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded |
462 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 461 | system.</entry> |
463 | </row> | 462 | |
464 | <row> | 463 | <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> |
465 | <entry>dosfstools</entry> | 464 | </row> |
466 | <entry>4.1</entry> | 465 | |
467 | <entry>DOS FAT Filesystem Utilities.</entry> | 466 | <row> |
468 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 467 | <entry>bzip2</entry> |
469 | </row> | 468 | |
470 | <row> | 469 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> |
471 | <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> | 470 | |
472 | <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry> | 471 | <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler |
473 | <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> | 472 | block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. |
474 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 473 | Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by |
475 | </row> | 474 | more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the |
476 | <row> | 475 | performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> |
477 | <entry>dpdk</entry> | 476 | |
478 | <entry>17.08</entry> | 477 | <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry> |
479 | <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry> | 478 | </row> |
480 | <entry> BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 479 | |
481 | </row> | 480 | <row> |
482 | <row> | 481 | <entry>ca-certificates</entry> |
483 | <entry>dpkg</entry> | 482 | |
484 | <entry>1.18.10</entry> | 483 | <entry>20161130</entry> |
485 | <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> | 484 | |
486 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 485 | <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow |
487 | </row> | 486 | SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL |
488 | <row> | 487 | connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> |
489 | <entry>dtc</entry> | 488 | |
490 | <entry>1.4.2</entry> | 489 | <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> |
491 | <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> | 490 | </row> |
492 | <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> | 491 | |
493 | </row> | 492 | <row> |
494 | <row> | 493 | <entry>cacao-initial</entry> |
495 | <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> | 494 | |
496 | <entry>1.43.4</entry> | 495 | <entry>0.98</entry> |
497 | <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> | 496 | |
498 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> | 497 | <entry>CacaoVM for use as OpenEmbedded's Java VM</entry> |
499 | </row> | 498 | |
500 | <row> | 499 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
501 | <entry>ebtables</entry> | 500 | </row> |
502 | <entry>2.0.10-4</entry> | 501 | |
503 | <entry>Utility for basic Ethernet frame filtering on a Linux bridge advanced logging MAC DNAT/SNAT and brouting.</entry> | 502 | <row> |
504 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 503 | <entry>cairo</entry> |
505 | </row> | 504 | |
506 | <row> | 505 | <entry>1.14.8</entry> |
507 | <entry>ecj-bootstrap</entry> | 506 | |
508 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 507 | <entry>Cairo is a multi-platform library providing anti-aliased |
509 | <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Bootstrap variant</entry> | 508 | vector-based rendering for multiple target backends. Paths consist |
510 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 509 | of line segments and cubic splines and can be rendered at any |
511 | </row> | 510 | width with various join and cap styles. All colors may be |
512 | <row> | 511 | specified with optional translucence (opacity/alpha) and combined |
513 | <entry>ecj-initial</entry> | 512 | using the extended Porter/Duff compositing algebra as found in the |
514 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 513 | X Render Extension.</entry> |
515 | <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Bootstrap variant</entry> | 514 | |
516 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 515 | <entry>MPL-1.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry> |
517 | </row> | 516 | </row> |
518 | <row> | 517 | |
519 | <entry>elfutils</entry> | 518 | <row> |
520 | <entry>0.168</entry> | 519 | <entry>cantarell-fonts</entry> |
521 | <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object files.</entry> | 520 | |
522 | <entry> GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> | 521 | <entry>0.0.24</entry> |
523 | </row> | 522 | |
524 | <row> | 523 | <entry>The Cantarell font typeface is designed as a contemporary |
525 | <entry>enea-nfv-access-dev</entry> | 524 | Humanist sans serif and was developed for on-screen reading; in |
526 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 525 | particular reading web pages on an HTC Dream mobile phone.</entry> |
527 | <entry>Image for the host side of the Enea NFV Access Platform</entry> | 526 | |
528 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 527 | <entry></entry> |
529 | </row> | 528 | </row> |
530 | <row> | 529 | |
531 | <entry>expat</entry> | 530 | <row> |
532 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> | 531 | <entry>cdrkit</entry> |
533 | <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start tags)</entry> | 532 | |
534 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 533 | <entry>1.1.11</entry> |
535 | </row> | 534 | |
536 | <row> | 535 | <entry>CD/DVD command line tools.</entry> |
537 | <entry>fastjar</entry> | 536 | |
538 | <entry>0.98</entry> | 537 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
539 | <entry>jar replacement written in C.</entry> | 538 | </row> |
540 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 539 | |
541 | </row> | 540 | <row> |
542 | <row> | 541 | <entry>cdrtools</entry> |
543 | <entry>file</entry> | 542 | |
544 | <entry>5.30</entry> | 543 | <entry>3.01a31</entry> |
545 | <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> | 544 | |
546 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 545 | <entry>A set of tools for CD recording including cdrecord.</entry> |
547 | </row> | 546 | |
548 | <row> | 547 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
549 | <entry>findutils</entry> | 548 | </row> |
550 | <entry>4.6.0</entry> | 549 | |
551 | <entry>The GNU Find Utilities are the basic directory searching utilities of the GNU operating system. These programs are typically used in conjunction with other programs to provide modular and powerful directory search and file locating capabilities to other commands.</entry> | 550 | <row> |
552 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 551 | <entry>chrpath</entry> |
553 | </row> | 552 | |
554 | <row> | 553 | <entry>0.16</entry> |
555 | <entry>fixesproto</entry> | 554 | |
556 | <entry>5.0</entry> | 555 | <entry>chrpath allows you to change the rpath (where the |
557 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Fixes extension. This extension is designed to provide server-side support for application work arounds to shortcomings in the core X window system.</entry> | 556 | application looks for libraries) in an application. It does not |
558 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 557 | (yet) allow you to add an rpath if there isn't one |
559 | </row> | 558 | already.</entry> |
560 | <row> | 559 | |
561 | <entry>flex</entry> | 560 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
562 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> | 561 | </row> |
563 | <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in text.</entry> | 562 | |
564 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 563 | <row> |
565 | </row> | 564 | <entry>classpath-initial</entry> |
566 | <row> | 565 | |
567 | <entry>fontconfig</entry> | 566 | <entry>0.93</entry> |
568 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> | 567 | |
569 | <entry>Fontconfig is a font configuration and customization library which does not depend on the X Window System. It is designed to locate fonts within the system and select them according to requirements specified by applications. Fontconfig is not a rasterization library nor does it impose a particular rasterization library on the application. The X-specific library 'Xft' uses fontconfig along with freetype to specify and rasterize fonts.</entry> | 568 | <entry>Java1.4-compatible GNU Classpath variant that is used as |
570 | <entry> MIT, PD</entry> | 569 | bootclasspath for jikes-native.</entry> |
571 | </row> | 570 | |
572 | <row> | 571 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
573 | <entry>freetype</entry> | 572 | </row> |
574 | <entry>2.7.1</entry> | 573 | |
575 | <entry>FreeType is a software font engine that is designed to be small efficient highly customizable and portable while capable of producing high-quality output (glyph images). It can be used in graphics libraries display servers font conversion tools text image generation tools and many other products as well.</entry> | 574 | <row> |
576 | <entry> FreeType, GPL-2.0</entry> | 575 | <entry>classpath</entry> |
577 | </row> | 576 | |
578 | <row> | 577 | <entry>0.99</entry> |
579 | <entry>fuse</entry> | 578 | |
580 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | 579 | <entry>GNU Classpath standard Java libraries - For native |
581 | <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem implementations. </entry> | 580 | Java-dependent programs</entry> |
582 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 581 | |
583 | </row> | 582 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
584 | <row> | 583 | </row> |
585 | <entry>gawk</entry> | 584 | |
586 | <entry>4.1.4</entry> | 585 | <row> |
587 | <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> | 586 | <entry>cmake</entry> |
588 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 587 | |
589 | </row> | 588 | <entry>3.7.2</entry> |
590 | <row> | 589 | |
591 | <entry>gcc-cross-initial-x86_64</entry> | 590 | <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> |
592 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 591 | |
593 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 592 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
594 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 593 | </row> |
595 | </row> | 594 | |
596 | <row> | 595 | <row> |
597 | <entry>gcc-cross-x86_64</entry> | 596 | <entry>commons-logging</entry> |
598 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 597 | |
599 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 598 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> |
600 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 599 | |
601 | </row> | 600 | <entry>Java Internet protocol suite library</entry> |
602 | <row> | 601 | |
603 | <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> | 602 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
604 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 603 | </row> |
605 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 604 | |
606 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 605 | <row> |
607 | </row> | 606 | <entry>commons-net</entry> |
608 | <row> | 607 | |
609 | <entry>gcc</entry> | 608 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> |
610 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 609 | |
611 | <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry> | 610 | <entry>Java Internet protocol suite library</entry> |
612 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> | 611 | |
613 | </row> | 612 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
614 | <row> | 613 | </row> |
615 | <entry>gdb</entry> | 614 | |
616 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> | 615 | <row> |
617 | <entry>GNU debugger.</entry> | 616 | <entry>compose-file</entry> |
618 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 617 | |
619 | </row> | 618 | <entry>3.0</entry> |
620 | <row> | 619 | |
621 | <entry>gdbm</entry> | 620 | <entry>Parser for the Compose file format (version 3)</entry> |
622 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 621 | |
623 | <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> | 622 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
624 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 623 | </row> |
625 | </row> | 624 | |
626 | <row> | 625 | <row> |
627 | <entry>gdk-pixbuf</entry> | 626 | <entry>compositeproto</entry> |
628 | <entry>2.36.5</entry> | 627 | |
629 | <entry>Image loading library for GTK+.</entry> | 628 | <entry>0.4.2</entry> |
630 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 629 | |
631 | </row> | 630 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X composite |
632 | <row> | 631 | extension. The X composite extension provides three related |
633 | <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> | 632 | mechanisms for compositing and off-screen storage.</entry> |
634 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> | 633 | |
635 | <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> | 634 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
636 | <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> | 635 | </row> |
637 | </row> | 636 | |
638 | <row> | 637 | <row> |
639 | <entry>gettext</entry> | 638 | <entry>containerd-docker</entry> |
640 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> | 639 | |
641 | <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools include a set of conventions about how programs should be written to support message catalogs a directory and file naming organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of translatable and already translated strings.</entry> | 640 | <entry>0.2.3</entry> |
642 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 641 | |
643 | </row> | 642 | <entry>containerd is a daemon to control runC built for |
644 | <row> | 643 | performance and density. containerd leverages runC's advanced |
645 | <entry>giflib</entry> | 644 | features such as seccomp and user namespace support as well as |
646 | <entry>5.1.4</entry> | 645 | checkpoint and restore for cloning and live migration of |
647 | <entry>shared library for GIF images.</entry> | 646 | containers.</entry> |
648 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 647 | |
649 | </row> | 648 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
650 | <row> | 649 | </row> |
651 | <entry>git</entry> | 650 | |
652 | <entry>2.11.1</entry> | 651 | <row> |
653 | <entry>Distributed version control system.</entry> | 652 | <entry>coreutils</entry> |
654 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 653 | |
655 | </row> | 654 | <entry>8.26</entry> |
656 | <row> | 655 | |
657 | <entry>glib-2.0</entry> | 656 | <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and |
658 | <entry>2.50.3</entry> | 657 | text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which |
659 | <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> | 658 | are expected to exist on every system.</entry> |
660 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> | 659 | |
661 | </row> | 660 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
662 | <row> | 661 | </row> |
663 | <entry>glibc-locale</entry> | 662 | |
664 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 663 | <row> |
665 | <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> | 664 | <entry>cross-localedef</entry> |
666 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 665 | |
667 | </row> | 666 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
668 | <row> | 667 | |
669 | <entry>glibc</entry> | 668 | <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> |
670 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 669 | |
671 | <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> | 670 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
672 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 671 | </row> |
673 | </row> | 672 | |
674 | <row> | 673 | <row> |
675 | <entry>gmp</entry> | 674 | <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry> |
676 | <entry>6.1.2</entry> | 675 | |
677 | <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point numbers</entry> | 676 | <entry>1.8</entry> |
678 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 677 | |
679 | </row> | 678 | <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> |
680 | <row> | 679 | |
681 | <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> | 680 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
682 | <entry>2014.1</entry> | 681 | </row> |
683 | <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> | 682 | |
684 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 683 | <row> |
685 | </row> | 684 | <entry>cup</entry> |
686 | <row> | 685 | |
687 | <entry>gnome-themes-standard</entry> | 686 | <entry>0.10k</entry> |
688 | <entry>3.22.2</entry> | 687 | |
689 | <entry>GTK+2 standard themes.</entry> | 688 | <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry> |
690 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 689 | |
691 | </row> | 690 | <entry></entry> |
692 | <row> | 691 | </row> |
693 | <entry>gnu-config</entry> | 692 | |
694 | <entry>20150728</entry> | 693 | <row> |
695 | <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a directory tree</entry> | 694 | <entry>cups</entry> |
696 | <entry> </entry> | 695 | |
697 | </row> | 696 | <entry>2.2.2</entry> |
698 | <row> | 697 | |
699 | <entry>gnujaf</entry> | 698 | <entry>An Internet printing system for Unix.</entry> |
700 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> | 699 | |
701 | <entry>Provides a mean to type data and locate components suitable for performing various kinds of action on it.</entry> | 700 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
702 | <entry> </entry> | 701 | </row> |
703 | </row> | 702 | |
704 | <row> | 703 | <row> |
705 | <entry>gnumail</entry> | 704 | <entry>curl</entry> |
706 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> | 705 | |
707 | <entry>GNU's free implementation of the JavaMail API specification</entry> | 706 | <entry>7.53.1</entry> |
708 | <entry> </entry> | 707 | |
709 | </row> | 708 | <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL |
710 | <row> | 709 | transfers.</entry> |
711 | <entry>gnutls</entry> | 710 | |
712 | <entry>3.5.9</entry> | 711 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
713 | <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> | 712 | </row> |
714 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 713 | |
715 | </row> | 714 | <row> |
716 | <row> | 715 | <entry>damageproto</entry> |
717 | <entry>go-bootstrap</entry> | 716 | |
718 | <entry>1.4.3</entry> | 717 | <entry>1.2.1</entry> |
719 | <entry> The Go programming language is an open source project to make programmers more productive. Go is expressive concise clean and efficient. Its concurrency mechanisms make it easy to write programs that get the most out of multicore and networked machines while its novel type system enables flexible and modular program construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code yet has the convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time reflection. It's a fast statically typed compiled language that feels like a dynamically typed interpreted language.</entry> | 718 | |
720 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 719 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the DAMAGE |
721 | </row> | 720 | extension. The DAMAGE extension allows applications to receive |
722 | <row> | 721 | information about changes made to pixel contents of windows and |
723 | <entry>go-capability</entry> | 722 | pixmaps.</entry> |
724 | <entry>0.0</entry> | 723 | |
725 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating POSIX capabilities in Go.</entry> | 724 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
726 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 725 | </row> |
727 | </row> | 726 | |
728 | <row> | 727 | <row> |
729 | <entry>go-cli</entry> | 728 | <entry>db</entry> |
730 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | 729 | |
731 | <entry>A small package for building command line apps in Go</entry> | 730 | <entry>5.3.28</entry> |
732 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 731 | |
733 | </row> | 732 | <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> |
734 | <row> | 733 | |
735 | <entry>go-connections</entry> | 734 | <entry>Sleepycat</entry> |
736 | <entry>0.2.1</entry> | 735 | </row> |
737 | <entry>Utility package to work with network connections</entry> | 736 | |
738 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 737 | <row> |
739 | </row> | 738 | <entry>dbus-glib</entry> |
740 | <row> | 739 | |
741 | <entry>go-context</entry> | 740 | <entry>0.108</entry> |
742 | <entry>git</entry> | 741 | |
743 | <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> | 742 | <entry>GLib bindings for the D-Bus message bus that integrate the |
744 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 743 | D-Bus library with the GLib thread abstraction and main |
745 | </row> | 744 | loop.</entry> |
746 | <row> | 745 | |
747 | <entry>go-cross-x86_64</entry> | 746 | <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
748 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 747 | </row> |
749 | <entry> The Go programming language is an open source project to make programmers more productive. Go is expressive concise clean and efficient. Its concurrency mechanisms make it easy to write programs that get the most out of multicore and networked machines while its novel type system enables flexible and modular program construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code yet has the convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time reflection. It's a fast statically typed compiled language that feels like a dynamically typed interpreted language.</entry> | 748 | |
750 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 749 | <row> |
751 | </row> | 750 | <entry>dbus-test</entry> |
752 | <row> | 751 | |
753 | <entry>go-dbus</entry> | 752 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> |
754 | <entry>4.0.0</entry> | 753 | |
755 | <entry>Native Go bindings for D-Bus</entry> | 754 | <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing |
756 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 755 | only).</entry> |
757 | </row> | 756 | |
758 | <row> | 757 | <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
759 | <entry>go-distribution</entry> | 758 | </row> |
760 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> | 759 | |
761 | <entry>The Docker toolset to pack ship store and deliver content</entry> | 760 | <row> |
762 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 761 | <entry>dbus</entry> |
763 | </row> | 762 | |
764 | <row> | 763 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> |
765 | <entry>go-fsnotify</entry> | 764 | |
766 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> | 765 | <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for |
767 | <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> | 766 | applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess |
768 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 767 | communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes |
769 | </row> | 768 | it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application |
770 | <row> | 769 | or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when |
771 | <entry>go-libtrust</entry> | 770 | their services are needed."</entry> |
772 | <entry>0.0</entry> | 771 | |
773 | <entry>Primitives for identity and authorization</entry> | 772 | <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
774 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 773 | </row> |
775 | </row> | 774 | |
776 | <row> | 775 | <row> |
777 | <entry>go-logrus</entry> | 776 | <entry>debianutils</entry> |
778 | <entry>0.11.0</entry> | 777 | |
779 | <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> | 778 | <entry>4.8.1</entry> |
780 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 779 | |
781 | </row> | 780 | <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> |
782 | <row> | 781 | |
783 | <entry>go-mux</entry> | 782 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
784 | <entry>git</entry> | 783 | </row> |
785 | <entry>A powerful URL router and dispatcher for golang.</entry> | 784 | |
786 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 785 | <row> |
787 | </row> | 786 | <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> |
788 | <row> | 787 | |
789 | <entry>go-patricia</entry> | 788 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
790 | <entry>2.2.6</entry> | 789 | |
791 | <entry>A generic patricia trie (also called radix tree) implemented in Go (Golang)</entry> | 790 | <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency |
792 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 791 | indexer.</entry> |
793 | </row> | 792 | |
794 | <row> | 793 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
795 | <entry>go-pty</entry> | 794 | </row> |
796 | <entry>git</entry> | 795 | |
797 | <entry>PTY interface for Go</entry> | 796 | <row> |
798 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 797 | <entry>dhcp</entry> |
799 | </row> | 798 | |
800 | <row> | 799 | <entry>4.3.5</entry> |
801 | <entry>go-systemd</entry> | 800 | |
802 | <entry>4</entry> | 801 | <entry>DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) is a protocol |
803 | <entry>Go bindings to systemd socket activation journal D-Bus and unit files</entry> | 802 | which allows individual devices on an IP network to get their own |
804 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 803 | network configuration information from a server. DHCP helps make |
805 | </row> | 804 | it easier to administer devices.</entry> |
806 | <row> | 805 | |
807 | <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> | 806 | <entry>ISC</entry> |
808 | <entry>1.50.0</entry> | 807 | </row> |
809 | <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and language bindings.</entry> | 808 | |
810 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 809 | <row> |
811 | </row> | 810 | <entry>diffutils</entry> |
812 | <row> | 811 | |
813 | <entry>gperf</entry> | 812 | <entry>3.5</entry> |
814 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> | 813 | |
815 | <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> | 814 | <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp |
816 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 815 | utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch |
817 | </row> | 816 | files.</entry> |
818 | <row> | 817 | |
819 | <entry>grep</entry> | 818 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
820 | <entry>3.0</entry> | 819 | </row> |
821 | <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> | 820 | |
822 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 821 | <row> |
823 | </row> | 822 | <entry>dmidecode</entry> |
824 | <row> | 823 | |
825 | <entry>groff</entry> | 824 | <entry>3.0</entry> |
826 | <entry>1.22.3</entry> | 825 | |
827 | <entry>The groff (GNU troff) software is a typesetting package which reads plain text mixed with formatting commands and produces formatted output.</entry> | 826 | <entry>DMI (Desktop Management Interface) table related |
828 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 827 | utilities.</entry> |
829 | </row> | 828 | |
830 | <row> | 829 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
831 | <entry>grpc-go</entry> | 830 | </row> |
832 | <entry>1.4.0</entry> | 831 | |
833 | <entry>The Go language implementation of gRPC. HTTP/2 based RPC</entry> | 832 | <row> |
834 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 833 | <entry>dnsmasq</entry> |
835 | </row> | 834 | |
836 | <row> | 835 | <entry>2.76</entry> |
837 | <entry>grub-efi</entry> | 836 | |
838 | <entry>2.00</entry> | 837 | <entry>Lightweight easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP |
839 | <entry>GRUB2 is the next generaion of a GPLed bootloader intended to unify bootloading across x86 operating systems. In addition to loading the Linux kernel it implements the Multiboot standard which allows for flexible loading of multiple boot images.</entry> | 838 | server.</entry> |
840 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 839 | |
841 | </row> | 840 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
842 | <row> | 841 | </row> |
843 | <entry>gtk+</entry> | 842 | |
844 | <entry>2.24.31</entry> | 843 | <row> |
845 | <entry>GTK+ is a multi-platform toolkit for creating graphical user interfaces. Offering a complete set of widgets GTK+ is suitable for projects ranging from small one-off projects to complete application suites.</entry> | 844 | <entry>docbook-xml-dtd4</entry> |
846 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 845 | |
847 | </row> | 846 | <entry>4.5</entry> |
848 | <row> | 847 | |
849 | <entry>gtk-doc</entry> | 848 | <entry>Document type definitions for verification of XML data |
850 | <entry>1.25</entry> | 849 | files against the DocBook rule set it ships with the latest |
851 | <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of html documentation files from them</entry> | 850 | DocBook 4.5 XML DTD as well as a selected set of legacy DTDs for |
852 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 851 | use with older documents including 4.0 4.1.2 4.2 4.3 and |
853 | </row> | 852 | 4.4</entry> |
854 | <row> | 853 | |
855 | <entry>gtk-icon-utils</entry> | 854 | <entry>OASIS</entry> |
856 | <entry>3.22.8</entry> | 855 | </row> |
857 | <entry>gtk-update-icon-cache and gtk-encode-symbolic-svg built from GTK+ natively for build time and on-host postinst script execution.</entry> | 856 | |
858 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 857 | <row> |
859 | </row> | 858 | <entry>docbook-xsl-stylesheets</entry> |
860 | <row> | 859 | |
861 | <entry>guile</entry> | 860 | <entry>1.79.1</entry> |
862 | <entry>2.0.14</entry> | 861 | |
863 | <entry>Guile is the GNU Ubiquitous Intelligent Language for Extensions the official extension language for the GNU operating system. Guile is a library designed to help programmers create flexible applications. Using Guile in an application allows the application's functionality to be extended by users or other programmers with plug-ins modules or scripts. Guile provides what might be described as 'practical software freedom' making it possible for users to customize an application to meet their needs without digging into the application's internals.</entry> | 862 | <entry>XSL stylesheets for processing DocBook XML to various |
864 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 863 | output formats.</entry> |
865 | </row> | 864 | |
866 | <row> | 865 | <entry></entry> |
867 | <entry>gzip</entry> | 866 | </row> |
868 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 867 | |
869 | <entry>GNU Gzip is a popular data compression program originally written by Jean-loup Gailly for the GNU project. Mark Adler wrote the decompression part</entry> | 868 | <row> |
870 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 869 | <entry>docker</entry> |
871 | </row> | 870 | |
872 | <row> | 871 | <entry>1.13.0</entry> |
873 | <entry>harfbuzz</entry> | 872 | |
874 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | 873 | <entry>Linux container runtime Docker complements kernel |
875 | <entry>HarfBuzz is an OpenType text shaping engine.</entry> | 874 | namespacing with a high-level API which operates at the process |
876 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 875 | level. It runs unix processes with strong guarantees of isolation |
877 | </row> | 876 | and repeatability across servers. . Docker is a great building |
878 | <row> | 877 | block for automating distributed systems: large-scale web |
879 | <entry>hicolor-icon-theme</entry> | 878 | deployments database clusters continuous deployment systems |
880 | <entry>0.15</entry> | 879 | private PaaS service-oriented architectures etc. . This package |
881 | <entry>Default icon theme that all icon themes automatically inherit from.</entry> | 880 | contains the daemon and client. Using docker.io is officially |
882 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 881 | supported on x86_64 and arm (32-bit) hosts. Other architectures |
883 | </row> | 882 | are considered experimental. . Also note that kernel version 3.10 |
884 | <row> | 883 | or above is required for proper operation of the daemon process |
885 | <entry>htop</entry> | 884 | and that any lower versions may have subtle and/or glaring |
886 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> | 885 | issues.</entry> |
887 | <entry>htop process monitor.</entry> | 886 | |
888 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 887 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
889 | </row> | 888 | </row> |
890 | <row> | 889 | |
891 | <entry>icedtea7</entry> | 890 | <row> |
892 | <entry>2.1.3</entry> | 891 | <entry>dosfstools</entry> |
893 | <entry>Harness to build the source code from OpenJDK using Free Software build tools</entry> | 892 | |
894 | <entry> </entry> | 893 | <entry>4.1</entry> |
895 | </row> | 894 | |
896 | <row> | 895 | <entry>DOS FAT Filesystem Utilities.</entry> |
897 | <entry>icu</entry> | 896 | |
898 | <entry>58.2</entry> | 897 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
899 | <entry>The International Component for Unicode (ICU) is a mature portable set of C/C++ and Java libraries for Unicode support software internationalization (I18N) and globalization (G11N) giving applications the same results on all platforms.</entry> | 898 | </row> |
900 | <entry>ICU</entry> | 899 | |
901 | </row> | 900 | <row> |
902 | <row> | 901 | <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> |
903 | <entry>inetlib</entry> | 902 | |
904 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> | 903 | <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry> |
905 | <entry>GNU Classpath inetlib is an extension library to provide extra network protocol support for GNU Classpath and ClasspathX project but it can also used standalone to add http imap pop3 and smtp client support applications. </entry> | 904 | |
906 | <entry> </entry> | 905 | <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> |
907 | </row> | 906 | |
908 | <row> | 907 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
909 | <entry>initscripts</entry> | 908 | </row> |
910 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 909 | |
911 | <entry>Initscripts provide the basic system startup initialization scripts for the system. These scripts include actions such as filesystem mounting fsck RTC manipulation and other actions routinely performed at system startup. In addition the scripts are also used during system shutdown to reverse the actions performed at startup.</entry> | 910 | <row> |
912 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 911 | <entry>dpdk</entry> |
913 | </row> | 912 | |
914 | <row> | 913 | <entry>17.08</entry> |
915 | <entry>inputproto</entry> | 914 | |
916 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> | 915 | <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry> |
917 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input extension. The extension supports input devices other then the core X keyboard and pointer.</entry> | 916 | |
918 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 917 | <entry>BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
919 | </row> | 918 | </row> |
920 | <row> | 919 | |
921 | <entry>intel-microcode</entry> | 920 | <row> |
922 | <entry>20170511</entry> | 921 | <entry>dpkg</entry> |
923 | <entry>The microcode data file contains the latest microcode definitions for all Intel processors. Intel releases microcode updates to correct processor behavior as documented in the respective processor specification updates. While the regular approach to getting this microcode update is via a BIOS upgrade Intel realizes that this can be an administrative hassle. The Linux operating system and VMware ESX products have a mechanism to update the microcode after booting. For example this file will be used by the operating system mechanism if the file is placed in the /etc/firmware directory of the Linux system.</entry> | 922 | |
924 | <entry> </entry> | 923 | <entry>1.18.10</entry> |
925 | </row> | 924 | |
926 | <row> | 925 | <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> |
927 | <entry>intltool</entry> | 926 | |
928 | <entry>0.51.0</entry> | 927 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
929 | <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry> | 928 | </row> |
930 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 929 | |
931 | </row> | 930 | <row> |
932 | <row> | 931 | <entry>dtc</entry> |
933 | <entry>iproute2</entry> | 932 | |
934 | <entry>4.10.0</entry> | 933 | <entry>1.4.2</entry> |
935 | <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP / IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6 configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry> | 934 | |
936 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 935 | <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the |
937 | </row> | 936 | Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> |
938 | <row> | 937 | |
939 | <entry>iptables</entry> | 938 | <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> |
940 | <entry>1.6.1</entry> | 939 | </row> |
941 | <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to configure and control network packet filtering code in Linux.</entry> | 940 | |
942 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 941 | <row> |
943 | </row> | 942 | <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> |
944 | <row> | 943 | |
945 | <entry>iucode-tool</entry> | 944 | <entry>1.43.4</entry> |
946 | <entry>2.1.1</entry> | 945 | |
947 | <entry>iucode_tool is a program to manipulate Intel i686 and X86-64 processor microcode update collections and to use the kernel facilities to update the microcode on Intel system processors. It can load microcode data files in text and binary format sort list and filter the microcode updates contained in these files write selected microcode updates to a new file in binary format or upload them to the kernel. It operates on microcode data downloaded directly from Intel: http://feeds.downloadcenter.intel.com/rss/?p=2371</entry> | 946 | <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of |
948 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 947 | the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and |
949 | </row> | 948 | debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> |
950 | <row> | 949 | |
951 | <entry>jacl</entry> | 950 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> |
952 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | 951 | </row> |
953 | <entry>Tcl interpreter for Java</entry> | 952 | |
954 | <entry> , , , </entry> | 953 | <row> |
955 | </row> | 954 | <entry>ebtables</entry> |
956 | <row> | 955 | |
957 | <entry>jamvm</entry> | 956 | <entry>2.0.10-4</entry> |
958 | <entry>2.0.0-devel</entry> | 957 | |
959 | <entry>A compact Java Virtual Machine which conforms to the JVM specification version 2.</entry> | 958 | <entry>Utility for basic Ethernet frame filtering on a Linux |
960 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 959 | bridge advanced logging MAC DNAT/SNAT and brouting.</entry> |
961 | </row> | 960 | |
962 | <row> | 961 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
963 | <entry>jansson</entry> | 962 | </row> |
964 | <entry>2.9</entry> | 963 | |
965 | <entry>Jansson is a C library for encoding decoding and manipulating JSON data.</entry> | 964 | <row> |
966 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 965 | <entry>ecj-bootstrap</entry> |
967 | </row> | 966 | |
968 | <row> | 967 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
969 | <entry>jaxp1.3</entry> | 968 | |
970 | <entry>1.4.01</entry> | 969 | <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Bootstrap variant</entry> |
971 | <entry>Java XML parser and transformer APIs (DOM SAX JAXP TrAX)</entry> | 970 | |
972 | <entry> Apache-2.0, PD</entry> | 971 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
973 | </row> | 972 | </row> |
974 | <row> | 973 | |
975 | <entry>jdepend</entry> | 974 | <row> |
976 | <entry>2.9.1</entry> | 975 | <entry>ecj-initial</entry> |
977 | <entry>Design quality metrics generator for each Java</entry> | 976 | |
978 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 977 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
979 | </row> | 978 | |
980 | <row> | 979 | <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Bootstrap variant</entry> |
981 | <entry>jikes-initial</entry> | 980 | |
982 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 981 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
983 | <entry>Initial Java 1.4-compatible (and not higher) compiler.</entry> | 982 | </row> |
984 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 983 | |
985 | </row> | 984 | <row> |
986 | <row> | 985 | <entry>elfutils</entry> |
987 | <entry>jikes</entry> | 986 | |
988 | <entry>1.22</entry> | 987 | <entry>0.168</entry> |
989 | <entry>Java compiler adhering to language and VM specifications</entry> | 988 | |
990 | <entry> </entry> | 989 | <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object |
991 | </row> | 990 | files.</entry> |
992 | <row> | 991 | |
993 | <entry>jlex</entry> | 992 | <entry>GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> |
994 | <entry>1.2.6</entry> | 993 | </row> |
995 | <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry> | 994 | |
996 | <entry> </entry> | 995 | <row> |
997 | </row> | 996 | <entry>enea-nfv-access-dev</entry> |
998 | <row> | 997 | |
999 | <entry>jsch</entry> | 998 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
1000 | <entry>0.1.40</entry> | 999 | |
1001 | <entry>SSH implementation in Java</entry> | 1000 | <entry>Image for the host side of the Enea NFV Access |
1002 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1001 | Platform</entry> |
1003 | </row> | 1002 | |
1004 | <row> | 1003 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1005 | <entry>json-c</entry> | 1004 | </row> |
1006 | <entry>0.12</entry> | 1005 | |
1007 | <entry>JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that allows you to easily construct JSON objects in C.</entry> | 1006 | <row> |
1008 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1007 | <entry>expat</entry> |
1009 | </row> | 1008 | |
1010 | <row> | 1009 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> |
1011 | <entry>junit</entry> | 1010 | |
1012 | <entry>3.8.2</entry> | 1011 | <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a |
1013 | <entry>JUnit is a testing framework for Java</entry> | 1012 | stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers |
1014 | <entry> </entry> | 1013 | for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start |
1015 | </row> | 1014 | tags)</entry> |
1016 | <row> | 1015 | |
1017 | <entry>jzlib</entry> | 1016 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1018 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> | 1017 | </row> |
1019 | <entry>zlib implementation in Java</entry> | 1018 | |
1020 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1019 | <row> |
1021 | </row> | 1020 | <entry>fastjar</entry> |
1022 | <row> | 1021 | |
1023 | <entry>kbd</entry> | 1022 | <entry>0.98</entry> |
1024 | <entry>2.0.4</entry> | 1023 | |
1025 | <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry> | 1024 | <entry>jar replacement written in C.</entry> |
1026 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1025 | |
1027 | </row> | 1026 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1028 | <row> | 1027 | </row> |
1029 | <entry>kbproto</entry> | 1028 | |
1030 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> | 1029 | <row> |
1031 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard extension. This extension is used to control options related to keyboard handling and layout.</entry> | 1030 | <entry>file</entry> |
1032 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1031 | |
1033 | </row> | 1032 | <entry>5.30</entry> |
1034 | <row> | 1033 | |
1035 | <entry>kern-tools</entry> | 1034 | <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents |
1036 | <entry>0.2</entry> | 1035 | and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> |
1037 | <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched kernels.</entry> | 1036 | |
1038 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1037 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1039 | </row> | 1038 | </row> |
1040 | <row> | 1039 | |
1041 | <entry>kernel-devsrc</entry> | 1040 | <row> |
1042 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1041 | <entry>findutils</entry> |
1043 | <entry>Development source linux kernel. When built this recipe packages the source of the preferred virtual/kernel provider and makes it available for full kernel development or external module builds</entry> | 1042 | |
1044 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1043 | <entry>4.6.0</entry> |
1045 | </row> | 1044 | |
1046 | <row> | 1045 | <entry>The GNU Find Utilities are the basic directory searching |
1047 | <entry>keymaps</entry> | 1046 | utilities of the GNU operating system. These programs are |
1048 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1047 | typically used in conjunction with other programs to provide |
1049 | <entry>Keymaps and initscript to set the keymap on bootup.</entry> | 1048 | modular and powerful directory search and file locating |
1050 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1049 | capabilities to other commands.</entry> |
1051 | </row> | 1050 | |
1052 | <row> | 1051 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1053 | <entry>kmod</entry> | 1052 | </row> |
1054 | <entry>23</entry> | 1053 | |
1055 | <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve dependencies and aliases.</entry> | 1054 | <row> |
1056 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1055 | <entry>fixesproto</entry> |
1057 | </row> | 1056 | |
1058 | <row> | 1057 | <entry>5.0</entry> |
1059 | <entry>krb5</entry> | 1058 | |
1060 | <entry>1.15.1</entry> | 1059 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Fixes |
1061 | <entry>"Kerberos is a system for authenticating users and services on a network. Kerberos is a trusted third-party service. That means that there is a third party (the Kerberos server) that is trusted by all the entities on the network (users and services usually called ""principals""). . This is the MIT reference implementation of Kerberos V5. . This package contains the Kerberos key server (KDC). The KDC manages all authentication credentials for a Kerberos realm holds the master keys for the realm and responds to authentication requests. This package should be installed on both master and slave KDCs."</entry> | 1060 | extension. This extension is designed to provide server-side |
1062 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1061 | support for application work arounds to shortcomings in the core X |
1063 | </row> | 1062 | window system.</entry> |
1064 | <row> | 1063 | |
1065 | <entry>latencytop</entry> | 1064 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1066 | <entry>0.5</entry> | 1065 | </row> |
1067 | <entry>Linux tool for measuring and fixing latency.</entry> | 1066 | |
1068 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1067 | <row> |
1069 | </row> | 1068 | <entry>flex</entry> |
1070 | <row> | 1069 | |
1071 | <entry>ldconfig</entry> | 1070 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> |
1072 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> | 1071 | |
1073 | <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry> | 1072 | <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool |
1074 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1073 | for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in |
1075 | </row> | 1074 | text.</entry> |
1076 | <row> | 1075 | |
1077 | <entry>less</entry> | 1076 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1078 | <entry>487</entry> | 1077 | </row> |
1079 | <entry>Less is a program similar to more i.e. a terminal based program for viewing text files and the output from other programs. Less offers many features beyond those that more does.</entry> | 1078 | |
1080 | <entry> GPL-3.0, BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 1079 | <row> |
1081 | </row> | 1080 | <entry>fontconfig</entry> |
1082 | <row> | 1081 | |
1083 | <entry>libaio</entry> | 1082 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> |
1084 | <entry>0.3.110</entry> | 1083 | |
1085 | <entry>Asynchronous input/output library that uses the kernels native interface</entry> | 1084 | <entry>Fontconfig is a font configuration and customization |
1086 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1085 | library which does not depend on the X Window System. It is |
1087 | </row> | 1086 | designed to locate fonts within the system and select them |
1088 | <row> | 1087 | according to requirements specified by applications. Fontconfig is |
1089 | <entry>libarchive</entry> | 1088 | not a rasterization library nor does it impose a particular |
1090 | <entry>3.2.2</entry> | 1089 | rasterization library on the application. The X-specific library |
1091 | <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry> | 1090 | 'Xft' uses fontconfig along with freetype to specify and rasterize |
1092 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1091 | fonts.</entry> |
1093 | </row> | 1092 | |
1094 | <row> | 1093 | <entry>MIT, PD</entry> |
1095 | <entry>libatomic-ops</entry> | 1094 | </row> |
1096 | <entry>7.4.4</entry> | 1095 | |
1097 | <entry>A library for atomic integer operations.</entry> | 1096 | <row> |
1098 | <entry> GPL-2.0, MIT</entry> | 1097 | <entry>freetype</entry> |
1099 | </row> | 1098 | |
1100 | <row> | 1099 | <entry>2.7.1</entry> |
1101 | <entry>libbsd</entry> | 1100 | |
1102 | <entry>0.8.3</entry> | 1101 | <entry>FreeType is a software font engine that is designed to be |
1103 | <entry>This library provides useful functions commonly found on BSD systems and lacking on others like GNU systems thus making it easier to port projects with strong BSD origins without needing to embed the same code over and over again on each project.</entry> | 1102 | small efficient highly customizable and portable while capable of |
1104 | <entry> BSD-4-Clause, ISC, PD</entry> | 1103 | producing high-quality output (glyph images). It can be used in |
1105 | </row> | 1104 | graphics libraries display servers font conversion tools text |
1106 | <row> | 1105 | image generation tools and many other products as well.</entry> |
1107 | <entry>libcap</entry> | 1106 | |
1108 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 1107 | <entry>FreeType, GPL-2.0</entry> |
1109 | <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry> | 1108 | </row> |
1110 | <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1109 | |
1111 | </row> | 1110 | <row> |
1112 | <row> | 1111 | <entry>fuse</entry> |
1113 | <entry>libcgroup</entry> | 1112 | |
1114 | <entry>0.41</entry> | 1113 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> |
1115 | <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of processes.</entry> | 1114 | |
1116 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1115 | <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for |
1117 | </row> | 1116 | userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux |
1118 | <row> | 1117 | kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non |
1119 | <entry>libcheck</entry> | 1118 | privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem |
1120 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> | 1119 | implementations.</entry> |
1121 | <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry> | 1120 | |
1122 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1121 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
1123 | </row> | 1122 | </row> |
1124 | <row> | 1123 | |
1125 | <entry>libcroco</entry> | 1124 | <row> |
1126 | <entry>0.6.11</entry> | 1125 | <entry>gawk</entry> |
1127 | <entry>Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) parsing and manipulation toolkit.</entry> | 1126 | |
1128 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1127 | <entry>4.1.4</entry> |
1129 | </row> | 1128 | |
1130 | <row> | 1129 | <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk |
1131 | <entry>libdaemon</entry> | 1130 | interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and |
1132 | <entry>0.14</entry> | 1131 | easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> |
1133 | <entry>Lightweight C library which eases the writing of UNIX daemons.</entry> | 1132 | |
1134 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1133 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1135 | </row> | 1134 | </row> |
1136 | <row> | 1135 | |
1137 | <entry>libdevmapper</entry> | 1136 | <row> |
1138 | <entry>2.02.166</entry> | 1137 | <entry>gcc-cross-initial-x86_64</entry> |
1139 | <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in Linux.</entry> | 1138 | |
1140 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1139 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
1141 | </row> | 1140 | |
1142 | <row> | 1141 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
1143 | <entry>libecj-bootstrap</entry> | 1142 | |
1144 | <entry>3.6.2</entry> | 1143 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
1145 | <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Jar only</entry> | 1144 | </row> |
1146 | <entry>EPL-1.0</entry> | 1145 | |
1147 | </row> | 1146 | <row> |
1148 | <row> | 1147 | <entry>gcc-cross-x86_64</entry> |
1149 | <entry>liberation-fonts</entry> | 1148 | |
1150 | <entry>1.04</entry> | 1149 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
1151 | <entry>The Liberation(tm) Fonts is a font family originally created by Ascender(c) which aims at metric compatibility with Arial Times New Roman Courier New.</entry> | 1150 | |
1152 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1151 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
1153 | </row> | 1152 | |
1154 | <row> | 1153 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
1155 | <entry>libevent</entry> | 1154 | </row> |
1156 | <entry>2.0.22</entry> | 1155 | |
1157 | <entry>An asynchronous event notification library.</entry> | 1156 | <row> |
1158 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1157 | <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> |
1159 | </row> | 1158 | |
1160 | <row> | 1159 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
1161 | <entry>libffi</entry> | 1160 | |
1162 | <entry>3.2.1</entry> | 1161 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
1163 | <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for the interface that allows code written in one language to call code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that handles type conversions for values passed between the two languages.</entry> | 1162 | |
1164 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1163 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
1165 | </row> | 1164 | </row> |
1166 | <row> | 1165 | |
1167 | <entry>libgcc</entry> | 1166 | <row> |
1168 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 1167 | <entry>gcc</entry> |
1169 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 1168 | |
1170 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 1169 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
1171 | </row> | 1170 | |
1172 | <row> | 1171 | <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry> |
1173 | <entry>libgudev</entry> | 1172 | |
1174 | <entry>231</entry> | 1173 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> |
1175 | <entry>GObject wrapper for libudev.</entry> | 1174 | </row> |
1176 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1175 | |
1177 | </row> | 1176 | <row> |
1178 | <row> | 1177 | <entry>gdb</entry> |
1179 | <entry>libice</entry> | 1178 | |
1180 | <entry>1.0.9</entry> | 1179 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> |
1181 | <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up and shutting down connections for performing authentication for negotiating versions and for reporting errors. </entry> | 1180 | |
1182 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1181 | <entry>GNU debugger.</entry> |
1183 | </row> | 1182 | |
1184 | <row> | 1183 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> |
1185 | <entry>libidn</entry> | 1184 | </row> |
1186 | <entry>1.33</entry> | 1185 | |
1187 | <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) working group.</entry> | 1186 | <row> |
1188 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 1187 | <entry>gdbm</entry> |
1189 | </row> | 1188 | |
1190 | <row> | 1189 | <entry>1.12</entry> |
1191 | <entry>libjpeg-turbo</entry> | 1190 | |
1192 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | 1191 | <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> |
1193 | <entry>libjpeg-turbo is a derivative of libjpeg that uses SIMD instructions (MMX SSE2 NEON) to accelerate baseline JPEG compression and decompression</entry> | 1192 | |
1194 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1193 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1195 | </row> | 1194 | </row> |
1196 | <row> | 1195 | |
1197 | <entry>libmpc</entry> | 1196 | <row> |
1198 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> | 1197 | <entry>gdk-pixbuf</entry> |
1199 | <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as Mpfr</entry> | 1198 | |
1200 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | 1199 | <entry>2.36.5</entry> |
1201 | </row> | 1200 | |
1202 | <row> | 1201 | <entry>Image loading library for GTK+.</entry> |
1203 | <entry>libndp</entry> | 1202 | |
1204 | <entry>1.6</entry> | 1203 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> |
1205 | <entry>Library for IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol.</entry> | 1204 | </row> |
1206 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1205 | |
1207 | </row> | 1206 | <row> |
1208 | <row> | 1207 | <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> |
1209 | <entry>libnewt</entry> | 1208 | |
1210 | <entry>0.52.19</entry> | 1209 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> |
1211 | <entry>Newt is a programming library for color text mode widget based user interfaces. Newt can be used to add stacked windows entry widgets checkboxes radio buttons labels plain text fields scrollbars etc. to text mode user interfaces. This package also contains the shared library needed by programs built with newt as well as a /usr/bin/dialog replacement called whiptail. Newt is based on the slang library.</entry> | 1210 | |
1212 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1211 | <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building |
1213 | </row> | 1212 | autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup |
1214 | <row> | 1213 | by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now |
1215 | <entry>libnl</entry> | 1214 | only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> |
1216 | <entry>3.2.29</entry> | 1215 | |
1217 | <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink sockets.</entry> | 1216 | <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> |
1218 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1217 | </row> |
1219 | </row> | 1218 | |
1220 | <row> | 1219 | <row> |
1221 | <entry>libnss-mdns</entry> | 1220 | <entry>gettext</entry> |
1222 | <entry>0.10</entry> | 1221 | |
1223 | <entry>Name Service Switch module for Multicast DNS (zeroconf) name resolution.</entry> | 1222 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> |
1224 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1223 | |
1225 | </row> | 1224 | <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to |
1226 | <row> | 1225 | help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools |
1227 | <entry>libpcap</entry> | 1226 | include a set of conventions about how programs should be written |
1228 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> | 1227 | to support message catalogs a directory and file naming |
1229 | <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection security monitoring and network debugging.</entry> | 1228 | organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library |
1230 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1229 | supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few |
1231 | </row> | 1230 | stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of |
1232 | <row> | 1231 | translatable and already translated strings.</entry> |
1233 | <entry>libpciaccess</entry> | 1232 | |
1234 | <entry>0.13.4</entry> | 1233 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1235 | <entry>libpciaccess provides functionality for X to access the PCI bus and devices in a platform-independent way.</entry> | 1234 | </row> |
1236 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1235 | |
1237 | </row> | 1236 | <row> |
1238 | <row> | 1237 | <entry>giflib</entry> |
1239 | <entry>libpcre</entry> | 1238 | |
1240 | <entry>8.40</entry> | 1239 | <entry>5.1.4</entry> |
1241 | <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular expression API.</entry> | 1240 | |
1242 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1241 | <entry>shared library for GIF images.</entry> |
1243 | </row> | 1242 | |
1244 | <row> | 1243 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1245 | <entry>libpng</entry> | 1244 | </row> |
1246 | <entry>1.6.28</entry> | 1245 | |
1247 | <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry> | 1246 | <row> |
1248 | <entry>Libpng</entry> | 1247 | <entry>git</entry> |
1249 | </row> | 1248 | |
1250 | <row> | 1249 | <entry>2.11.1</entry> |
1251 | <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry> | 1250 | |
1252 | <entry>0.3</entry> | 1251 | <entry>Distributed version control system.</entry> |
1253 | <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry> | 1252 | |
1254 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1253 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1255 | </row> | 1254 | </row> |
1256 | <row> | 1255 | |
1257 | <entry>librsvg</entry> | 1256 | <row> |
1258 | <entry>2.40.16</entry> | 1257 | <entry>glib-2.0</entry> |
1259 | <entry>Library for rendering SVG files.</entry> | 1258 | |
1260 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1259 | <entry>2.50.3</entry> |
1261 | </row> | 1260 | |
1262 | <row> | 1261 | <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides |
1263 | <entry>libsdl</entry> | 1262 | many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities |
1264 | <entry>1.2.15</entry> | 1263 | file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> |
1265 | <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video framebuffer.</entry> | 1264 | |
1266 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1265 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> |
1267 | </row> | 1266 | </row> |
1268 | <row> | 1267 | |
1269 | <entry>libsm</entry> | 1268 | <row> |
1270 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | 1269 | <entry>glibc-locale</entry> |
1271 | <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of clients each of which has a particular state."</entry> | 1270 | |
1272 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1271 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
1273 | </row> | 1272 | |
1274 | <row> | 1273 | <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> |
1275 | <entry>libtasn1</entry> | 1274 | |
1276 | <entry>4.10</entry> | 1275 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1277 | <entry>Library for ASN.1 and DER manipulation.</entry> | 1276 | </row> |
1278 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1277 | |
1279 | </row> | 1278 | <row> |
1280 | <row> | 1279 | <entry>glibc</entry> |
1281 | <entry>libtool</entry> | 1280 | |
1282 | <entry>2.4.6</entry> | 1281 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
1283 | <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script. Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry> | 1282 | |
1284 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1283 | <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most |
1285 | </row> | 1284 | systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> |
1286 | <row> | 1285 | |
1287 | <entry>libunistring</entry> | 1286 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1288 | <entry>0.9.7</entry> | 1287 | </row> |
1289 | <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains documentation.</entry> | 1288 | |
1290 | <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1289 | <row> |
1291 | </row> | 1290 | <entry>gmp</entry> |
1292 | <row> | 1291 | |
1293 | <entry>liburcu</entry> | 1292 | <entry>6.1.2</entry> |
1294 | <entry>0.9.3</entry> | 1293 | |
1295 | <entry>Userspace RCU (read-copy-update) library.</entry> | 1294 | <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic |
1296 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, MIT</entry> | 1295 | operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point |
1297 | </row> | 1296 | numbers</entry> |
1298 | <row> | 1297 | |
1299 | <entry>libusb-compat</entry> | 1298 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> |
1300 | <entry>0.1.5</entry> | 1299 | </row> |
1301 | <entry>libusb-0.1 compatible layer for libusb1 a drop-in replacement that aims to look feel and behave exactly like libusb-0.1</entry> | 1300 | |
1302 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1301 | <row> |
1303 | </row> | 1302 | <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> |
1304 | <row> | 1303 | |
1305 | <entry>libusb1</entry> | 1304 | <entry>2014.1</entry> |
1306 | <entry>1.0.21</entry> | 1305 | |
1307 | <entry>Userspace library to access USB (version 1.0).</entry> | 1306 | <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> |
1308 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1307 | |
1309 | </row> | 1308 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> |
1310 | <row> | 1309 | </row> |
1311 | <entry>libvirt</entry> | 1310 | |
1312 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | 1311 | <row> |
1313 | <entry>A toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities of recent versions of Linux.</entry> | 1312 | <entry>gnome-themes-standard</entry> |
1314 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1313 | |
1315 | </row> | 1314 | <entry>3.22.2</entry> |
1316 | <row> | 1315 | |
1317 | <entry>libx11</entry> | 1316 | <entry>GTK+2 standard themes.</entry> |
1318 | <entry>1.6.4</entry> | 1317 | |
1319 | <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for the basic functions of the window system.</entry> | 1318 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1320 | <entry> MIT, BSD</entry> | 1319 | </row> |
1321 | </row> | 1320 | |
1322 | <row> | 1321 | <row> |
1323 | <entry>libxau</entry> | 1322 | <entry>gnu-config</entry> |
1324 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | 1323 | |
1325 | <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X connections both client-side and server-side.</entry> | 1324 | <entry>20150728</entry> |
1326 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1325 | |
1327 | </row> | 1326 | <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a |
1328 | <row> | 1327 | directory tree</entry> |
1329 | <entry>libxcb</entry> | 1328 | |
1330 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 1329 | <entry></entry> |
1331 | <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading support and extensibility.</entry> | 1330 | </row> |
1332 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1331 | |
1333 | </row> | 1332 | <row> |
1334 | <row> | 1333 | <entry>gnujaf</entry> |
1335 | <entry>libxcomposite</entry> | 1334 | |
1336 | <entry>0.4.4</entry> | 1335 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> |
1337 | <entry>The composite extension provides three related mechanisms: per-hierarchy storage automatic shadow update and external parent. In per-hierarchy storage the rendering of an entire hierarchy of windows is redirected to off-screen storage. In automatic shadow update when a hierarchy is rendered off-screen the X server provides an automatic mechanism for presenting those contents within the parent window. In external parent a mechanism for providing redirection of compositing transformations through a client.</entry> | 1336 | |
1338 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1337 | <entry>Provides a mean to type data and locate components suitable |
1339 | </row> | 1338 | for performing various kinds of action on it.</entry> |
1340 | <row> | 1339 | |
1341 | <entry>libxcursor</entry> | 1340 | <entry></entry> |
1342 | <entry>1.1.14</entry> | 1341 | </row> |
1343 | <entry>Xcursor is a simple library designed to help locate and load cursors. Cursors can be loaded from files or memory. A library of common cursors exists which map to the standard X cursor names. Cursors can exist in several sizes and the library automatically picks the best size.</entry> | 1342 | |
1344 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1343 | <row> |
1345 | </row> | 1344 | <entry>gnumail</entry> |
1346 | <row> | 1345 | |
1347 | <entry>libxdamage</entry> | 1346 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> |
1348 | <entry>1.1.4</entry> | 1347 | |
1349 | <entry>'Damage' is a term that describes changes make to pixel contents of windows and pixmaps. Damage accumulates as drawing occurs in the drawable. Each drawing operation 'damages' one or more rectangular areas within the drawable. The rectangles are guaranteed to include the set of pixels modified by each operation but may include significantly more than just those pixels. The DAMAGE extension allows applications to either receive the raw rectangles as a stream of events or to have them partially processed within the X server to reduce the amount of data transmitted as well as reduce the processing latency once the repaint operation has started.</entry> | 1348 | <entry>GNU's free implementation of the JavaMail API |
1350 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1349 | specification</entry> |
1351 | </row> | 1350 | |
1352 | <row> | 1351 | <entry></entry> |
1353 | <entry>libxdmcp</entry> | 1352 | </row> |
1354 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> | 1353 | |
1355 | <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime example of an autonomous display.</entry> | 1354 | <row> |
1356 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1355 | <entry>gnutls</entry> |
1357 | </row> | 1356 | |
1358 | <row> | 1357 | <entry>3.5.9</entry> |
1359 | <entry>libxext</entry> | 1358 | |
1360 | <entry>1.3.3</entry> | 1359 | <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> |
1361 | <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X protocol extensions.</entry> | 1360 | |
1362 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1361 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1363 | </row> | 1362 | </row> |
1364 | <row> | 1363 | |
1365 | <entry>libxfixes</entry> | 1364 | <row> |
1366 | <entry>5.0.3</entry> | 1365 | <entry>go-bootstrap</entry> |
1367 | <entry>X applications have often needed to work around various shortcomings in the core X window system. This extension is designed to provide the minimal server-side support necessary to eliminate problems caused by these workarounds.</entry> | 1366 | |
1368 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1367 | <entry>1.4.3</entry> |
1369 | </row> | 1368 | |
1370 | <row> | 1369 | <entry>The Go programming language is an open source project to |
1371 | <entry>libxft</entry> | 1370 | make programmers more productive. Go is expressive concise clean |
1372 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> | 1371 | and efficient. Its concurrency mechanisms make it easy to write |
1373 | <entry>Xft was designed to provide good support for scalable fonts and to do so efficiently. Unlike the core fonts system it supports features such as anti-aliasing and sub-pixel rasterisation. Perhaps more importantly it gives applications full control over the way glyphs are rendered making fine typesetting and WYSIWIG display possible. Finally it allows applications to use fonts that are not installed system-wide for displaying documents with embedded fonts. Xft is not compatible with the core fonts system: usage of Xft requires fairly extensive changes to toolkits (user-interface libraries).</entry> | 1372 | programs that get the most out of multicore and networked machines |
1374 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1373 | while its novel type system enables flexible and modular program |
1375 | </row> | 1374 | construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code yet has the |
1376 | <row> | 1375 | convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time |
1377 | <entry>libxi</entry> | 1376 | reflection. It's a fast statically typed compiled language that |
1378 | <entry>1.7.9</entry> | 1377 | feels like a dynamically typed interpreted language.</entry> |
1379 | <entry>libxi is an extension to the X11 protocol to support input devices other than the core X keyboard and pointer. It allows client programs to select input from these devices independently from each other and independently from the core devices.</entry> | 1378 | |
1380 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1379 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
1381 | </row> | 1380 | </row> |
1382 | <row> | 1381 | |
1383 | <entry>libxkbcommon</entry> | 1382 | <row> |
1384 | <entry>0.7.1</entry> | 1383 | <entry>go-capability</entry> |
1385 | <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB specification.</entry> | 1384 | |
1386 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1385 | <entry>0.0</entry> |
1387 | </row> | 1386 | |
1388 | <row> | 1387 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating POSIX capabilities in |
1389 | <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry> | 1388 | Go.</entry> |
1390 | <entry>2.44</entry> | 1389 | |
1391 | <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML documents.</entry> | 1390 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> |
1392 | <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | 1391 | </row> |
1393 | </row> | 1392 | |
1394 | <row> | 1393 | <row> |
1395 | <entry>libxml2</entry> | 1394 | <entry>go-cli</entry> |
1396 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | 1395 | |
1397 | <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2 includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible with Expat.</entry> | 1396 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> |
1398 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1397 | |
1399 | </row> | 1398 | <entry>A small package for building command line apps in |
1400 | <row> | 1399 | Go</entry> |
1401 | <entry>libxrandr</entry> | 1400 | |
1402 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | 1401 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1403 | <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry> | 1402 | </row> |
1404 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1403 | |
1405 | </row> | 1404 | <row> |
1406 | <row> | 1405 | <entry>go-connections</entry> |
1407 | <entry>libxrender</entry> | 1406 | |
1408 | <entry>0.9.10</entry> | 1407 | <entry>0.2.1</entry> |
1409 | <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of them.</entry> | 1408 | |
1410 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1409 | <entry>Utility package to work with network connections</entry> |
1411 | </row> | 1410 | |
1412 | <row> | 1411 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
1413 | <entry>libxslt</entry> | 1412 | </row> |
1414 | <entry>1.1.29</entry> | 1413 | |
1415 | <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry> | 1414 | <row> |
1416 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1415 | <entry>go-context</entry> |
1417 | </row> | 1416 | |
1418 | <row> | 1417 | <entry>git</entry> |
1419 | <entry>libxt</entry> | 1418 | |
1420 | <entry>1.1.5</entry> | 1419 | <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> |
1421 | <entry>The Intrinsics are a programming library tailored to the special requirements of user interface construction within a network window system specifically the X Window System. The Intrinsics and a widget set make up an X Toolkit. The Intrinsics provide the base mechanism necessary to build a wide variety of interoperating widget sets and application environments. The Intrinsics are a layer on top of Xlib the C Library X Interface. They extend the fundamental abstractions provided by the X Window System while still remaining independent of any particular user interface policy or style.</entry> | 1420 | |
1422 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1421 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
1423 | </row> | 1422 | </row> |
1424 | <row> | 1423 | |
1425 | <entry>libxtst</entry> | 1424 | <row> |
1426 | <entry>1.2.3</entry> | 1425 | <entry>go-cross-x86_64</entry> |
1427 | <entry>This extension is a minimal set of client and server extensions required to completely test the X11 server with no user intervention.</entry> | 1426 | |
1428 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1427 | <entry>1.8</entry> |
1429 | </row> | 1428 | |
1430 | <row> | 1429 | <entry>The Go programming language is an open source project to |
1431 | <entry>linux-intel-dev</entry> | 1430 | make programmers more productive. Go is expressive concise clean |
1432 | <entry>4.9.47</entry> | 1431 | and efficient. Its concurrency mechanisms make it easy to write |
1433 | <entry>Linux kernel.</entry> | 1432 | programs that get the most out of multicore and networked machines |
1434 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1433 | while its novel type system enables flexible and modular program |
1435 | </row> | 1434 | construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code yet has the |
1436 | <row> | 1435 | convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time |
1437 | <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry> | 1436 | reflection. It's a fast statically typed compiled language that |
1438 | <entry>4.10</entry> | 1437 | feels like a dynamically typed interpreted language.</entry> |
1439 | <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's use.</entry> | 1438 | |
1440 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1439 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
1441 | </row> | 1440 | </row> |
1442 | <row> | 1441 | |
1443 | <entry>log4j1.2</entry> | 1442 | <row> |
1444 | <entry>1.2.17</entry> | 1443 | <entry>go-dbus</entry> |
1445 | <entry>Java library to help the programmer output log statements to a variety of output targets</entry> | 1444 | |
1446 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1445 | <entry>4.0.0</entry> |
1447 | </row> | 1446 | |
1448 | <row> | 1447 | <entry>Native Go bindings for D-Bus</entry> |
1449 | <entry>logkit</entry> | 1448 | |
1450 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | 1449 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> |
1451 | <entry>Logging toolkit designed for secure performance orientated logging in Java applications</entry> | 1450 | </row> |
1452 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1451 | |
1453 | </row> | 1452 | <row> |
1454 | <row> | 1453 | <entry>go-distribution</entry> |
1455 | <entry>lsb</entry> | 1454 | |
1456 | <entry>4.1</entry> | 1455 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> |
1457 | <entry>LSB support for OpenEmbedded.</entry> | 1456 | |
1458 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1457 | <entry>The Docker toolset to pack ship store and deliver |
1459 | </row> | 1458 | content</entry> |
1460 | <row> | 1459 | |
1461 | <entry>lsbinitscripts</entry> | 1460 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
1462 | <entry>9.68</entry> | 1461 | </row> |
1463 | <entry>SysV init scripts which are only used in an LSB image.</entry> | 1462 | |
1464 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1463 | <row> |
1465 | </row> | 1464 | <entry>go-fsnotify</entry> |
1466 | <row> | 1465 | |
1467 | <entry>lttng-modules</entry> | 1466 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> |
1468 | <entry>2.9.1</entry> | 1467 | |
1469 | <entry>The lttng-modules 2.0 package contains the kernel tracer modules</entry> | 1468 | <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> |
1470 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0, MIT</entry> | 1469 | |
1471 | </row> | 1470 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
1472 | <row> | 1471 | </row> |
1473 | <entry>lttng-tools</entry> | 1472 | |
1474 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | 1473 | <row> |
1475 | <entry>The Linux trace toolkit is a suite of tools designed to extract program execution details from the Linux operating system and interpret them.</entry> | 1474 | <entry>go-libtrust</entry> |
1476 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1475 | |
1477 | </row> | 1476 | <entry>0.0</entry> |
1478 | <row> | 1477 | |
1479 | <entry>lttng-ust</entry> | 1478 | <entry>Primitives for identity and authorization</entry> |
1480 | <entry>2.9.0</entry> | 1479 | |
1481 | <entry>The LTTng UST 2.x package contains the userspace tracer library to trace userspace codes.</entry> | 1480 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
1482 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1481 | </row> |
1483 | </row> | 1482 | |
1484 | <row> | 1483 | <row> |
1485 | <entry>lvm2</entry> | 1484 | <entry>go-logrus</entry> |
1486 | <entry>2.02.166</entry> | 1485 | |
1487 | <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in Linux.</entry> | 1486 | <entry>0.11.0</entry> |
1488 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1487 | |
1489 | </row> | 1488 | <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> |
1490 | <row> | 1489 | |
1491 | <entry>lxc</entry> | 1490 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1492 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> | 1491 | </row> |
1493 | <entry>lxc aims to use these new functionnalities to provide an userspace container object</entry> | 1492 | |
1494 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1493 | <row> |
1495 | </row> | 1494 | <entry>go-mux</entry> |
1496 | <row> | 1495 | |
1497 | <entry>lxd</entry> | 1496 | <entry>git</entry> |
1498 | <entry>git</entry> | 1497 | |
1499 | <entry>"LXD is a container ""hypervisor"" and a new user experience for LXC Specifically it's made of three components: - A system-wide daemon (lxd) - A command line client (lxc) - An OpenStack Nova plugin (nova-compute-lxd)"</entry> | 1498 | <entry>A powerful URL router and dispatcher for golang.</entry> |
1500 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1499 | |
1501 | </row> | 1500 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
1502 | <row> | 1501 | </row> |
1503 | <entry>lz4</entry> | 1502 | |
1504 | <entry>131</entry> | 1503 | <row> |
1505 | <entry>LZ4 is a very fast lossless compression algorithm providing compression speed at 400 MB/s per core scalable with multi-cores CPU. It also features an extremely fast decoder with speed in multiple GB/s per core typically reaching RAM speed limits on multi-core systems.</entry> | 1504 | <entry>go-patricia</entry> |
1506 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1505 | |
1507 | </row> | 1506 | <entry>2.2.6</entry> |
1508 | <row> | 1507 | |
1509 | <entry>lzo</entry> | 1508 | <entry>A generic patricia trie (also called radix tree) |
1510 | <entry>2.09</entry> | 1509 | implemented in Go (Golang)</entry> |
1511 | <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry> | 1510 | |
1512 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1511 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1513 | </row> | 1512 | </row> |
1514 | <row> | 1513 | |
1515 | <entry>lzop</entry> | 1514 | <row> |
1516 | <entry>1.03</entry> | 1515 | <entry>go-pty</entry> |
1517 | <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher compression and decompression speed at the cost of some \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry> | 1516 | |
1518 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1517 | <entry>git</entry> |
1519 | </row> | 1518 | |
1520 | <row> | 1519 | <entry>PTY interface for Go</entry> |
1521 | <entry>m4</entry> | 1520 | |
1522 | <entry>1.4.18</entry> | 1521 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1523 | <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry> | 1522 | </row> |
1524 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1523 | |
1525 | </row> | 1524 | <row> |
1526 | <row> | 1525 | <entry>go-systemd</entry> |
1527 | <entry>make</entry> | 1526 | |
1528 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 1527 | <entry>4</entry> |
1529 | <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables and other non-source files of a program from the program's source files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files and how to compute it from other files.</entry> | 1528 | |
1530 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1529 | <entry>Go bindings to systemd socket activation journal D-Bus and |
1531 | </row> | 1530 | unit files</entry> |
1532 | <row> | 1531 | |
1533 | <entry>makedepend</entry> | 1532 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
1534 | <entry>1.0.5</entry> | 1533 | </row> |
1535 | <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can reference files having other #include directives and parsing will occur in these files as well.</entry> | 1534 | |
1536 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1535 | <row> |
1537 | </row> | 1536 | <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> |
1538 | <row> | 1537 | |
1539 | <entry>makedevs</entry> | 1538 | <entry>1.50.0</entry> |
1540 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> | 1539 | |
1541 | <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry> | 1540 | <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and |
1542 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1541 | language bindings.</entry> |
1543 | </row> | 1542 | |
1544 | <row> | 1543 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
1545 | <entry>man</entry> | 1544 | </row> |
1546 | <entry>1.6g</entry> | 1545 | |
1547 | <entry>A set of documentation tools: man apropos and whatis</entry> | 1546 | <row> |
1548 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1547 | <entry>gperf</entry> |
1549 | </row> | 1548 | |
1550 | <row> | 1549 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> |
1551 | <entry>mklibs</entry> | 1550 | |
1552 | <entry>0.1.43</entry> | 1551 | <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> |
1553 | <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry> | 1552 | |
1554 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1553 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1555 | </row> | 1554 | </row> |
1556 | <row> | 1555 | |
1557 | <entry>mozjs</entry> | 1556 | <row> |
1558 | <entry>17.0.0</entry> | 1557 | <entry>grep</entry> |
1559 | <entry>SpiderMonkey is Mozilla's JavaScript engine written in C/C++.</entry> | 1558 | |
1560 | <entry>MPL-2.0</entry> | 1559 | <entry>3.0</entry> |
1561 | </row> | 1560 | |
1562 | <row> | 1561 | <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> |
1563 | <entry>mpfr</entry> | 1562 | |
1564 | <entry>3.1.5</entry> | 1563 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1565 | <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point computations with exact rounding.</entry> | 1564 | </row> |
1566 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 1565 | |
1567 | </row> | 1566 | <row> |
1568 | <row> | 1567 | <entry>groff</entry> |
1569 | <entry>mtools</entry> | 1568 | |
1570 | <entry>4.0.18</entry> | 1569 | <entry>1.22.3</entry> |
1571 | <entry>Mtools is a collection of utilities to access MS-DOS disks from GNU and Unix without mounting them.</entry> | 1570 | |
1572 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1571 | <entry>The groff (GNU troff) software is a typesetting package |
1573 | </row> | 1572 | which reads plain text mixed with formatting commands and produces |
1574 | <row> | 1573 | formatted output.</entry> |
1575 | <entry>nasm</entry> | 1574 | |
1576 | <entry>2.12.02</entry> | 1575 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1577 | <entry>General-purpose x86 assembler.</entry> | 1576 | </row> |
1578 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 1577 | |
1579 | </row> | 1578 | <row> |
1580 | <row> | 1579 | <entry>grpc-go</entry> |
1581 | <entry>ncurses</entry> | 1580 | |
1582 | <entry>6.0</entry> | 1581 | <entry>1.4.0</entry> |
1583 | <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using the gpm library.</entry> | 1582 | |
1584 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1583 | <entry>The Go language implementation of gRPC. HTTP/2 based |
1585 | </row> | 1584 | RPC</entry> |
1586 | <row> | 1585 | |
1587 | <entry>net-snmp</entry> | 1586 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1588 | <entry>5.7.3</entry> | 1587 | </row> |
1589 | <entry>Various tools relating to the Simple Network Management Protocol.</entry> | 1588 | |
1590 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1589 | <row> |
1591 | </row> | 1590 | <entry>grub-efi</entry> |
1592 | <row> | 1591 | |
1593 | <entry>netbase</entry> | 1592 | <entry>2.00</entry> |
1594 | <entry>5.4</entry> | 1593 | |
1595 | <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for basic TCP/IP based networking</entry> | 1594 | <entry>GRUB2 is the next generaion of a GPLed bootloader intended |
1596 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1595 | to unify bootloading across x86 operating systems. In addition to |
1597 | </row> | 1596 | loading the Linux kernel it implements the Multiboot standard |
1598 | <row> | 1597 | which allows for flexible loading of multiple boot images.</entry> |
1599 | <entry>netcat-openbsd</entry> | 1598 | |
1600 | <entry>1.105</entry> | 1599 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1601 | <entry>A simple Unix utility which reads and writes data across network connections using TCP or UDP protocol. It is designed to be a reliable 'back-end' tool that can be used directly or easily driven by other programs and scripts. At the same time it is a feature-rich network debugging and exploration tool since it can create almost any kind of connection you would need and has several interesting built-in capabilities.</entry> | 1600 | </row> |
1602 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1601 | |
1603 | </row> | 1602 | <row> |
1604 | <row> | 1603 | <entry>gtk+</entry> |
1605 | <entry>nettle</entry> | 1604 | |
1606 | <entry>3.3</entry> | 1605 | <entry>2.24.31</entry> |
1607 | <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry> | 1606 | |
1608 | <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1607 | <entry>GTK+ is a multi-platform toolkit for creating graphical |
1609 | </row> | 1608 | user interfaces. Offering a complete set of widgets GTK+ is |
1610 | <row> | 1609 | suitable for projects ranging from small one-off projects to |
1611 | <entry>networkmanager</entry> | 1610 | complete application suites.</entry> |
1612 | <entry>1.4.4</entry> | 1611 | |
1613 | <entry>NetworkManager.</entry> | 1612 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1614 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1613 | </row> |
1615 | </row> | 1614 | |
1616 | <row> | 1615 | <row> |
1617 | <entry>notary</entry> | 1616 | <entry>gtk-doc</entry> |
1618 | <entry>0.4.2</entry> | 1617 | |
1619 | <entry>Notary is a Docker project that allows anyone to have trust over arbitrary collections of data</entry> | 1618 | <entry>1.25</entry> |
1620 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1619 | |
1621 | </row> | 1620 | <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially |
1622 | <row> | 1621 | formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of |
1623 | <entry>nspr</entry> | 1622 | html documentation files from them</entry> |
1624 | <entry>4.13.1</entry> | 1623 | |
1625 | <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry> | 1624 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1626 | <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1625 | </row> |
1627 | </row> | 1626 | |
1628 | <row> | 1627 | <row> |
1629 | <entry>nss</entry> | 1628 | <entry>gtk-icon-utils</entry> |
1630 | <entry>3.28.1</entry> | 1629 | |
1631 | <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry> | 1630 | <entry>3.22.8</entry> |
1632 | <entry> MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1631 | |
1633 | </row> | 1632 | <entry>gtk-update-icon-cache and gtk-encode-symbolic-svg built |
1634 | <row> | 1633 | from GTK+ natively for build time and on-host postinst script |
1635 | <entry>ntp</entry> | 1634 | execution.</entry> |
1636 | <entry>4.2.8p10</entry> | 1635 | |
1637 | <entry>The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is used to synchronize the time of a computer client or server to another server or reference time source such as a radio or satellite receiver or modem.</entry> | 1636 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1638 | <entry>NTP</entry> | 1637 | </row> |
1639 | </row> | 1638 | |
1640 | <row> | 1639 | <row> |
1641 | <entry>numactl</entry> | 1640 | <entry>guile</entry> |
1642 | <entry>2.0.11</entry> | 1641 | |
1643 | <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in applications.</entry> | 1642 | <entry>2.0.14</entry> |
1644 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1643 | |
1645 | </row> | 1644 | <entry>Guile is the GNU Ubiquitous Intelligent Language for |
1646 | <row> | 1645 | Extensions the official extension language for the GNU operating |
1647 | <entry>openjdk-8</entry> | 1646 | system. Guile is a library designed to help programmers create |
1648 | <entry>102b14</entry> | 1647 | flexible applications. Using Guile in an application allows the |
1649 | <entry>Java runtime based upon the OpenJDK Project</entry> | 1648 | application's functionality to be extended by users or other |
1650 | <entry> </entry> | 1649 | programmers with plug-ins modules or scripts. Guile provides what |
1651 | </row> | 1650 | might be described as 'practical software freedom' making it |
1652 | <row> | 1651 | possible for users to customize an application to meet their needs |
1653 | <entry>openjre-8</entry> | 1652 | without digging into the application's internals.</entry> |
1654 | <entry>102b14</entry> | 1653 | |
1655 | <entry>Java runtime based upon the OpenJDK Project</entry> | 1654 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1656 | <entry> </entry> | 1655 | </row> |
1657 | </row> | 1656 | |
1658 | <row> | 1657 | <row> |
1659 | <entry>openssh</entry> | 1658 | <entry>gzip</entry> |
1660 | <entry>7.4p1</entry> | 1659 | |
1661 | <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry> | 1660 | <entry>1.8</entry> |
1662 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1661 | |
1663 | </row> | 1662 | <entry>GNU Gzip is a popular data compression program originally |
1664 | <row> | 1663 | written by Jean-loup Gailly for the GNU project. Mark Adler wrote |
1665 | <entry>openssl</entry> | 1664 | the decompression part</entry> |
1666 | <entry>1.0.2k</entry> | 1665 | |
1667 | <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic tools.</entry> | 1666 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1668 | <entry>OpenSSL</entry> | 1667 | </row> |
1669 | </row> | 1668 | |
1670 | <row> | 1669 | <row> |
1671 | <entry>openvswitch</entry> | 1670 | <entry>harfbuzz</entry> |
1672 | <entry>2.8.1</entry> | 1671 | |
1673 | <entry> Open vSwitch is a production quality multilayer virtual switch licensed under the open source Apache 2.0 license. It is designed to enable massive network automation through programmatic extension while still supporting standard management interfaces and protocols (e.g. NetFlow sFlow SPAN RSPAN CLI LACP 802.1ag) </entry> | 1672 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> |
1674 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1673 | |
1675 | </row> | 1674 | <entry>HarfBuzz is an OpenType text shaping engine.</entry> |
1676 | <row> | 1675 | |
1677 | <entry>opkg-utils</entry> | 1676 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1678 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | 1677 | </row> |
1679 | <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry> | 1678 | |
1680 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1679 | <row> |
1681 | </row> | 1680 | <entry>hicolor-icon-theme</entry> |
1682 | <row> | 1681 | |
1683 | <entry>oprofile</entry> | 1682 | <entry>0.15</entry> |
1684 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | 1683 | |
1685 | <entry>OProfile is a system-wide profiler for Linux systems capable of profiling all running code at low overhead.</entry> | 1684 | <entry>Default icon theme that all icon themes automatically |
1686 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1685 | inherit from.</entry> |
1687 | </row> | 1686 | |
1688 | <row> | 1687 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1689 | <entry>oro</entry> | 1688 | </row> |
1690 | <entry>2.0.8</entry> | 1689 | |
1691 | <entry>Perl5-compatible regular expressions library for Java</entry> | 1690 | <row> |
1692 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1691 | <entry>htop</entry> |
1693 | </row> | 1692 | |
1694 | <row> | 1693 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> |
1695 | <entry>os-release</entry> | 1694 | |
1696 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1695 | <entry>htop process monitor.</entry> |
1697 | <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system identification data.</entry> | 1696 | |
1698 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1697 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1699 | </row> | 1698 | </row> |
1700 | <row> | 1699 | |
1701 | <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry> | 1700 | <row> |
1702 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1701 | <entry>icedtea7</entry> |
1703 | <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the system</entry> | 1702 | |
1704 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1703 | <entry>2.1.3</entry> |
1705 | </row> | 1704 | |
1706 | <row> | 1705 | <entry>Harness to build the source code from OpenJDK using Free |
1707 | <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry> | 1706 | Software build tools</entry> |
1708 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1707 | |
1709 | <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry> | 1708 | <entry></entry> |
1710 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1709 | </row> |
1711 | </row> | 1710 | |
1712 | <row> | 1711 | <row> |
1713 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-docker</entry> | 1712 | <entry>icu</entry> |
1714 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1713 | |
1715 | <entry>Packagegroup for Docker.</entry> | 1714 | <entry>58.2</entry> |
1716 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1715 | |
1717 | </row> | 1716 | <entry>The International Component for Unicode (ICU) is a mature |
1718 | <row> | 1717 | portable set of C/C++ and Java libraries for Unicode support |
1719 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry> | 1718 | software internationalization (I18N) and globalization (G11N) |
1720 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1719 | giving applications the same results on all platforms.</entry> |
1721 | <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry> | 1720 | |
1722 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1721 | <entry>ICU</entry> |
1723 | </row> | 1722 | </row> |
1724 | <row> | 1723 | |
1725 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-element-odm</entry> | 1724 | <row> |
1726 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1725 | <entry>inetlib</entry> |
1727 | <entry>Packagegroup for Element ODM.</entry> | 1726 | |
1728 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1727 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> |
1729 | </row> | 1728 | |
1730 | <row> | 1729 | <entry>GNU Classpath inetlib is an extension library to provide |
1731 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-host</entry> | 1730 | extra network protocol support for GNU Classpath and ClasspathX |
1732 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1731 | project but it can also used standalone to add http imap pop3 and |
1733 | <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups specific to the host side of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry> | 1732 | smtp client support applications.</entry> |
1734 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1733 | |
1735 | </row> | 1734 | <entry></entry> |
1736 | <row> | 1735 | </row> |
1737 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-libvirt</entry> | 1736 | |
1738 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1737 | <row> |
1739 | <entry>Package group for libvirt.</entry> | 1738 | <entry>initscripts</entry> |
1740 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1739 | |
1741 | </row> | 1740 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
1742 | <row> | 1741 | |
1743 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxc</entry> | 1742 | <entry>Initscripts provide the basic system startup initialization |
1744 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1743 | scripts for the system. These scripts include actions such as |
1745 | <entry>Packagegroup for LXC.</entry> | 1744 | filesystem mounting fsck RTC manipulation and other actions |
1746 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1745 | routinely performed at system startup. In addition the scripts are |
1747 | </row> | 1746 | also used during system shutdown to reverse the actions performed |
1748 | <row> | 1747 | at startup.</entry> |
1749 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxd</entry> | 1748 | |
1750 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1749 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1751 | <entry>Packagegroup for LXD.</entry> | 1750 | </row> |
1752 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1751 | |
1753 | </row> | 1752 | <row> |
1754 | <row> | 1753 | <entry>inputproto</entry> |
1755 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-ovs</entry> | 1754 | |
1756 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1755 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> |
1757 | <entry>Packagegroup for Open vSwitch.</entry> | 1756 | |
1758 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1757 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input |
1759 | </row> | 1758 | extension. The extension supports input devices other then the |
1760 | <row> | 1759 | core X keyboard and pointer.</entry> |
1761 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-qemu</entry> | 1760 | |
1762 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1761 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1763 | <entry>Packagegroup for QEMU.</entry> | 1762 | </row> |
1764 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1763 | |
1765 | </row> | 1764 | <row> |
1766 | <row> | 1765 | <entry>intel-microcode</entry> |
1767 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-tools</entry> | 1766 | |
1768 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1767 | <entry>20170511</entry> |
1769 | <entry>Enea Linux debugging tools.</entry> | 1768 | |
1770 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1769 | <entry>The microcode data file contains the latest microcode |
1771 | </row> | 1770 | definitions for all Intel processors. Intel releases microcode |
1772 | <row> | 1771 | updates to correct processor behavior as documented in the |
1773 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry> | 1772 | respective processor specification updates. While the regular |
1774 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1773 | approach to getting this microcode update is via a BIOS upgrade |
1775 | <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry> | 1774 | Intel realizes that this can be an administrative hassle. The |
1776 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1775 | Linux operating system and VMware ESX products have a mechanism to |
1777 | </row> | 1776 | update the microcode after booting. For example this file will be |
1778 | <row> | 1777 | used by the operating system mechanism if the file is placed in |
1779 | <entry>pango</entry> | 1778 | the /etc/firmware directory of the Linux system.</entry> |
1780 | <entry>1.40.3</entry> | 1779 | |
1781 | <entry>Pango is a library for laying out and rendering of text with an emphasis on internationalization. Pango can be used anywhere that text layout is needed though most of the work on Pango so far has been done in the context of the GTK+ widget toolkit. Pango forms the core of text and font handling for GTK+-2.x.</entry> | 1780 | <entry></entry> |
1782 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1781 | </row> |
1783 | </row> | 1782 | |
1784 | <row> | 1783 | <row> |
1785 | <entry>parted</entry> | 1784 | <entry>intltool</entry> |
1786 | <entry>3.2</entry> | 1785 | |
1787 | <entry>Disk partition editing/resizing utility.</entry> | 1786 | <entry>0.51.0</entry> |
1788 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1787 | |
1789 | </row> | 1788 | <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry> |
1790 | <row> | 1789 | |
1791 | <entry>partrt</entry> | 1790 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1792 | <entry>1.1</entry> | 1791 | </row> |
1793 | <entry>partrt is a tool for dividing a SMP Linux system into a real time domain and a non-real time domain.</entry> | 1792 | |
1794 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1793 | <row> |
1795 | </row> | 1794 | <entry>iproute2</entry> |
1796 | <row> | 1795 | |
1797 | <entry>pciutils</entry> | 1796 | <entry>4.10.0</entry> |
1798 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | 1797 | |
1799 | <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based on this library.</entry> | 1798 | <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP / |
1800 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1799 | IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip |
1801 | </row> | 1800 | and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6 |
1802 | <row> | 1801 | configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry> |
1803 | <entry>perf</entry> | 1802 | |
1804 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1803 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1805 | <entry>Performance counters for Linux are a new kernel-based subsystem that provide a framework for all things performance analysis. It covers hardware level (CPU/PMU Performance Monitoring Unit) features and software features (software counters tracepoints) as well.</entry> | 1804 | </row> |
1806 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1805 | |
1807 | </row> | 1806 | <row> |
1808 | <row> | 1807 | <entry>iptables</entry> |
1809 | <entry>perl</entry> | 1808 | |
1810 | <entry>5.24.1</entry> | 1809 | <entry>1.6.1</entry> |
1811 | <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry> | 1810 | |
1812 | <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | 1811 | <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to |
1813 | </row> | 1812 | configure and control network packet filtering code in |
1814 | <row> | 1813 | Linux.</entry> |
1815 | <entry>pigz</entry> | 1814 | |
1816 | <entry>2.3.4</entry> | 1815 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1817 | <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data. pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread libraries.</entry> | 1816 | </row> |
1818 | <entry> Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry> | 1817 | |
1819 | </row> | 1818 | <row> |
1820 | <row> | 1819 | <entry>iucode-tool</entry> |
1821 | <entry>pixman</entry> | 1820 | |
1822 | <entry>0.34.0</entry> | 1821 | <entry>2.1.1</entry> |
1823 | <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions -- a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry> | 1822 | |
1824 | <entry> MIT, PD</entry> | 1823 | <entry>iucode_tool is a program to manipulate Intel i686 and |
1825 | </row> | 1824 | X86-64 processor microcode update collections and to use the |
1826 | <row> | 1825 | kernel facilities to update the microcode on Intel system |
1827 | <entry>pkgconfig</entry> | 1826 | processors. It can load microcode data files in text and binary |
1828 | <entry>0.29.1</entry> | 1827 | format sort list and filter the microcode updates contained in |
1829 | <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry> | 1828 | these files write selected microcode updates to a new file in |
1830 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1829 | binary format or upload them to the kernel. It operates on |
1831 | </row> | 1830 | microcode data downloaded directly from Intel: |
1832 | <row> | 1831 | http://feeds.downloadcenter.intel.com/rss/?p=2371</entry> |
1833 | <entry>pm-utils</entry> | 1832 | |
1834 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | 1833 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1835 | <entry>Simple shell command line tools to suspend and hibernate.</entry> | 1834 | </row> |
1836 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1835 | |
1837 | </row> | 1836 | <row> |
1838 | <row> | 1837 | <entry>jacl</entry> |
1839 | <entry>polkit</entry> | 1838 | |
1840 | <entry>0.113</entry> | 1839 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> |
1841 | <entry>The polkit package is an application-level toolkit for defining and handling the policy that allows unprivileged processes to speak to privileged processes.</entry> | 1840 | |
1842 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1841 | <entry>Tcl interpreter for Java</entry> |
1843 | </row> | 1842 | |
1844 | <row> | 1843 | <entry>, , ,</entry> |
1845 | <entry>popt</entry> | 1844 | </row> |
1846 | <entry>1.16</entry> | 1845 | |
1847 | <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry> | 1846 | <row> |
1848 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1847 | <entry>jamvm</entry> |
1849 | </row> | 1848 | |
1850 | <row> | 1849 | <entry>2.0.0-devel</entry> |
1851 | <entry>pps-tools</entry> | 1850 | |
1852 | <entry>0.0.0</entry> | 1851 | <entry>A compact Java Virtual Machine which conforms to the JVM |
1853 | <entry>User-space tools for LinuxPPS.</entry> | 1852 | specification version 2.</entry> |
1854 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1853 | |
1855 | </row> | 1854 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1856 | <row> | 1855 | </row> |
1857 | <entry>prelink</entry> | 1856 | |
1858 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1857 | <row> |
1859 | <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up faster.</entry> | 1858 | <entry>jansson</entry> |
1860 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1859 | |
1861 | </row> | 1860 | <entry>2.9</entry> |
1862 | <row> | 1861 | |
1863 | <entry>procps</entry> | 1862 | <entry>Jansson is a C library for encoding decoding and |
1864 | <entry>3.3.12</entry> | 1863 | manipulating JSON data.</entry> |
1865 | <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and skill.</entry> | 1864 | |
1866 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1865 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1867 | </row> | 1866 | </row> |
1868 | <row> | 1867 | |
1869 | <entry>pseudo</entry> | 1868 | <row> |
1870 | <entry>1.8.2</entry> | 1869 | <entry>jaxp1.3</entry> |
1871 | <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal user.</entry> | 1870 | |
1872 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1871 | <entry>1.4.01</entry> |
1873 | </row> | 1872 | |
1874 | <row> | 1873 | <entry>Java XML parser and transformer APIs (DOM SAX JAXP |
1875 | <entry>ptest-runner</entry> | 1874 | TrAX)</entry> |
1876 | <entry>2.0.2</entry> | 1875 | |
1877 | <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them in sequence.</entry> | 1876 | <entry>Apache-2.0, PD</entry> |
1878 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1877 | </row> |
1879 | </row> | 1878 | |
1880 | <row> | 1879 | <row> |
1881 | <entry>python-futures</entry> | 1880 | <entry>jdepend</entry> |
1882 | <entry>3.0.5</entry> | 1881 | |
1883 | <entry>The concurrent.futures module provides a high-level interface for asynchronously executing callables.</entry> | 1882 | <entry>2.9.1</entry> |
1884 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1883 | |
1885 | </row> | 1884 | <entry>Design quality metrics generator for each Java</entry> |
1886 | <row> | 1885 | |
1887 | <entry>python-netaddr</entry> | 1886 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1888 | <entry>0.7.19</entry> | 1887 | </row> |
1889 | <entry>A network address manipulation library for Python..</entry> | 1888 | |
1890 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1889 | <row> |
1891 | </row> | 1890 | <entry>jikes-initial</entry> |
1892 | <row> | 1891 | |
1893 | <entry>python-netifaces</entry> | 1892 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
1894 | <entry>0.10.6</entry> | 1893 | |
1895 | <entry>Portable network interface information..</entry> | 1894 | <entry>Initial Java 1.4-compatible (and not higher) |
1896 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1895 | compiler.</entry> |
1897 | </row> | 1896 | |
1898 | <row> | 1897 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1899 | <entry>python-pip</entry> | 1898 | </row> |
1900 | <entry>9.0.1</entry> | 1899 | |
1901 | <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python packages.</entry> | 1900 | <row> |
1902 | <entry> MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1901 | <entry>jikes</entry> |
1903 | </row> | 1902 | |
1904 | <row> | 1903 | <entry>1.22</entry> |
1905 | <entry>python-psutil</entry> | 1904 | |
1906 | <entry>5.2.0</entry> | 1905 | <entry>Java compiler adhering to language and VM |
1907 | <entry>A cross-platform process and system utilities module for Python.</entry> | 1906 | specifications</entry> |
1908 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1907 | |
1909 | </row> | 1908 | <entry></entry> |
1910 | <row> | 1909 | </row> |
1911 | <entry>python-setuptools</entry> | 1910 | |
1912 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | 1911 | <row> |
1913 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python packages.</entry> | 1912 | <entry>jlex</entry> |
1914 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1913 | |
1915 | </row> | 1914 | <entry>1.2.6</entry> |
1916 | <row> | 1915 | |
1917 | <entry>python-six</entry> | 1916 | <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry> |
1918 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | 1917 | |
1919 | <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities</entry> | 1918 | <entry></entry> |
1920 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1919 | </row> |
1921 | </row> | 1920 | |
1922 | <row> | 1921 | <row> |
1923 | <entry>python-twisted</entry> | 1922 | <entry>jsch</entry> |
1924 | <entry>13.2.0</entry> | 1923 | |
1925 | <entry>Twisted is an event-driven networking framework written in Python and licensed under the LGPL. Twisted supports TCP UDP SSL/TLS multicast Unix sockets a large number of protocols (including HTTP NNTP IMAP SSH IRC FTP and others) and much more.</entry> | 1924 | <entry>0.1.40</entry> |
1926 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1925 | |
1927 | </row> | 1926 | <entry>SSH implementation in Java</entry> |
1928 | <row> | 1927 | |
1929 | <entry>python-zopeinterface</entry> | 1928 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1930 | <entry>4.3.3</entry> | 1929 | </row> |
1931 | <entry>Interface definitions for Zope products.</entry> | 1930 | |
1932 | <entry> </entry> | 1931 | <row> |
1933 | </row> | 1932 | <entry>json-c</entry> |
1934 | <row> | 1933 | |
1935 | <entry>python</entry> | 1934 | <entry>0.12</entry> |
1936 | <entry>2.7.13</entry> | 1935 | |
1937 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | 1936 | <entry>JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that |
1938 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 1937 | allows you to easily construct JSON objects in C.</entry> |
1939 | </row> | 1938 | |
1940 | <row> | 1939 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1941 | <entry>python3-setuptools</entry> | 1940 | </row> |
1942 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | 1941 | |
1943 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python packages.</entry> | 1942 | <row> |
1944 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1943 | <entry>junit</entry> |
1945 | </row> | 1944 | |
1946 | <row> | 1945 | <entry>3.8.2</entry> |
1947 | <entry>python3</entry> | 1946 | |
1948 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | 1947 | <entry>JUnit is a testing framework for Java</entry> |
1949 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | 1948 | |
1950 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 1949 | <entry></entry> |
1951 | </row> | 1950 | </row> |
1952 | <row> | 1951 | |
1953 | <entry>qemu</entry> | 1952 | <row> |
1954 | <entry>2.8.0</entry> | 1953 | <entry>jzlib</entry> |
1955 | <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry> | 1954 | |
1956 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1955 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> |
1957 | </row> | 1956 | |
1958 | <row> | 1957 | <entry>zlib implementation in Java</entry> |
1959 | <entry>qemuwrapper</entry> | 1958 | |
1960 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1959 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1961 | <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry> | 1960 | </row> |
1962 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1961 | |
1963 | </row> | 1962 | <row> |
1964 | <row> | 1963 | <entry>kbd</entry> |
1965 | <entry>quilt</entry> | 1964 | |
1966 | <entry>0.65</entry> | 1965 | <entry>2.0.4</entry> |
1967 | <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry> | 1966 | |
1968 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1967 | <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry> |
1969 | </row> | 1968 | |
1970 | <row> | 1969 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1971 | <entry>randrproto</entry> | 1970 | </row> |
1972 | <entry>1.5.0</entry> | 1971 | |
1973 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry> | 1972 | <row> |
1974 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1973 | <entry>kbproto</entry> |
1975 | </row> | 1974 | |
1976 | <row> | 1975 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> |
1977 | <entry>readline</entry> | 1976 | |
1978 | <entry>7.0</entry> | 1977 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard |
1979 | <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous commands.</entry> | 1978 | extension. This extension is used to control options related to |
1980 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1979 | keyboard handling and layout.</entry> |
1981 | </row> | 1980 | |
1982 | <row> | 1981 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1983 | <entry>recordproto</entry> | 1982 | </row> |
1984 | <entry>1.14.2</entry> | 1983 | |
1985 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Record extension. This extension is used to record and play back event sequences.</entry> | 1984 | <row> |
1986 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1985 | <entry>kern-tools</entry> |
1987 | </row> | 1986 | |
1988 | <row> | 1987 | <entry>0.2</entry> |
1989 | <entry>regexp</entry> | 1988 | |
1990 | <entry>1.5</entry> | 1989 | <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched |
1991 | <entry>Java Regular Expression package</entry> | 1990 | kernels.</entry> |
1992 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1991 | |
1993 | </row> | 1992 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1994 | <row> | 1993 | </row> |
1995 | <entry>renderproto</entry> | 1994 | |
1996 | <entry>0.11.1</entry> | 1995 | <row> |
1997 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X window system.</entry> | 1996 | <entry>kernel-devsrc</entry> |
1998 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1997 | |
1999 | </row> | 1998 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2000 | <row> | 1999 | |
2001 | <entry>rhino</entry> | 2000 | <entry>Development source linux kernel. When built this recipe |
2002 | <entry>1.7r4</entry> | 2001 | packages the source of the preferred virtual/kernel provider and |
2003 | <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry> | 2002 | makes it available for full kernel development or external module |
2004 | <entry>MPL-2.0</entry> | 2003 | builds</entry> |
2005 | </row> | 2004 | |
2006 | <row> | 2005 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2007 | <entry>rpm</entry> | 2006 | </row> |
2008 | <entry>4.13.90</entry> | 2007 | |
2009 | <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line driven package management system capable of installing uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages. Each software package consists of an archive of files along with information about the package like its version a description etc.</entry> | 2008 | <row> |
2010 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2009 | <entry>keymaps</entry> |
2011 | </row> | 2010 | |
2012 | <row> | 2011 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2013 | <entry>rsync</entry> | 2012 | |
2014 | <entry>3.1.2</entry> | 2013 | <entry>Keymaps and initscript to set the keymap on bootup.</entry> |
2015 | <entry>File synchronization tool.</entry> | 2014 | |
2016 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2015 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2017 | </row> | 2016 | </row> |
2018 | <row> | 2017 | |
2019 | <entry>run-postinsts</entry> | 2018 | <row> |
2020 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2019 | <entry>kmod</entry> |
2021 | <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target device.</entry> | 2020 | |
2022 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2021 | <entry>23</entry> |
2023 | </row> | 2022 | |
2024 | <row> | 2023 | <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux |
2025 | <entry>runc-docker</entry> | 2024 | kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve |
2026 | <entry>1.0.0-rc2</entry> | 2025 | dependencies and aliases.</entry> |
2027 | <entry>runc is a CLI tool for spawning and running containers according to the OCI specification.</entry> | 2026 | |
2028 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2027 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2029 | </row> | 2028 | </row> |
2030 | <row> | 2029 | |
2031 | <entry>sed</entry> | 2030 | <row> |
2032 | <entry>4.2.2</entry> | 2031 | <entry>krb5</entry> |
2033 | <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry> | 2032 | |
2034 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2033 | <entry>1.15.1</entry> |
2035 | </row> | 2034 | |
2036 | <row> | 2035 | <entry>"Kerberos is a system for authenticating users and services |
2037 | <entry>servlet2.3</entry> | 2036 | on a network. Kerberos is a trusted third-party service. That |
2038 | <entry>4.1.37</entry> | 2037 | means that there is a third party (the Kerberos server) that is |
2039 | <entry>Servlet API 2.3 (from Tomcat 4.1)</entry> | 2038 | trusted by all the entities on the network (users and services |
2040 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2039 | usually called ""principals""). . This is the MIT reference |
2041 | </row> | 2040 | implementation of Kerberos V5. . This package contains the |
2042 | <row> | 2041 | Kerberos key server (KDC). The KDC manages all authentication |
2043 | <entry>shadow-securetty</entry> | 2042 | credentials for a Kerberos realm holds the master keys for the |
2044 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 2043 | realm and responds to authentication requests. This package should |
2045 | <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry> | 2044 | be installed on both master and slave KDCs."</entry> |
2046 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2045 | |
2047 | </row> | 2046 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2048 | <row> | 2047 | </row> |
2049 | <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry> | 2048 | |
2050 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 2049 | <row> |
2051 | <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry> | 2050 | <entry>latencytop</entry> |
2052 | <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | 2051 | |
2053 | </row> | 2052 | <entry>0.5</entry> |
2054 | <row> | 2053 | |
2055 | <entry>shadow</entry> | 2054 | <entry>Linux tool for measuring and fixing latency.</entry> |
2056 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 2055 | |
2057 | <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group data.</entry> | 2056 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2058 | <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | 2057 | </row> |
2059 | </row> | 2058 | |
2060 | <row> | 2059 | <row> |
2061 | <entry>shared-mime-info</entry> | 2060 | <entry>ldconfig</entry> |
2062 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 2061 | |
2063 | <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry> | 2062 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> |
2064 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 2063 | |
2065 | </row> | 2064 | <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry> |
2066 | <row> | 2065 | |
2067 | <entry>simpleproxy</entry> | 2066 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2068 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2067 | </row> |
2069 | <entry>Simpleproxy.</entry> | 2068 | |
2070 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2069 | <row> |
2071 | </row> | 2070 | <entry>less</entry> |
2072 | <row> | 2071 | |
2073 | <entry>slang</entry> | 2072 | <entry>487</entry> |
2074 | <entry>2.3.1a</entry> | 2073 | |
2075 | <entry>S-Lang is an interpreted language and a programming library. The S-Lang language was designed so that it can be easily embedded into a program to provide the program with a powerful extension language. The S-Lang library provided in this package provides the S-Lang extension language. S-Lang's syntax resembles C which makes it easy to recode S-Lang procedures in C if you need to.</entry> | 2074 | <entry>Less is a program similar to more i.e. a terminal based |
2076 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2075 | program for viewing text files and the output from other programs. |
2077 | </row> | 2076 | Less offers many features beyond those that more does.</entry> |
2078 | <row> | 2077 | |
2079 | <entry>sqlite3</entry> | 2078 | <entry>GPL-3.0, BSD-2-Clause</entry> |
2080 | <entry>3.17.0</entry> | 2079 | </row> |
2081 | <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry> | 2080 | |
2082 | <entry>PD</entry> | 2081 | <row> |
2083 | </row> | 2082 | <entry>libaio</entry> |
2084 | <row> | 2083 | |
2085 | <entry>squashfs-tools</entry> | 2084 | <entry>0.3.110</entry> |
2086 | <entry>4.3</entry> | 2085 | |
2087 | <entry>Tools for manipulating SquashFS filesystems.</entry> | 2086 | <entry>Asynchronous input/output library that uses the kernels |
2088 | <entry> GPL-2.0, PD</entry> | 2087 | native interface</entry> |
2089 | </row> | 2088 | |
2090 | <row> | 2089 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2091 | <entry>sysfsutils</entry> | 2090 | </row> |
2092 | <entry>2.1.0</entry> | 2091 | |
2093 | <entry>Tools for working with the sysfs virtual filesystem. The tool 'systool' can query devices by bus class and topology.</entry> | 2092 | <row> |
2094 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2093 | <entry>libarchive</entry> |
2095 | </row> | 2094 | |
2096 | <row> | 2095 | <entry>3.2.2</entry> |
2097 | <entry>syslinux</entry> | 2096 | |
2098 | <entry>6.03</entry> | 2097 | <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing |
2099 | <entry>Multi-purpose linux bootloader.</entry> | 2098 | tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry> |
2100 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2099 | |
2101 | </row> | 2100 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
2102 | <row> | 2101 | </row> |
2103 | <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry> | 2102 | |
2104 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2103 | <row> |
2105 | <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit scripts.</entry> | 2104 | <entry>libatomic-ops</entry> |
2106 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2105 | |
2107 | </row> | 2106 | <entry>7.4.4</entry> |
2108 | <row> | 2107 | |
2109 | <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry> | 2108 | <entry>A library for atomic integer operations.</entry> |
2110 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2109 | |
2111 | <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry> | 2110 | <entry>GPL-2.0, MIT</entry> |
2112 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2111 | </row> |
2113 | </row> | 2112 | |
2114 | <row> | 2113 | <row> |
2115 | <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry> | 2114 | <entry>libbsd</entry> |
2116 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2115 | |
2117 | <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry> | 2116 | <entry>0.8.3</entry> |
2118 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2117 | |
2119 | </row> | 2118 | <entry>This library provides useful functions commonly found on |
2120 | <row> | 2119 | BSD systems and lacking on others like GNU systems thus making it |
2121 | <entry>systemd</entry> | 2120 | easier to port projects with strong BSD origins without needing to |
2122 | <entry>232</entry> | 2121 | embed the same code over and over again on each project.</entry> |
2123 | <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and automount points and implements an elaborate transactional dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in replacement for sysvinit.</entry> | 2122 | |
2124 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2123 | <entry>BSD-4-Clause, ISC, PD</entry> |
2125 | </row> | 2124 | </row> |
2126 | <row> | 2125 | |
2127 | <entry>systemtap</entry> | 2126 | <row> |
2128 | <entry>3.1</entry> | 2127 | <entry>libcap</entry> |
2129 | <entry>Script-directed dynamic tracing and performance analysis tool for Linux.</entry> | 2128 | |
2130 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2129 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
2131 | </row> | 2130 | |
2132 | <row> | 2131 | <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry> |
2133 | <entry>tar</entry> | 2132 | |
2134 | <entry>1.29</entry> | 2133 | <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> |
2135 | <entry>GNU tar saves many files together into a single tape or disk archive and can restore individual files from the archive.</entry> | 2134 | </row> |
2136 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2135 | |
2137 | </row> | 2136 | <row> |
2138 | <row> | 2137 | <entry>libcgroup</entry> |
2139 | <entry>tcpdump</entry> | 2138 | |
2140 | <entry>4.9.0</entry> | 2139 | <entry>0.41</entry> |
2141 | <entry>A sophisticated network protocol analyzer.</entry> | 2140 | |
2142 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2141 | <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group |
2143 | </row> | 2142 | file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account |
2144 | <row> | 2143 | and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of |
2145 | <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry> | 2144 | processes.</entry> |
2146 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2145 | |
2147 | <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry> | 2146 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2148 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2147 | </row> |
2149 | </row> | 2148 | |
2150 | <row> | 2149 | <row> |
2151 | <entry>thin-provisioning-tools</entry> | 2150 | <entry>libcheck</entry> |
2152 | <entry>0.6.3</entry> | 2151 | |
2153 | <entry>A suite of tools for manipulating the metadata of the dm-thin device-mapper target.</entry> | 2152 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> |
2154 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2153 | |
2155 | </row> | 2154 | <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry> |
2156 | <row> | 2155 | |
2157 | <entry>tunctl</entry> | 2156 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2158 | <entry>1.5</entry> | 2157 | </row> |
2159 | <entry>Tool for controlling the Linux TUN/TAP driver.</entry> | 2158 | |
2160 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2159 | <row> |
2161 | </row> | 2160 | <entry>libcroco</entry> |
2162 | <row> | 2161 | |
2163 | <entry>tzcode</entry> | 2162 | <entry>0.6.11</entry> |
2164 | <entry>2017b</entry> | 2163 | |
2165 | <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump tzselect.</entry> | 2164 | <entry>Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) parsing and manipulation |
2166 | <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2165 | toolkit.</entry> |
2167 | </row> | 2166 | |
2168 | <row> | 2167 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2169 | <entry>tzdata</entry> | 2168 | </row> |
2170 | <entry>2017b</entry> | 2169 | |
2171 | <entry>Timezone data.</entry> | 2170 | <row> |
2172 | <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2171 | <entry>libdaemon</entry> |
2173 | </row> | 2172 | |
2174 | <row> | 2173 | <entry>0.14</entry> |
2175 | <entry>unifdef</entry> | 2174 | |
2176 | <entry>2.11</entry> | 2175 | <entry>Lightweight C library which eases the writing of UNIX |
2177 | <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry> | 2176 | daemons.</entry> |
2178 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 2177 | |
2179 | </row> | 2178 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2180 | <row> | 2179 | </row> |
2181 | <entry>unzip</entry> | 2180 | |
2182 | <entry>6.0</entry> | 2181 | <row> |
2183 | <entry>Utilities for extracting and viewing files in .zip archives.</entry> | 2182 | <entry>libdevmapper</entry> |
2184 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2183 | |
2185 | </row> | 2184 | <entry>2.02.166</entry> |
2186 | <row> | 2185 | |
2187 | <entry>update-rc.d</entry> | 2186 | <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in |
2188 | <entry>0.7</entry> | 2187 | Linux.</entry> |
2189 | <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory structure.</entry> | 2188 | |
2190 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2189 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
2191 | </row> | 2190 | </row> |
2192 | <row> | 2191 | |
2193 | <entry>util-linux</entry> | 2192 | <row> |
2194 | <entry>2.29.1</entry> | 2193 | <entry>libecj-bootstrap</entry> |
2195 | <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message management filesystem creation and system login.</entry> | 2194 | |
2196 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry> | 2195 | <entry>3.6.2</entry> |
2197 | </row> | 2196 | |
2198 | <row> | 2197 | <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Jar only</entry> |
2199 | <entry>util-macros</entry> | 2198 | |
2200 | <entry>1.19.1</entry> | 2199 | <entry>EPL-1.0</entry> |
2201 | <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry> | 2200 | </row> |
2202 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2201 | |
2203 | </row> | 2202 | <row> |
2204 | <row> | 2203 | <entry>liberation-fonts</entry> |
2205 | <entry>vala</entry> | 2204 | |
2206 | <entry>0.34.4</entry> | 2205 | <entry>1.04</entry> |
2207 | <entry>Vala is a C#-like language dedicated to ease GObject programming. Vala compiles to plain C and has no runtime environment nor penalities whatsoever.</entry> | 2206 | |
2208 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2207 | <entry>The Liberation(tm) Fonts is a font family originally |
2209 | </row> | 2208 | created by Ascender(c) which aims at metric compatibility with |
2210 | <row> | 2209 | Arial Times New Roman Courier New.</entry> |
2211 | <entry>volatile-binds</entry> | 2210 | |
2212 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2211 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2213 | <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for read-only-rootfs</entry> | 2212 | </row> |
2214 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2213 | |
2215 | </row> | 2214 | <row> |
2216 | <row> | 2215 | <entry>libevent</entry> |
2217 | <entry>xalan-j</entry> | 2216 | |
2218 | <entry>2.7.1</entry> | 2217 | <entry>2.0.22</entry> |
2219 | <entry>Java XSLT processor</entry> | 2218 | |
2220 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2219 | <entry>An asynchronous event notification library.</entry> |
2221 | </row> | 2220 | |
2222 | <row> | 2221 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
2223 | <entry>xcb-proto</entry> | 2222 | </row> |
2224 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 2223 | |
2225 | <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading support and extensibility.</entry> | 2224 | <row> |
2226 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2225 | <entry>libffi</entry> |
2227 | </row> | 2226 | |
2228 | <row> | 2227 | <entry>3.2.1</entry> |
2229 | <entry>xerces-j</entry> | 2228 | |
2230 | <entry>2.11.0</entry> | 2229 | <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level |
2231 | <entry>Reference implementation of XNI the Xerces Native Interface and also a fully conforming XML Schema processor.</entry> | 2230 | programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows |
2232 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2231 | a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface |
2233 | </row> | 2232 | description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function |
2234 | <row> | 2233 | Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for |
2235 | <entry>xextproto</entry> | 2234 | the interface that allows code written in one language to call |
2236 | <entry>7.3.0</entry> | 2235 | code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only |
2237 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also available.</entry> | 2236 | provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured |
2238 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2237 | foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that |
2239 | </row> | 2238 | handles type conversions for values passed between the two |
2240 | <row> | 2239 | languages.</entry> |
2241 | <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry> | 2240 | |
2242 | <entry>2.20</entry> | 2241 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2243 | <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window. The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based systems.</entry> | 2242 | </row> |
2244 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2243 | |
2245 | </row> | 2244 | <row> |
2246 | <row> | 2245 | <entry>libgcc</entry> |
2247 | <entry>xml-commons-resolver1.1</entry> | 2246 | |
2248 | <entry>1.2</entry> | 2247 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
2249 | <entry>Library to resolve various public or system identifiers into accessible URLs (Java)</entry> | 2248 | |
2250 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2249 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
2251 | </row> | 2250 | |
2252 | <row> | 2251 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
2253 | <entry>xmlto</entry> | 2252 | </row> |
2254 | <entry>0.0.28</entry> | 2253 | |
2255 | <entry>A shell-script tool for converting XML files to various formats.</entry> | 2254 | <row> |
2256 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2255 | <entry>libgudev</entry> |
2257 | </row> | 2256 | |
2258 | <row> | 2257 | <entry>231</entry> |
2259 | <entry>xproto</entry> | 2258 | |
2260 | <entry>7.0.31</entry> | 2259 | <entry>GObject wrapper for libudev.</entry> |
2261 | <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window System.</entry> | 2260 | |
2262 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2261 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2263 | </row> | 2262 | </row> |
2264 | <row> | 2263 | |
2265 | <entry>xtrans</entry> | 2264 | <row> |
2266 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | 2265 | <entry>libice</entry> |
2267 | <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system and transport specific code into a single place. This API should be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of transports and support for new platforms without making any changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface code.</entry> | 2266 | |
2268 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2267 | <entry>1.0.9</entry> |
2269 | </row> | 2268 | |
2270 | <row> | 2269 | <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic |
2271 | <entry>xz</entry> | 2270 | framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream |
2272 | <entry>5.2.3</entry> | 2271 | transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up |
2273 | <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry> | 2272 | and shutting down connections for performing authentication for |
2274 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry> | 2273 | negotiating versions and for reporting errors.</entry> |
2275 | </row> | 2274 | |
2276 | <row> | 2275 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2277 | <entry>yajl</entry> | 2276 | </row> |
2278 | <entry>2.1.0</entry> | 2277 | |
2279 | <entry>YAJL is a small event-driven (SAX-style) JSON parser written in ANSI C and a small validating JSON generator.</entry> | 2278 | <row> |
2280 | <entry>ISC</entry> | 2279 | <entry>libidn</entry> |
2281 | </row> | 2280 | |
2282 | <row> | 2281 | <entry>1.33</entry> |
2283 | <entry>zip</entry> | 2282 | |
2284 | <entry>3.0</entry> | 2283 | <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA |
2285 | <entry>Compressor/archiver for creating and modifying .zip files.</entry> | 2284 | specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names |
2286 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2285 | (IDN) working group.</entry> |
2287 | </row> | 2286 | |
2288 | <row> | 2287 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
2289 | <entry>zisofs-tools</entry> | 2288 | </row> |
2290 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | 2289 | |
2291 | <entry>Utilities for creating compressed CD-ROM filesystems.</entry> | 2290 | <row> |
2292 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2291 | <entry>libjpeg-turbo</entry> |
2293 | </row> | 2292 | |
2294 | <row> | 2293 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> |
2295 | <entry>zlib</entry> | 2294 | |
2296 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> | 2295 | <entry>libjpeg-turbo is a derivative of libjpeg that uses SIMD |
2297 | <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data compression library which is used by many different programs.</entry> | 2296 | instructions (MMX SSE2 NEON) to accelerate baseline JPEG |
2298 | <entry>Zlib</entry> | 2297 | compression and decompression</entry> |
2299 | </row> | 2298 | |
2300 | </tbody> | 2299 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
2301 | </tgroup> | 2300 | </row> |
2302 | </informaltable> | 2301 | |
2303 | </section> | 2302 | <row> |
2304 | <section id="open_source_license"> | 2303 | <entry>libmpc</entry> |
2305 | <title>Open Source Licenses</title> | 2304 | |
2306 | <section id="lic_0"> | 2305 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> |
2307 | <title>AFL-2.0</title> | 2306 | |
2308 | <para><programlisting> | 2307 | <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers |
2308 | with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the | ||
2309 | result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as | ||
2310 | Mpfr</entry> | ||
2311 | |||
2312 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | ||
2313 | </row> | ||
2314 | |||
2315 | <row> | ||
2316 | <entry>libndp</entry> | ||
2317 | |||
2318 | <entry>1.6</entry> | ||
2319 | |||
2320 | <entry>Library for IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol.</entry> | ||
2321 | |||
2322 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2323 | </row> | ||
2324 | |||
2325 | <row> | ||
2326 | <entry>libnewt</entry> | ||
2327 | |||
2328 | <entry>0.52.19</entry> | ||
2329 | |||
2330 | <entry>Newt is a programming library for color text mode widget | ||
2331 | based user interfaces. Newt can be used to add stacked windows | ||
2332 | entry widgets checkboxes radio buttons labels plain text fields | ||
2333 | scrollbars etc. to text mode user interfaces. This package also | ||
2334 | contains the shared library needed by programs built with newt as | ||
2335 | well as a /usr/bin/dialog replacement called whiptail. Newt is | ||
2336 | based on the slang library.</entry> | ||
2337 | |||
2338 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2339 | </row> | ||
2340 | |||
2341 | <row> | ||
2342 | <entry>libnl</entry> | ||
2343 | |||
2344 | <entry>3.2.29</entry> | ||
2345 | |||
2346 | <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink | ||
2347 | sockets.</entry> | ||
2348 | |||
2349 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2350 | </row> | ||
2351 | |||
2352 | <row> | ||
2353 | <entry>libnss-mdns</entry> | ||
2354 | |||
2355 | <entry>0.10</entry> | ||
2356 | |||
2357 | <entry>Name Service Switch module for Multicast DNS (zeroconf) | ||
2358 | name resolution.</entry> | ||
2359 | |||
2360 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2361 | </row> | ||
2362 | |||
2363 | <row> | ||
2364 | <entry>libpcap</entry> | ||
2365 | |||
2366 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> | ||
2367 | |||
2368 | <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network | ||
2369 | monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection | ||
2370 | security monitoring and network debugging.</entry> | ||
2371 | |||
2372 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
2373 | </row> | ||
2374 | |||
2375 | <row> | ||
2376 | <entry>libpciaccess</entry> | ||
2377 | |||
2378 | <entry>0.13.4</entry> | ||
2379 | |||
2380 | <entry>libpciaccess provides functionality for X to access the PCI | ||
2381 | bus and devices in a platform-independent way.</entry> | ||
2382 | |||
2383 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2384 | </row> | ||
2385 | |||
2386 | <row> | ||
2387 | <entry>libpcre</entry> | ||
2388 | |||
2389 | <entry>8.40</entry> | ||
2390 | |||
2391 | <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement | ||
2392 | regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and | ||
2393 | semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set | ||
2394 | of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular | ||
2395 | expression API.</entry> | ||
2396 | |||
2397 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
2398 | </row> | ||
2399 | |||
2400 | <row> | ||
2401 | <entry>libpng</entry> | ||
2402 | |||
2403 | <entry>1.6.28</entry> | ||
2404 | |||
2405 | <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry> | ||
2406 | |||
2407 | <entry>Libpng</entry> | ||
2408 | </row> | ||
2409 | |||
2410 | <row> | ||
2411 | <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry> | ||
2412 | |||
2413 | <entry>0.3</entry> | ||
2414 | |||
2415 | <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions | ||
2416 | not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry> | ||
2417 | |||
2418 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2419 | </row> | ||
2420 | |||
2421 | <row> | ||
2422 | <entry>librsvg</entry> | ||
2423 | |||
2424 | <entry>2.40.16</entry> | ||
2425 | |||
2426 | <entry>Library for rendering SVG files.</entry> | ||
2427 | |||
2428 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2429 | </row> | ||
2430 | |||
2431 | <row> | ||
2432 | <entry>libsdl</entry> | ||
2433 | |||
2434 | <entry>1.2.15</entry> | ||
2435 | |||
2436 | <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia | ||
2437 | library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard | ||
2438 | mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video | ||
2439 | framebuffer.</entry> | ||
2440 | |||
2441 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2442 | </row> | ||
2443 | |||
2444 | <row> | ||
2445 | <entry>libsm</entry> | ||
2446 | |||
2447 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | ||
2448 | |||
2449 | <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level | ||
2450 | \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session | ||
2451 | Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for | ||
2452 | users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of | ||
2453 | clients each of which has a particular state."</entry> | ||
2454 | |||
2455 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2456 | </row> | ||
2457 | |||
2458 | <row> | ||
2459 | <entry>libtasn1</entry> | ||
2460 | |||
2461 | <entry>4.10</entry> | ||
2462 | |||
2463 | <entry>Library for ASN.1 and DER manipulation.</entry> | ||
2464 | |||
2465 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2466 | </row> | ||
2467 | |||
2468 | <row> | ||
2469 | <entry>libtool</entry> | ||
2470 | |||
2471 | <entry>2.4.6</entry> | ||
2472 | |||
2473 | <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script. | ||
2474 | Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types | ||
2475 | (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry> | ||
2476 | |||
2477 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2478 | </row> | ||
2479 | |||
2480 | <row> | ||
2481 | <entry>libunistring</entry> | ||
2482 | |||
2483 | <entry>0.9.7</entry> | ||
2484 | |||
2485 | <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may | ||
2486 | consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese | ||
2487 | Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left | ||
2488 | writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX | ||
2489 | platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for | ||
2490 | dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In | ||
2491 | fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their | ||
2492 | base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides | ||
2493 | functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C | ||
2494 | strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains | ||
2495 | documentation.</entry> | ||
2496 | |||
2497 | <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2498 | </row> | ||
2499 | |||
2500 | <row> | ||
2501 | <entry>liburcu</entry> | ||
2502 | |||
2503 | <entry>0.9.3</entry> | ||
2504 | |||
2505 | <entry>Userspace RCU (read-copy-update) library.</entry> | ||
2506 | |||
2507 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, MIT</entry> | ||
2508 | </row> | ||
2509 | |||
2510 | <row> | ||
2511 | <entry>libusb-compat</entry> | ||
2512 | |||
2513 | <entry>0.1.5</entry> | ||
2514 | |||
2515 | <entry>libusb-0.1 compatible layer for libusb1 a drop-in | ||
2516 | replacement that aims to look feel and behave exactly like | ||
2517 | libusb-0.1</entry> | ||
2518 | |||
2519 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2520 | </row> | ||
2521 | |||
2522 | <row> | ||
2523 | <entry>libusb1</entry> | ||
2524 | |||
2525 | <entry>1.0.21</entry> | ||
2526 | |||
2527 | <entry>Userspace library to access USB (version 1.0).</entry> | ||
2528 | |||
2529 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2530 | </row> | ||
2531 | |||
2532 | <row> | ||
2533 | <entry>libvirt</entry> | ||
2534 | |||
2535 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | ||
2536 | |||
2537 | <entry>A toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities | ||
2538 | of recent versions of Linux.</entry> | ||
2539 | |||
2540 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2541 | </row> | ||
2542 | |||
2543 | <row> | ||
2544 | <entry>libx11</entry> | ||
2545 | |||
2546 | <entry>1.6.4</entry> | ||
2547 | |||
2548 | <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window | ||
2549 | System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for | ||
2550 | the basic functions of the window system.</entry> | ||
2551 | |||
2552 | <entry>MIT, BSD</entry> | ||
2553 | </row> | ||
2554 | |||
2555 | <row> | ||
2556 | <entry>libxau</entry> | ||
2557 | |||
2558 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | ||
2559 | |||
2560 | <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 | ||
2561 | authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X | ||
2562 | connections both client-side and server-side.</entry> | ||
2563 | |||
2564 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2565 | </row> | ||
2566 | |||
2567 | <row> | ||
2568 | <entry>libxcb</entry> | ||
2569 | |||
2570 | <entry>1.12</entry> | ||
2571 | |||
2572 | <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement | ||
2573 | for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access | ||
2574 | to the protocol improved threading support and | ||
2575 | extensibility.</entry> | ||
2576 | |||
2577 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2578 | </row> | ||
2579 | |||
2580 | <row> | ||
2581 | <entry>libxcomposite</entry> | ||
2582 | |||
2583 | <entry>0.4.4</entry> | ||
2584 | |||
2585 | <entry>The composite extension provides three related mechanisms: | ||
2586 | per-hierarchy storage automatic shadow update and external parent. | ||
2587 | In per-hierarchy storage the rendering of an entire hierarchy of | ||
2588 | windows is redirected to off-screen storage. In automatic shadow | ||
2589 | update when a hierarchy is rendered off-screen the X server | ||
2590 | provides an automatic mechanism for presenting those contents | ||
2591 | within the parent window. In external parent a mechanism for | ||
2592 | providing redirection of compositing transformations through a | ||
2593 | client.</entry> | ||
2594 | |||
2595 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2596 | </row> | ||
2597 | |||
2598 | <row> | ||
2599 | <entry>libxcursor</entry> | ||
2600 | |||
2601 | <entry>1.1.14</entry> | ||
2602 | |||
2603 | <entry>Xcursor is a simple library designed to help locate and | ||
2604 | load cursors. Cursors can be loaded from files or memory. A | ||
2605 | library of common cursors exists which map to the standard X | ||
2606 | cursor names. Cursors can exist in several sizes and the library | ||
2607 | automatically picks the best size.</entry> | ||
2608 | |||
2609 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2610 | </row> | ||
2611 | |||
2612 | <row> | ||
2613 | <entry>libxdamage</entry> | ||
2614 | |||
2615 | <entry>1.1.4</entry> | ||
2616 | |||
2617 | <entry>'Damage' is a term that describes changes make to pixel | ||
2618 | contents of windows and pixmaps. Damage accumulates as drawing | ||
2619 | occurs in the drawable. Each drawing operation 'damages' one or | ||
2620 | more rectangular areas within the drawable. The rectangles are | ||
2621 | guaranteed to include the set of pixels modified by each operation | ||
2622 | but may include significantly more than just those pixels. The | ||
2623 | DAMAGE extension allows applications to either receive the raw | ||
2624 | rectangles as a stream of events or to have them partially | ||
2625 | processed within the X server to reduce the amount of data | ||
2626 | transmitted as well as reduce the processing latency once the | ||
2627 | repaint operation has started.</entry> | ||
2628 | |||
2629 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2630 | </row> | ||
2631 | |||
2632 | <row> | ||
2633 | <entry>libxdmcp</entry> | ||
2634 | |||
2635 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> | ||
2636 | |||
2637 | <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol | ||
2638 | (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous | ||
2639 | display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal | ||
2640 | (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime | ||
2641 | example of an autonomous display.</entry> | ||
2642 | |||
2643 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2644 | </row> | ||
2645 | |||
2646 | <row> | ||
2647 | <entry>libxext</entry> | ||
2648 | |||
2649 | <entry>1.3.3</entry> | ||
2650 | |||
2651 | <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to | ||
2652 | several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol | ||
2653 | extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX | ||
2654 | MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC | ||
2655 | TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small | ||
2656 | set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X | ||
2657 | protocol extensions.</entry> | ||
2658 | |||
2659 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2660 | </row> | ||
2661 | |||
2662 | <row> | ||
2663 | <entry>libxfixes</entry> | ||
2664 | |||
2665 | <entry>5.0.3</entry> | ||
2666 | |||
2667 | <entry>X applications have often needed to work around various | ||
2668 | shortcomings in the core X window system. This extension is | ||
2669 | designed to provide the minimal server-side support necessary to | ||
2670 | eliminate problems caused by these workarounds.</entry> | ||
2671 | |||
2672 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2673 | </row> | ||
2674 | |||
2675 | <row> | ||
2676 | <entry>libxft</entry> | ||
2677 | |||
2678 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> | ||
2679 | |||
2680 | <entry>Xft was designed to provide good support for scalable fonts | ||
2681 | and to do so efficiently. Unlike the core fonts system it supports | ||
2682 | features such as anti-aliasing and sub-pixel rasterisation. | ||
2683 | Perhaps more importantly it gives applications full control over | ||
2684 | the way glyphs are rendered making fine typesetting and WYSIWIG | ||
2685 | display possible. Finally it allows applications to use fonts that | ||
2686 | are not installed system-wide for displaying documents with | ||
2687 | embedded fonts. Xft is not compatible with the core fonts system: | ||
2688 | usage of Xft requires fairly extensive changes to toolkits | ||
2689 | (user-interface libraries).</entry> | ||
2690 | |||
2691 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2692 | </row> | ||
2693 | |||
2694 | <row> | ||
2695 | <entry>libxi</entry> | ||
2696 | |||
2697 | <entry>1.7.9</entry> | ||
2698 | |||
2699 | <entry>libxi is an extension to the X11 protocol to support input | ||
2700 | devices other than the core X keyboard and pointer. It allows | ||
2701 | client programs to select input from these devices independently | ||
2702 | from each other and independently from the core devices.</entry> | ||
2703 | |||
2704 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2705 | </row> | ||
2706 | |||
2707 | <row> | ||
2708 | <entry>libxkbcommon</entry> | ||
2709 | |||
2710 | <entry>0.7.1</entry> | ||
2711 | |||
2712 | <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which | ||
2713 | processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB | ||
2714 | specification.</entry> | ||
2715 | |||
2716 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2717 | </row> | ||
2718 | |||
2719 | <row> | ||
2720 | <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry> | ||
2721 | |||
2722 | <entry>2.44</entry> | ||
2723 | |||
2724 | <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML | ||
2725 | documents.</entry> | ||
2726 | |||
2727 | <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | ||
2728 | </row> | ||
2729 | |||
2730 | <row> | ||
2731 | <entry>libxml2</entry> | ||
2732 | |||
2733 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | ||
2734 | |||
2735 | <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML | ||
2736 | files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for | ||
2737 | both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a | ||
2738 | parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2 | ||
2739 | includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It | ||
2740 | also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible | ||
2741 | with Expat.</entry> | ||
2742 | |||
2743 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2744 | </row> | ||
2745 | |||
2746 | <row> | ||
2747 | <entry>libxrandr</entry> | ||
2748 | |||
2749 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | ||
2750 | |||
2751 | <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for | ||
2752 | short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root | ||
2753 | window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate | ||
2754 | Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix | ||
2755 | Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry> | ||
2756 | |||
2757 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2758 | </row> | ||
2759 | |||
2760 | <row> | ||
2761 | <entry>libxrender</entry> | ||
2762 | |||
2763 | <entry>0.9.10</entry> | ||
2764 | |||
2765 | <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image | ||
2766 | composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the | ||
2767 | X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by | ||
2768 | client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text | ||
2769 | is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of | ||
2770 | them.</entry> | ||
2771 | |||
2772 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2773 | </row> | ||
2774 | |||
2775 | <row> | ||
2776 | <entry>libxslt</entry> | ||
2777 | |||
2778 | <entry>1.1.29</entry> | ||
2779 | |||
2780 | <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry> | ||
2781 | |||
2782 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2783 | </row> | ||
2784 | |||
2785 | <row> | ||
2786 | <entry>libxt</entry> | ||
2787 | |||
2788 | <entry>1.1.5</entry> | ||
2789 | |||
2790 | <entry>The Intrinsics are a programming library tailored to the | ||
2791 | special requirements of user interface construction within a | ||
2792 | network window system specifically the X Window System. The | ||
2793 | Intrinsics and a widget set make up an X Toolkit. The Intrinsics | ||
2794 | provide the base mechanism necessary to build a wide variety of | ||
2795 | interoperating widget sets and application environments. The | ||
2796 | Intrinsics are a layer on top of Xlib the C Library X Interface. | ||
2797 | They extend the fundamental abstractions provided by the X Window | ||
2798 | System while still remaining independent of any particular user | ||
2799 | interface policy or style.</entry> | ||
2800 | |||
2801 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2802 | </row> | ||
2803 | |||
2804 | <row> | ||
2805 | <entry>libxtst</entry> | ||
2806 | |||
2807 | <entry>1.2.3</entry> | ||
2808 | |||
2809 | <entry>This extension is a minimal set of client and server | ||
2810 | extensions required to completely test the X11 server with no user | ||
2811 | intervention.</entry> | ||
2812 | |||
2813 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
2814 | </row> | ||
2815 | |||
2816 | <row> | ||
2817 | <entry>linux-intel-dev</entry> | ||
2818 | |||
2819 | <entry>4.9.47</entry> | ||
2820 | |||
2821 | <entry>Linux kernel.</entry> | ||
2822 | |||
2823 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2824 | </row> | ||
2825 | |||
2826 | <row> | ||
2827 | <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry> | ||
2828 | |||
2829 | <entry>4.10</entry> | ||
2830 | |||
2831 | <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's | ||
2832 | use.</entry> | ||
2833 | |||
2834 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2835 | </row> | ||
2836 | |||
2837 | <row> | ||
2838 | <entry>log4j1.2</entry> | ||
2839 | |||
2840 | <entry>1.2.17</entry> | ||
2841 | |||
2842 | <entry>Java library to help the programmer output log statements | ||
2843 | to a variety of output targets</entry> | ||
2844 | |||
2845 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
2846 | </row> | ||
2847 | |||
2848 | <row> | ||
2849 | <entry>logkit</entry> | ||
2850 | |||
2851 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | ||
2852 | |||
2853 | <entry>Logging toolkit designed for secure performance orientated | ||
2854 | logging in Java applications</entry> | ||
2855 | |||
2856 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
2857 | </row> | ||
2858 | |||
2859 | <row> | ||
2860 | <entry>lsb</entry> | ||
2861 | |||
2862 | <entry>4.1</entry> | ||
2863 | |||
2864 | <entry>LSB support for OpenEmbedded.</entry> | ||
2865 | |||
2866 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2867 | </row> | ||
2868 | |||
2869 | <row> | ||
2870 | <entry>lsbinitscripts</entry> | ||
2871 | |||
2872 | <entry>9.68</entry> | ||
2873 | |||
2874 | <entry>SysV init scripts which are only used in an LSB | ||
2875 | image.</entry> | ||
2876 | |||
2877 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2878 | </row> | ||
2879 | |||
2880 | <row> | ||
2881 | <entry>lttng-modules</entry> | ||
2882 | |||
2883 | <entry>2.9.1</entry> | ||
2884 | |||
2885 | <entry>The lttng-modules 2.0 package contains the kernel tracer | ||
2886 | modules</entry> | ||
2887 | |||
2888 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0, MIT</entry> | ||
2889 | </row> | ||
2890 | |||
2891 | <row> | ||
2892 | <entry>lttng-tools</entry> | ||
2893 | |||
2894 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | ||
2895 | |||
2896 | <entry>The Linux trace toolkit is a suite of tools designed to | ||
2897 | extract program execution details from the Linux operating system | ||
2898 | and interpret them.</entry> | ||
2899 | |||
2900 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
2901 | </row> | ||
2902 | |||
2903 | <row> | ||
2904 | <entry>lttng-ust</entry> | ||
2905 | |||
2906 | <entry>2.9.0</entry> | ||
2907 | |||
2908 | <entry>The LTTng UST 2.x package contains the userspace tracer | ||
2909 | library to trace userspace codes.</entry> | ||
2910 | |||
2911 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2912 | </row> | ||
2913 | |||
2914 | <row> | ||
2915 | <entry>lvm2</entry> | ||
2916 | |||
2917 | <entry>2.02.166</entry> | ||
2918 | |||
2919 | <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in | ||
2920 | Linux.</entry> | ||
2921 | |||
2922 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2923 | </row> | ||
2924 | |||
2925 | <row> | ||
2926 | <entry>lxc</entry> | ||
2927 | |||
2928 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> | ||
2929 | |||
2930 | <entry>lxc aims to use these new functionnalities to provide an | ||
2931 | userspace container object</entry> | ||
2932 | |||
2933 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2934 | </row> | ||
2935 | |||
2936 | <row> | ||
2937 | <entry>lxd</entry> | ||
2938 | |||
2939 | <entry>git</entry> | ||
2940 | |||
2941 | <entry>"LXD is a container ""hypervisor"" and a new user | ||
2942 | experience for LXC Specifically it's made of three components: - A | ||
2943 | system-wide daemon (lxd) - A command line client (lxc) - An | ||
2944 | OpenStack Nova plugin (nova-compute-lxd)"</entry> | ||
2945 | |||
2946 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
2947 | </row> | ||
2948 | |||
2949 | <row> | ||
2950 | <entry>lz4</entry> | ||
2951 | |||
2952 | <entry>131</entry> | ||
2953 | |||
2954 | <entry>LZ4 is a very fast lossless compression algorithm providing | ||
2955 | compression speed at 400 MB/s per core scalable with multi-cores | ||
2956 | CPU. It also features an extremely fast decoder with speed in | ||
2957 | multiple GB/s per core typically reaching RAM speed limits on | ||
2958 | multi-core systems.</entry> | ||
2959 | |||
2960 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
2961 | </row> | ||
2962 | |||
2963 | <row> | ||
2964 | <entry>lzo</entry> | ||
2965 | |||
2966 | <entry>2.09</entry> | ||
2967 | |||
2968 | <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry> | ||
2969 | |||
2970 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2971 | </row> | ||
2972 | |||
2973 | <row> | ||
2974 | <entry>lzop</entry> | ||
2975 | |||
2976 | <entry>1.03</entry> | ||
2977 | |||
2978 | <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a | ||
2979 | companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression | ||
2980 | library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher | ||
2981 | compression and decompression speed at the cost of some | ||
2982 | \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed | ||
2983 | with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with | ||
2984 | reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry> | ||
2985 | |||
2986 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
2987 | </row> | ||
2988 | |||
2989 | <row> | ||
2990 | <entry>m4</entry> | ||
2991 | |||
2992 | <entry>1.4.18</entry> | ||
2993 | |||
2994 | <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro | ||
2995 | processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some | ||
2996 | extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters | ||
2997 | to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files | ||
2998 | running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry> | ||
2999 | |||
3000 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3001 | </row> | ||
3002 | |||
3003 | <row> | ||
3004 | <entry>make</entry> | ||
3005 | |||
3006 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
3007 | |||
3008 | <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables | ||
3009 | and other non-source files of a program from the program's source | ||
3010 | files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a | ||
3011 | file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files | ||
3012 | and how to compute it from other files.</entry> | ||
3013 | |||
3014 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3015 | </row> | ||
3016 | |||
3017 | <row> | ||
3018 | <entry>makedepend</entry> | ||
3019 | |||
3020 | <entry>1.0.5</entry> | ||
3021 | |||
3022 | <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence | ||
3023 | and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include | ||
3024 | #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else | ||
3025 | directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives | ||
3026 | would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can | ||
3027 | reference files having other #include directives and parsing will | ||
3028 | occur in these files as well.</entry> | ||
3029 | |||
3030 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3031 | </row> | ||
3032 | |||
3033 | <row> | ||
3034 | <entry>makedevs</entry> | ||
3035 | |||
3036 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> | ||
3037 | |||
3038 | <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry> | ||
3039 | |||
3040 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3041 | </row> | ||
3042 | |||
3043 | <row> | ||
3044 | <entry>man</entry> | ||
3045 | |||
3046 | <entry>1.6g</entry> | ||
3047 | |||
3048 | <entry>A set of documentation tools: man apropos and | ||
3049 | whatis</entry> | ||
3050 | |||
3051 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3052 | </row> | ||
3053 | |||
3054 | <row> | ||
3055 | <entry>mklibs</entry> | ||
3056 | |||
3057 | <entry>0.1.43</entry> | ||
3058 | |||
3059 | <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only | ||
3060 | the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry> | ||
3061 | |||
3062 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3063 | </row> | ||
3064 | |||
3065 | <row> | ||
3066 | <entry>mozjs</entry> | ||
3067 | |||
3068 | <entry>17.0.0</entry> | ||
3069 | |||
3070 | <entry>SpiderMonkey is Mozilla's JavaScript engine written in | ||
3071 | C/C++.</entry> | ||
3072 | |||
3073 | <entry>MPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3074 | </row> | ||
3075 | |||
3076 | <row> | ||
3077 | <entry>mpfr</entry> | ||
3078 | |||
3079 | <entry>3.1.5</entry> | ||
3080 | |||
3081 | <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point | ||
3082 | computations with exact rounding.</entry> | ||
3083 | |||
3084 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3085 | </row> | ||
3086 | |||
3087 | <row> | ||
3088 | <entry>mtools</entry> | ||
3089 | |||
3090 | <entry>4.0.18</entry> | ||
3091 | |||
3092 | <entry>Mtools is a collection of utilities to access MS-DOS disks | ||
3093 | from GNU and Unix without mounting them.</entry> | ||
3094 | |||
3095 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3096 | </row> | ||
3097 | |||
3098 | <row> | ||
3099 | <entry>nasm</entry> | ||
3100 | |||
3101 | <entry>2.12.02</entry> | ||
3102 | |||
3103 | <entry>General-purpose x86 assembler.</entry> | ||
3104 | |||
3105 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | ||
3106 | </row> | ||
3107 | |||
3108 | <row> | ||
3109 | <entry>ncurses</entry> | ||
3110 | |||
3111 | <entry>6.0</entry> | ||
3112 | |||
3113 | <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo | ||
3114 | tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple | ||
3115 | highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of | ||
3116 | keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable | ||
3117 | windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using | ||
3118 | the gpm library.</entry> | ||
3119 | |||
3120 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3121 | </row> | ||
3122 | |||
3123 | <row> | ||
3124 | <entry>net-snmp</entry> | ||
3125 | |||
3126 | <entry>5.7.3</entry> | ||
3127 | |||
3128 | <entry>Various tools relating to the Simple Network Management | ||
3129 | Protocol.</entry> | ||
3130 | |||
3131 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3132 | </row> | ||
3133 | |||
3134 | <row> | ||
3135 | <entry>netbase</entry> | ||
3136 | |||
3137 | <entry>5.4</entry> | ||
3138 | |||
3139 | <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for | ||
3140 | basic TCP/IP based networking</entry> | ||
3141 | |||
3142 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3143 | </row> | ||
3144 | |||
3145 | <row> | ||
3146 | <entry>netcat-openbsd</entry> | ||
3147 | |||
3148 | <entry>1.105</entry> | ||
3149 | |||
3150 | <entry>A simple Unix utility which reads and writes data across | ||
3151 | network connections using TCP or UDP protocol. It is designed to | ||
3152 | be a reliable 'back-end' tool that can be used directly or easily | ||
3153 | driven by other programs and scripts. At the same time it is a | ||
3154 | feature-rich network debugging and exploration tool since it can | ||
3155 | create almost any kind of connection you would need and has | ||
3156 | several interesting built-in capabilities.</entry> | ||
3157 | |||
3158 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
3159 | </row> | ||
3160 | |||
3161 | <row> | ||
3162 | <entry>nettle</entry> | ||
3163 | |||
3164 | <entry>3.3</entry> | ||
3165 | |||
3166 | <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry> | ||
3167 | |||
3168 | <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3169 | </row> | ||
3170 | |||
3171 | <row> | ||
3172 | <entry>networkmanager</entry> | ||
3173 | |||
3174 | <entry>1.4.4</entry> | ||
3175 | |||
3176 | <entry>NetworkManager.</entry> | ||
3177 | |||
3178 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3179 | </row> | ||
3180 | |||
3181 | <row> | ||
3182 | <entry>notary</entry> | ||
3183 | |||
3184 | <entry>0.4.2</entry> | ||
3185 | |||
3186 | <entry>Notary is a Docker project that allows anyone to have trust | ||
3187 | over arbitrary collections of data</entry> | ||
3188 | |||
3189 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3190 | </row> | ||
3191 | |||
3192 | <row> | ||
3193 | <entry>nspr</entry> | ||
3194 | |||
3195 | <entry>4.13.1</entry> | ||
3196 | |||
3197 | <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry> | ||
3198 | |||
3199 | <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
3200 | </row> | ||
3201 | |||
3202 | <row> | ||
3203 | <entry>nss</entry> | ||
3204 | |||
3205 | <entry>3.28.1</entry> | ||
3206 | |||
3207 | <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries | ||
3208 | designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled | ||
3209 | client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can | ||
3210 | support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME | ||
3211 | X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry> | ||
3212 | |||
3213 | <entry>MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
3214 | </row> | ||
3215 | |||
3216 | <row> | ||
3217 | <entry>ntp</entry> | ||
3218 | |||
3219 | <entry>4.2.8p10</entry> | ||
3220 | |||
3221 | <entry>The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is used to synchronize the | ||
3222 | time of a computer client or server to another server or reference | ||
3223 | time source such as a radio or satellite receiver or | ||
3224 | modem.</entry> | ||
3225 | |||
3226 | <entry>NTP</entry> | ||
3227 | </row> | ||
3228 | |||
3229 | <row> | ||
3230 | <entry>numactl</entry> | ||
3231 | |||
3232 | <entry>2.0.11</entry> | ||
3233 | |||
3234 | <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl | ||
3235 | program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a | ||
3236 | libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in | ||
3237 | applications.</entry> | ||
3238 | |||
3239 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
3240 | </row> | ||
3241 | |||
3242 | <row> | ||
3243 | <entry>openjdk-8</entry> | ||
3244 | |||
3245 | <entry>102b14</entry> | ||
3246 | |||
3247 | <entry>Java runtime based upon the OpenJDK Project</entry> | ||
3248 | |||
3249 | <entry></entry> | ||
3250 | </row> | ||
3251 | |||
3252 | <row> | ||
3253 | <entry>openjre-8</entry> | ||
3254 | |||
3255 | <entry>102b14</entry> | ||
3256 | |||
3257 | <entry>Java runtime based upon the OpenJDK Project</entry> | ||
3258 | |||
3259 | <entry></entry> | ||
3260 | </row> | ||
3261 | |||
3262 | <row> | ||
3263 | <entry>openssh</entry> | ||
3264 | |||
3265 | <entry>7.4p1</entry> | ||
3266 | |||
3267 | <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh | ||
3268 | (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and | ||
3269 | for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry> | ||
3270 | |||
3271 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3272 | </row> | ||
3273 | |||
3274 | <row> | ||
3275 | <entry>openssl</entry> | ||
3276 | |||
3277 | <entry>1.0.2k</entry> | ||
3278 | |||
3279 | <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic | ||
3280 | tools.</entry> | ||
3281 | |||
3282 | <entry>OpenSSL</entry> | ||
3283 | </row> | ||
3284 | |||
3285 | <row> | ||
3286 | <entry>openvswitch</entry> | ||
3287 | |||
3288 | <entry>2.8.1</entry> | ||
3289 | |||
3290 | <entry>Open vSwitch is a production quality multilayer virtual | ||
3291 | switch licensed under the open source Apache 2.0 license. It is | ||
3292 | designed to enable massive network automation through programmatic | ||
3293 | extension while still supporting standard management interfaces | ||
3294 | and protocols (e.g. NetFlow sFlow SPAN RSPAN CLI LACP | ||
3295 | 802.1ag)</entry> | ||
3296 | |||
3297 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3298 | </row> | ||
3299 | |||
3300 | <row> | ||
3301 | <entry>opkg-utils</entry> | ||
3302 | |||
3303 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | ||
3304 | |||
3305 | <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry> | ||
3306 | |||
3307 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3308 | </row> | ||
3309 | |||
3310 | <row> | ||
3311 | <entry>oprofile</entry> | ||
3312 | |||
3313 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | ||
3314 | |||
3315 | <entry>OProfile is a system-wide profiler for Linux systems | ||
3316 | capable of profiling all running code at low overhead.</entry> | ||
3317 | |||
3318 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3319 | </row> | ||
3320 | |||
3321 | <row> | ||
3322 | <entry>oro</entry> | ||
3323 | |||
3324 | <entry>2.0.8</entry> | ||
3325 | |||
3326 | <entry>Perl5-compatible regular expressions library for | ||
3327 | Java</entry> | ||
3328 | |||
3329 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3330 | </row> | ||
3331 | |||
3332 | <row> | ||
3333 | <entry>os-release</entry> | ||
3334 | |||
3335 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3336 | |||
3337 | <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system | ||
3338 | identification data.</entry> | ||
3339 | |||
3340 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3341 | </row> | ||
3342 | |||
3343 | <row> | ||
3344 | <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry> | ||
3345 | |||
3346 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3347 | |||
3348 | <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the | ||
3349 | system</entry> | ||
3350 | |||
3351 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3352 | </row> | ||
3353 | |||
3354 | <row> | ||
3355 | <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry> | ||
3356 | |||
3357 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3358 | |||
3359 | <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry> | ||
3360 | |||
3361 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3362 | </row> | ||
3363 | |||
3364 | <row> | ||
3365 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-docker</entry> | ||
3366 | |||
3367 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3368 | |||
3369 | <entry>Packagegroup for Docker.</entry> | ||
3370 | |||
3371 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3372 | </row> | ||
3373 | |||
3374 | <row> | ||
3375 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry> | ||
3376 | |||
3377 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3378 | |||
3379 | <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry> | ||
3380 | |||
3381 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3382 | </row> | ||
3383 | |||
3384 | <row> | ||
3385 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-element-odm</entry> | ||
3386 | |||
3387 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3388 | |||
3389 | <entry>Packagegroup for Element ODM.</entry> | ||
3390 | |||
3391 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3392 | </row> | ||
3393 | |||
3394 | <row> | ||
3395 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-host</entry> | ||
3396 | |||
3397 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3398 | |||
3399 | <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups | ||
3400 | specific to the host side of the Enea Linux Virtualization | ||
3401 | Profile.</entry> | ||
3402 | |||
3403 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3404 | </row> | ||
3405 | |||
3406 | <row> | ||
3407 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-libvirt</entry> | ||
3408 | |||
3409 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3410 | |||
3411 | <entry>Package group for libvirt.</entry> | ||
3412 | |||
3413 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3414 | </row> | ||
3415 | |||
3416 | <row> | ||
3417 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxc</entry> | ||
3418 | |||
3419 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3420 | |||
3421 | <entry>Packagegroup for LXC.</entry> | ||
3422 | |||
3423 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3424 | </row> | ||
3425 | |||
3426 | <row> | ||
3427 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxd</entry> | ||
3428 | |||
3429 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3430 | |||
3431 | <entry>Packagegroup for LXD.</entry> | ||
3432 | |||
3433 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3434 | </row> | ||
3435 | |||
3436 | <row> | ||
3437 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-ovs</entry> | ||
3438 | |||
3439 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3440 | |||
3441 | <entry>Packagegroup for Open vSwitch.</entry> | ||
3442 | |||
3443 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3444 | </row> | ||
3445 | |||
3446 | <row> | ||
3447 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-qemu</entry> | ||
3448 | |||
3449 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3450 | |||
3451 | <entry>Packagegroup for QEMU.</entry> | ||
3452 | |||
3453 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3454 | </row> | ||
3455 | |||
3456 | <row> | ||
3457 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-tools</entry> | ||
3458 | |||
3459 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3460 | |||
3461 | <entry>Enea Linux debugging tools.</entry> | ||
3462 | |||
3463 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3464 | </row> | ||
3465 | |||
3466 | <row> | ||
3467 | <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry> | ||
3468 | |||
3469 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3470 | |||
3471 | <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups | ||
3472 | required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux | ||
3473 | Virtualization Profile.</entry> | ||
3474 | |||
3475 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3476 | </row> | ||
3477 | |||
3478 | <row> | ||
3479 | <entry>pango</entry> | ||
3480 | |||
3481 | <entry>1.40.3</entry> | ||
3482 | |||
3483 | <entry>Pango is a library for laying out and rendering of text | ||
3484 | with an emphasis on internationalization. Pango can be used | ||
3485 | anywhere that text layout is needed though most of the work on | ||
3486 | Pango so far has been done in the context of the GTK+ widget | ||
3487 | toolkit. Pango forms the core of text and font handling for | ||
3488 | GTK+-2.x.</entry> | ||
3489 | |||
3490 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3491 | </row> | ||
3492 | |||
3493 | <row> | ||
3494 | <entry>parted</entry> | ||
3495 | |||
3496 | <entry>3.2</entry> | ||
3497 | |||
3498 | <entry>Disk partition editing/resizing utility.</entry> | ||
3499 | |||
3500 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3501 | </row> | ||
3502 | |||
3503 | <row> | ||
3504 | <entry>partrt</entry> | ||
3505 | |||
3506 | <entry>1.1</entry> | ||
3507 | |||
3508 | <entry>partrt is a tool for dividing a SMP Linux system into a | ||
3509 | real time domain and a non-real time domain.</entry> | ||
3510 | |||
3511 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3512 | </row> | ||
3513 | |||
3514 | <row> | ||
3515 | <entry>pciutils</entry> | ||
3516 | |||
3517 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | ||
3518 | |||
3519 | <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable | ||
3520 | access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based | ||
3521 | on this library.</entry> | ||
3522 | |||
3523 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3524 | </row> | ||
3525 | |||
3526 | <row> | ||
3527 | <entry>perf</entry> | ||
3528 | |||
3529 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3530 | |||
3531 | <entry>Performance counters for Linux are a new kernel-based | ||
3532 | subsystem that provide a framework for all things performance | ||
3533 | analysis. It covers hardware level (CPU/PMU Performance Monitoring | ||
3534 | Unit) features and software features (software counters | ||
3535 | tracepoints) as well.</entry> | ||
3536 | |||
3537 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3538 | </row> | ||
3539 | |||
3540 | <row> | ||
3541 | <entry>perl</entry> | ||
3542 | |||
3543 | <entry>5.24.1</entry> | ||
3544 | |||
3545 | <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry> | ||
3546 | |||
3547 | <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | ||
3548 | </row> | ||
3549 | |||
3550 | <row> | ||
3551 | <entry>pigz</entry> | ||
3552 | |||
3553 | <entry>2.3.4</entry> | ||
3554 | |||
3555 | <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a | ||
3556 | fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple | ||
3557 | processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data. | ||
3558 | pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread | ||
3559 | libraries.</entry> | ||
3560 | |||
3561 | <entry>Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3562 | </row> | ||
3563 | |||
3564 | <row> | ||
3565 | <entry>pixman</entry> | ||
3566 | |||
3567 | <entry>0.34.0</entry> | ||
3568 | |||
3569 | <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions -- | ||
3570 | a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the | ||
3571 | Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric | ||
3572 | primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry> | ||
3573 | |||
3574 | <entry>MIT, PD</entry> | ||
3575 | </row> | ||
3576 | |||
3577 | <row> | ||
3578 | <entry>pkgconfig</entry> | ||
3579 | |||
3580 | <entry>0.29.1</entry> | ||
3581 | |||
3582 | <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling | ||
3583 | applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct | ||
3584 | compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry> | ||
3585 | |||
3586 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3587 | </row> | ||
3588 | |||
3589 | <row> | ||
3590 | <entry>pm-utils</entry> | ||
3591 | |||
3592 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | ||
3593 | |||
3594 | <entry>Simple shell command line tools to suspend and | ||
3595 | hibernate.</entry> | ||
3596 | |||
3597 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3598 | </row> | ||
3599 | |||
3600 | <row> | ||
3601 | <entry>polkit</entry> | ||
3602 | |||
3603 | <entry>0.113</entry> | ||
3604 | |||
3605 | <entry>The polkit package is an application-level toolkit for | ||
3606 | defining and handling the policy that allows unprivileged | ||
3607 | processes to speak to privileged processes.</entry> | ||
3608 | |||
3609 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3610 | </row> | ||
3611 | |||
3612 | <row> | ||
3613 | <entry>popt</entry> | ||
3614 | |||
3615 | <entry>1.16</entry> | ||
3616 | |||
3617 | <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry> | ||
3618 | |||
3619 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3620 | </row> | ||
3621 | |||
3622 | <row> | ||
3623 | <entry>pps-tools</entry> | ||
3624 | |||
3625 | <entry>0.0.0</entry> | ||
3626 | |||
3627 | <entry>User-space tools for LinuxPPS.</entry> | ||
3628 | |||
3629 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3630 | </row> | ||
3631 | |||
3632 | <row> | ||
3633 | <entry>prelink</entry> | ||
3634 | |||
3635 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3636 | |||
3637 | <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF | ||
3638 | shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations | ||
3639 | need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up | ||
3640 | faster.</entry> | ||
3641 | |||
3642 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3643 | </row> | ||
3644 | |||
3645 | <row> | ||
3646 | <entry>procps</entry> | ||
3647 | |||
3648 | <entry>3.3.12</entry> | ||
3649 | |||
3650 | <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide | ||
3651 | system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The | ||
3652 | package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and | ||
3653 | skill.</entry> | ||
3654 | |||
3655 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3656 | </row> | ||
3657 | |||
3658 | <row> | ||
3659 | <entry>pseudo</entry> | ||
3660 | |||
3661 | <entry>1.8.2</entry> | ||
3662 | |||
3663 | <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal | ||
3664 | user.</entry> | ||
3665 | |||
3666 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
3667 | </row> | ||
3668 | |||
3669 | <row> | ||
3670 | <entry>ptest-runner</entry> | ||
3671 | |||
3672 | <entry>2.0.2</entry> | ||
3673 | |||
3674 | <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program | ||
3675 | which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them | ||
3676 | in sequence.</entry> | ||
3677 | |||
3678 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3679 | </row> | ||
3680 | |||
3681 | <row> | ||
3682 | <entry>python-futures</entry> | ||
3683 | |||
3684 | <entry>3.0.5</entry> | ||
3685 | |||
3686 | <entry>The concurrent.futures module provides a high-level | ||
3687 | interface for asynchronously executing callables.</entry> | ||
3688 | |||
3689 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3690 | </row> | ||
3691 | |||
3692 | <row> | ||
3693 | <entry>python-netaddr</entry> | ||
3694 | |||
3695 | <entry>0.7.19</entry> | ||
3696 | |||
3697 | <entry>A network address manipulation library for Python..</entry> | ||
3698 | |||
3699 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3700 | </row> | ||
3701 | |||
3702 | <row> | ||
3703 | <entry>python-netifaces</entry> | ||
3704 | |||
3705 | <entry>0.10.6</entry> | ||
3706 | |||
3707 | <entry>Portable network interface information..</entry> | ||
3708 | |||
3709 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3710 | </row> | ||
3711 | |||
3712 | <row> | ||
3713 | <entry>python-pip</entry> | ||
3714 | |||
3715 | <entry>9.0.1</entry> | ||
3716 | |||
3717 | <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python | ||
3718 | packages.</entry> | ||
3719 | |||
3720 | <entry>MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
3721 | </row> | ||
3722 | |||
3723 | <row> | ||
3724 | <entry>python-psutil</entry> | ||
3725 | |||
3726 | <entry>5.2.0</entry> | ||
3727 | |||
3728 | <entry>A cross-platform process and system utilities module for | ||
3729 | Python.</entry> | ||
3730 | |||
3731 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3732 | </row> | ||
3733 | |||
3734 | <row> | ||
3735 | <entry>python-setuptools</entry> | ||
3736 | |||
3737 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | ||
3738 | |||
3739 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python | ||
3740 | packages.</entry> | ||
3741 | |||
3742 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3743 | </row> | ||
3744 | |||
3745 | <row> | ||
3746 | <entry>python-six</entry> | ||
3747 | |||
3748 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | ||
3749 | |||
3750 | <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities</entry> | ||
3751 | |||
3752 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3753 | </row> | ||
3754 | |||
3755 | <row> | ||
3756 | <entry>python-twisted</entry> | ||
3757 | |||
3758 | <entry>13.2.0</entry> | ||
3759 | |||
3760 | <entry>Twisted is an event-driven networking framework written in | ||
3761 | Python and licensed under the LGPL. Twisted supports TCP UDP | ||
3762 | SSL/TLS multicast Unix sockets a large number of protocols | ||
3763 | (including HTTP NNTP IMAP SSH IRC FTP and others) and much | ||
3764 | more.</entry> | ||
3765 | |||
3766 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3767 | </row> | ||
3768 | |||
3769 | <row> | ||
3770 | <entry>python-zopeinterface</entry> | ||
3771 | |||
3772 | <entry>4.3.3</entry> | ||
3773 | |||
3774 | <entry>Interface definitions for Zope products.</entry> | ||
3775 | |||
3776 | <entry></entry> | ||
3777 | </row> | ||
3778 | |||
3779 | <row> | ||
3780 | <entry>python</entry> | ||
3781 | |||
3782 | <entry>2.7.13</entry> | ||
3783 | |||
3784 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | ||
3785 | |||
3786 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | ||
3787 | </row> | ||
3788 | |||
3789 | <row> | ||
3790 | <entry>python3-setuptools</entry> | ||
3791 | |||
3792 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | ||
3793 | |||
3794 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python | ||
3795 | packages.</entry> | ||
3796 | |||
3797 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3798 | </row> | ||
3799 | |||
3800 | <row> | ||
3801 | <entry>python3</entry> | ||
3802 | |||
3803 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | ||
3804 | |||
3805 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | ||
3806 | |||
3807 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | ||
3808 | </row> | ||
3809 | |||
3810 | <row> | ||
3811 | <entry>qemu</entry> | ||
3812 | |||
3813 | <entry>2.8.0</entry> | ||
3814 | |||
3815 | <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry> | ||
3816 | |||
3817 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
3818 | </row> | ||
3819 | |||
3820 | <row> | ||
3821 | <entry>qemuwrapper</entry> | ||
3822 | |||
3823 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3824 | |||
3825 | <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry> | ||
3826 | |||
3827 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3828 | </row> | ||
3829 | |||
3830 | <row> | ||
3831 | <entry>quilt</entry> | ||
3832 | |||
3833 | <entry>0.65</entry> | ||
3834 | |||
3835 | <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry> | ||
3836 | |||
3837 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3838 | </row> | ||
3839 | |||
3840 | <row> | ||
3841 | <entry>randrproto</entry> | ||
3842 | |||
3843 | <entry>1.5.0</entry> | ||
3844 | |||
3845 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize | ||
3846 | Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability | ||
3847 | to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry> | ||
3848 | |||
3849 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3850 | </row> | ||
3851 | |||
3852 | <row> | ||
3853 | <entry>readline</entry> | ||
3854 | |||
3855 | <entry>7.0</entry> | ||
3856 | |||
3857 | <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for | ||
3858 | use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they | ||
3859 | are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The | ||
3860 | Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list | ||
3861 | of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit | ||
3862 | those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous | ||
3863 | commands.</entry> | ||
3864 | |||
3865 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3866 | </row> | ||
3867 | |||
3868 | <row> | ||
3869 | <entry>recordproto</entry> | ||
3870 | |||
3871 | <entry>1.14.2</entry> | ||
3872 | |||
3873 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Record | ||
3874 | extension. This extension is used to record and play back event | ||
3875 | sequences.</entry> | ||
3876 | |||
3877 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3878 | </row> | ||
3879 | |||
3880 | <row> | ||
3881 | <entry>regexp</entry> | ||
3882 | |||
3883 | <entry>1.5</entry> | ||
3884 | |||
3885 | <entry>Java Regular Expression package</entry> | ||
3886 | |||
3887 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3888 | </row> | ||
3889 | |||
3890 | <row> | ||
3891 | <entry>renderproto</entry> | ||
3892 | |||
3893 | <entry>0.11.1</entry> | ||
3894 | |||
3895 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering | ||
3896 | extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X | ||
3897 | window system.</entry> | ||
3898 | |||
3899 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3900 | </row> | ||
3901 | |||
3902 | <row> | ||
3903 | <entry>rhino</entry> | ||
3904 | |||
3905 | <entry>1.7r4</entry> | ||
3906 | |||
3907 | <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry> | ||
3908 | |||
3909 | <entry>MPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3910 | </row> | ||
3911 | |||
3912 | <row> | ||
3913 | <entry>rpm</entry> | ||
3914 | |||
3915 | <entry>4.13.90</entry> | ||
3916 | |||
3917 | <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line | ||
3918 | driven package management system capable of installing | ||
3919 | uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages. | ||
3920 | Each software package consists of an archive of files along with | ||
3921 | information about the package like its version a description | ||
3922 | etc.</entry> | ||
3923 | |||
3924 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
3925 | </row> | ||
3926 | |||
3927 | <row> | ||
3928 | <entry>rsync</entry> | ||
3929 | |||
3930 | <entry>3.1.2</entry> | ||
3931 | |||
3932 | <entry>File synchronization tool.</entry> | ||
3933 | |||
3934 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3935 | </row> | ||
3936 | |||
3937 | <row> | ||
3938 | <entry>run-postinsts</entry> | ||
3939 | |||
3940 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
3941 | |||
3942 | <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target | ||
3943 | device.</entry> | ||
3944 | |||
3945 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3946 | </row> | ||
3947 | |||
3948 | <row> | ||
3949 | <entry>runc-docker</entry> | ||
3950 | |||
3951 | <entry>1.0.0-rc2</entry> | ||
3952 | |||
3953 | <entry>runc is a CLI tool for spawning and running containers | ||
3954 | according to the OCI specification.</entry> | ||
3955 | |||
3956 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3957 | </row> | ||
3958 | |||
3959 | <row> | ||
3960 | <entry>sed</entry> | ||
3961 | |||
3962 | <entry>4.2.2</entry> | ||
3963 | |||
3964 | <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry> | ||
3965 | |||
3966 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
3967 | </row> | ||
3968 | |||
3969 | <row> | ||
3970 | <entry>servlet2.3</entry> | ||
3971 | |||
3972 | <entry>4.1.37</entry> | ||
3973 | |||
3974 | <entry>Servlet API 2.3 (from Tomcat 4.1)</entry> | ||
3975 | |||
3976 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3977 | </row> | ||
3978 | |||
3979 | <row> | ||
3980 | <entry>shadow-securetty</entry> | ||
3981 | |||
3982 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
3983 | |||
3984 | <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry> | ||
3985 | |||
3986 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3987 | </row> | ||
3988 | |||
3989 | <row> | ||
3990 | <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry> | ||
3991 | |||
3992 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
3993 | |||
3994 | <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry> | ||
3995 | |||
3996 | <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | ||
3997 | </row> | ||
3998 | |||
3999 | <row> | ||
4000 | <entry>shadow</entry> | ||
4001 | |||
4002 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
4003 | |||
4004 | <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group | ||
4005 | data.</entry> | ||
4006 | |||
4007 | <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | ||
4008 | </row> | ||
4009 | |||
4010 | <row> | ||
4011 | <entry>shared-mime-info</entry> | ||
4012 | |||
4013 | <entry>1.8</entry> | ||
4014 | |||
4015 | <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry> | ||
4016 | |||
4017 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4018 | </row> | ||
4019 | |||
4020 | <row> | ||
4021 | <entry>simpleproxy</entry> | ||
4022 | |||
4023 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
4024 | |||
4025 | <entry>Simpleproxy.</entry> | ||
4026 | |||
4027 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4028 | </row> | ||
4029 | |||
4030 | <row> | ||
4031 | <entry>slang</entry> | ||
4032 | |||
4033 | <entry>2.3.1a</entry> | ||
4034 | |||
4035 | <entry>S-Lang is an interpreted language and a programming | ||
4036 | library. The S-Lang language was designed so that it can be easily | ||
4037 | embedded into a program to provide the program with a powerful | ||
4038 | extension language. The S-Lang library provided in this package | ||
4039 | provides the S-Lang extension language. S-Lang's syntax resembles | ||
4040 | C which makes it easy to recode S-Lang procedures in C if you need | ||
4041 | to.</entry> | ||
4042 | |||
4043 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4044 | </row> | ||
4045 | |||
4046 | <row> | ||
4047 | <entry>sqlite3</entry> | ||
4048 | |||
4049 | <entry>3.17.0</entry> | ||
4050 | |||
4051 | <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry> | ||
4052 | |||
4053 | <entry>PD</entry> | ||
4054 | </row> | ||
4055 | |||
4056 | <row> | ||
4057 | <entry>squashfs-tools</entry> | ||
4058 | |||
4059 | <entry>4.3</entry> | ||
4060 | |||
4061 | <entry>Tools for manipulating SquashFS filesystems.</entry> | ||
4062 | |||
4063 | <entry>GPL-2.0, PD</entry> | ||
4064 | </row> | ||
4065 | |||
4066 | <row> | ||
4067 | <entry>sysfsutils</entry> | ||
4068 | |||
4069 | <entry>2.1.0</entry> | ||
4070 | |||
4071 | <entry>Tools for working with the sysfs virtual filesystem. The | ||
4072 | tool 'systool' can query devices by bus class and | ||
4073 | topology.</entry> | ||
4074 | |||
4075 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
4076 | </row> | ||
4077 | |||
4078 | <row> | ||
4079 | <entry>syslinux</entry> | ||
4080 | |||
4081 | <entry>6.03</entry> | ||
4082 | |||
4083 | <entry>Multi-purpose linux bootloader.</entry> | ||
4084 | |||
4085 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4086 | </row> | ||
4087 | |||
4088 | <row> | ||
4089 | <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry> | ||
4090 | |||
4091 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
4092 | |||
4093 | <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit | ||
4094 | scripts.</entry> | ||
4095 | |||
4096 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4097 | </row> | ||
4098 | |||
4099 | <row> | ||
4100 | <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry> | ||
4101 | |||
4102 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
4103 | |||
4104 | <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry> | ||
4105 | |||
4106 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4107 | </row> | ||
4108 | |||
4109 | <row> | ||
4110 | <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry> | ||
4111 | |||
4112 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
4113 | |||
4114 | <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry> | ||
4115 | |||
4116 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4117 | </row> | ||
4118 | |||
4119 | <row> | ||
4120 | <entry>systemd</entry> | ||
4121 | |||
4122 | <entry>232</entry> | ||
4123 | |||
4124 | <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux | ||
4125 | compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides | ||
4126 | aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus | ||
4127 | activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of | ||
4128 | daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports | ||
4129 | snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and | ||
4130 | automount points and implements an elaborate transactional | ||
4131 | dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in | ||
4132 | replacement for sysvinit.</entry> | ||
4133 | |||
4134 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
4135 | </row> | ||
4136 | |||
4137 | <row> | ||
4138 | <entry>systemtap</entry> | ||
4139 | |||
4140 | <entry>3.1</entry> | ||
4141 | |||
4142 | <entry>Script-directed dynamic tracing and performance analysis | ||
4143 | tool for Linux.</entry> | ||
4144 | |||
4145 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4146 | </row> | ||
4147 | |||
4148 | <row> | ||
4149 | <entry>tar</entry> | ||
4150 | |||
4151 | <entry>1.29</entry> | ||
4152 | |||
4153 | <entry>GNU tar saves many files together into a single tape or | ||
4154 | disk archive and can restore individual files from the | ||
4155 | archive.</entry> | ||
4156 | |||
4157 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
4158 | </row> | ||
4159 | |||
4160 | <row> | ||
4161 | <entry>tcpdump</entry> | ||
4162 | |||
4163 | <entry>4.9.0</entry> | ||
4164 | |||
4165 | <entry>A sophisticated network protocol analyzer.</entry> | ||
4166 | |||
4167 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4168 | </row> | ||
4169 | |||
4170 | <row> | ||
4171 | <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry> | ||
4172 | |||
4173 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
4174 | |||
4175 | <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry> | ||
4176 | |||
4177 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4178 | </row> | ||
4179 | |||
4180 | <row> | ||
4181 | <entry>thin-provisioning-tools</entry> | ||
4182 | |||
4183 | <entry>0.6.3</entry> | ||
4184 | |||
4185 | <entry>A suite of tools for manipulating the metadata of the | ||
4186 | dm-thin device-mapper target.</entry> | ||
4187 | |||
4188 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
4189 | </row> | ||
4190 | |||
4191 | <row> | ||
4192 | <entry>tunctl</entry> | ||
4193 | |||
4194 | <entry>1.5</entry> | ||
4195 | |||
4196 | <entry>Tool for controlling the Linux TUN/TAP driver.</entry> | ||
4197 | |||
4198 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4199 | </row> | ||
4200 | |||
4201 | <row> | ||
4202 | <entry>tzcode</entry> | ||
4203 | |||
4204 | <entry>2017b</entry> | ||
4205 | |||
4206 | <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump | ||
4207 | tzselect.</entry> | ||
4208 | |||
4209 | <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
4210 | </row> | ||
4211 | |||
4212 | <row> | ||
4213 | <entry>tzdata</entry> | ||
4214 | |||
4215 | <entry>2017b</entry> | ||
4216 | |||
4217 | <entry>Timezone data.</entry> | ||
4218 | |||
4219 | <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
4220 | </row> | ||
4221 | |||
4222 | <row> | ||
4223 | <entry>unifdef</entry> | ||
4224 | |||
4225 | <entry>2.11</entry> | ||
4226 | |||
4227 | <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry> | ||
4228 | |||
4229 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | ||
4230 | </row> | ||
4231 | |||
4232 | <row> | ||
4233 | <entry>unzip</entry> | ||
4234 | |||
4235 | <entry>6.0</entry> | ||
4236 | |||
4237 | <entry>Utilities for extracting and viewing files in .zip | ||
4238 | archives.</entry> | ||
4239 | |||
4240 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
4241 | </row> | ||
4242 | |||
4243 | <row> | ||
4244 | <entry>update-rc.d</entry> | ||
4245 | |||
4246 | <entry>0.7</entry> | ||
4247 | |||
4248 | <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of | ||
4249 | symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory | ||
4250 | structure.</entry> | ||
4251 | |||
4252 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4253 | </row> | ||
4254 | |||
4255 | <row> | ||
4256 | <entry>util-linux</entry> | ||
4257 | |||
4258 | <entry>2.29.1</entry> | ||
4259 | |||
4260 | <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration | ||
4261 | utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more | ||
4262 | important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message | ||
4263 | management filesystem creation and system login.</entry> | ||
4264 | |||
4265 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry> | ||
4266 | </row> | ||
4267 | |||
4268 | <row> | ||
4269 | <entry>util-macros</entry> | ||
4270 | |||
4271 | <entry>1.19.1</entry> | ||
4272 | |||
4273 | <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry> | ||
4274 | |||
4275 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4276 | </row> | ||
4277 | |||
4278 | <row> | ||
4279 | <entry>vala</entry> | ||
4280 | |||
4281 | <entry>0.34.4</entry> | ||
4282 | |||
4283 | <entry>Vala is a C#-like language dedicated to ease GObject | ||
4284 | programming. Vala compiles to plain C and has no runtime | ||
4285 | environment nor penalities whatsoever.</entry> | ||
4286 | |||
4287 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
4288 | </row> | ||
4289 | |||
4290 | <row> | ||
4291 | <entry>volatile-binds</entry> | ||
4292 | |||
4293 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
4294 | |||
4295 | <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for | ||
4296 | read-only-rootfs</entry> | ||
4297 | |||
4298 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4299 | </row> | ||
4300 | |||
4301 | <row> | ||
4302 | <entry>xalan-j</entry> | ||
4303 | |||
4304 | <entry>2.7.1</entry> | ||
4305 | |||
4306 | <entry>Java XSLT processor</entry> | ||
4307 | |||
4308 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4309 | </row> | ||
4310 | |||
4311 | <row> | ||
4312 | <entry>xcb-proto</entry> | ||
4313 | |||
4314 | <entry>1.12</entry> | ||
4315 | |||
4316 | <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding | ||
4317 | (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint | ||
4318 | latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading | ||
4319 | support and extensibility.</entry> | ||
4320 | |||
4321 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4322 | </row> | ||
4323 | |||
4324 | <row> | ||
4325 | <entry>xerces-j</entry> | ||
4326 | |||
4327 | <entry>2.11.0</entry> | ||
4328 | |||
4329 | <entry>Reference implementation of XNI the Xerces Native Interface | ||
4330 | and also a fully conforming XML Schema processor.</entry> | ||
4331 | |||
4332 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4333 | </row> | ||
4334 | |||
4335 | <row> | ||
4336 | <entry>xextproto</entry> | ||
4337 | |||
4338 | <entry>7.3.0</entry> | ||
4339 | |||
4340 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X | ||
4341 | extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS | ||
4342 | Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD | ||
4343 | Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC | ||
4344 | XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also | ||
4345 | available.</entry> | ||
4346 | |||
4347 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4348 | </row> | ||
4349 | |||
4350 | <row> | ||
4351 | <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry> | ||
4352 | |||
4353 | <entry>2.20</entry> | ||
4354 | |||
4355 | <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window. | ||
4356 | The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently | ||
4357 | released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window | ||
4358 | System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based | ||
4359 | systems.</entry> | ||
4360 | |||
4361 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4362 | </row> | ||
4363 | |||
4364 | <row> | ||
4365 | <entry>xml-commons-resolver1.1</entry> | ||
4366 | |||
4367 | <entry>1.2</entry> | ||
4368 | |||
4369 | <entry>Library to resolve various public or system identifiers | ||
4370 | into accessible URLs (Java)</entry> | ||
4371 | |||
4372 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4373 | </row> | ||
4374 | |||
4375 | <row> | ||
4376 | <entry>xmlto</entry> | ||
4377 | |||
4378 | <entry>0.0.28</entry> | ||
4379 | |||
4380 | <entry>A shell-script tool for converting XML files to various | ||
4381 | formats.</entry> | ||
4382 | |||
4383 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4384 | </row> | ||
4385 | |||
4386 | <row> | ||
4387 | <entry>xproto</entry> | ||
4388 | |||
4389 | <entry>7.0.31</entry> | ||
4390 | |||
4391 | <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window | ||
4392 | System.</entry> | ||
4393 | |||
4394 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4395 | </row> | ||
4396 | |||
4397 | <row> | ||
4398 | <entry>xtrans</entry> | ||
4399 | |||
4400 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | ||
4401 | |||
4402 | <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system | ||
4403 | and transport specific code into a single place. This API should | ||
4404 | be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window | ||
4405 | System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of | ||
4406 | transports and support for new platforms without making any | ||
4407 | changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface | ||
4408 | code.</entry> | ||
4409 | |||
4410 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4411 | </row> | ||
4412 | |||
4413 | <row> | ||
4414 | <entry>xz</entry> | ||
4415 | |||
4416 | <entry>5.2.3</entry> | ||
4417 | |||
4418 | <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry> | ||
4419 | |||
4420 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry> | ||
4421 | </row> | ||
4422 | |||
4423 | <row> | ||
4424 | <entry>yajl</entry> | ||
4425 | |||
4426 | <entry>2.1.0</entry> | ||
4427 | |||
4428 | <entry>YAJL is a small event-driven (SAX-style) JSON parser | ||
4429 | written in ANSI C and a small validating JSON generator.</entry> | ||
4430 | |||
4431 | <entry>ISC</entry> | ||
4432 | </row> | ||
4433 | |||
4434 | <row> | ||
4435 | <entry>zip</entry> | ||
4436 | |||
4437 | <entry>3.0</entry> | ||
4438 | |||
4439 | <entry>Compressor/archiver for creating and modifying .zip | ||
4440 | files.</entry> | ||
4441 | |||
4442 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
4443 | </row> | ||
4444 | |||
4445 | <row> | ||
4446 | <entry>zisofs-tools</entry> | ||
4447 | |||
4448 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | ||
4449 | |||
4450 | <entry>Utilities for creating compressed CD-ROM | ||
4451 | filesystems.</entry> | ||
4452 | |||
4453 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
4454 | </row> | ||
4455 | |||
4456 | <row> | ||
4457 | <entry>zlib</entry> | ||
4458 | |||
4459 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> | ||
4460 | |||
4461 | <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data | ||
4462 | compression library which is used by many different | ||
4463 | programs.</entry> | ||
4464 | |||
4465 | <entry>Zlib</entry> | ||
4466 | </row> | ||
4467 | </tbody> | ||
4468 | </tgroup> | ||
4469 | </informaltable> | ||
4470 | </section> | ||
4471 | |||
4472 | <section id="open_source_license"> | ||
4473 | <title>Open Source Licenses</title> | ||
4474 | |||
4475 | <section id="lic_0"> | ||
4476 | <title>AFL-2.0</title> | ||
4477 | |||
4478 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2309 | 4479 | ||
2310 | The Academic Free License | 4480 | The Academic Free License |
2311 | v. 2.0 | 4481 | v. 2.0 |
@@ -2446,11 +4616,13 @@ Permission is hereby granted to copy and distribute this license without modific | |||
2446 | This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its | 4616 | This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its |
2447 | copyright owner. | 4617 | copyright owner. |
2448 | 4618 | ||
2449 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4619 | </programlisting></para> |
4620 | </section> | ||
4621 | |||
4622 | <section id="lic_1"> | ||
4623 | <title>Apache-2.0</title> | ||
2450 | 4624 | ||
2451 | <section id="lic_1"> | 4625 | <para><programlisting> |
2452 | <title>Apache-2.0</title> | ||
2453 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2454 | 4626 | ||
2455 | 4627 | ||
2456 | Apache License | 4628 | Apache License |
@@ -2655,11 +4827,13 @@ copyright owner. | |||
2655 | See the License for the specific language governing permissions and | 4827 | See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
2656 | limitations under the License. | 4828 | limitations under the License. |
2657 | 4829 | ||
2658 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4830 | </programlisting></para> |
4831 | </section> | ||
2659 | 4832 | ||
2660 | <section id="lic_2"> | 4833 | <section id="lic_2"> |
2661 | <title>Artistic-1.0</title> | 4834 | <title>Artistic-1.0</title> |
2662 | <para><programlisting> | 4835 | |
4836 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2663 | 4837 | ||
2664 | The Artistic License | 4838 | The Artistic License |
2665 | Preamble | 4839 | Preamble |
@@ -2752,11 +4926,13 @@ FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. | |||
2752 | 4926 | ||
2753 | The End | 4927 | The End |
2754 | 4928 | ||
2755 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4929 | </programlisting></para> |
4930 | </section> | ||
4931 | |||
4932 | <section id="lic_3"> | ||
4933 | <title>BSD</title> | ||
2756 | 4934 | ||
2757 | <section id="lic_3"> | 4935 | <para><programlisting> |
2758 | <title>BSD</title> | ||
2759 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2760 | Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. | 4936 | Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. |
2761 | All rights reserved. | 4937 | All rights reserved. |
2762 | 4938 | ||
@@ -2783,11 +4959,13 @@ HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT | |||
2783 | LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY | 4959 | LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY |
2784 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF | 4960 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF |
2785 | SUCH DAMAGE. | 4961 | SUCH DAMAGE. |
2786 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4962 | </programlisting></para> |
4963 | </section> | ||
4964 | |||
4965 | <section id="lic_4"> | ||
4966 | <title>BSD-2-Clause</title> | ||
2787 | 4967 | ||
2788 | <section id="lic_4"> | 4968 | <para><programlisting> |
2789 | <title>BSD-2-Clause</title> | ||
2790 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2791 | 4969 | ||
2792 | The FreeBSD Copyright | 4970 | The FreeBSD Copyright |
2793 | 4971 | ||
@@ -2815,11 +4993,13 @@ The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation are those | |||
2815 | authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either | 4993 | authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either |
2816 | expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. | 4994 | expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. |
2817 | 4995 | ||
2818 | </programlisting></para></section> | 4996 | </programlisting></para> |
4997 | </section> | ||
2819 | 4998 | ||
2820 | <section id="lic_5"> | 4999 | <section id="lic_5"> |
2821 | <title>BSD-3-Clause</title> | 5000 | <title>BSD-3-Clause</title> |
2822 | <para><programlisting> | 5001 | |
5002 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2823 | 5003 | ||
2824 | Copyright (c) <YEAR>, <OWNER> | 5004 | Copyright (c) <YEAR>, <OWNER> |
2825 | All rights reserved. | 5005 | All rights reserved. |
@@ -2846,11 +5026,13 @@ CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING | |||
2846 | WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH | 5026 | WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH |
2847 | DAMAGE. | 5027 | DAMAGE. |
2848 | 5028 | ||
2849 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5029 | </programlisting></para> |
5030 | </section> | ||
5031 | |||
5032 | <section id="lic_6"> | ||
5033 | <title>BSD-4-Clause</title> | ||
2850 | 5034 | ||
2851 | <section id="lic_6"> | 5035 | <para><programlisting> |
2852 | <title>BSD-4-Clause</title> | ||
2853 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2854 | 5036 | ||
2855 | Copyright (c) <year>, <copyright holder> | 5037 | Copyright (c) <year>, <copyright holder> |
2856 | All rights reserved. | 5038 | All rights reserved. |
@@ -2880,11 +5062,13 @@ ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT | |||
2880 | (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS | 5062 | (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS |
2881 | SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. | 5063 | SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
2882 | 5064 | ||
2883 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5065 | </programlisting></para> |
5066 | </section> | ||
5067 | |||
5068 | <section id="lic_7"> | ||
5069 | <title>BSL-1.0</title> | ||
2884 | 5070 | ||
2885 | <section id="lic_7"> | 5071 | <para><programlisting> |
2886 | <title>BSL-1.0</title> | ||
2887 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2888 | 5072 | ||
2889 | Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003 | 5073 | Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003 |
2890 | 5074 | ||
@@ -2910,11 +5094,13 @@ FOR ANY DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, | |||
2910 | ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER | 5094 | ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER |
2911 | DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. | 5095 | DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. |
2912 | 5096 | ||
2913 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5097 | </programlisting></para> |
5098 | </section> | ||
2914 | 5099 | ||
2915 | <section id="lic_8"> | 5100 | <section id="lic_8"> |
2916 | <title>EPL-1.0</title> | 5101 | <title>EPL-1.0</title> |
2917 | <para><programlisting> | 5102 | |
5103 | <para><programlisting> | ||
2918 | 5104 | ||
2919 | Eclipse Public License - v 1.0 | 5105 | Eclipse Public License - v 1.0 |
2920 | 5106 | ||
@@ -3102,11 +5288,13 @@ property laws of the United States of America. No party to this Agreement will b | |||
3102 | legal action under this Agreement more than one year after the cause of action arose. | 5288 | legal action under this Agreement more than one year after the cause of action arose. |
3103 | Each party waives its rights to a jury trial in any resulting litigation. | 5289 | Each party waives its rights to a jury trial in any resulting litigation. |
3104 | 5290 | ||
3105 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5291 | </programlisting></para> |
5292 | </section> | ||
5293 | |||
5294 | <section id="lic_9"> | ||
5295 | <title>Elfutils-Exception</title> | ||
3106 | 5296 | ||
3107 | <section id="lic_9"> | 5297 | <para><programlisting> |
3108 | <title>Elfutils-Exception</title> | ||
3109 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3110 | This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed | 5298 | This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed |
3111 | to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. | 5299 | to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. |
3112 | For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files | 5300 | For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files |
@@ -3119,20 +5307,24 @@ Each party waives its rights to a jury trial in any resulting litigation. | |||
3119 | libdw.h | 5307 | libdw.h |
3120 | libdwfl.h | 5308 | libdwfl.h |
3121 | 5309 | ||
3122 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5310 | </programlisting></para> |
5311 | </section> | ||
5312 | |||
5313 | <section id="lic_10"> | ||
5314 | <title>FSF-Unlimited</title> | ||
3123 | 5315 | ||
3124 | <section id="lic_10"> | 5316 | <para><programlisting> |
3125 | <title>FSF-Unlimited</title> | ||
3126 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3127 | Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. | 5317 | Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
3128 | This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation | 5318 | This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation |
3129 | gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, | 5319 | gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, |
3130 | with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. | 5320 | with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. |
3131 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5321 | </programlisting></para> |
5322 | </section> | ||
3132 | 5323 | ||
3133 | <section id="lic_11"> | 5324 | <section id="lic_11"> |
3134 | <title>FreeType</title> | 5325 | <title>FreeType</title> |
3135 | <para><programlisting> | 5326 | |
5327 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3136 | The FreeType Project LICENSE | 5328 | The FreeType Project LICENSE |
3137 | ---------------------------- | 5329 | ---------------------------- |
3138 | 5330 | ||
@@ -3303,11 +5495,13 @@ Legal Terms | |||
3303 | 5495 | ||
3304 | --- end of FTL.TXT --- | 5496 | --- end of FTL.TXT --- |
3305 | 5497 | ||
3306 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5498 | </programlisting></para> |
5499 | </section> | ||
5500 | |||
5501 | <section id="lic_12"> | ||
5502 | <title>GPL-1.0</title> | ||
3307 | 5503 | ||
3308 | <section id="lic_12"> | 5504 | <para><programlisting> |
3309 | <title>GPL-1.0</title> | ||
3310 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3311 | 5505 | ||
3312 | GNU General Public License, version 1 | 5506 | GNU General Public License, version 1 |
3313 | 5507 | ||
@@ -3560,11 +5754,13 @@ necessary. Here a sample; alter the names: | |||
3560 | 5754 | ||
3561 | That`s all there is to it! | 5755 | That`s all there is to it! |
3562 | 5756 | ||
3563 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5757 | </programlisting></para> |
5758 | </section> | ||
5759 | |||
5760 | <section id="lic_13"> | ||
5761 | <title>GPL-2.0</title> | ||
3564 | 5762 | ||
3565 | <section id="lic_13"> | 5763 | <para><programlisting> |
3566 | <title>GPL-2.0</title> | ||
3567 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3568 | 5764 | ||
3569 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 5765 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
3570 | 5766 | ||
@@ -3863,16 +6059,18 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this | |||
3863 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this | 6059 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this |
3864 | License. | 6060 | License. |
3865 | 6061 | ||
3866 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6062 | </programlisting></para> |
6063 | </section> | ||
3867 | 6064 | ||
3868 | <section id="lic_14"> | 6065 | <section id="lic_14"> |
3869 | <title>GPL-3.0</title> | 6066 | <title>GPL-3.0</title> |
3870 | <para><programlisting> | 6067 | |
6068 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3871 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 6069 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
3872 | 6070 | ||
3873 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 | 6071 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 |
3874 | 6072 | ||
3875 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> | 6073 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> |
3876 | 6074 | ||
3877 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, | 6075 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, |
3878 | but changing it is not allowed. | 6076 | but changing it is not allowed. |
@@ -4441,11 +6639,13 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this | |||
4441 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this | 6639 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this |
4442 | License. But first, please read | 6640 | License. But first, please read |
4443 | <http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>. | 6641 | <http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>. |
4444 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6642 | </programlisting></para> |
6643 | </section> | ||
6644 | |||
6645 | <section id="lic_15"> | ||
6646 | <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title> | ||
4445 | 6647 | ||
4446 | <section id="lic_15"> | 6648 | <para><programlisting> |
4447 | <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title> | ||
4448 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4449 | 6649 | ||
4450 | insert GPL v3 text here | 6650 | insert GPL v3 text here |
4451 | 6651 | ||
@@ -4501,11 +6701,13 @@ consistent with the licensing of the Independent Modules. | |||
4501 | The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that | 6701 | The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that |
4502 | third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. | 6702 | third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. |
4503 | 6703 | ||
4504 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6704 | </programlisting></para> |
6705 | </section> | ||
6706 | |||
6707 | <section id="lic_16"> | ||
6708 | <title>ICU</title> | ||
4505 | 6709 | ||
4506 | <section id="lic_16"> | 6710 | <para><programlisting> |
4507 | <title>ICU</title> | ||
4508 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4509 | COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE | 6711 | COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE |
4510 | 6712 | ||
4511 | Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others | 6713 | Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others |
@@ -4536,16 +6738,18 @@ Software without prior written authorization of the copyright holder. | |||
4536 | 6738 | ||
4537 | All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their | 6739 | All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their |
4538 | respective owners. | 6740 | respective owners. |
4539 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6741 | </programlisting></para> |
6742 | </section> | ||
4540 | 6743 | ||
4541 | <section id="lic_17"> | 6744 | <section id="lic_17"> |
4542 | <title>ISC</title> | 6745 | <title>ISC</title> |
4543 | <para><programlisting> | 6746 | |
6747 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4544 | 6748 | ||
4545 | ISC License: | 6749 | ISC License: |
4546 | 6750 | ||
4547 | Copyright © 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") | 6751 | Copyright © 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") |
4548 | Copyright © 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium | 6752 | Copyright © 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium |
4549 | 6753 | ||
4550 | Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with | 6754 | Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with |
4551 | or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this | 6755 | or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this |
@@ -4558,11 +6762,13 @@ DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN AC | |||
4558 | OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH | 6762 | OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH |
4559 | THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. | 6763 | THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. |
4560 | 6764 | ||
4561 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6765 | </programlisting></para> |
6766 | </section> | ||
6767 | |||
6768 | <section id="lic_18"> | ||
6769 | <title>LGPL-2.0</title> | ||
4562 | 6770 | ||
4563 | <section id="lic_18"> | 6771 | <para><programlisting> |
4564 | <title>LGPL-2.0</title> | ||
4565 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4566 | GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 6772 | GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
4567 | 6773 | ||
4568 | 6774 | ||
@@ -5146,11 +7352,13 @@ Ty Coon, President of Vice | |||
5146 | 7352 | ||
5147 | That's all there is to it! | 7353 | That's all there is to it! |
5148 | 7354 | ||
5149 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7355 | </programlisting></para> |
7356 | </section> | ||
7357 | |||
7358 | <section id="lic_19"> | ||
7359 | <title>LGPL-2.1</title> | ||
5150 | 7360 | ||
5151 | <section id="lic_19"> | 7361 | <para><programlisting> |
5152 | <title>LGPL-2.1</title> | ||
5153 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5154 | 7362 | ||
5155 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 7363 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
5156 | 7364 | ||
@@ -5578,16 +7786,18 @@ signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1990 | |||
5578 | Ty Coon, President of Vice | 7786 | Ty Coon, President of Vice |
5579 | That`s all there is to it! | 7787 | That`s all there is to it! |
5580 | 7788 | ||
5581 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7789 | </programlisting></para> |
7790 | </section> | ||
5582 | 7791 | ||
5583 | <section id="lic_20"> | 7792 | <section id="lic_20"> |
5584 | <title>LGPL-3.0</title> | 7793 | <title>LGPL-3.0</title> |
5585 | <para><programlisting> | 7794 | |
7795 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5586 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 7796 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
5587 | 7797 | ||
5588 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 | 7798 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 |
5589 | 7799 | ||
5590 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> | 7800 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> |
5591 | 7801 | ||
5592 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, | 7802 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, |
5593 | but changing it is not allowed. | 7803 | but changing it is not allowed. |
@@ -5718,11 +7928,13 @@ If the Library as you received it specifies that a proxy can decide whether futu | |||
5718 | versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public | 7928 | versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public |
5719 | statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose | 7929 | statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose |
5720 | that version for the Library. | 7930 | that version for the Library. |
5721 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7931 | </programlisting></para> |
7932 | </section> | ||
7933 | |||
7934 | <section id="lic_21"> | ||
7935 | <title>Libpng</title> | ||
5722 | 7936 | ||
5723 | <section id="lic_21"> | 7937 | <para><programlisting> |
5724 | <title>Libpng</title> | ||
5725 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5726 | 7938 | ||
5727 | This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of | 7939 | This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of |
5728 | any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is | 7940 | any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is |
@@ -5835,11 +8047,13 @@ Glenn Randers-Pehrson | |||
5835 | glennrp at users.sourceforge.net | 8047 | glennrp at users.sourceforge.net |
5836 | December 9, 2010 | 8048 | December 9, 2010 |
5837 | 8049 | ||
5838 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8050 | </programlisting></para> |
8051 | </section> | ||
8052 | |||
8053 | <section id="lic_22"> | ||
8054 | <title>MIT</title> | ||
5839 | 8055 | ||
5840 | <section id="lic_22"> | 8056 | <para><programlisting> |
5841 | <title>MIT</title> | ||
5842 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5843 | 8057 | ||
5844 | MIT License | 8058 | MIT License |
5845 | 8059 | ||
@@ -5863,11 +8077,13 @@ LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, | |||
5863 | OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN | 8077 | OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN |
5864 | THE SOFTWARE. | 8078 | THE SOFTWARE. |
5865 | 8079 | ||
5866 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8080 | </programlisting></para> |
8081 | </section> | ||
5867 | 8082 | ||
5868 | <section id="lic_23"> | 8083 | <section id="lic_23"> |
5869 | <title>MPL-1.0</title> | 8084 | <title>MPL-1.0</title> |
5870 | <para><programlisting> | 8085 | |
8086 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5871 | 8087 | ||
5872 | MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE | 8088 | MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE |
5873 | Version 1.0 | 8089 | Version 1.0 |
@@ -6160,11 +8376,13 @@ All Rights Reserved. | |||
6160 | 8376 | ||
6161 | Contributor(s): ______________________________________.`` | 8377 | Contributor(s): ______________________________________.`` |
6162 | 8378 | ||
6163 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8379 | </programlisting></para> |
8380 | </section> | ||
8381 | |||
8382 | <section id="lic_24"> | ||
8383 | <title>MPL-2.0</title> | ||
6164 | 8384 | ||
6165 | <section id="lic_24"> | 8385 | <para><programlisting> |
6166 | <title>MPL-2.0</title> | ||
6167 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6168 | Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 | 8386 | Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 |
6169 | ================================== | 8387 | ================================== |
6170 | 8388 | ||
@@ -6538,11 +8756,13 @@ Exhibit B - "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses" Notice | |||
6538 | 8756 | ||
6539 | This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as | 8757 | This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as |
6540 | defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. | 8758 | defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. |
6541 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8759 | </programlisting></para> |
8760 | </section> | ||
8761 | |||
8762 | <section id="lic_25"> | ||
8763 | <title>NTP</title> | ||
6542 | 8764 | ||
6543 | <section id="lic_25"> | 8765 | <para><programlisting> |
6544 | <title>NTP</title> | ||
6545 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6546 | 8766 | ||
6547 | NTP License (NTP) | 8767 | NTP License (NTP) |
6548 | 8768 | ||
@@ -6557,11 +8777,13 @@ of the software without specific, written prior permission. (TrademarkedName) ma | |||
6557 | representations about the suitability this software for any purpose. It is provided | 8777 | representations about the suitability this software for any purpose. It is provided |
6558 | "as is" without express or implied warranty. | 8778 | "as is" without express or implied warranty. |
6559 | 8779 | ||
6560 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8780 | </programlisting></para> |
8781 | </section> | ||
6561 | 8782 | ||
6562 | <section id="lic_26"> | 8783 | <section id="lic_26"> |
6563 | <title>OASIS</title> | 8784 | <title>OASIS</title> |
6564 | <para><programlisting> | 8785 | |
8786 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6565 | Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute the DocBook DTD and | 8787 | Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute the DocBook DTD and |
6566 | its accompanying documentation for any purpose and without fee is | 8788 | its accompanying documentation for any purpose and without fee is |
6567 | hereby granted in perpetuity, provided that the above copyright | 8789 | hereby granted in perpetuity, provided that the above copyright |
@@ -6575,11 +8797,13 @@ representations about the suitability this software for any purpose. It is provi | |||
6575 | additional notations, label your DTD as a variant of DocBook. See | 8797 | additional notations, label your DTD as a variant of DocBook. See |
6576 | the maintenance documentation for more information. | 8798 | the maintenance documentation for more information. |
6577 | 8799 | ||
6578 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8800 | </programlisting></para> |
8801 | </section> | ||
8802 | |||
8803 | <section id="lic_27"> | ||
8804 | <title>OpenSSL</title> | ||
6579 | 8805 | ||
6580 | <section id="lic_27"> | 8806 | <para><programlisting> |
6581 | <title>OpenSSL</title> | ||
6582 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6583 | 8807 | ||
6584 | OpenSSL License | 8808 | OpenSSL License |
6585 | 8809 | ||
@@ -6696,17 +8920,21 @@ put under another distribution licence | |||
6696 | 8920 | ||
6697 | 8921 | ||
6698 | 8922 | ||
6699 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8923 | </programlisting></para> |
8924 | </section> | ||
8925 | |||
8926 | <section id="lic_28"> | ||
8927 | <title>PD</title> | ||
6700 | 8928 | ||
6701 | <section id="lic_28"> | 8929 | <para><programlisting> |
6702 | <title>PD</title> | ||
6703 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6704 | This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License | 8930 | This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License |
6705 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8931 | </programlisting></para> |
8932 | </section> | ||
6706 | 8933 | ||
6707 | <section id="lic_29"> | 8934 | <section id="lic_29"> |
6708 | <title>Python-2.0</title> | 8935 | <title>Python-2.0</title> |
6709 | <para><programlisting> | 8936 | |
8937 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6710 | 8938 | ||
6711 | PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 | 8939 | PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 |
6712 | -------------------------------------------- | 8940 | -------------------------------------------- |
@@ -6899,11 +9127,13 @@ WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN | |||
6899 | ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT | 9127 | ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT |
6900 | OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. | 9128 | OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. |
6901 | 9129 | ||
6902 | </programlisting></para></section> | 9130 | </programlisting></para> |
9131 | </section> | ||
9132 | |||
9133 | <section id="lic_30"> | ||
9134 | <title>Sleepycat</title> | ||
6903 | 9135 | ||
6904 | <section id="lic_30"> | 9136 | <para><programlisting> |
6905 | <title>Sleepycat</title> | ||
6906 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6907 | 9137 | ||
6908 | The Sleepycat License | 9138 | The Sleepycat License |
6909 | Copyright (c) 1990-1999 | 9139 | Copyright (c) 1990-1999 |
@@ -6994,11 +9224,13 @@ LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY | |||
6994 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF | 9224 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF |
6995 | SUCH DAMAGE. | 9225 | SUCH DAMAGE. |
6996 | 9226 | ||
6997 | </programlisting></para></section> | 9227 | </programlisting></para> |
9228 | </section> | ||
9229 | |||
9230 | <section id="lic_31"> | ||
9231 | <title>Zlib</title> | ||
6998 | 9232 | ||
6999 | <section id="lic_31"> | 9233 | <para><programlisting> |
7000 | <title>Zlib</title> | ||
7001 | <para><programlisting> | ||
7002 | 9234 | ||
7003 | zlib License | 9235 | zlib License |
7004 | 9236 | ||
@@ -7020,10 +9252,11 @@ zlib License | |||
7020 | 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. | 9252 | 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. |
7021 | 9253 | ||
7022 | 9254 | ||
7023 | </programlisting></para></section> | 9255 | </programlisting></para> |
9256 | </section> | ||
9257 | </section> | ||
7024 | 9258 | ||
7025 | </section> | 9259 | <section id="proprietary_license"> |
7026 | <section id="proprietary_license"> | 9260 | <title>Proprietary Licenses</title> |
7027 | <title>Proprietary Licenses</title> | 9261 | </section> |
7028 | </section> | 9262 | </chapter> \ No newline at end of file |
7029 | </chapter> | ||
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-openstack-open-source/doc/licenses.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-openstack-open-source/doc/licenses.xml index d284b0f..e0efc04 100644 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-openstack-open-source/doc/licenses.xml +++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-openstack-open-source/doc/licenses.xml | |||
@@ -3,3047 +3,5727 @@ | |||
3 | "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> | 3 | "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> |
4 | <chapter id="enea_linux_packages"> | 4 | <chapter id="enea_linux_packages"> |
5 | <title>Packages and Licenses</title> | 5 | <title>Packages and Licenses</title> |
6 | <section id="licenses_packages"> | ||
7 | 6 | ||
8 | <title>Packages</title> | 7 | <section id="licenses_packages"> |
8 | <title>Packages</title> | ||
9 | 9 | ||
10 | 10 | <!--This chapter contains a generated list of all packages that Enea Linux | |
11 | <!--This chapter contains a generated list of all packages that Enea Linux | ||
12 | supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package | 11 | supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package |
13 | specific documentation.--> | 12 | specific documentation.--> |
14 | 13 | ||
15 | <informaltable> | 14 | <informaltable> |
16 | <tgroup cols="4"> | 15 | <tgroup cols="4"> |
17 | <colspec colwidth="2*"/> | 16 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
18 | <colspec colwidth="1*"/> | 17 | |
19 | <colspec colwidth="5*"/> | 18 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
20 | <colspec colwidth="2*"/> | 19 | |
21 | 20 | <colspec colwidth="5*" /> | |
22 | <thead> | 21 | |
23 | <row> | 22 | <colspec colwidth="2*" /> |
24 | <entry align="center">Package Name</entry> | 23 | |
25 | <entry align="center">Version</entry> | 24 | <thead> |
26 | <entry align="center">Description</entry> | 25 | <row> |
27 | <entry align="center">License</entry> | 26 | <entry align="center">Package Name</entry> |
28 | </row> | 27 | |
29 | </thead> | 28 | <entry align="center">Version</entry> |
30 | 29 | ||
31 | <tbody valign="top"> | 30 | <entry align="center">Description</entry> |
32 | <row> | 31 | |
33 | <entry>acl</entry> | 32 | <entry align="center">License</entry> |
34 | <entry>2.2.52</entry> | 33 | </row> |
35 | <entry>Utilities for managing POSIX Access Control Lists.</entry> | 34 | </thead> |
36 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 35 | |
37 | </row> | 36 | <tbody valign="top"> |
38 | <row> | 37 | <row> |
39 | <entry>apache2</entry> | 38 | <entry>acl</entry> |
40 | <entry>2.4.25</entry> | 39 | |
41 | <entry>The Apache HTTP Server is a powerful efficient and extensible web server.</entry> | 40 | <entry>2.2.52</entry> |
42 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 41 | |
43 | </row> | 42 | <entry>Utilities for managing POSIX Access Control Lists.</entry> |
44 | <row> | 43 | |
45 | <entry>apr-util</entry> | 44 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> |
46 | <entry>1.5.4</entry> | 45 | </row> |
47 | <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) companion library.</entry> | 46 | |
48 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 47 | <row> |
49 | </row> | 48 | <entry>apache2</entry> |
50 | <row> | 49 | |
51 | <entry>apr</entry> | 50 | <entry>2.4.25</entry> |
52 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> | 51 | |
53 | <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) library.</entry> | 52 | <entry>The Apache HTTP Server is a powerful efficient and |
54 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 53 | extensible web server.</entry> |
55 | </row> | 54 | |
56 | <row> | 55 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
57 | <entry>apt</entry> | 56 | </row> |
58 | <entry>1.2.12</entry> | 57 | |
59 | <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> | 58 | <row> |
60 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 59 | <entry>apr-util</entry> |
61 | </row> | 60 | |
62 | <row> | 61 | <entry>1.5.4</entry> |
63 | <entry>attr</entry> | 62 | |
64 | <entry>2.4.47</entry> | 63 | <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) companion library.</entry> |
65 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended attributes.</entry> | 64 | |
66 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 65 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
67 | </row> | 66 | </row> |
68 | <row> | 67 | |
69 | <entry>autoconf-archive</entry> | 68 | <row> |
70 | <entry>2016.09.16</entry> | 69 | <entry>apr</entry> |
71 | <entry>autoconf-archive-native version 2016.09.16-r0.</entry> | 70 | |
72 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 71 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> |
73 | </row> | 72 | |
74 | <row> | 73 | <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) library.</entry> |
75 | <entry>autoconf</entry> | 74 | |
76 | <entry>2.69</entry> | 75 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
77 | <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce shell scripts to automatically configure software source code packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package from a template file that lists the operating system features that the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> | 76 | </row> |
78 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 77 | |
79 | </row> | 78 | <row> |
80 | <row> | 79 | <entry>apt</entry> |
81 | <entry>autogen</entry> | 80 | |
82 | <entry>5.18.12</entry> | 81 | <entry>1.2.12</entry> |
83 | <entry>AutoGen is a tool designed to simplify the creation and maintenance of programs that contain large amounts of repetitious text. It is especially valuable in programs that have several blocks of text that must be kept synchronized.</entry> | 82 | |
84 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 83 | <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> |
85 | </row> | 84 | |
86 | <row> | 85 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
87 | <entry>automake</entry> | 86 | </row> |
88 | <entry>1.15</entry> | 87 | |
89 | <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> | 88 | <row> |
90 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 89 | <entry>attr</entry> |
91 | </row> | 90 | |
92 | <row> | 91 | <entry>2.4.47</entry> |
93 | <entry>avahi</entry> | 92 | |
94 | <entry>0.6.32</entry> | 93 | <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended |
95 | <entry>"Avahi is a fully LGPL framework for Multicast DNS Service Discovery. It allows programs to publish and discover services and hosts running on a local network with no specific configuration. This tool implements IPv4LL ""Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses"" (IETF RFC3927) a protocol for automatic IP address configuration from the link-local 169.254.0.0/16 range without the need for a central server."</entry> | 94 | attributes.</entry> |
96 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 95 | |
97 | </row> | 96 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> |
98 | <row> | 97 | </row> |
99 | <entry>base-files</entry> | 98 | |
100 | <entry>3.0.14</entry> | 99 | <row> |
101 | <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for the system.</entry> | 100 | <entry>autoconf-archive</entry> |
102 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 101 | |
103 | </row> | 102 | <entry>2016.09.16</entry> |
104 | <row> | 103 | |
105 | <entry>base-passwd</entry> | 104 | <entry>autoconf-archive-native version 2016.09.16-r0.</entry> |
106 | <entry>3.5.29</entry> | 105 | |
107 | <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> | 106 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
108 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 107 | </row> |
109 | </row> | 108 | |
110 | <row> | 109 | <row> |
111 | <entry>bash-completion</entry> | 110 | <entry>autoconf</entry> |
112 | <entry>2.5</entry> | 111 | |
113 | <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> | 112 | <entry>2.69</entry> |
114 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 113 | |
115 | </row> | 114 | <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce |
116 | <row> | 115 | shell scripts to automatically configure software source code |
117 | <entry>bash</entry> | 116 | packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package |
118 | <entry>4.3.30</entry> | 117 | from a template file that lists the operating system features that |
119 | <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> | 118 | the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> |
120 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 119 | |
121 | </row> | 120 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
122 | <row> | 121 | </row> |
123 | <entry>bc</entry> | 122 | |
124 | <entry>1.06</entry> | 123 | <row> |
125 | <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> | 124 | <entry>autogen</entry> |
126 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 125 | |
127 | </row> | 126 | <entry>5.18.12</entry> |
128 | <row> | 127 | |
129 | <entry>bdwgc</entry> | 128 | <entry>AutoGen is a tool designed to simplify the creation and |
130 | <entry>7.6.0</entry> | 129 | maintenance of programs that contain large amounts of repetitious |
131 | <entry>The Boehm-Demers-Weiser conservative garbage collector can be used as a garbage collecting replacement for C malloc or C++ new. It allows you to allocate memory basically as you normally would without explicitly deallocating memory that is no longer useful. The collector automatically recycles memory when it determines that it can no longer be otherwise accessed. The collector is also used by a number of programming language implementations that either use C as intermediate code want to facilitate easier interoperation with C libraries or just prefer the simple collector interface. Alternatively the garbage collector may be used as a leak detector for C or C++ programs though that is not its primary goal. Empirically this collector works with most unmodified C programs simply by replacing malloc with GC_malloc calls replacing realloc with GC_realloc calls and removing free calls.</entry> | 130 | text. It is especially valuable in programs that have several |
132 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 131 | blocks of text that must be kept synchronized.</entry> |
133 | </row> | 132 | |
134 | <row> | 133 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
135 | <entry>bind</entry> | 134 | </row> |
136 | <entry>9.10.3-P3</entry> | 135 | |
137 | <entry>ISC Internet Domain Name Server.</entry> | 136 | <row> |
138 | <entry> ISC, BSD</entry> | 137 | <entry>automake</entry> |
139 | </row> | 138 | |
140 | <row> | 139 | <entry>1.15</entry> |
141 | <entry>binutils-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> | 140 | |
142 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 141 | <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating |
143 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 142 | `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. |
144 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 143 | Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> |
145 | </row> | 144 | |
146 | <row> | 145 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
147 | <entry>binutils-cross-x86_64</entry> | 146 | </row> |
148 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 147 | |
149 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 148 | <row> |
150 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 149 | <entry>avahi</entry> |
151 | </row> | 150 | |
152 | <row> | 151 | <entry>0.6.32</entry> |
153 | <entry>binutils-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> | 152 | |
154 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 153 | <entry>"Avahi is a fully LGPL framework for Multicast DNS Service |
155 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 154 | Discovery. It allows programs to publish and discover services and |
156 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 155 | hosts running on a local network with no specific configuration. |
157 | </row> | 156 | This tool implements IPv4LL ""Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 |
158 | <row> | 157 | Link-Local Addresses"" (IETF RFC3927) a protocol for automatic IP |
159 | <entry>binutils</entry> | 158 | address configuration from the link-local 169.254.0.0/16 range |
160 | <entry>2.28</entry> | 159 | without the need for a central server."</entry> |
161 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> | 160 | |
162 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 161 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
163 | </row> | 162 | </row> |
164 | <row> | 163 | |
165 | <entry>bison</entry> | 164 | <row> |
166 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> | 165 | <entry>base-files</entry> |
167 | <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with little trouble.</entry> | 166 | |
168 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 167 | <entry>3.0.14</entry> |
169 | </row> | 168 | |
170 | <row> | 169 | <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory |
171 | <entry>bjam</entry> | 170 | structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for |
172 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> | 171 | the system.</entry> |
173 | <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry> | 172 | |
174 | <entry> BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> | 173 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
175 | </row> | 174 | </row> |
176 | <row> | 175 | |
177 | <entry>bluez5</entry> | 176 | <row> |
178 | <entry>5.43</entry> | 177 | <entry>base-passwd</entry> |
179 | <entry>Linux Bluetooth stack V5 userland components. These include a system configurations daemons tools and system libraries.</entry> | 178 | |
180 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 179 | <entry>3.5.29</entry> |
181 | </row> | 180 | |
182 | <row> | 181 | <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd |
183 | <entry>boost</entry> | 182 | and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep |
184 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> | 183 | the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> |
185 | <entry>Free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.</entry> | 184 | |
186 | <entry> BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> | 185 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
187 | </row> | 186 | </row> |
188 | <row> | 187 | |
189 | <entry>bridge-utils</entry> | 188 | <row> |
190 | <entry>1.5</entry> | 189 | <entry>bash-completion</entry> |
191 | <entry>Tools for ethernet bridging.</entry> | 190 | |
192 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 191 | <entry>2.5</entry> |
193 | </row> | 192 | |
194 | <row> | 193 | <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> |
195 | <entry>busybox</entry> | 194 | |
196 | <entry>1.24.1</entry> | 195 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
197 | <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the options that are included provide the expected functionality and behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded system.</entry> | 196 | </row> |
198 | <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> | 197 | |
199 | </row> | 198 | <row> |
200 | <row> | 199 | <entry>bash</entry> |
201 | <entry>bzip2</entry> | 200 | |
202 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> | 201 | <entry>4.3.30</entry> |
203 | <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> | 202 | |
204 | <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry> | 203 | <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> |
205 | </row> | 204 | |
206 | <row> | 205 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
207 | <entry>ca-certificates</entry> | 206 | </row> |
208 | <entry>20161130</entry> | 207 | |
209 | <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> | 208 | <row> |
210 | <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> | 209 | <entry>bc</entry> |
211 | </row> | 210 | |
212 | <row> | 211 | <entry>1.06</entry> |
213 | <entry>cairo</entry> | 212 | |
214 | <entry>1.14.8</entry> | 213 | <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> |
215 | <entry>Cairo is a multi-platform library providing anti-aliased vector-based rendering for multiple target backends. Paths consist of line segments and cubic splines and can be rendered at any width with various join and cap styles. All colors may be specified with optional translucence (opacity/alpha) and combined using the extended Porter/Duff compositing algebra as found in the X Render Extension.</entry> | 214 | |
216 | <entry> MPL-1.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry> | 215 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
217 | </row> | 216 | </row> |
218 | <row> | 217 | |
219 | <entry>cdrtools</entry> | 218 | <row> |
220 | <entry>3.01a31</entry> | 219 | <entry>bdwgc</entry> |
221 | <entry>A set of tools for CD recording including cdrecord.</entry> | 220 | |
222 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 221 | <entry>7.6.0</entry> |
223 | </row> | 222 | |
224 | <row> | 223 | <entry>The Boehm-Demers-Weiser conservative garbage collector can |
225 | <entry>chrpath</entry> | 224 | be used as a garbage collecting replacement for C malloc or C++ |
226 | <entry>0.16</entry> | 225 | new. It allows you to allocate memory basically as you normally |
227 | <entry>chrpath allows you to change the rpath (where the application looks for libraries) in an application. It does not (yet) allow you to add an rpath if there isn't one already.</entry> | 226 | would without explicitly deallocating memory that is no longer |
228 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 227 | useful. The collector automatically recycles memory when it |
229 | </row> | 228 | determines that it can no longer be otherwise accessed. The |
230 | <row> | 229 | collector is also used by a number of programming language |
231 | <entry>cloud-init</entry> | 230 | implementations that either use C as intermediate code want to |
232 | <entry>0.7.6</entry> | 231 | facilitate easier interoperation with C libraries or just prefer |
233 | <entry>Init scripts for use on cloud images</entry> | 232 | the simple collector interface. Alternatively the garbage |
234 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 233 | collector may be used as a leak detector for C or C++ programs |
235 | </row> | 234 | though that is not its primary goal. Empirically this collector |
236 | <row> | 235 | works with most unmodified C programs simply by replacing malloc |
237 | <entry>cmake</entry> | 236 | with GC_malloc calls replacing realloc with GC_realloc calls and |
238 | <entry>3.7.2</entry> | 237 | removing free calls.</entry> |
239 | <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> | 238 | |
240 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 239 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
241 | </row> | 240 | </row> |
242 | <row> | 241 | |
243 | <entry>coreutils</entry> | 242 | <row> |
244 | <entry>8.26</entry> | 243 | <entry>bind</entry> |
245 | <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which are expected to exist on every system.</entry> | 244 | |
246 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 245 | <entry>9.10.3-P3</entry> |
247 | </row> | 246 | |
248 | <row> | 247 | <entry>ISC Internet Domain Name Server.</entry> |
249 | <entry>cracklib</entry> | 248 | |
250 | <entry>2.9.5</entry> | 249 | <entry>ISC, BSD</entry> |
251 | <entry>Password strength checker library.</entry> | 250 | </row> |
252 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 251 | |
253 | </row> | 252 | <row> |
254 | <row> | 253 | <entry>binutils-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> |
255 | <entry>cronie</entry> | 254 | |
256 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | 255 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
257 | <entry>Cronie contains the standard UNIX daemon crond that runs specified programs at scheduled times and related tools. It is based on the original cron and has security and configuration enhancements like the ability to use pam and SELinux.</entry> | 256 | |
258 | <entry> ISC, BSD-3-Clause, BSD-2-Clause, GPL-2.0</entry> | 257 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
259 | </row> | 258 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
260 | <row> | 259 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
261 | <entry>cross-localedef</entry> | 260 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
262 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 261 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
263 | <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> | 262 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
264 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 263 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
265 | </row> | 264 | |
266 | <row> | 265 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
267 | <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry> | 266 | </row> |
268 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 267 | |
269 | <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> | 268 | <row> |
270 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 269 | <entry>binutils-cross-x86_64</entry> |
271 | </row> | 270 | |
272 | <row> | 271 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
273 | <entry>curl</entry> | 272 | |
274 | <entry>7.53.1</entry> | 273 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
275 | <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL transfers.</entry> | 274 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
276 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 275 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
277 | </row> | 276 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
278 | <row> | 277 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
279 | <entry>db</entry> | 278 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
280 | <entry>5.3.28</entry> | 279 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
281 | <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> | 280 | |
282 | <entry>Sleepycat</entry> | 281 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
283 | </row> | 282 | </row> |
284 | <row> | 283 | |
285 | <entry>dbus-glib</entry> | 284 | <row> |
286 | <entry>0.108</entry> | 285 | <entry>binutils-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> |
287 | <entry>GLib bindings for the D-Bus message bus that integrate the D-Bus library with the GLib thread abstraction and main loop.</entry> | 286 | |
288 | <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 287 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
289 | </row> | 288 | |
290 | <row> | 289 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
291 | <entry>dbus-test</entry> | 290 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
292 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> | 291 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
293 | <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing only).</entry> | 292 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
294 | <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 293 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
295 | </row> | 294 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
296 | <row> | 295 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
297 | <entry>dbus</entry> | 296 | |
298 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> | 297 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
299 | <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when their services are needed."</entry> | 298 | </row> |
300 | <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 299 | |
301 | </row> | 300 | <row> |
302 | <row> | 301 | <entry>binutils</entry> |
303 | <entry>debianutils</entry> | 302 | |
304 | <entry>4.8.1</entry> | 303 | <entry>2.28</entry> |
305 | <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> | 304 | |
306 | <entry> GPL-2.0</entry> | 305 | <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main |
307 | </row> | 306 | ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also |
308 | <row> | 307 | includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into |
309 | <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> | 308 | filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and |
310 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 309 | extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy |
311 | <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency indexer.</entry> | 310 | (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object |
312 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 311 | information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> |
313 | </row> | 312 | |
314 | <row> | 313 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
315 | <entry>dhcp</entry> | 314 | </row> |
316 | <entry>4.3.5</entry> | 315 | |
317 | <entry>DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) is a protocol which allows individual devices on an IP network to get their own network configuration information from a server. DHCP helps make it easier to administer devices.</entry> | 316 | <row> |
318 | <entry>ISC</entry> | 317 | <entry>bison</entry> |
319 | </row> | 318 | |
320 | <row> | 319 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> |
321 | <entry>diffutils</entry> | 320 | |
322 | <entry>3.5</entry> | 321 | <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts |
323 | <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch files.</entry> | 322 | an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser |
324 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 323 | for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all |
325 | </row> | 324 | properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no |
326 | <row> | 325 | change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with |
327 | <entry>dmidecode</entry> | 326 | little trouble.</entry> |
328 | <entry>3.0</entry> | 327 | |
329 | <entry>DMI (Desktop Management Interface) table related utilities.</entry> | 328 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
330 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 329 | </row> |
331 | </row> | 330 | |
332 | <row> | 331 | <row> |
333 | <entry>dnf</entry> | 332 | <entry>bjam</entry> |
334 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> | 333 | |
335 | <entry>Package manager forked from Yum using libsolv as a dependency resolver.</entry> | 334 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> |
336 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 335 | |
337 | </row> | 336 | <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry> |
338 | <row> | 337 | |
339 | <entry>dnsmasq</entry> | 338 | <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> |
340 | <entry>2.76</entry> | 339 | </row> |
341 | <entry>Lightweight easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP server.</entry> | 340 | |
342 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 341 | <row> |
343 | </row> | 342 | <entry>bluez5</entry> |
344 | <row> | 343 | |
345 | <entry>docbook-xml-dtd4</entry> | 344 | <entry>5.43</entry> |
346 | <entry>4.5</entry> | 345 | |
347 | <entry>Document type definitions for verification of XML data files against the DocBook rule set it ships with the latest DocBook 4.5 XML DTD as well as a selected set of legacy DTDs for use with older documents including 4.0 4.1.2 4.2 4.3 and 4.4</entry> | 346 | <entry>Linux Bluetooth stack V5 userland components. These include |
348 | <entry>OASIS</entry> | 347 | a system configurations daemons tools and system |
349 | </row> | 348 | libraries.</entry> |
350 | <row> | 349 | |
351 | <entry>docbook-xsl-stylesheets</entry> | 350 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
352 | <entry>1.79.1</entry> | 351 | </row> |
353 | <entry>XSL stylesheets for processing DocBook XML to various output formats.</entry> | 352 | |
354 | <entry>XSL</entry> | 353 | <row> |
355 | </row> | 354 | <entry>boost</entry> |
356 | <row> | 355 | |
357 | <entry>dosfstools</entry> | 356 | <entry>1.63.0</entry> |
358 | <entry>4.1</entry> | 357 | |
359 | <entry>DOS FAT Filesystem Utilities.</entry> | 358 | <entry>Free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.</entry> |
360 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 359 | |
361 | </row> | 360 | <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> |
362 | <row> | 361 | </row> |
363 | <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> | 362 | |
364 | <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry> | 363 | <row> |
365 | <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> | 364 | <entry>bridge-utils</entry> |
366 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 365 | |
367 | </row> | 366 | <entry>1.5</entry> |
368 | <row> | 367 | |
369 | <entry>dpdk</entry> | 368 | <entry>Tools for ethernet bridging.</entry> |
370 | <entry>17.08</entry> | 369 | |
371 | <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry> | 370 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
372 | <entry> BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 371 | </row> |
373 | </row> | 372 | |
374 | <row> | 373 | <row> |
375 | <entry>dpkg</entry> | 374 | <entry>busybox</entry> |
376 | <entry>1.18.10</entry> | 375 | |
377 | <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> | 376 | <entry>1.24.1</entry> |
378 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 377 | |
379 | </row> | 378 | <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX |
380 | <row> | 379 | utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist |
381 | <entry>dtc</entry> | 380 | replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU |
382 | <entry>1.4.2</entry> | 381 | fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have |
383 | <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> | 382 | fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the |
384 | <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> | 383 | options that are included provide the expected functionality and |
385 | </row> | 384 | behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a |
386 | <row> | 385 | fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded |
387 | <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> | 386 | system.</entry> |
388 | <entry>1.43.4</entry> | 387 | |
389 | <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> | 388 | <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> |
390 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> | 389 | </row> |
391 | </row> | 390 | |
392 | <row> | 391 | <row> |
393 | <entry>ebtables</entry> | 392 | <entry>bzip2</entry> |
394 | <entry>2.0.10-4</entry> | 393 | |
395 | <entry>Utility for basic Ethernet frame filtering on a Linux bridge advanced logging MAC DNAT/SNAT and brouting.</entry> | 394 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> |
396 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 395 | |
397 | </row> | 396 | <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler |
398 | <row> | 397 | block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. |
399 | <entry>elfutils</entry> | 398 | Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by |
400 | <entry>0.168</entry> | 399 | more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the |
401 | <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object files.</entry> | 400 | performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> |
402 | <entry> GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> | 401 | |
403 | </row> | 402 | <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry> |
404 | <row> | 403 | </row> |
405 | <entry>enea-nfv-access-openstack</entry> | 404 | |
406 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 405 | <row> |
407 | <entry>Image for the host side of the Enea NFV Access Platform that provides Oopenstack support</entry> | 406 | <entry>ca-certificates</entry> |
408 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 407 | |
409 | </row> | 408 | <entry>20161130</entry> |
410 | <row> | 409 | |
411 | <entry>expat</entry> | 410 | <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow |
412 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> | 411 | SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL |
413 | <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start tags)</entry> | 412 | connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> |
414 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 413 | |
415 | </row> | 414 | <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> |
416 | <row> | 415 | </row> |
417 | <entry>file</entry> | 416 | |
418 | <entry>5.30</entry> | 417 | <row> |
419 | <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> | 418 | <entry>cairo</entry> |
420 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 419 | |
421 | </row> | 420 | <entry>1.14.8</entry> |
422 | <row> | 421 | |
423 | <entry>flex</entry> | 422 | <entry>Cairo is a multi-platform library providing anti-aliased |
424 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> | 423 | vector-based rendering for multiple target backends. Paths consist |
425 | <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in text.</entry> | 424 | of line segments and cubic splines and can be rendered at any |
426 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 425 | width with various join and cap styles. All colors may be |
427 | </row> | 426 | specified with optional translucence (opacity/alpha) and combined |
428 | <row> | 427 | using the extended Porter/Duff compositing algebra as found in the |
429 | <entry>fontconfig</entry> | 428 | X Render Extension.</entry> |
430 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> | 429 | |
431 | <entry>Fontconfig is a font configuration and customization library which does not depend on the X Window System. It is designed to locate fonts within the system and select them according to requirements specified by applications. Fontconfig is not a rasterization library nor does it impose a particular rasterization library on the application. The X-specific library 'Xft' uses fontconfig along with freetype to specify and rasterize fonts.</entry> | 430 | <entry>MPL-1.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry> |
432 | <entry> MIT, PD</entry> | 431 | </row> |
433 | </row> | 432 | |
434 | <row> | 433 | <row> |
435 | <entry>freetype</entry> | 434 | <entry>cdrtools</entry> |
436 | <entry>2.7.1</entry> | 435 | |
437 | <entry>FreeType is a software font engine that is designed to be small efficient highly customizable and portable while capable of producing high-quality output (glyph images). It can be used in graphics libraries display servers font conversion tools text image generation tools and many other products as well.</entry> | 436 | <entry>3.01a31</entry> |
438 | <entry> FreeType, GPL-2.0</entry> | 437 | |
439 | </row> | 438 | <entry>A set of tools for CD recording including cdrecord.</entry> |
440 | <row> | 439 | |
441 | <entry>fuse</entry> | 440 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
442 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | 441 | </row> |
443 | <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem implementations. </entry> | 442 | |
444 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 443 | <row> |
445 | </row> | 444 | <entry>chrpath</entry> |
446 | <row> | 445 | |
447 | <entry>gawk</entry> | 446 | <entry>0.16</entry> |
448 | <entry>4.1.4</entry> | 447 | |
449 | <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> | 448 | <entry>chrpath allows you to change the rpath (where the |
450 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 449 | application looks for libraries) in an application. It does not |
451 | </row> | 450 | (yet) allow you to add an rpath if there isn't one |
452 | <row> | 451 | already.</entry> |
453 | <entry>gcc-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> | 452 | |
454 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 453 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
455 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers (cross-canadian for x86_64 target).</entry> | 454 | </row> |
456 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 455 | |
457 | </row> | 456 | <row> |
458 | <row> | 457 | <entry>cloud-init</entry> |
459 | <entry>gcc-cross-initial-x86_64</entry> | 458 | |
460 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 459 | <entry>0.7.6</entry> |
461 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 460 | |
462 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 461 | <entry>Init scripts for use on cloud images</entry> |
463 | </row> | 462 | |
464 | <row> | 463 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
465 | <entry>gcc-cross-x86_64</entry> | 464 | </row> |
466 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 465 | |
467 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 466 | <row> |
468 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 467 | <entry>cmake</entry> |
469 | </row> | 468 | |
470 | <row> | 469 | <entry>3.7.2</entry> |
471 | <entry>gcc-crosssdk-initial-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> | 470 | |
472 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 471 | <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> |
473 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 472 | |
474 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 473 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
475 | </row> | 474 | </row> |
476 | <row> | 475 | |
477 | <entry>gcc-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> | 476 | <row> |
478 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 477 | <entry>coreutils</entry> |
479 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 478 | |
480 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 479 | <entry>8.26</entry> |
481 | </row> | 480 | |
482 | <row> | 481 | <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and |
483 | <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> | 482 | text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which |
484 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 483 | are expected to exist on every system.</entry> |
485 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 484 | |
486 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 485 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
487 | </row> | 486 | </row> |
488 | <row> | 487 | |
489 | <entry>gcc</entry> | 488 | <row> |
490 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 489 | <entry>cracklib</entry> |
491 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 490 | |
492 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 491 | <entry>2.9.5</entry> |
493 | </row> | 492 | |
494 | <row> | 493 | <entry>Password strength checker library.</entry> |
495 | <entry>gdb-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> | 494 | |
496 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> | 495 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
497 | <entry>GNU debugger (cross-canadian gdb for x86_64 target).</entry> | 496 | </row> |
498 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 497 | |
499 | </row> | 498 | <row> |
500 | <row> | 499 | <entry>cronie</entry> |
501 | <entry>gdb</entry> | 500 | |
502 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> | 501 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> |
503 | <entry>GNU debugger.</entry> | 502 | |
504 | <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 503 | <entry>Cronie contains the standard UNIX daemon crond that runs |
505 | </row> | 504 | specified programs at scheduled times and related tools. It is |
506 | <row> | 505 | based on the original cron and has security and configuration |
507 | <entry>gdbm</entry> | 506 | enhancements like the ability to use pam and SELinux.</entry> |
508 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 507 | |
509 | <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> | 508 | <entry>ISC, BSD-3-Clause, BSD-2-Clause, GPL-2.0</entry> |
510 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 509 | </row> |
511 | </row> | 510 | |
512 | <row> | 511 | <row> |
513 | <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> | 512 | <entry>cross-localedef</entry> |
514 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> | 513 | |
515 | <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> | 514 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
516 | <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> | 515 | |
517 | </row> | 516 | <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> |
518 | <row> | 517 | |
519 | <entry>gettext</entry> | 518 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
520 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> | 519 | </row> |
521 | <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools include a set of conventions about how programs should be written to support message catalogs a directory and file naming organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of translatable and already translated strings.</entry> | 520 | |
522 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 521 | <row> |
523 | </row> | 522 | <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry> |
524 | <row> | 523 | |
525 | <entry>glib-2.0</entry> | 524 | <entry>1.8</entry> |
526 | <entry>2.50.3</entry> | 525 | |
527 | <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> | 526 | <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> |
528 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> | 527 | |
529 | </row> | 528 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
530 | <row> | 529 | </row> |
531 | <entry>glibc-locale</entry> | 530 | |
532 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 531 | <row> |
533 | <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> | 532 | <entry>curl</entry> |
534 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 533 | |
535 | </row> | 534 | <entry>7.53.1</entry> |
536 | <row> | 535 | |
537 | <entry>glibc-mtrace</entry> | 536 | <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL |
538 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 537 | transfers.</entry> |
539 | <entry>mtrace utility provided by glibc</entry> | 538 | |
540 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 539 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
541 | </row> | 540 | </row> |
542 | <row> | 541 | |
543 | <entry>glibc</entry> | 542 | <row> |
544 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 543 | <entry>db</entry> |
545 | <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> | 544 | |
546 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 545 | <entry>5.3.28</entry> |
547 | </row> | 546 | |
548 | <row> | 547 | <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> |
549 | <entry>gmp</entry> | 548 | |
550 | <entry>6.1.2</entry> | 549 | <entry>Sleepycat</entry> |
551 | <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point numbers</entry> | 550 | </row> |
552 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 551 | |
553 | </row> | 552 | <row> |
554 | <row> | 553 | <entry>dbus-glib</entry> |
555 | <entry>gnome-common</entry> | 554 | |
556 | <entry>3.18.0</entry> | 555 | <entry>0.108</entry> |
557 | <entry>Common macros for building GNOME applications.</entry> | 556 | |
558 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 557 | <entry>GLib bindings for the D-Bus message bus that integrate the |
559 | </row> | 558 | D-Bus library with the GLib thread abstraction and main |
560 | <row> | 559 | loop.</entry> |
561 | <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> | 560 | |
562 | <entry>2014.1</entry> | 561 | <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
563 | <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> | 562 | </row> |
564 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 563 | |
565 | </row> | 564 | <row> |
566 | <row> | 565 | <entry>dbus-test</entry> |
567 | <entry>gnu-config</entry> | 566 | |
568 | <entry>20150728</entry> | 567 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> |
569 | <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a directory tree</entry> | 568 | |
570 | <entry>GPLv2</entry> | 569 | <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing |
571 | </row> | 570 | only).</entry> |
572 | <row> | 571 | |
573 | <entry>gnutls</entry> | 572 | <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
574 | <entry>3.5.9</entry> | 573 | </row> |
575 | <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> | 574 | |
576 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 575 | <row> |
577 | </row> | 576 | <entry>dbus</entry> |
578 | <row> | 577 | |
579 | <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> | 578 | <entry>1.10.14</entry> |
580 | <entry>1.50.0</entry> | 579 | |
581 | <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and language bindings.</entry> | 580 | <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for |
582 | <entry> LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 581 | applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess |
583 | </row> | 582 | communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes |
584 | <row> | 583 | it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application |
585 | <entry>gperf</entry> | 584 | or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when |
586 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> | 585 | their services are needed."</entry> |
587 | <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> | 586 | |
588 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 587 | <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
589 | </row> | 588 | </row> |
590 | <row> | 589 | |
591 | <entry>gpgme</entry> | 590 | <row> |
592 | <entry>1.8.0</entry> | 591 | <entry>debianutils</entry> |
593 | <entry>GnuPG Made Easy (GPGME) is a library designed to make access to GnuPG easier for applications. It provides a High-Level Crypto API for encryption decryption signing signature verification and key management</entry> | 592 | |
594 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 593 | <entry>4.8.1</entry> |
595 | </row> | 594 | |
596 | <row> | 595 | <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> |
597 | <entry>grep</entry> | 596 | |
598 | <entry>3.0</entry> | 597 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
599 | <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> | 598 | </row> |
600 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 599 | |
601 | </row> | 600 | <row> |
602 | <row> | 601 | <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> |
603 | <entry>groff</entry> | 602 | |
604 | <entry>1.22.3</entry> | 603 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
605 | <entry>The groff (GNU troff) software is a typesetting package which reads plain text mixed with formatting commands and produces formatted output.</entry> | 604 | |
606 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 605 | <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency |
607 | </row> | 606 | indexer.</entry> |
608 | <row> | 607 | |
609 | <entry>grub-efi</entry> | 608 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
610 | <entry>2.00</entry> | 609 | </row> |
611 | <entry>GRUB2 is the next generaion of a GPLed bootloader intended to unify bootloading across x86 operating systems. In addition to loading the Linux kernel it implements the Multiboot standard which allows for flexible loading of multiple boot images.</entry> | 610 | |
612 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 611 | <row> |
613 | </row> | 612 | <entry>dhcp</entry> |
614 | <row> | 613 | |
615 | <entry>gtk-doc</entry> | 614 | <entry>4.3.5</entry> |
616 | <entry>1.25</entry> | 615 | |
617 | <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of html documentation files from them</entry> | 616 | <entry>DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) is a protocol |
618 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 617 | which allows individual devices on an IP network to get their own |
619 | </row> | 618 | network configuration information from a server. DHCP helps make |
620 | <row> | 619 | it easier to administer devices.</entry> |
621 | <entry>guile</entry> | 620 | |
622 | <entry>2.0.14</entry> | 621 | <entry>ISC</entry> |
623 | <entry>Guile is the GNU Ubiquitous Intelligent Language for Extensions the official extension language for the GNU operating system. Guile is a library designed to help programmers create flexible applications. Using Guile in an application allows the application's functionality to be extended by users or other programmers with plug-ins modules or scripts. Guile provides what might be described as 'practical software freedom' making it possible for users to customize an application to meet their needs without digging into the application's internals.</entry> | 622 | </row> |
624 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 623 | |
625 | </row> | 624 | <row> |
626 | <row> | 625 | <entry>diffutils</entry> |
627 | <entry>gzip</entry> | 626 | |
628 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 627 | <entry>3.5</entry> |
629 | <entry>GNU Gzip is a popular data compression program originally written by Jean-loup Gailly for the GNU project. Mark Adler wrote the decompression part</entry> | 628 | |
630 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 629 | <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp |
631 | </row> | 630 | utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch |
632 | <row> | 631 | files.</entry> |
633 | <entry>icu</entry> | 632 | |
634 | <entry>58.2</entry> | 633 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
635 | <entry>The International Component for Unicode (ICU) is a mature portable set of C/C++ and Java libraries for Unicode support software internationalization (I18N) and globalization (G11N) giving applications the same results on all platforms.</entry> | 634 | </row> |
636 | <entry>ICU</entry> | 635 | |
637 | </row> | 636 | <row> |
638 | <row> | 637 | <entry>dmidecode</entry> |
639 | <entry>initscripts</entry> | 638 | |
640 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 639 | <entry>3.0</entry> |
641 | <entry>Initscripts provide the basic system startup initialization scripts for the system. These scripts include actions such as filesystem mounting fsck RTC manipulation and other actions routinely performed at system startup. In addition the scripts are also used during system shutdown to reverse the actions performed at startup.</entry> | 640 | |
642 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 641 | <entry>DMI (Desktop Management Interface) table related |
643 | </row> | 642 | utilities.</entry> |
644 | <row> | 643 | |
645 | <entry>inputproto</entry> | 644 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
646 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> | 645 | </row> |
647 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input extension. The extension supports input devices other then the core X keyboard and pointer.</entry> | 646 | |
648 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 647 | <row> |
649 | </row> | 648 | <entry>dnf</entry> |
650 | <row> | 649 | |
651 | <entry>intel-microcode</entry> | 650 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> |
652 | <entry>20170511</entry> | 651 | |
653 | <entry>The microcode data file contains the latest microcode definitions for all Intel processors. Intel releases microcode updates to correct processor behavior as documented in the respective processor specification updates. While the regular approach to getting this microcode update is via a BIOS upgrade Intel realizes that this can be an administrative hassle. The Linux operating system and VMware ESX products have a mechanism to update the microcode after booting. For example this file will be used by the operating system mechanism if the file is placed in the /etc/firmware directory of the Linux system.</entry> | 652 | <entry>Package manager forked from Yum using libsolv as a |
654 | <entry>Intel-Microcode-License</entry> | 653 | dependency resolver.</entry> |
655 | </row> | 654 | |
656 | <row> | 655 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
657 | <entry>intltool</entry> | 656 | </row> |
658 | <entry>0.51.0</entry> | 657 | |
659 | <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry> | 658 | <row> |
660 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 659 | <entry>dnsmasq</entry> |
661 | </row> | 660 | |
662 | <row> | 661 | <entry>2.76</entry> |
663 | <entry>iproute2</entry> | 662 | |
664 | <entry>4.10.0</entry> | 663 | <entry>Lightweight easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP |
665 | <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP / IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6 configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry> | 664 | server.</entry> |
666 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 665 | |
667 | </row> | 666 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
668 | <row> | 667 | </row> |
669 | <entry>iptables</entry> | 668 | |
670 | <entry>1.6.1</entry> | 669 | <row> |
671 | <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to configure and control network packet filtering code in Linux.</entry> | 670 | <entry>docbook-xml-dtd4</entry> |
672 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 671 | |
673 | </row> | 672 | <entry>4.5</entry> |
674 | <row> | 673 | |
675 | <entry>iputils</entry> | 674 | <entry>Document type definitions for verification of XML data |
676 | <entry>s20151218</entry> | 675 | files against the DocBook rule set it ships with the latest |
677 | <entry>Utilities for the IP protocol including traceroute6 tracepath tracepath6 ping ping6 and arping.</entry> | 676 | DocBook 4.5 XML DTD as well as a selected set of legacy DTDs for |
678 | <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> | 677 | use with older documents including 4.0 4.1.2 4.2 4.3 and |
679 | </row> | 678 | 4.4</entry> |
680 | <row> | 679 | |
681 | <entry>iucode-tool</entry> | 680 | <entry>OASIS</entry> |
682 | <entry>2.1.1</entry> | 681 | </row> |
683 | <entry>iucode_tool is a program to manipulate Intel i686 and X86-64 processor microcode update collections and to use the kernel facilities to update the microcode on Intel system processors. It can load microcode data files in text and binary format sort list and filter the microcode updates contained in these files write selected microcode updates to a new file in binary format or upload them to the kernel. It operates on microcode data downloaded directly from Intel: http://feeds.downloadcenter.intel.com/rss/?p=2371</entry> | 682 | |
684 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 683 | <row> |
685 | </row> | 684 | <entry>docbook-xsl-stylesheets</entry> |
686 | <row> | 685 | |
687 | <entry>json-c</entry> | 686 | <entry>1.79.1</entry> |
688 | <entry>0.12</entry> | 687 | |
689 | <entry>JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that allows you to easily construct JSON objects in C.</entry> | 688 | <entry>XSL stylesheets for processing DocBook XML to various |
690 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 689 | output formats.</entry> |
691 | </row> | 690 | |
692 | <row> | 691 | <entry>XSL</entry> |
693 | <entry>kbd</entry> | 692 | </row> |
694 | <entry>2.0.4</entry> | 693 | |
695 | <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry> | 694 | <row> |
696 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 695 | <entry>dosfstools</entry> |
697 | </row> | 696 | |
698 | <row> | 697 | <entry>4.1</entry> |
699 | <entry>kbproto</entry> | 698 | |
700 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> | 699 | <entry>DOS FAT Filesystem Utilities.</entry> |
701 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard extension. This extension is used to control options related to keyboard handling and layout.</entry> | 700 | |
702 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 701 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
703 | </row> | 702 | </row> |
704 | <row> | 703 | |
705 | <entry>kern-tools</entry> | 704 | <row> |
706 | <entry>0.2</entry> | 705 | <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> |
707 | <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched kernels.</entry> | 706 | |
708 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 707 | <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry> |
709 | </row> | 708 | |
710 | <row> | 709 | <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> |
711 | <entry>keymaps</entry> | 710 | |
712 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 711 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
713 | <entry>Keymaps and initscript to set the keymap on bootup.</entry> | 712 | </row> |
714 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 713 | |
715 | </row> | 714 | <row> |
716 | <row> | 715 | <entry>dpdk</entry> |
717 | <entry>kmod</entry> | 716 | |
718 | <entry>23</entry> | 717 | <entry>17.08</entry> |
719 | <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve dependencies and aliases.</entry> | 718 | |
720 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 719 | <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry> |
721 | </row> | 720 | |
722 | <row> | 721 | <entry>BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
723 | <entry>ldconfig</entry> | 722 | </row> |
724 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> | 723 | |
725 | <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry> | 724 | <row> |
726 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 725 | <entry>dpkg</entry> |
727 | </row> | 726 | |
728 | <row> | 727 | <entry>1.18.10</entry> |
729 | <entry>libaio</entry> | 728 | |
730 | <entry>0.3.110</entry> | 729 | <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> |
731 | <entry>Asynchronous input/output library that uses the kernels native interface</entry> | 730 | |
732 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 731 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
733 | </row> | 732 | </row> |
734 | <row> | 733 | |
735 | <entry>libarchive</entry> | 734 | <row> |
736 | <entry>3.2.2</entry> | 735 | <entry>dtc</entry> |
737 | <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry> | 736 | |
738 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 737 | <entry>1.4.2</entry> |
739 | </row> | 738 | |
740 | <row> | 739 | <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the |
741 | <entry>libassuan</entry> | 740 | Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> |
742 | <entry>2.4.3</entry> | 741 | |
743 | <entry>IPC library used by GnuPG and GPGME.</entry> | 742 | <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> |
744 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 743 | </row> |
745 | </row> | 744 | |
746 | <row> | 745 | <row> |
747 | <entry>libatomic-ops</entry> | 746 | <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> |
748 | <entry>7.4.4</entry> | 747 | |
749 | <entry>A library for atomic integer operations.</entry> | 748 | <entry>1.43.4</entry> |
750 | <entry> GPL-2.0, MIT</entry> | 749 | |
751 | </row> | 750 | <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of |
752 | <row> | 751 | the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and |
753 | <entry>libbsd</entry> | 752 | debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> |
754 | <entry>0.8.3</entry> | 753 | |
755 | <entry>This library provides useful functions commonly found on BSD systems and lacking on others like GNU systems thus making it easier to port projects with strong BSD origins without needing to embed the same code over and over again on each project.</entry> | 754 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> |
756 | <entry> BSD-4-Clause, ISC, PD</entry> | 755 | </row> |
757 | </row> | 756 | |
758 | <row> | 757 | <row> |
759 | <entry>libcap</entry> | 758 | <entry>ebtables</entry> |
760 | <entry>2.25</entry> | 759 | |
761 | <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry> | 760 | <entry>2.0.10-4</entry> |
762 | <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> | 761 | |
763 | </row> | 762 | <entry>Utility for basic Ethernet frame filtering on a Linux |
764 | <row> | 763 | bridge advanced logging MAC DNAT/SNAT and brouting.</entry> |
765 | <entry>libcgroup</entry> | 764 | |
766 | <entry>0.41</entry> | 765 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
767 | <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of processes.</entry> | 766 | </row> |
768 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 767 | |
769 | </row> | 768 | <row> |
770 | <row> | 769 | <entry>elfutils</entry> |
771 | <entry>libcheck</entry> | 770 | |
772 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> | 771 | <entry>0.168</entry> |
773 | <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry> | 772 | |
774 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 773 | <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object |
775 | </row> | 774 | files.</entry> |
776 | <row> | 775 | |
777 | <entry>libcomps</entry> | 776 | <entry>GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> |
778 | <entry>0.1.8</entry> | 777 | </row> |
779 | <entry>Libcomps is alternative for yum.comps library (which is for managing rpm package groups)..</entry> | 778 | |
780 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 779 | <row> |
781 | </row> | 780 | <entry>enea-nfv-access-openstack</entry> |
782 | <row> | 781 | |
783 | <entry>libconfig-general-perl</entry> | 782 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
784 | <entry>2.63</entry> | 783 | |
785 | <entry>Config file parser module</entry> | 784 | <entry>Image for the host side of the Enea NFV Access Platform |
786 | <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | 785 | that provides Oopenstack support</entry> |
787 | </row> | 786 | |
788 | <row> | 787 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
789 | <entry>libdaemon</entry> | 788 | </row> |
790 | <entry>0.14</entry> | 789 | |
791 | <entry>Lightweight C library which eases the writing of UNIX daemons.</entry> | 790 | <row> |
792 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 791 | <entry>expat</entry> |
793 | </row> | 792 | |
794 | <row> | 793 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> |
795 | <entry>libdevmapper</entry> | 794 | |
796 | <entry>2.02.166</entry> | 795 | <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a |
797 | <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in Linux.</entry> | 796 | stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers |
798 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 797 | for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start |
799 | </row> | 798 | tags)</entry> |
800 | <row> | 799 | |
801 | <entry>libdnf</entry> | 800 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
802 | <entry>0.2.3</entry> | 801 | </row> |
803 | <entry>Library providing simplified C and Python API to libsolv.</entry> | 802 | |
804 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 803 | <row> |
805 | </row> | 804 | <entry>file</entry> |
806 | <row> | 805 | |
807 | <entry>libevent</entry> | 806 | <entry>5.30</entry> |
808 | <entry>2.0.22</entry> | 807 | |
809 | <entry>An asynchronous event notification library.</entry> | 808 | <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents |
810 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 809 | and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> |
811 | </row> | 810 | |
812 | <row> | 811 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
813 | <entry>libffi</entry> | 812 | </row> |
814 | <entry>3.2.1</entry> | 813 | |
815 | <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for the interface that allows code written in one language to call code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that handles type conversions for values passed between the two languages.</entry> | 814 | <row> |
816 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 815 | <entry>flex</entry> |
817 | </row> | 816 | |
818 | <row> | 817 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> |
819 | <entry>libgcc</entry> | 818 | |
820 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> | 819 | <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool |
821 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> | 820 | for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in |
822 | <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> | 821 | text.</entry> |
823 | </row> | 822 | |
824 | <row> | 823 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
825 | <entry>libgcrypt</entry> | 824 | </row> |
826 | <entry>1.7.6</entry> | 825 | |
827 | <entry>General purpose cryptographic library based on the code from GnuPG.</entry> | 826 | <row> |
828 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry> | 827 | <entry>fontconfig</entry> |
829 | </row> | 828 | |
830 | <row> | 829 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> |
831 | <entry>libgpg-error</entry> | 830 | |
832 | <entry>1.26</entry> | 831 | <entry>Fontconfig is a font configuration and customization |
833 | <entry>Small library that defines common error values for all GnuPG components.</entry> | 832 | library which does not depend on the X Window System. It is |
834 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 833 | designed to locate fonts within the system and select them |
835 | </row> | 834 | according to requirements specified by applications. Fontconfig is |
836 | <row> | 835 | not a rasterization library nor does it impose a particular |
837 | <entry>libical</entry> | 836 | rasterization library on the application. The X-specific library |
838 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> | 837 | 'Xft' uses fontconfig along with freetype to specify and rasterize |
839 | <entry>iCal and scheduling (RFC 2445 2446 2447) library.</entry> | 838 | fonts.</entry> |
840 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, MPL-1.0</entry> | 839 | |
841 | </row> | 840 | <entry>MIT, PD</entry> |
842 | <row> | 841 | </row> |
843 | <entry>libice</entry> | 842 | |
844 | <entry>1.0.9</entry> | 843 | <row> |
845 | <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up and shutting down connections for performing authentication for negotiating versions and for reporting errors. </entry> | 844 | <entry>freetype</entry> |
846 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 845 | |
847 | </row> | 846 | <entry>2.7.1</entry> |
848 | <row> | 847 | |
849 | <entry>libidn</entry> | 848 | <entry>FreeType is a software font engine that is designed to be |
850 | <entry>1.33</entry> | 849 | small efficient highly customizable and portable while capable of |
851 | <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) working group.</entry> | 850 | producing high-quality output (glyph images). It can be used in |
852 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry> | 851 | graphics libraries display servers font conversion tools text |
853 | </row> | 852 | image generation tools and many other products as well.</entry> |
854 | <row> | 853 | |
855 | <entry>libmpc</entry> | 854 | <entry>FreeType, GPL-2.0</entry> |
856 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> | 855 | </row> |
857 | <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as Mpfr</entry> | 856 | |
858 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | 857 | <row> |
859 | </row> | 858 | <entry>fuse</entry> |
860 | <row> | 859 | |
861 | <entry>libnfsidmap</entry> | 860 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> |
862 | <entry>0.25</entry> | 861 | |
863 | <entry>NFS id mapping library.</entry> | 862 | <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for |
864 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 863 | userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux |
865 | </row> | 864 | kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non |
866 | <row> | 865 | privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem |
867 | <entry>libnl</entry> | 866 | implementations.</entry> |
868 | <entry>3.2.29</entry> | 867 | |
869 | <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink sockets.</entry> | 868 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
870 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 869 | </row> |
871 | </row> | 870 | |
872 | <row> | 871 | <row> |
873 | <entry>libnss-mdns</entry> | 872 | <entry>gawk</entry> |
874 | <entry>0.10</entry> | 873 | |
875 | <entry>Name Service Switch module for Multicast DNS (zeroconf) name resolution.</entry> | 874 | <entry>4.1.4</entry> |
876 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 875 | |
877 | </row> | 876 | <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk |
878 | <row> | 877 | interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and |
879 | <entry>libpam</entry> | 878 | easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> |
880 | <entry>1.3.0</entry> | 879 | |
881 | <entry>Linux-PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules for Linux) a flexible mechanism for authenticating users</entry> | 880 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
882 | <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> | 881 | </row> |
883 | </row> | 882 | |
884 | <row> | 883 | <row> |
885 | <entry>libpcap</entry> | 884 | <entry>gcc-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> |
886 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> | 885 | |
887 | <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection security monitoring and network debugging.</entry> | 886 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
888 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 887 | |
889 | </row> | 888 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers (cross-canadian for x86_64 |
890 | <row> | 889 | target).</entry> |
891 | <entry>libpciaccess</entry> | 890 | |
892 | <entry>0.13.4</entry> | 891 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
893 | <entry>libpciaccess provides functionality for X to access the PCI bus and devices in a platform-independent way.</entry> | 892 | </row> |
894 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 893 | |
895 | </row> | 894 | <row> |
896 | <row> | 895 | <entry>gcc-cross-initial-x86_64</entry> |
897 | <entry>libpcre</entry> | 896 | |
898 | <entry>8.40</entry> | 897 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
899 | <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular expression API.</entry> | 898 | |
900 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 899 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
901 | </row> | 900 | |
902 | <row> | 901 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
903 | <entry>libpng</entry> | 902 | </row> |
904 | <entry>1.6.28</entry> | 903 | |
905 | <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry> | 904 | <row> |
906 | <entry>Libpng</entry> | 905 | <entry>gcc-cross-x86_64</entry> |
907 | </row> | 906 | |
908 | <row> | 907 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
909 | <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry> | 908 | |
910 | <entry>0.3</entry> | 909 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
911 | <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry> | 910 | |
912 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 911 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
913 | </row> | 912 | </row> |
914 | <row> | 913 | |
915 | <entry>librepo</entry> | 914 | <row> |
916 | <entry>1.7.20</entry> | 915 | <entry>gcc-crosssdk-initial-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> |
917 | <entry> A library providing C and Python (libcURL like) API for downloading linux repository metadata and packages..</entry> | 916 | |
918 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 917 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
919 | </row> | 918 | |
920 | <row> | 919 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
921 | <entry>libsdl</entry> | 920 | |
922 | <entry>1.2.15</entry> | 921 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
923 | <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video framebuffer.</entry> | 922 | </row> |
924 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 923 | |
925 | </row> | 924 | <row> |
926 | <row> | 925 | <entry>gcc-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> |
927 | <entry>libsm</entry> | 926 | |
928 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | 927 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
929 | <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of clients each of which has a particular state."</entry> | 928 | |
930 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 929 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
931 | </row> | 930 | |
932 | <row> | 931 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
933 | <entry>libsolv</entry> | 932 | </row> |
934 | <entry>0.6.26</entry> | 933 | |
935 | <entry>Library for solving packages and reading repositories.</entry> | 934 | <row> |
936 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 935 | <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> |
937 | </row> | 936 | |
938 | <row> | 937 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
939 | <entry>libtasn1</entry> | 938 | |
940 | <entry>4.10</entry> | 939 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
941 | <entry>Library for ASN.1 and DER manipulation.</entry> | 940 | |
942 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 941 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
943 | </row> | 942 | </row> |
944 | <row> | 943 | |
945 | <entry>libtirpc</entry> | 944 | <row> |
946 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> | 945 | <entry>gcc</entry> |
947 | <entry>Libtirpc is a port of Suns Transport-Independent RPC library to Linux</entry> | 946 | |
948 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 947 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
949 | </row> | 948 | |
950 | <row> | 949 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
951 | <entry>libtool</entry> | 950 | |
952 | <entry>2.4.6</entry> | 951 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
953 | <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script. Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry> | 952 | </row> |
954 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 953 | |
955 | </row> | 954 | <row> |
956 | <row> | 955 | <entry>gdb-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> |
957 | <entry>libunistring</entry> | 956 | |
958 | <entry>0.9.7</entry> | 957 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> |
959 | <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains documentation.</entry> | 958 | |
960 | <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 959 | <entry>GNU debugger (cross-canadian gdb for x86_64 |
961 | </row> | 960 | target).</entry> |
962 | <row> | 961 | |
963 | <entry>liburcu</entry> | 962 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> |
964 | <entry>0.9.3</entry> | 963 | </row> |
965 | <entry>Userspace RCU (read-copy-update) library.</entry> | 964 | |
966 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, MIT</entry> | 965 | <row> |
967 | </row> | 966 | <entry>gdb</entry> |
968 | <row> | 967 | |
969 | <entry>libusb-compat</entry> | 968 | <entry>7.12.1</entry> |
970 | <entry>0.1.5</entry> | 969 | |
971 | <entry>libusb-0.1 compatible layer for libusb1 a drop-in replacement that aims to look feel and behave exactly like libusb-0.1</entry> | 970 | <entry>GNU debugger.</entry> |
972 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 971 | |
973 | </row> | 972 | <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> |
974 | <row> | 973 | </row> |
975 | <entry>libusb1</entry> | 974 | |
976 | <entry>1.0.21</entry> | 975 | <row> |
977 | <entry>Userspace library to access USB (version 1.0).</entry> | 976 | <entry>gdbm</entry> |
978 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 977 | |
979 | </row> | 978 | <entry>1.12</entry> |
980 | <row> | 979 | |
981 | <entry>libvirt</entry> | 980 | <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> |
982 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | 981 | |
983 | <entry>A toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities of recent versions of Linux.</entry> | 982 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
984 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> | 983 | </row> |
985 | </row> | 984 | |
986 | <row> | 985 | <row> |
987 | <entry>libx11</entry> | 986 | <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> |
988 | <entry>1.6.4</entry> | 987 | |
989 | <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for the basic functions of the window system.</entry> | 988 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> |
990 | <entry> MIT, BSD</entry> | 989 | |
991 | </row> | 990 | <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building |
992 | <row> | 991 | autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup |
993 | <entry>libxau</entry> | 992 | by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now |
994 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | 993 | only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> |
995 | <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X connections both client-side and server-side.</entry> | 994 | |
996 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 995 | <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> |
997 | </row> | 996 | </row> |
998 | <row> | 997 | |
999 | <entry>libxaw</entry> | 998 | <row> |
1000 | <entry>1.0.13</entry> | 999 | <entry>gettext</entry> |
1001 | <entry>X Athena Widget Set.</entry> | 1000 | |
1002 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1001 | <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> |
1003 | </row> | 1002 | |
1004 | <row> | 1003 | <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to |
1005 | <entry>libxcb</entry> | 1004 | help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools |
1006 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 1005 | include a set of conventions about how programs should be written |
1007 | <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading support and extensibility.</entry> | 1006 | to support message catalogs a directory and file naming |
1008 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1007 | organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library |
1009 | </row> | 1008 | supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few |
1010 | <row> | 1009 | stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of |
1011 | <entry>libxdmcp</entry> | 1010 | translatable and already translated strings.</entry> |
1012 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> | 1011 | |
1013 | <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime example of an autonomous display.</entry> | 1012 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1014 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1013 | </row> |
1015 | </row> | 1014 | |
1016 | <row> | 1015 | <row> |
1017 | <entry>libxext</entry> | 1016 | <entry>glib-2.0</entry> |
1018 | <entry>1.3.3</entry> | 1017 | |
1019 | <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X protocol extensions.</entry> | 1018 | <entry>2.50.3</entry> |
1020 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1019 | |
1021 | </row> | 1020 | <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides |
1022 | <row> | 1021 | many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities |
1023 | <entry>libxinerama</entry> | 1022 | file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> |
1024 | <entry>1.1.3</entry> | 1023 | |
1025 | <entry>Xinerama is a simple library designed to interface the Xinerama Extension for retrieving information about physical output devices which may be combined into a single logical X screen.</entry> | 1024 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> |
1026 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1025 | </row> |
1027 | </row> | 1026 | |
1028 | <row> | 1027 | <row> |
1029 | <entry>libxkbcommon</entry> | 1028 | <entry>glibc-locale</entry> |
1030 | <entry>0.7.1</entry> | 1029 | |
1031 | <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB specification.</entry> | 1030 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
1032 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1031 | |
1033 | </row> | 1032 | <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> |
1034 | <row> | 1033 | |
1035 | <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry> | 1034 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1036 | <entry>2.44</entry> | 1035 | </row> |
1037 | <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML documents.</entry> | 1036 | |
1038 | <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | 1037 | <row> |
1039 | </row> | 1038 | <entry>glibc-mtrace</entry> |
1040 | <row> | 1039 | |
1041 | <entry>libxml2</entry> | 1040 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
1042 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> | 1041 | |
1043 | <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2 includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible with Expat.</entry> | 1042 | <entry>mtrace utility provided by glibc</entry> |
1044 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1043 | |
1045 | </row> | 1044 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1046 | <row> | 1045 | </row> |
1047 | <entry>libxmu</entry> | 1046 | |
1048 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> | 1047 | <row> |
1049 | <entry>The Xmu Library is a collection of miscellaneous (some might say random) utility functions that have been useful in building various applications and widgets. This library is required by the Athena Widgets. A subset of the functions that do not rely on the Athena Widgets (libXaw) or X Toolkit Instrinsics (libXt) are provided in a second library libXmuu.</entry> | 1048 | <entry>glibc</entry> |
1050 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1049 | |
1051 | </row> | 1050 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
1052 | <row> | 1051 | |
1053 | <entry>libxpm</entry> | 1052 | <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most |
1054 | <entry>3.5.12</entry> | 1053 | systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> |
1055 | <entry>libXpm provides support and common operation for the XPM pixmap format which is commonly used in legacy X applications. XPM is an extension of the monochrome XBM bitmap specificied in the X protocol.</entry> | 1054 | |
1056 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1055 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1057 | </row> | 1056 | </row> |
1058 | <row> | 1057 | |
1059 | <entry>libxrandr</entry> | 1058 | <row> |
1060 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | 1059 | <entry>gmp</entry> |
1061 | <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry> | 1060 | |
1062 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1061 | <entry>6.1.2</entry> |
1063 | </row> | 1062 | |
1064 | <row> | 1063 | <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic |
1065 | <entry>libxrender</entry> | 1064 | operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point |
1066 | <entry>0.9.10</entry> | 1065 | numbers</entry> |
1067 | <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of them.</entry> | 1066 | |
1068 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1067 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> |
1069 | </row> | 1068 | </row> |
1070 | <row> | 1069 | |
1071 | <entry>libxslt</entry> | 1070 | <row> |
1072 | <entry>1.1.29</entry> | 1071 | <entry>gnome-common</entry> |
1073 | <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry> | 1072 | |
1074 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1073 | <entry>3.18.0</entry> |
1075 | </row> | 1074 | |
1076 | <row> | 1075 | <entry>Common macros for building GNOME applications.</entry> |
1077 | <entry>libxt</entry> | 1076 | |
1078 | <entry>1.1.5</entry> | 1077 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1079 | <entry>The Intrinsics are a programming library tailored to the special requirements of user interface construction within a network window system specifically the X Window System. The Intrinsics and a widget set make up an X Toolkit. The Intrinsics provide the base mechanism necessary to build a wide variety of interoperating widget sets and application environments. The Intrinsics are a layer on top of Xlib the C Library X Interface. They extend the fundamental abstractions provided by the X Window System while still remaining independent of any particular user interface policy or style.</entry> | 1078 | </row> |
1080 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 1079 | |
1081 | </row> | 1080 | <row> |
1082 | <row> | 1081 | <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> |
1083 | <entry>libyaml</entry> | 1082 | |
1084 | <entry>0.1.7</entry> | 1083 | <entry>2014.1</entry> |
1085 | <entry>LibYAML is a C library for parsing and emitting data in YAML 1.1 a human-readable data serialization format. </entry> | 1084 | |
1086 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1085 | <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> |
1087 | </row> | 1086 | |
1088 | <row> | 1087 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> |
1089 | <entry>linux-intel-host</entry> | 1088 | </row> |
1090 | <entry>4.9.47</entry> | 1089 | |
1091 | <entry>Linux kernel.</entry> | 1090 | <row> |
1092 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1091 | <entry>gnu-config</entry> |
1093 | </row> | 1092 | |
1094 | <row> | 1093 | <entry>20150728</entry> |
1095 | <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry> | 1094 | |
1096 | <entry>4.10</entry> | 1095 | <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a |
1097 | <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's use.</entry> | 1096 | directory tree</entry> |
1098 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1097 | |
1099 | </row> | 1098 | <entry>GPLv2</entry> |
1100 | <row> | 1099 | </row> |
1101 | <entry>lsb</entry> | 1100 | |
1102 | <entry>4.1</entry> | 1101 | <row> |
1103 | <entry>LSB support for OpenEmbedded.</entry> | 1102 | <entry>gnutls</entry> |
1104 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1103 | |
1105 | </row> | 1104 | <entry>3.5.9</entry> |
1106 | <row> | 1105 | |
1107 | <entry>lsbinitscripts</entry> | 1106 | <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> |
1108 | <entry>9.68</entry> | 1107 | |
1109 | <entry>SysV init scripts which are only used in an LSB image.</entry> | 1108 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1110 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1109 | </row> |
1111 | </row> | 1110 | |
1112 | <row> | 1111 | <row> |
1113 | <entry>lttng-ust</entry> | 1112 | <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> |
1114 | <entry>2.9.0</entry> | 1113 | |
1115 | <entry>The LTTng UST 2.x package contains the userspace tracer library to trace userspace codes.</entry> | 1114 | <entry>1.50.0</entry> |
1116 | <entry> LGPL-2.1, MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1115 | |
1117 | </row> | 1116 | <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and |
1118 | <row> | 1117 | language bindings.</entry> |
1119 | <entry>lvm2</entry> | 1118 | |
1120 | <entry>2.02.166</entry> | 1119 | <entry>LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
1121 | <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in Linux.</entry> | 1120 | </row> |
1122 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1121 | |
1123 | </row> | 1122 | <row> |
1124 | <row> | 1123 | <entry>gperf</entry> |
1125 | <entry>lxc</entry> | 1124 | |
1126 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> | 1125 | <entry>3.0.4</entry> |
1127 | <entry>lxc aims to use these new functionnalities to provide an userspace container object</entry> | 1126 | |
1128 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1127 | <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> |
1129 | </row> | 1128 | |
1130 | <row> | 1129 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1131 | <entry>lzo</entry> | 1130 | </row> |
1132 | <entry>2.09</entry> | 1131 | |
1133 | <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry> | 1132 | <row> |
1134 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1133 | <entry>gpgme</entry> |
1135 | </row> | 1134 | |
1136 | <row> | 1135 | <entry>1.8.0</entry> |
1137 | <entry>lzop</entry> | 1136 | |
1138 | <entry>1.03</entry> | 1137 | <entry>GnuPG Made Easy (GPGME) is a library designed to make |
1139 | <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher compression and decompression speed at the cost of some \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry> | 1138 | access to GnuPG easier for applications. It provides a High-Level |
1140 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1139 | Crypto API for encryption decryption signing signature |
1141 | </row> | 1140 | verification and key management</entry> |
1142 | <row> | 1141 | |
1143 | <entry>m4</entry> | 1142 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1144 | <entry>1.4.18</entry> | 1143 | </row> |
1145 | <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry> | 1144 | |
1146 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1145 | <row> |
1147 | </row> | 1146 | <entry>grep</entry> |
1148 | <row> | 1147 | |
1149 | <entry>make</entry> | 1148 | <entry>3.0</entry> |
1150 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 1149 | |
1151 | <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables and other non-source files of a program from the program's source files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files and how to compute it from other files.</entry> | 1150 | <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> |
1152 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1151 | |
1153 | </row> | 1152 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1154 | <row> | 1153 | </row> |
1155 | <entry>makedepend</entry> | 1154 | |
1156 | <entry>1.0.5</entry> | 1155 | <row> |
1157 | <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can reference files having other #include directives and parsing will occur in these files as well.</entry> | 1156 | <entry>groff</entry> |
1158 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1157 | |
1159 | </row> | 1158 | <entry>1.22.3</entry> |
1160 | <row> | 1159 | |
1161 | <entry>makedevs</entry> | 1160 | <entry>The groff (GNU troff) software is a typesetting package |
1162 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> | 1161 | which reads plain text mixed with formatting commands and produces |
1163 | <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry> | 1162 | formatted output.</entry> |
1164 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1163 | |
1165 | </row> | 1164 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1166 | <row> | 1165 | </row> |
1167 | <entry>meta-environment-inteld1521</entry> | 1166 | |
1168 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1167 | <row> |
1169 | <entry>Package of environment files for SDK.</entry> | 1168 | <entry>grub-efi</entry> |
1170 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1169 | |
1171 | </row> | 1170 | <entry>2.00</entry> |
1172 | <row> | 1171 | |
1173 | <entry>meta-toolchain</entry> | 1172 | <entry>GRUB2 is the next generaion of a GPLed bootloader intended |
1174 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1173 | to unify bootloading across x86 operating systems. In addition to |
1175 | <entry>Meta package for building a installable toolchain.</entry> | 1174 | loading the Linux kernel it implements the Multiboot standard |
1176 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1175 | which allows for flexible loading of multiple boot images.</entry> |
1177 | </row> | 1176 | |
1178 | <row> | 1177 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1179 | <entry>mklibs</entry> | 1178 | </row> |
1180 | <entry>0.1.43</entry> | 1179 | |
1181 | <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry> | 1180 | <row> |
1182 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1181 | <entry>gtk-doc</entry> |
1183 | </row> | 1182 | |
1184 | <row> | 1183 | <entry>1.25</entry> |
1185 | <entry>mpfr</entry> | 1184 | |
1186 | <entry>3.1.5</entry> | 1185 | <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially |
1187 | <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point computations with exact rounding.</entry> | 1186 | formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of |
1188 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 1187 | html documentation files from them</entry> |
1189 | </row> | 1188 | |
1190 | <row> | 1189 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1191 | <entry>mtools</entry> | 1190 | </row> |
1192 | <entry>4.0.18</entry> | 1191 | |
1193 | <entry>Mtools is a collection of utilities to access MS-DOS disks from GNU and Unix without mounting them.</entry> | 1192 | <row> |
1194 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1193 | <entry>guile</entry> |
1195 | </row> | 1194 | |
1196 | <row> | 1195 | <entry>2.0.14</entry> |
1197 | <entry>nasm</entry> | 1196 | |
1198 | <entry>2.12.02</entry> | 1197 | <entry>Guile is the GNU Ubiquitous Intelligent Language for |
1199 | <entry>General-purpose x86 assembler.</entry> | 1198 | Extensions the official extension language for the GNU operating |
1200 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 1199 | system. Guile is a library designed to help programmers create |
1201 | </row> | 1200 | flexible applications. Using Guile in an application allows the |
1202 | <row> | 1201 | application's functionality to be extended by users or other |
1203 | <entry>ncurses</entry> | 1202 | programmers with plug-ins modules or scripts. Guile provides what |
1204 | <entry>6.0</entry> | 1203 | might be described as 'practical software freedom' making it |
1205 | <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using the gpm library.</entry> | 1204 | possible for users to customize an application to meet their needs |
1206 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1205 | without digging into the application's internals.</entry> |
1207 | </row> | 1206 | |
1208 | <row> | 1207 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1209 | <entry>netbase</entry> | 1208 | </row> |
1210 | <entry>5.4</entry> | 1209 | |
1211 | <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for basic TCP/IP based networking</entry> | 1210 | <row> |
1212 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1211 | <entry>gzip</entry> |
1213 | </row> | 1212 | |
1214 | <row> | 1213 | <entry>1.8</entry> |
1215 | <entry>netcat-openbsd</entry> | 1214 | |
1216 | <entry>1.105</entry> | 1215 | <entry>GNU Gzip is a popular data compression program originally |
1217 | <entry>A simple Unix utility which reads and writes data across network connections using TCP or UDP protocol. It is designed to be a reliable 'back-end' tool that can be used directly or easily driven by other programs and scripts. At the same time it is a feature-rich network debugging and exploration tool since it can create almost any kind of connection you would need and has several interesting built-in capabilities.</entry> | 1216 | written by Jean-loup Gailly for the GNU project. Mark Adler wrote |
1218 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1217 | the decompression part</entry> |
1219 | </row> | 1218 | |
1220 | <row> | 1219 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
1221 | <entry>nettle</entry> | 1220 | </row> |
1222 | <entry>3.3</entry> | 1221 | |
1223 | <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry> | 1222 | <row> |
1224 | <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> | 1223 | <entry>icu</entry> |
1225 | </row> | 1224 | |
1226 | <row> | 1225 | <entry>58.2</entry> |
1227 | <entry>nfs-utils</entry> | 1226 | |
1228 | <entry>1.3.4</entry> | 1227 | <entry>The International Component for Unicode (ICU) is a mature |
1229 | <entry>The nfs-utils package provides a daemon for the kernel NFS server and related tools.</entry> | 1228 | portable set of C/C++ and Java libraries for Unicode support |
1230 | <entry> MIT, GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> | 1229 | software internationalization (I18N) and globalization (G11N) |
1231 | </row> | 1230 | giving applications the same results on all platforms.</entry> |
1232 | <row> | 1231 | |
1233 | <entry>nspr</entry> | 1232 | <entry>ICU</entry> |
1234 | <entry>4.13.1</entry> | 1233 | </row> |
1235 | <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry> | 1234 | |
1236 | <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1235 | <row> |
1237 | </row> | 1236 | <entry>initscripts</entry> |
1238 | <row> | 1237 | |
1239 | <entry>nss</entry> | 1238 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
1240 | <entry>3.28.1</entry> | 1239 | |
1241 | <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry> | 1240 | <entry>Initscripts provide the basic system startup initialization |
1242 | <entry> MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1241 | scripts for the system. These scripts include actions such as |
1243 | </row> | 1242 | filesystem mounting fsck RTC manipulation and other actions |
1244 | <row> | 1243 | routinely performed at system startup. In addition the scripts are |
1245 | <entry>numactl</entry> | 1244 | also used during system shutdown to reverse the actions performed |
1246 | <entry>2.0.11</entry> | 1245 | at startup.</entry> |
1247 | <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in applications.</entry> | 1246 | |
1248 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1247 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1249 | </row> | 1248 | </row> |
1250 | <row> | 1249 | |
1251 | <entry>openssh</entry> | 1250 | <row> |
1252 | <entry>7.4p1</entry> | 1251 | <entry>inputproto</entry> |
1253 | <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry> | 1252 | |
1254 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1253 | <entry>2.3.2</entry> |
1255 | </row> | 1254 | |
1256 | <row> | 1255 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input |
1257 | <entry>openssl</entry> | 1256 | extension. The extension supports input devices other then the |
1258 | <entry>1.0.2k</entry> | 1257 | core X keyboard and pointer.</entry> |
1259 | <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic tools.</entry> | 1258 | |
1260 | <entry>OpenSSL</entry> | 1259 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1261 | </row> | 1260 | </row> |
1262 | <row> | 1261 | |
1263 | <entry>openvswitch</entry> | 1262 | <row> |
1264 | <entry>2.8.1</entry> | 1263 | <entry>intel-microcode</entry> |
1265 | <entry> Open vSwitch is a production quality multilayer virtual switch licensed under the open source Apache 2.0 license. It is designed to enable massive network automation through programmatic extension while still supporting standard management interfaces and protocols (e.g. NetFlow sFlow SPAN RSPAN CLI LACP 802.1ag) </entry> | 1264 | |
1266 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1265 | <entry>20170511</entry> |
1267 | </row> | 1266 | |
1268 | <row> | 1267 | <entry>The microcode data file contains the latest microcode |
1269 | <entry>opkg-utils</entry> | 1268 | definitions for all Intel processors. Intel releases microcode |
1270 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | 1269 | updates to correct processor behavior as documented in the |
1271 | <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry> | 1270 | respective processor specification updates. While the regular |
1272 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1271 | approach to getting this microcode update is via a BIOS upgrade |
1273 | </row> | 1272 | Intel realizes that this can be an administrative hassle. The |
1274 | <row> | 1273 | Linux operating system and VMware ESX products have a mechanism to |
1275 | <entry>opkg</entry> | 1274 | update the microcode after booting. For example this file will be |
1276 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> | 1275 | used by the operating system mechanism if the file is placed in |
1277 | <entry>Open Package Manager.</entry> | 1276 | the /etc/firmware directory of the Linux system.</entry> |
1278 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1277 | |
1279 | </row> | 1278 | <entry>Intel-Microcode-License</entry> |
1280 | <row> | 1279 | </row> |
1281 | <entry>os-release</entry> | 1280 | |
1282 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1281 | <row> |
1283 | <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system identification data.</entry> | 1282 | <entry>intltool</entry> |
1284 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1283 | |
1285 | </row> | 1284 | <entry>0.51.0</entry> |
1286 | <row> | 1285 | |
1287 | <entry>ossp-uuid</entry> | 1286 | <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry> |
1288 | <entry>1.6.2</entry> | 1287 | |
1289 | <entry>OSSP uuid is a ISO-C:1999 application programming interface (API) and corresponding command line interface (CLI) for the generation of DCE 1.1 ISO/IEC 11578:1996 and RFC 4122 compliant Universally Unique Identifier (UUID). It supports DCE 1.1 variant UUIDs of version 1 (time and node based) version 3 (name based MD5) version 4 (random number based) and version 5 (name based SHA-1).</entry> | 1288 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1290 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1289 | </row> |
1291 | </row> | 1290 | |
1292 | <row> | 1291 | <row> |
1293 | <entry>packagegroup-cloud-compute</entry> | 1292 | <entry>iproute2</entry> |
1294 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1293 | |
1295 | <entry>Configuration for OpenStack Compute node.</entry> | 1294 | <entry>4.10.0</entry> |
1296 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1295 | |
1297 | </row> | 1296 | <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP / |
1298 | <row> | 1297 | IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip |
1299 | <entry>packagegroup-cloud-debug</entry> | 1298 | and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6 |
1300 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1299 | configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry> |
1301 | <entry>Add debugging capabilities to cloud images.</entry> | 1300 | |
1302 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1301 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1303 | </row> | 1302 | </row> |
1304 | <row> | 1303 | |
1305 | <entry>packagegroup-cloud-extras</entry> | 1304 | <row> |
1306 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1305 | <entry>iptables</entry> |
1307 | <entry>Extra packages that improve the usability of compute/control nodes.</entry> | 1306 | |
1308 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1307 | <entry>1.6.1</entry> |
1309 | </row> | 1308 | |
1310 | <row> | 1309 | <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to |
1311 | <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry> | 1310 | configure and control network packet filtering code in |
1312 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1311 | Linux.</entry> |
1313 | <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the system</entry> | 1312 | |
1314 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1313 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1315 | </row> | 1314 | </row> |
1316 | <row> | 1315 | |
1317 | <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry> | 1316 | <row> |
1318 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1317 | <entry>iputils</entry> |
1319 | <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry> | 1318 | |
1320 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1319 | <entry>s20151218</entry> |
1321 | </row> | 1320 | |
1322 | <row> | 1321 | <entry>Utilities for the IP protocol including traceroute6 |
1323 | <entry>packagegroup-core-standalone-sdk-target</entry> | 1322 | tracepath tracepath6 ping ping6 and arping.</entry> |
1324 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1323 | |
1325 | <entry>Target packages for the standalone SDK.</entry> | 1324 | <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> |
1326 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1325 | </row> |
1327 | </row> | 1326 | |
1328 | <row> | 1327 | <row> |
1329 | <entry>packagegroup-core-tools-debug</entry> | 1328 | <entry>iucode-tool</entry> |
1330 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1329 | |
1331 | <entry>Debugging tools.</entry> | 1330 | <entry>2.1.1</entry> |
1332 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1331 | |
1333 | </row> | 1332 | <entry>iucode_tool is a program to manipulate Intel i686 and |
1334 | <row> | 1333 | X86-64 processor microcode update collections and to use the |
1335 | <entry>packagegroup-cross-canadian-inteld1521</entry> | 1334 | kernel facilities to update the microcode on Intel system |
1336 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1335 | processors. It can load microcode data files in text and binary |
1337 | <entry>Host SDK package for cross canadian toolchain.</entry> | 1336 | format sort list and filter the microcode updates contained in |
1338 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1337 | these files write selected microcode updates to a new file in |
1339 | </row> | 1338 | binary format or upload them to the kernel. It operates on |
1340 | <row> | 1339 | microcode data downloaded directly from Intel: |
1341 | <entry>packagegroup-sdk-host</entry> | 1340 | http://feeds.downloadcenter.intel.com/rss/?p=2371</entry> |
1342 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1341 | |
1343 | <entry>Host packages for the standalone SDK or external toolchain.</entry> | 1342 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1344 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1343 | </row> |
1345 | </row> | 1344 | |
1346 | <row> | 1345 | <row> |
1347 | <entry>parted</entry> | 1346 | <entry>json-c</entry> |
1348 | <entry>3.2</entry> | 1347 | |
1349 | <entry>Disk partition editing/resizing utility.</entry> | 1348 | <entry>0.12</entry> |
1350 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 1349 | |
1351 | </row> | 1350 | <entry>JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that |
1352 | <row> | 1351 | allows you to easily construct JSON objects in C.</entry> |
1353 | <entry>pciutils</entry> | 1352 | |
1354 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | 1353 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1355 | <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based on this library.</entry> | 1354 | </row> |
1356 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1355 | |
1357 | </row> | 1356 | <row> |
1358 | <row> | 1357 | <entry>kbd</entry> |
1359 | <entry>perl</entry> | 1358 | |
1360 | <entry>5.24.1</entry> | 1359 | <entry>2.0.4</entry> |
1361 | <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry> | 1360 | |
1362 | <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> | 1361 | <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry> |
1363 | </row> | 1362 | |
1364 | <row> | 1363 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1365 | <entry>pigz</entry> | 1364 | </row> |
1366 | <entry>2.3.4</entry> | 1365 | |
1367 | <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data. pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread libraries.</entry> | 1366 | <row> |
1368 | <entry> Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry> | 1367 | <entry>kbproto</entry> |
1369 | </row> | 1368 | |
1370 | <row> | 1369 | <entry>1.0.7</entry> |
1371 | <entry>pixman</entry> | 1370 | |
1372 | <entry>0.34.0</entry> | 1371 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard |
1373 | <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions -- a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry> | 1372 | extension. This extension is used to control options related to |
1374 | <entry> MIT, PD</entry> | 1373 | keyboard handling and layout.</entry> |
1375 | </row> | 1374 | |
1376 | <row> | 1375 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1377 | <entry>pixz</entry> | 1376 | </row> |
1378 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> | 1377 | |
1379 | <entry>Parallel indexed xz compressor.</entry> | 1378 | <row> |
1380 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 1379 | <entry>kern-tools</entry> |
1381 | </row> | 1380 | |
1382 | <row> | 1381 | <entry>0.2</entry> |
1383 | <entry>pkgconfig</entry> | 1382 | |
1384 | <entry>0.29.1</entry> | 1383 | <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched |
1385 | <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry> | 1384 | kernels.</entry> |
1386 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1385 | |
1387 | </row> | 1386 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1388 | <row> | 1387 | </row> |
1389 | <entry>pm-utils</entry> | 1388 | |
1390 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | 1389 | <row> |
1391 | <entry>Simple shell command line tools to suspend and hibernate.</entry> | 1390 | <entry>keymaps</entry> |
1392 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1391 | |
1393 | </row> | 1392 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
1394 | <row> | 1393 | |
1395 | <entry>popt</entry> | 1394 | <entry>Keymaps and initscript to set the keymap on bootup.</entry> |
1396 | <entry>1.16</entry> | 1395 | |
1397 | <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry> | 1396 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1398 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1397 | </row> |
1399 | </row> | 1398 | |
1400 | <row> | 1399 | <row> |
1401 | <entry>postgresql</entry> | 1400 | <entry>kmod</entry> |
1402 | <entry>9.4.11</entry> | 1401 | |
1403 | <entry> PostgreSQL is an advanced Object-Relational database management system (DBMS) that supports almost all SQL constructs (including transactions subselects and user-defined types and functions). The postgresql package includes the client programs and libraries that you'll need to access a PostgreSQL DBMS server. These PostgreSQL client programs are programs that directly manipulate the internal structure of PostgreSQL databases on a PostgreSQL server. These client programs can be located on the same machine with the PostgreSQL server or may be on a remote machine which accesses a PostgreSQL server over a network connection. This package contains the docs in HTML for the whole package as well as command-line utilities for managing PostgreSQL databases on a PostgreSQL server. If you want to manipulate a PostgreSQL database on a local or remote PostgreSQL server you need this package. You also need to install this package if you're installing the postgresql-server package. </entry> | 1402 | <entry>23</entry> |
1404 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1403 | |
1405 | </row> | 1404 | <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux |
1406 | <row> | 1405 | kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve |
1407 | <entry>postinst-intercept</entry> | 1406 | dependencies and aliases.</entry> |
1408 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1407 | |
1409 | <entry>Postinstall scriptlets.</entry> | 1408 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1410 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1409 | </row> |
1411 | </row> | 1410 | |
1412 | <row> | 1411 | <row> |
1413 | <entry>prelink</entry> | 1412 | <entry>ldconfig</entry> |
1414 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 1413 | |
1415 | <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up faster.</entry> | 1414 | <entry>2.12.1</entry> |
1416 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1415 | |
1417 | </row> | 1416 | <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry> |
1418 | <row> | 1417 | |
1419 | <entry>procps</entry> | 1418 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1420 | <entry>3.3.12</entry> | 1419 | </row> |
1421 | <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and skill.</entry> | 1420 | |
1422 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> | 1421 | <row> |
1423 | </row> | 1422 | <entry>libaio</entry> |
1424 | <row> | 1423 | |
1425 | <entry>pseudo</entry> | 1424 | <entry>0.3.110</entry> |
1426 | <entry>1.8.2</entry> | 1425 | |
1427 | <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal user.</entry> | 1426 | <entry>Asynchronous input/output library that uses the kernels |
1428 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1427 | native interface</entry> |
1429 | </row> | 1428 | |
1430 | <row> | 1429 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1431 | <entry>ptest-runner</entry> | 1430 | </row> |
1432 | <entry>2.0.2</entry> | 1431 | |
1433 | <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them in sequence.</entry> | 1432 | <row> |
1434 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 1433 | <entry>libarchive</entry> |
1435 | </row> | 1434 | |
1436 | <row> | 1435 | <entry>3.2.2</entry> |
1437 | <entry>python-alembic</entry> | 1436 | |
1438 | <entry>0.8.10</entry> | 1437 | <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing |
1439 | <entry>A database migration tool for SQLAlchemy.</entry> | 1438 | tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry> |
1440 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1439 | |
1441 | </row> | 1440 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1442 | <row> | 1441 | </row> |
1443 | <entry>python-amqp</entry> | 1442 | |
1444 | <entry>1.4.9</entry> | 1443 | <row> |
1445 | <entry>Low-level AMQP client for Python</entry> | 1444 | <entry>libassuan</entry> |
1446 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1445 | |
1447 | </row> | 1446 | <entry>2.4.3</entry> |
1448 | <row> | 1447 | |
1449 | <entry>python-amqplib</entry> | 1448 | <entry>IPC library used by GnuPG and GPGME.</entry> |
1450 | <entry>1.0.2</entry> | 1449 | |
1451 | <entry>Python client for the Advanced Message Queuing Procotol (AMQP)</entry> | 1450 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1452 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | 1451 | </row> |
1453 | </row> | 1452 | |
1454 | <row> | 1453 | <row> |
1455 | <entry>python-anyjson</entry> | 1454 | <entry>libatomic-ops</entry> |
1456 | <entry>0.3.3</entry> | 1455 | |
1457 | <entry>Anyjson loads whichever is the fastest JSON module installed and provides a uniform API regardless of which JSON implementation is used.</entry> | 1456 | <entry>7.4.4</entry> |
1458 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1457 | |
1459 | </row> | 1458 | <entry>A library for atomic integer operations.</entry> |
1460 | <row> | 1459 | |
1461 | <entry>python-appdirs</entry> | 1460 | <entry>GPL-2.0, MIT</entry> |
1462 | <entry>1.4.0</entry> | 1461 | </row> |
1463 | <entry>A small Python module for determining appropriate platform-specific dirs e.g. a user data dir.</entry> | 1462 | |
1464 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1463 | <row> |
1465 | </row> | 1464 | <entry>libbsd</entry> |
1466 | <row> | 1465 | |
1467 | <entry>python-babel</entry> | 1466 | <entry>0.8.3</entry> |
1468 | <entry>2.3.4</entry> | 1467 | |
1469 | <entry>A collection of tools for internationalizing Python applications</entry> | 1468 | <entry>This library provides useful functions commonly found on |
1470 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1469 | BSD systems and lacking on others like GNU systems thus making it |
1471 | </row> | 1470 | easier to port projects with strong BSD origins without needing to |
1472 | <row> | 1471 | embed the same code over and over again on each project.</entry> |
1473 | <entry>python-beautifulsoup4</entry> | 1472 | |
1474 | <entry>4.4.1</entry> | 1473 | <entry>BSD-4-Clause, ISC, PD</entry> |
1475 | <entry>Screen-scraping library</entry> | 1474 | </row> |
1476 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1475 | |
1477 | </row> | 1476 | <row> |
1478 | <row> | 1477 | <entry>libcap</entry> |
1479 | <entry>python-boto</entry> | 1478 | |
1480 | <entry>2.34.0</entry> | 1479 | <entry>2.25</entry> |
1481 | <entry> Boto is a Python package that provides interfaces to Amazon Web Services. Currently all features work with Python 2.6 and 2.7. Work is under way to support Python 3.3+ in the same codebase. Modules are being ported one at a time with the help of the open source community so please check below for compatibility with Python 3.3+. </entry> | 1480 | |
1482 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1481 | <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry> |
1483 | </row> | 1482 | |
1484 | <row> | 1483 | <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> |
1485 | <entry>python-cachetools</entry> | 1484 | </row> |
1486 | <entry>1.1.5</entry> | 1485 | |
1487 | <entry>Extensible memoizing collections and decorators</entry> | 1486 | <row> |
1488 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1487 | <entry>libcgroup</entry> |
1489 | </row> | 1488 | |
1490 | <row> | 1489 | <entry>0.41</entry> |
1491 | <entry>python-castellan</entry> | 1490 | |
1492 | <entry>0.4.0</entry> | 1491 | <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group |
1493 | <entry>Generic Key Manager interface for OpenStack</entry> | 1492 | file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account |
1494 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1493 | and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of |
1495 | </row> | 1494 | processes.</entry> |
1496 | <row> | 1495 | |
1497 | <entry>python-ceilometer</entry> | 1496 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1498 | <entry>7.1.0</entry> | 1497 | </row> |
1499 | <entry>OpenStack Metering Component</entry> | 1498 | |
1500 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1499 | <row> |
1501 | </row> | 1500 | <entry>libcheck</entry> |
1502 | <row> | 1501 | |
1503 | <entry>python-ceilometerclient</entry> | 1502 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> |
1504 | <entry>2.6.2</entry> | 1503 | |
1505 | <entry>CLI and python client library for OpenStack Ceilometer</entry> | 1504 | <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry> |
1506 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1505 | |
1507 | </row> | 1506 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1508 | <row> | 1507 | </row> |
1509 | <entry>python-certifi</entry> | 1508 | |
1510 | <entry>2017.1.23</entry> | 1509 | <row> |
1511 | <entry>This installable Python package contains a CA Bundle that you can reference in your Python code. This is useful for verifying HTTP requests for example. This is the same CA Bundle which ships with the Requests codebase and is derived from Mozilla Firefox's canonical set.</entry> | 1510 | <entry>libcomps</entry> |
1512 | <entry>ISC</entry> | 1511 | |
1513 | </row> | 1512 | <entry>0.1.8</entry> |
1514 | <row> | 1513 | |
1515 | <entry>python-cffi</entry> | 1514 | <entry>Libcomps is alternative for yum.comps library (which is for |
1516 | <entry>1.9.1</entry> | 1515 | managing rpm package groups)..</entry> |
1517 | <entry>Foreign Function Interface for Python calling C code.</entry> | 1516 | |
1518 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1517 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
1519 | </row> | 1518 | </row> |
1520 | <row> | 1519 | |
1521 | <entry>python-cheetah</entry> | 1520 | <row> |
1522 | <entry>2.4.4</entry> | 1521 | <entry>libconfig-general-perl</entry> |
1523 | <entry>Python template engine and code generation tool.</entry> | 1522 | |
1524 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1523 | <entry>2.63</entry> |
1525 | </row> | 1524 | |
1526 | <row> | 1525 | <entry>Config file parser module</entry> |
1527 | <entry>python-cinderclient</entry> | 1526 | |
1528 | <entry>1.9.0</entry> | 1527 | <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> |
1529 | <entry>Client library for OpenStack Cinder API.</entry> | 1528 | </row> |
1530 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1529 | |
1531 | </row> | 1530 | <row> |
1532 | <row> | 1531 | <entry>libdaemon</entry> |
1533 | <entry>python-cliff</entry> | 1532 | |
1534 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> | 1533 | <entry>0.14</entry> |
1535 | <entry>Command Line Interface Formulation Framework</entry> | 1534 | |
1536 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1535 | <entry>Lightweight C library which eases the writing of UNIX |
1537 | </row> | 1536 | daemons.</entry> |
1538 | <row> | 1537 | |
1539 | <entry>python-cmd2</entry> | 1538 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1540 | <entry>0.7.0</entry> | 1539 | </row> |
1541 | <entry>Extra features for standard library's cmd module.</entry> | 1540 | |
1542 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1541 | <row> |
1543 | </row> | 1542 | <entry>libdevmapper</entry> |
1544 | <row> | 1543 | |
1545 | <entry>python-colorama</entry> | 1544 | <entry>2.02.166</entry> |
1546 | <entry>0.3.3</entry> | 1545 | |
1547 | <entry>Simple cross-platform colored terminal text in Python</entry> | 1546 | <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in |
1548 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1547 | Linux.</entry> |
1549 | </row> | 1548 | |
1550 | <row> | 1549 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
1551 | <entry>python-contextlib2</entry> | 1550 | </row> |
1552 | <entry>0.4.0</entry> | 1551 | |
1553 | <entry>Backports and enhancements for the contextlib module</entry> | 1552 | <row> |
1554 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 1553 | <entry>libdnf</entry> |
1555 | </row> | 1554 | |
1556 | <row> | 1555 | <entry>0.2.3</entry> |
1557 | <entry>python-cotyledon</entry> | 1556 | |
1558 | <entry>1.6.8</entry> | 1557 | <entry>Library providing simplified C and Python API to |
1559 | <entry>Cotyledon provides a framework for defining long-running services.</entry> | 1558 | libsolv.</entry> |
1560 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1559 | |
1561 | </row> | 1560 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1562 | <row> | 1561 | </row> |
1563 | <entry>python-coverage</entry> | 1562 | |
1564 | <entry>4.0a5</entry> | 1563 | <row> |
1565 | <entry>Code coverage measurement for Python</entry> | 1564 | <entry>libevent</entry> |
1566 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1565 | |
1567 | </row> | 1566 | <entry>2.0.22</entry> |
1568 | <row> | 1567 | |
1569 | <entry>python-croniter</entry> | 1568 | <entry>An asynchronous event notification library.</entry> |
1570 | <entry>0.3.5</entry> | 1569 | |
1571 | <entry>croniter provides iteration for datetime object with cron like format</entry> | 1570 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1572 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1571 | </row> |
1573 | </row> | 1572 | |
1574 | <row> | 1573 | <row> |
1575 | <entry>python-cryptography-vectors</entry> | 1574 | <entry>libffi</entry> |
1576 | <entry>1.7.2</entry> | 1575 | |
1577 | <entry>Test vectors for the cryptography package..</entry> | 1576 | <entry>3.2.1</entry> |
1578 | <entry> Apache-2.0, BSD</entry> | 1577 | |
1579 | </row> | 1578 | <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level |
1580 | <row> | 1579 | programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows |
1581 | <entry>python-cryptography</entry> | 1580 | a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface |
1582 | <entry>1.7.2</entry> | 1581 | description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function |
1583 | <entry>Provides cryptographic recipes and primitives to python developers.</entry> | 1582 | Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for |
1584 | <entry> Apache-2.0, BSD</entry> | 1583 | the interface that allows code written in one language to call |
1585 | </row> | 1584 | code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only |
1586 | <row> | 1585 | provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured |
1587 | <entry>python-cython</entry> | 1586 | foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that |
1588 | <entry>0.25.2</entry> | 1587 | handles type conversions for values passed between the two |
1589 | <entry>Cython is a language specially designed for writing Python extension modules. It's designed to bridge the gap between the nice high-level easy-to-use world of Python and the messy low-level world of C.</entry> | 1588 | languages.</entry> |
1590 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1589 | |
1591 | </row> | 1590 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1592 | <row> | 1591 | </row> |
1593 | <entry>python-dateutil</entry> | 1592 | |
1594 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> | 1593 | <row> |
1595 | <entry>The dateutil module provides powerful extensions to the datetime module available in the Python standard library.</entry> | 1594 | <entry>libgcc</entry> |
1596 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1595 | |
1597 | </row> | 1596 | <entry>6.3.0</entry> |
1598 | <row> | 1597 | |
1599 | <entry>python-debtcollector</entry> | 1598 | <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> |
1600 | <entry>1.8.0</entry> | 1599 | |
1601 | <entry>A collection of Python deprecation patterns and strategies that help you collect your technical debt in a non-destructive manner.</entry> | 1600 | <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> |
1602 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1601 | </row> |
1603 | </row> | 1602 | |
1604 | <row> | 1603 | <row> |
1605 | <entry>python-decorator</entry> | 1604 | <entry>libgcrypt</entry> |
1606 | <entry>4.0.11</entry> | 1605 | |
1607 | <entry>The aim of the decorator module it to simplify the usage of decorators for the average programmer and to popularize decorators by showing various non-trivial examples. Of course as all techniques decorators can be abused and you should not try to solve every problem with a decorator just because you can.</entry> | 1606 | <entry>1.7.6</entry> |
1608 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1607 | |
1609 | </row> | 1608 | <entry>General purpose cryptographic library based on the code |
1610 | <row> | 1609 | from GnuPG.</entry> |
1611 | <entry>python-designateclient</entry> | 1610 | |
1612 | <entry>2.3.0</entry> | 1611 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry> |
1613 | <entry>Python bindings to the Designate API</entry> | 1612 | </row> |
1614 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1613 | |
1615 | </row> | 1614 | <row> |
1616 | <row> | 1615 | <entry>libgpg-error</entry> |
1617 | <entry>python-dogpile.cache</entry> | 1616 | |
1618 | <entry>0.6.2</entry> | 1617 | <entry>1.26</entry> |
1619 | <entry>Python Dogpile Cache: A caching front-end based on the Dogpile lock</entry> | 1618 | |
1620 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1619 | <entry>Small library that defines common error values for all |
1621 | </row> | 1620 | GnuPG components.</entry> |
1622 | <row> | 1621 | |
1623 | <entry>python-ecdsa</entry> | 1622 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1624 | <entry>0.13</entry> | 1623 | </row> |
1625 | <entry>ECDSA cryptographic signature library</entry> | 1624 | |
1626 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1625 | <row> |
1627 | </row> | 1626 | <entry>libical</entry> |
1628 | <row> | 1627 | |
1629 | <entry>python-enum34</entry> | 1628 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> |
1630 | <entry>1.1.6</entry> | 1629 | |
1631 | <entry>backport of Python 3.4's enum package.</entry> | 1630 | <entry>iCal and scheduling (RFC 2445 2446 2447) library.</entry> |
1632 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1631 | |
1633 | </row> | 1632 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, MPL-1.0</entry> |
1634 | <row> | 1633 | </row> |
1635 | <entry>python-eventlet</entry> | 1634 | |
1636 | <entry>0.18.4</entry> | 1635 | <row> |
1637 | <entry>Highly concurrent networking library</entry> | 1636 | <entry>libice</entry> |
1638 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1637 | |
1639 | </row> | 1638 | <entry>1.0.9</entry> |
1640 | <row> | 1639 | |
1641 | <entry>python-extras</entry> | 1640 | <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic |
1642 | <entry>1.0.0</entry> | 1641 | framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream |
1643 | <entry>Useful extra bits for Python - things that should be in the standard library</entry> | 1642 | transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up |
1644 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1643 | and shutting down connections for performing authentication for |
1645 | </row> | 1644 | negotiating versions and for reporting errors.</entry> |
1646 | <row> | 1645 | |
1647 | <entry>python-fasteners</entry> | 1646 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1648 | <entry>0.13.0</entry> | 1647 | </row> |
1649 | <entry>A python package that provides useful locks.</entry> | 1648 | |
1650 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1649 | <row> |
1651 | </row> | 1650 | <entry>libidn</entry> |
1652 | <row> | 1651 | |
1653 | <entry>python-feedparser</entry> | 1652 | <entry>1.33</entry> |
1654 | <entry>5.2.1</entry> | 1653 | |
1655 | <entry>Python Atom and RSS feed parser.</entry> | 1654 | <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA |
1656 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 1655 | specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names |
1657 | </row> | 1656 | (IDN) working group.</entry> |
1658 | <row> | 1657 | |
1659 | <entry>python-fixtures</entry> | 1658 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry> |
1660 | <entry>3.0.0</entry> | 1659 | </row> |
1661 | <entry>Fixtures reusable state for writing clean tests and more</entry> | 1660 | |
1662 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1661 | <row> |
1663 | </row> | 1662 | <entry>libmpc</entry> |
1664 | <row> | 1663 | |
1665 | <entry>python-flask</entry> | 1664 | <entry>1.0.3</entry> |
1666 | <entry>0.10.1</entry> | 1665 | |
1667 | <entry>A microframework based on Werkzeug Jinja2 and good intentions</entry> | 1666 | <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers |
1668 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1667 | with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the |
1669 | </row> | 1668 | result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as |
1670 | <row> | 1669 | Mpfr</entry> |
1671 | <entry>python-funcsigs</entry> | 1670 | |
1672 | <entry>1.0.2</entry> | 1671 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> |
1673 | <entry>Python function signatures from PEP362 for Python 2.6 2.7 and 3.2+.</entry> | 1672 | </row> |
1674 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1673 | |
1675 | </row> | 1674 | <row> |
1676 | <row> | 1675 | <entry>libnfsidmap</entry> |
1677 | <entry>python-functools32</entry> | 1676 | |
1678 | <entry>3.2.3-2</entry> | 1677 | <entry>0.25</entry> |
1679 | <entry>Backport of the functools module from Python 3.2.3 for use on 2.7 and PyPy..</entry> | 1678 | |
1680 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 1679 | <entry>NFS id mapping library.</entry> |
1681 | </row> | 1680 | |
1682 | <row> | 1681 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1683 | <entry>python-futures</entry> | 1682 | </row> |
1684 | <entry>3.0.5</entry> | 1683 | |
1685 | <entry>The concurrent.futures module provides a high-level interface for asynchronously executing callables.</entry> | 1684 | <row> |
1686 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1685 | <entry>libnl</entry> |
1687 | </row> | 1686 | |
1688 | <row> | 1687 | <entry>3.2.29</entry> |
1689 | <entry>python-futurist</entry> | 1688 | |
1690 | <entry>0.21.0</entry> | 1689 | <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink |
1691 | <entry>Useful additions to futures from the future</entry> | 1690 | sockets.</entry> |
1692 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1691 | |
1693 | </row> | 1692 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1694 | <row> | 1693 | </row> |
1695 | <entry>python-glanceclient</entry> | 1694 | |
1696 | <entry>2.5.0</entry> | 1695 | <row> |
1697 | <entry>Client library for Glance built on the OpenStack Images API</entry> | 1696 | <entry>libnss-mdns</entry> |
1698 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1697 | |
1699 | </row> | 1698 | <entry>0.10</entry> |
1700 | <row> | 1699 | |
1701 | <entry>python-greenlet</entry> | 1700 | <entry>Name Service Switch module for Multicast DNS (zeroconf) |
1702 | <entry>0.4.12</entry> | 1701 | name resolution.</entry> |
1703 | <entry>Python lightweight in-process concurrent programming.</entry> | 1702 | |
1704 | <entry> MIT, Python-2.0</entry> | 1703 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1705 | </row> | 1704 | </row> |
1706 | <row> | 1705 | |
1707 | <entry>python-happybase</entry> | 1706 | <row> |
1708 | <entry>1.0.0</entry> | 1707 | <entry>libpam</entry> |
1709 | <entry>Python library to interact with Apache HBase</entry> | 1708 | |
1710 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1709 | <entry>1.3.0</entry> |
1711 | </row> | 1710 | |
1712 | <row> | 1711 | <entry>Linux-PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules for Linux) a |
1713 | <entry>python-httplib2</entry> | 1712 | flexible mechanism for authenticating users</entry> |
1714 | <entry>0.9.2</entry> | 1713 | |
1715 | <entry>A comprehensive HTTP client library</entry> | 1714 | <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> |
1716 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1715 | </row> |
1717 | </row> | 1716 | |
1718 | <row> | 1717 | <row> |
1719 | <entry>python-httpretty</entry> | 1718 | <entry>libpcap</entry> |
1720 | <entry>0.8.14</entry> | 1719 | |
1721 | <entry>HTTP client mock for Python</entry> | 1720 | <entry>1.8.1</entry> |
1722 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1721 | |
1723 | </row> | 1722 | <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network |
1724 | <row> | 1723 | monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection |
1725 | <entry>python-idna</entry> | 1724 | security monitoring and network debugging.</entry> |
1726 | <entry>2.5</entry> | 1725 | |
1727 | <entry>Internationalised Domain Names in Applications.</entry> | 1726 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1728 | <entry> BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1727 | </row> |
1729 | </row> | 1728 | |
1730 | <row> | 1729 | <row> |
1731 | <entry>python-ipaddr</entry> | 1730 | <entry>libpciaccess</entry> |
1732 | <entry>2.1.11</entry> | 1731 | |
1733 | <entry>Google's IP address manipulation library</entry> | 1732 | <entry>0.13.4</entry> |
1734 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1733 | |
1735 | </row> | 1734 | <entry>libpciaccess provides functionality for X to access the PCI |
1736 | <row> | 1735 | bus and devices in a platform-independent way.</entry> |
1737 | <entry>python-ipaddress</entry> | 1736 | |
1738 | <entry>1.0.18</entry> | 1737 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1739 | <entry>Python 3.3+'s ipaddress for Python 2.6 2.7 3.2..</entry> | 1738 | </row> |
1740 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 1739 | |
1741 | </row> | 1740 | <row> |
1742 | <row> | 1741 | <entry>libpcre</entry> |
1743 | <entry>python-iso8601</entry> | 1742 | |
1744 | <entry>0.1.11</entry> | 1743 | <entry>8.40</entry> |
1745 | <entry>Simple module to parse ISO 8601 dates.</entry> | 1744 | |
1746 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1745 | <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement |
1747 | </row> | 1746 | regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and |
1748 | <row> | 1747 | semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set |
1749 | <entry>python-itsdangerous</entry> | 1748 | of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular |
1750 | <entry>0.24</entry> | 1749 | expression API.</entry> |
1751 | <entry>Various helpers to pass trusted data to untrusted environments and back</entry> | 1750 | |
1752 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1751 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1753 | </row> | 1752 | </row> |
1754 | <row> | 1753 | |
1755 | <entry>python-jinja2</entry> | 1754 | <row> |
1756 | <entry>2.9.5</entry> | 1755 | <entry>libpng</entry> |
1757 | <entry>Python Jinja2: A small but fast and easy to use stand-alone template engine written in pure python.</entry> | 1756 | |
1758 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1757 | <entry>1.6.28</entry> |
1759 | </row> | 1758 | |
1760 | <row> | 1759 | <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry> |
1761 | <entry>python-jsonpatch</entry> | 1760 | |
1762 | <entry>1.15</entry> | 1761 | <entry>Libpng</entry> |
1763 | <entry>Appling JSON patches in Python 2.6+ and 3.x.</entry> | 1762 | </row> |
1764 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1763 | |
1765 | </row> | 1764 | <row> |
1766 | <row> | 1765 | <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry> |
1767 | <entry>python-jsonpath-rw-ext</entry> | 1766 | |
1768 | <entry>0.1.9</entry> | 1767 | <entry>0.3</entry> |
1769 | <entry>Extensions for JSONPath RW.</entry> | 1768 | |
1770 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1769 | <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions |
1771 | </row> | 1770 | not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry> |
1772 | <row> | 1771 | |
1773 | <entry>python-jsonpath-rw</entry> | 1772 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1774 | <entry>1.4.0</entry> | 1773 | </row> |
1775 | <entry>A robust and significantly extended implementation of JSONPath for Python</entry> | 1774 | |
1776 | <entry>BSD+</entry> | 1775 | <row> |
1777 | </row> | 1776 | <entry>librepo</entry> |
1778 | <row> | 1777 | |
1779 | <entry>python-jsonpointer</entry> | 1778 | <entry>1.7.20</entry> |
1780 | <entry>1.10</entry> | 1779 | |
1781 | <entry>Resolve JSON Pointers in Python.</entry> | 1780 | <entry>A library providing C and Python (libcURL like) API for |
1782 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1781 | downloading linux repository metadata and packages..</entry> |
1783 | </row> | 1782 | |
1784 | <row> | 1783 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1785 | <entry>python-jsonschema</entry> | 1784 | </row> |
1786 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> | 1785 | |
1787 | <entry>An implementation of JSON Schema validation for Python.</entry> | 1786 | <row> |
1788 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1787 | <entry>libsdl</entry> |
1789 | </row> | 1788 | |
1790 | <row> | 1789 | <entry>1.2.15</entry> |
1791 | <entry>python-kafka</entry> | 1790 | |
1792 | <entry>0.9.5</entry> | 1791 | <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia |
1793 | <entry>Python client for Apache Kafka.</entry> | 1792 | library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard |
1794 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1793 | mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video |
1795 | </row> | 1794 | framebuffer.</entry> |
1796 | <row> | 1795 | |
1797 | <entry>python-kazoo</entry> | 1796 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1798 | <entry>2.4.0</entry> | 1797 | </row> |
1799 | <entry>Higher Level Zookeeper Client</entry> | 1798 | |
1800 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1799 | <row> |
1801 | </row> | 1800 | <entry>libsm</entry> |
1802 | <row> | 1801 | |
1803 | <entry>python-keystone</entry> | 1802 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> |
1804 | <entry>10.0.3</entry> | 1803 | |
1805 | <entry>Authentication service for OpenStack</entry> | 1804 | <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level |
1806 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1805 | \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session |
1807 | </row> | 1806 | Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for |
1808 | <row> | 1807 | users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of |
1809 | <entry>python-keystoneauth1</entry> | 1808 | clients each of which has a particular state."</entry> |
1810 | <entry>2.12.3</entry> | 1809 | |
1811 | <entry>Authentication Library for OpenStack Identity</entry> | 1810 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1812 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1811 | </row> |
1813 | </row> | 1812 | |
1814 | <row> | 1813 | <row> |
1815 | <entry>python-keystoneclient</entry> | 1814 | <entry>libsolv</entry> |
1816 | <entry>3.5.1</entry> | 1815 | |
1817 | <entry>Client library for OpenStack Identity API</entry> | 1816 | <entry>0.6.26</entry> |
1818 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1817 | |
1819 | </row> | 1818 | <entry>Library for solving packages and reading |
1820 | <row> | 1819 | repositories.</entry> |
1821 | <entry>python-keystonemiddleware</entry> | 1820 | |
1822 | <entry>4.9.1</entry> | 1821 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
1823 | <entry>Middleware for OpenStack Identity API</entry> | 1822 | </row> |
1824 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1823 | |
1825 | </row> | 1824 | <row> |
1826 | <row> | 1825 | <entry>libtasn1</entry> |
1827 | <entry>python-kombu</entry> | 1826 | |
1828 | <entry>3.0.37</entry> | 1827 | <entry>4.10</entry> |
1829 | <entry>A messaging framework for Python</entry> | 1828 | |
1830 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1829 | <entry>Library for ASN.1 and DER manipulation.</entry> |
1831 | </row> | 1830 | |
1832 | <row> | 1831 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1833 | <entry>python-lockfile</entry> | 1832 | </row> |
1834 | <entry>0.12.2</entry> | 1833 | |
1835 | <entry>Platform-independent file locking module</entry> | 1834 | <row> |
1836 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1835 | <entry>libtirpc</entry> |
1837 | </row> | 1836 | |
1838 | <row> | 1837 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> |
1839 | <entry>python-logutils</entry> | 1838 | |
1840 | <entry>0.3.3</entry> | 1839 | <entry>Libtirpc is a port of Suns Transport-Independent RPC |
1841 | <entry>Set of handlers for the Python standard library's logging package</entry> | 1840 | library to Linux</entry> |
1842 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1841 | |
1843 | </row> | 1842 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
1844 | <row> | 1843 | </row> |
1845 | <entry>python-lxml</entry> | 1844 | |
1846 | <entry>3.7.3</entry> | 1845 | <row> |
1847 | <entry>lxml is a Pythonic mature binding for the libxml2 and libxslt libraries. It provides safe and convenient access to these libraries using the ElementTree API. It extends the ElementTree API significantly to offer support for XPath RelaxNG XML Schema XSLT C14N and much more.</entry> | 1846 | <entry>libtool</entry> |
1848 | <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0, MIT, Python-2.0</entry> | 1847 | |
1849 | </row> | 1848 | <entry>2.4.6</entry> |
1850 | <row> | 1849 | |
1851 | <entry>python-mako</entry> | 1850 | <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script. |
1852 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> | 1851 | Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types |
1853 | <entry>Templating library for Python.</entry> | 1852 | (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry> |
1854 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1853 | |
1855 | </row> | 1854 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1856 | <row> | 1855 | </row> |
1857 | <entry>python-markupsafe</entry> | 1856 | |
1858 | <entry>0.23</entry> | 1857 | <row> |
1859 | <entry>Implements a XML/HTML/XHTML Markup safe string for Python</entry> | 1858 | <entry>libunistring</entry> |
1860 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 1859 | |
1861 | </row> | 1860 | <entry>0.9.7</entry> |
1862 | <row> | 1861 | |
1863 | <entry>python-mccabe</entry> | 1862 | <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may |
1864 | <entry>0.4.0</entry> | 1863 | consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese |
1865 | <entry>McCabe checker plugin for flake8.</entry> | 1864 | Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left |
1866 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1865 | writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX |
1867 | </row> | 1866 | platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for |
1868 | <row> | 1867 | dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In |
1869 | <entry>python-memcache</entry> | 1868 | fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their |
1870 | <entry>1.2.9</entry> | 1869 | base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides |
1871 | <entry>A comprehensive fast pure Python memcached client</entry> | 1870 | functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C |
1872 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1871 | strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains |
1873 | </row> | 1872 | documentation.</entry> |
1874 | <row> | 1873 | |
1875 | <entry>python-microversion-parse</entry> | 1874 | <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
1876 | <entry>0.1.2</entry> | 1875 | </row> |
1877 | <entry>OpenStack services use REST APIs which include HTTP headers. This package provides a simple parser for OpenStack microversion headers.</entry> | 1876 | |
1878 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1877 | <row> |
1879 | </row> | 1878 | <entry>liburcu</entry> |
1880 | <row> | 1879 | |
1881 | <entry>python-mistralclient</entry> | 1880 | <entry>0.9.3</entry> |
1882 | <entry>2.1.2</entry> | 1881 | |
1883 | <entry>Python client for Mistral REST API</entry> | 1882 | <entry>Userspace RCU (read-copy-update) library.</entry> |
1884 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1883 | |
1885 | </row> | 1884 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, MIT</entry> |
1886 | <row> | 1885 | </row> |
1887 | <entry>python-mock</entry> | 1886 | |
1888 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> | 1887 | <row> |
1889 | <entry>A Python Mocking and Patching Library for Testing.</entry> | 1888 | <entry>libusb-compat</entry> |
1890 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1889 | |
1891 | </row> | 1890 | <entry>0.1.5</entry> |
1892 | <row> | 1891 | |
1893 | <entry>python-monotonic</entry> | 1892 | <entry>libusb-0.1 compatible layer for libusb1 a drop-in |
1894 | <entry>1.2</entry> | 1893 | replacement that aims to look feel and behave exactly like |
1895 | <entry>An implementation of time.monotonic() for Python 2.0 through 3.2.</entry> | 1894 | libusb-0.1</entry> |
1896 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1895 | |
1897 | </row> | 1896 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1898 | <row> | 1897 | </row> |
1899 | <entry>python-mox3</entry> | 1898 | |
1900 | <entry>0.20.0</entry> | 1899 | <row> |
1901 | <entry>mox3: mock object framework for Python</entry> | 1900 | <entry>libusb1</entry> |
1902 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1901 | |
1903 | </row> | 1902 | <entry>1.0.21</entry> |
1904 | <row> | 1903 | |
1905 | <entry>python-msgpack</entry> | 1904 | <entry>Userspace library to access USB (version 1.0).</entry> |
1906 | <entry>0.4.8</entry> | 1905 | |
1907 | <entry>MessagePack (de)serializer.</entry> | 1906 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
1908 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1907 | </row> |
1909 | </row> | 1908 | |
1910 | <row> | 1909 | <row> |
1911 | <entry>python-ndg-httpsclient</entry> | 1910 | <entry>libvirt</entry> |
1912 | <entry>0.4.2</entry> | 1911 | |
1913 | <entry>Provides enhanced HTTPS support for httplib and urllib2 using PyOpenSSL</entry> | 1912 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> |
1914 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1913 | |
1915 | </row> | 1914 | <entry>A toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities |
1916 | <row> | 1915 | of recent versions of Linux.</entry> |
1917 | <entry>python-netaddr</entry> | 1916 | |
1918 | <entry>0.7.19</entry> | 1917 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> |
1919 | <entry>A network address manipulation library for Python..</entry> | 1918 | </row> |
1920 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 1919 | |
1921 | </row> | 1920 | <row> |
1922 | <row> | 1921 | <entry>libx11</entry> |
1923 | <entry>python-netifaces</entry> | 1922 | |
1924 | <entry>0.10.6</entry> | 1923 | <entry>1.6.4</entry> |
1925 | <entry>Portable network interface information..</entry> | 1924 | |
1926 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 1925 | <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window |
1927 | </row> | 1926 | System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for |
1928 | <row> | 1927 | the basic functions of the window system.</entry> |
1929 | <entry>python-neutron-lib</entry> | 1928 | |
1930 | <entry>0.4.0</entry> | 1929 | <entry>MIT, BSD</entry> |
1931 | <entry>Neutron shared routines and utilities</entry> | 1930 | </row> |
1932 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1931 | |
1933 | </row> | 1932 | <row> |
1934 | <row> | 1933 | <entry>libxau</entry> |
1935 | <entry>python-neutron</entry> | 1934 | |
1936 | <entry>9.4.0</entry> | 1935 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> |
1937 | <entry>Neutron (virtual network service)</entry> | 1936 | |
1938 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1937 | <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 |
1939 | </row> | 1938 | authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X |
1940 | <row> | 1939 | connections both client-side and server-side.</entry> |
1941 | <entry>python-neutronclient</entry> | 1940 | |
1942 | <entry>6.0.0-gitAUTOINC</entry> | 1941 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1943 | <entry>CLI and python client library for OpenStack Neutron</entry> | 1942 | </row> |
1944 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1943 | |
1945 | </row> | 1944 | <row> |
1946 | <row> | 1945 | <entry>libxaw</entry> |
1947 | <entry>python-nose</entry> | 1946 | |
1948 | <entry>1.3.7</entry> | 1947 | <entry>1.0.13</entry> |
1949 | <entry>nose extends the test loading and running features of unittest making it easier to write find and run tests.</entry> | 1948 | |
1950 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 1949 | <entry>X Athena Widget Set.</entry> |
1951 | </row> | 1950 | |
1952 | <row> | 1951 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1953 | <entry>python-nova</entry> | 1952 | </row> |
1954 | <entry>14.0.7</entry> | 1953 | |
1955 | <entry>Nova is a cloud computing fabric controller</entry> | 1954 | <row> |
1956 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1955 | <entry>libxcb</entry> |
1957 | </row> | 1956 | |
1958 | <row> | 1957 | <entry>1.12</entry> |
1959 | <entry>python-novaclient</entry> | 1958 | |
1960 | <entry>6.0.1</entry> | 1959 | <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement |
1961 | <entry>Client library for OpenStack Compute API</entry> | 1960 | for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access |
1962 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1961 | to the protocol improved threading support and |
1963 | </row> | 1962 | extensibility.</entry> |
1964 | <row> | 1963 | |
1965 | <entry>python-oauthlib</entry> | 1964 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1966 | <entry>0.7.2</entry> | 1965 | </row> |
1967 | <entry>A generic spec-compliant thorough implementation of the OAuth request-signing logic</entry> | 1966 | |
1968 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1967 | <row> |
1969 | </row> | 1968 | <entry>libxdmcp</entry> |
1970 | <row> | 1969 | |
1971 | <entry>python-openstack-nose</entry> | 1970 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> |
1972 | <entry>0.11</entry> | 1971 | |
1973 | <entry>Openstack style output for nosetests</entry> | 1972 | <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol |
1974 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1973 | (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous |
1975 | </row> | 1974 | display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal |
1976 | <row> | 1975 | (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime |
1977 | <entry>python-os-brick</entry> | 1976 | example of an autonomous display.</entry> |
1978 | <entry>1.6.2</entry> | 1977 | |
1979 | <entry>OpenStack Cinder brick library for managing local volume attaches</entry> | 1978 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1980 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1979 | </row> |
1981 | </row> | 1980 | |
1982 | <row> | 1981 | <row> |
1983 | <entry>python-os-client-config</entry> | 1982 | <entry>libxext</entry> |
1984 | <entry>1.21.1</entry> | 1983 | |
1985 | <entry>OpenStack Client Configuation Library</entry> | 1984 | <entry>1.3.3</entry> |
1986 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1985 | |
1987 | </row> | 1986 | <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to |
1988 | <row> | 1987 | several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol |
1989 | <entry>python-os-vif</entry> | 1988 | extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX |
1990 | <entry>1.2.1</entry> | 1989 | MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC |
1991 | <entry>A library for plugging and unplugging virtual interfaces in OpenStack</entry> | 1990 | TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small |
1992 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1991 | set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X |
1993 | </row> | 1992 | protocol extensions.</entry> |
1994 | <row> | 1993 | |
1995 | <entry>python-os-win</entry> | 1994 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
1996 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | 1995 | </row> |
1997 | <entry>Windows / Hyper-V library for OpenStack projects</entry> | 1996 | |
1998 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 1997 | <row> |
1999 | </row> | 1998 | <entry>libxinerama</entry> |
2000 | <row> | 1999 | |
2001 | <entry>python-osc-lib</entry> | 2000 | <entry>1.1.3</entry> |
2002 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | 2001 | |
2003 | <entry>OpenStackClient Library</entry> | 2002 | <entry>Xinerama is a simple library designed to interface the |
2004 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2003 | Xinerama Extension for retrieving information about physical |
2005 | </row> | 2004 | output devices which may be combined into a single logical X |
2006 | <row> | 2005 | screen.</entry> |
2007 | <entry>python-oslo.cache</entry> | 2006 | |
2008 | <entry>1.14.1</entry> | 2007 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2009 | <entry>An oslo.config enabled dogpile.cache</entry> | 2008 | </row> |
2010 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2009 | |
2011 | </row> | 2010 | <row> |
2012 | <row> | 2011 | <entry>libxkbcommon</entry> |
2013 | <entry>python-oslo.concurrency</entry> | 2012 | |
2014 | <entry>3.14.1</entry> | 2013 | <entry>0.7.1</entry> |
2015 | <entry>oslo.concurrency library</entry> | 2014 | |
2016 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2015 | <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which |
2017 | </row> | 2016 | processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB |
2018 | <row> | 2017 | specification.</entry> |
2019 | <entry>python-oslo.config</entry> | 2018 | |
2020 | <entry>3.17.1</entry> | 2019 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2021 | <entry>API supporting parsing command line arguments and .ini style configuration files.</entry> | 2020 | </row> |
2022 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2021 | |
2023 | </row> | 2022 | <row> |
2024 | <row> | 2023 | <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry> |
2025 | <entry>python-oslo.context</entry> | 2024 | |
2026 | <entry>2.9.0</entry> | 2025 | <entry>2.44</entry> |
2027 | <entry>Oslo Context Library</entry> | 2026 | |
2028 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2027 | <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML |
2029 | </row> | 2028 | documents.</entry> |
2030 | <row> | 2029 | |
2031 | <entry>python-oslo.db</entry> | 2030 | <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> |
2032 | <entry>4.13.6</entry> | 2031 | </row> |
2033 | <entry>oslo.db library</entry> | 2032 | |
2034 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2033 | <row> |
2035 | </row> | 2034 | <entry>libxml2</entry> |
2036 | <row> | 2035 | |
2037 | <entry>python-oslo.i18n</entry> | 2036 | <entry>2.9.4</entry> |
2038 | <entry>3.9.0</entry> | 2037 | |
2039 | <entry>oslo.i18n library</entry> | 2038 | <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML |
2040 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2039 | files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for |
2041 | </row> | 2040 | both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a |
2042 | <row> | 2041 | parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2 |
2043 | <entry>python-oslo.log</entry> | 2042 | includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It |
2044 | <entry>3.16.1</entry> | 2043 | also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible |
2045 | <entry>Oslo Log Library</entry> | 2044 | with Expat.</entry> |
2046 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2045 | |
2047 | </row> | 2046 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2048 | <row> | 2047 | </row> |
2049 | <entry>python-oslo.messaging</entry> | 2048 | |
2050 | <entry>5.10.2</entry> | 2049 | <row> |
2051 | <entry>Oslo Messaging API</entry> | 2050 | <entry>libxmu</entry> |
2052 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2051 | |
2053 | </row> | 2052 | <entry>1.1.2</entry> |
2054 | <row> | 2053 | |
2055 | <entry>python-oslo.middleware</entry> | 2054 | <entry>The Xmu Library is a collection of miscellaneous (some |
2056 | <entry>3.19.1</entry> | 2055 | might say random) utility functions that have been useful in |
2057 | <entry>Oslo Middleware library</entry> | 2056 | building various applications and widgets. This library is |
2058 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2057 | required by the Athena Widgets. A subset of the functions that do |
2059 | </row> | 2058 | not rely on the Athena Widgets (libXaw) or X Toolkit Instrinsics |
2060 | <row> | 2059 | (libXt) are provided in a second library libXmuu.</entry> |
2061 | <entry>python-oslo.policy</entry> | 2060 | |
2062 | <entry>1.14.0</entry> | 2061 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2063 | <entry>The Oslo Policy library provides support for RBAC policy enforcement across all OpenStack services.</entry> | 2062 | </row> |
2064 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2063 | |
2065 | </row> | 2064 | <row> |
2066 | <row> | 2065 | <entry>libxpm</entry> |
2067 | <entry>python-oslo.privsep</entry> | 2066 | |
2068 | <entry>1.13.2</entry> | 2067 | <entry>3.5.12</entry> |
2069 | <entry>This library helps applications perform actions which require more or less privileges than they were started with in a safe easy to code and easy to use manner. For more information on why this is generally a good idea please read over the principle of least privilege and the specification which created this library.</entry> | 2068 | |
2070 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2069 | <entry>libXpm provides support and common operation for the XPM |
2071 | </row> | 2070 | pixmap format which is commonly used in legacy X applications. XPM |
2072 | <row> | 2071 | is an extension of the monochrome XBM bitmap specificied in the X |
2073 | <entry>python-oslo.reports</entry> | 2072 | protocol.</entry> |
2074 | <entry>1.14.0</entry> | 2073 | |
2075 | <entry>oslo.reports library</entry> | 2074 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
2076 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2075 | </row> |
2077 | </row> | 2076 | |
2078 | <row> | 2077 | <row> |
2079 | <entry>python-oslo.rootwrap</entry> | 2078 | <entry>libxrandr</entry> |
2080 | <entry>5.1.2</entry> | 2079 | |
2081 | <entry>Oslo Rootwrap</entry> | 2080 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> |
2082 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2081 | |
2083 | </row> | 2082 | <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for |
2084 | <row> | 2083 | short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root |
2085 | <entry>python-oslo.serialization</entry> | 2084 | window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate |
2086 | <entry>2.13.1</entry> | 2085 | Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix |
2087 | <entry>Oslo Serialization API</entry> | 2086 | Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry> |
2088 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2087 | |
2089 | </row> | 2088 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2090 | <row> | 2089 | </row> |
2091 | <entry>python-oslo.service</entry> | 2090 | |
2092 | <entry>1.16.1</entry> | 2091 | <row> |
2093 | <entry>oslo.service library</entry> | 2092 | <entry>libxrender</entry> |
2094 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2093 | |
2095 | </row> | 2094 | <entry>0.9.10</entry> |
2096 | <row> | 2095 | |
2097 | <entry>python-oslo.utils</entry> | 2096 | <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image |
2098 | <entry>3.16.1</entry> | 2097 | composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the |
2099 | <entry>Oslo utils</entry> | 2098 | X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by |
2100 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2099 | client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text |
2101 | </row> | 2100 | is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of |
2102 | <row> | 2101 | them.</entry> |
2103 | <entry>python-oslo.versionedobjects</entry> | 2102 | |
2104 | <entry>1.17.1</entry> | 2103 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2105 | <entry>oslo.versionedobjects library</entry> | 2104 | </row> |
2106 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2105 | |
2107 | </row> | 2106 | <row> |
2108 | <row> | 2107 | <entry>libxslt</entry> |
2109 | <entry>python-oslotest</entry> | 2108 | |
2110 | <entry>2.10.1</entry> | 2109 | <entry>1.1.29</entry> |
2111 | <entry>OpenStack test framework and test fixtures. The oslotest package can be cross-tested against its consuming projects to ensure that no changes to the library break the tests in those other projects.</entry> | 2110 | |
2112 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2111 | <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry> |
2113 | </row> | 2112 | |
2114 | <row> | 2113 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2115 | <entry>python-osprofiler</entry> | 2114 | </row> |
2116 | <entry>1.4.0</entry> | 2115 | |
2117 | <entry>OpenStack Profiler Library</entry> | 2116 | <row> |
2118 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2117 | <entry>libxt</entry> |
2119 | </row> | 2118 | |
2120 | <row> | 2119 | <entry>1.1.5</entry> |
2121 | <entry>python-pam</entry> | 2120 | |
2122 | <entry>1.8.2</entry> | 2121 | <entry>The Intrinsics are a programming library tailored to the |
2123 | <entry>Python PAM module using ctypes py3/py2.</entry> | 2122 | special requirements of user interface construction within a |
2124 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2123 | network window system specifically the X Window System. The |
2125 | </row> | 2124 | Intrinsics and a widget set make up an X Toolkit. The Intrinsics |
2126 | <row> | 2125 | provide the base mechanism necessary to build a wide variety of |
2127 | <entry>python-paramiko</entry> | 2126 | interoperating widget sets and application environments. The |
2128 | <entry>2.1.1</entry> | 2127 | Intrinsics are a layer on top of Xlib the C Library X Interface. |
2129 | <entry>SSH2 protocol library</entry> | 2128 | They extend the fundamental abstractions provided by the X Window |
2130 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2129 | System while still remaining independent of any particular user |
2131 | </row> | 2130 | interface policy or style.</entry> |
2132 | <row> | 2131 | |
2133 | <entry>python-passlib</entry> | 2132 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2134 | <entry>1.7.1</entry> | 2133 | </row> |
2135 | <entry>Passlib is a password hashing library for Python 2 & 3 which provides cross-platform implementations of over 30 password hashing algorithms as well as a framework for managing existing password hashes. It’s designed to be useful for a wide range of tasks from verifying a hash found in /etc/shadow to providing full-strength password hashing for multi-user applications.</entry> | 2134 | |
2136 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2135 | <row> |
2137 | </row> | 2136 | <entry>libyaml</entry> |
2138 | <row> | 2137 | |
2139 | <entry>python-paste</entry> | 2138 | <entry>0.1.7</entry> |
2140 | <entry>2.0.3</entry> | 2139 | |
2141 | <entry>Tools for using a Web Server Gateway Interface stack.</entry> | 2140 | <entry>LibYAML is a C library for parsing and emitting data in |
2142 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2141 | YAML 1.1 a human-readable data serialization format.</entry> |
2143 | </row> | 2142 | |
2144 | <row> | 2143 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2145 | <entry>python-pastedeploy</entry> | 2144 | </row> |
2146 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> | 2145 | |
2147 | <entry>Load configure and compose WSGI applications and servers</entry> | 2146 | <row> |
2148 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2147 | <entry>linux-intel-host</entry> |
2149 | </row> | 2148 | |
2150 | <row> | 2149 | <entry>4.9.47</entry> |
2151 | <entry>python-pbr</entry> | 2150 | |
2152 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> | 2151 | <entry>Linux kernel.</entry> |
2153 | <entry>Python Build Reasonableness: PBR is a library that injects some useful and sensible default behaviors into your setuptools run</entry> | 2152 | |
2154 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2153 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2155 | </row> | 2154 | </row> |
2156 | <row> | 2155 | |
2157 | <entry>python-pecan</entry> | 2156 | <row> |
2158 | <entry>1.2.1</entry> | 2157 | <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry> |
2159 | <entry>WSGI object-dispatching web framework</entry> | 2158 | |
2160 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2159 | <entry>4.10</entry> |
2161 | </row> | 2160 | |
2162 | <row> | 2161 | <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's |
2163 | <entry>python-pep8</entry> | 2162 | use.</entry> |
2164 | <entry>1.7.0</entry> | 2163 | |
2165 | <entry>Python style guide checker.</entry> | 2164 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2166 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2165 | </row> |
2167 | </row> | 2166 | |
2168 | <row> | 2167 | <row> |
2169 | <entry>python-pika-pool</entry> | 2168 | <entry>lsb</entry> |
2170 | <entry>0.1.3</entry> | 2169 | |
2171 | <entry>pools for your pikas.</entry> | 2170 | <entry>4.1</entry> |
2172 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2171 | |
2173 | </row> | 2172 | <entry>LSB support for OpenEmbedded.</entry> |
2174 | <row> | 2173 | |
2175 | <entry>python-pika</entry> | 2174 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2176 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> | 2175 | </row> |
2177 | <entry>Pure Python RabbitMQ/AMQP 0-9-1 client library.</entry> | 2176 | |
2178 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2177 | <row> |
2179 | </row> | 2178 | <entry>lsbinitscripts</entry> |
2180 | <row> | 2179 | |
2181 | <entry>python-pip</entry> | 2180 | <entry>9.68</entry> |
2182 | <entry>9.0.1</entry> | 2181 | |
2183 | <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python packages.</entry> | 2182 | <entry>SysV init scripts which are only used in an LSB |
2184 | <entry> MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2183 | image.</entry> |
2185 | </row> | 2184 | |
2186 | <row> | 2185 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2187 | <entry>python-ply</entry> | 2186 | </row> |
2188 | <entry>3.10</entry> | 2187 | |
2189 | <entry>Python ply: PLY is yet another implementation of lex and yacc for Python</entry> | 2188 | <row> |
2190 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2189 | <entry>lttng-ust</entry> |
2191 | </row> | 2190 | |
2192 | <row> | 2191 | <entry>2.9.0</entry> |
2193 | <entry>python-positional</entry> | 2192 | |
2194 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> | 2193 | <entry>The LTTng UST 2.x package contains the userspace tracer |
2195 | <entry>Library to enforce positional or key-word arguments</entry> | 2194 | library to trace userspace codes.</entry> |
2196 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2195 | |
2197 | </row> | 2196 | <entry>LGPL-2.1, MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> |
2198 | <row> | 2197 | </row> |
2199 | <entry>python-posix-ipc</entry> | 2198 | |
2200 | <entry>1.0.0</entry> | 2199 | <row> |
2201 | <entry>POSIX IPC primitives (semaphores shared memory and message queues) for Python</entry> | 2200 | <entry>lvm2</entry> |
2202 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2201 | |
2203 | </row> | 2202 | <entry>2.02.166</entry> |
2204 | <row> | 2203 | |
2205 | <entry>python-pretend</entry> | 2204 | <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in |
2206 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | 2205 | Linux.</entry> |
2207 | <entry>A library for stubbing in Python.</entry> | 2206 | |
2208 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2207 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
2209 | </row> | 2208 | </row> |
2210 | <row> | 2209 | |
2211 | <entry>python-prettytable</entry> | 2210 | <row> |
2212 | <entry>0.7.2</entry> | 2211 | <entry>lxc</entry> |
2213 | <entry>Python library for displaying tabular data in a ASCII table format.</entry> | 2212 | |
2214 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2213 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> |
2215 | </row> | 2214 | |
2216 | <row> | 2215 | <entry>lxc aims to use these new functionnalities to provide an |
2217 | <entry>python-psutil</entry> | 2216 | userspace container object</entry> |
2218 | <entry>5.2.0</entry> | 2217 | |
2219 | <entry>A cross-platform process and system utilities module for Python.</entry> | 2218 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2220 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2219 | </row> |
2221 | </row> | 2220 | |
2222 | <row> | 2221 | <row> |
2223 | <entry>python-psycopg2</entry> | 2222 | <entry>lzo</entry> |
2224 | <entry>2.6.2</entry> | 2223 | |
2225 | <entry>Python-PostgreSQL Database Adapter</entry> | 2224 | <entry>2.09</entry> |
2226 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2225 | |
2227 | </row> | 2226 | <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry> |
2228 | <row> | 2227 | |
2229 | <entry>python-py</entry> | 2228 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2230 | <entry>1.4.32</entry> | 2229 | </row> |
2231 | <entry>Library with cross-python path ini-parsing io code log facilities.</entry> | 2230 | |
2232 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2231 | <row> |
2233 | </row> | 2232 | <entry>lzop</entry> |
2234 | <row> | 2233 | |
2235 | <entry>python-pyasn1</entry> | 2234 | <entry>1.03</entry> |
2236 | <entry>0.2.3</entry> | 2235 | |
2237 | <entry>Python library implementing ASN.1 types..</entry> | 2236 | <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a |
2238 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 2237 | companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression |
2239 | </row> | 2238 | library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher |
2240 | <row> | 2239 | compression and decompression speed at the cost of some |
2241 | <entry>python-pycadf</entry> | 2240 | \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed |
2242 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | 2241 | with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with |
2243 | <entry>CADF Library</entry> | 2242 | reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry> |
2244 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2243 | |
2245 | </row> | 2244 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2246 | <row> | 2245 | </row> |
2247 | <entry>python-pycparser</entry> | 2246 | |
2248 | <entry>2.17</entry> | 2247 | <row> |
2249 | <entry>Parser of the C language written in pure Python.</entry> | 2248 | <entry>m4</entry> |
2250 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2249 | |
2251 | </row> | 2250 | <entry>1.4.18</entry> |
2252 | <row> | 2251 | |
2253 | <entry>python-pycrypto</entry> | 2252 | <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro |
2254 | <entry>2.6.1</entry> | 2253 | processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some |
2255 | <entry>Cryptographic modules for Python.</entry> | 2254 | extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters |
2256 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 2255 | to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files |
2257 | </row> | 2256 | running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry> |
2258 | <row> | 2257 | |
2259 | <entry>python-pyflakes</entry> | 2258 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
2260 | <entry>1.2.3</entry> | 2259 | </row> |
2261 | <entry>passive checker of Python programs.</entry> | 2260 | |
2262 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2261 | <row> |
2263 | </row> | 2262 | <entry>make</entry> |
2264 | <row> | 2263 | |
2265 | <entry>python-pyinotify</entry> | 2264 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> |
2266 | <entry>0.9.6</entry> | 2265 | |
2267 | <entry>Python pyinotify: Linux filesystem events monitoring</entry> | 2266 | <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables |
2268 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2267 | and other non-source files of a program from the program's source |
2269 | </row> | 2268 | files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a |
2270 | <row> | 2269 | file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files |
2271 | <entry>python-pymongo</entry> | 2270 | and how to compute it from other files.</entry> |
2272 | <entry>3.4.0</entry> | 2271 | |
2273 | <entry>The PyMongo distribution contains tools for interacting with MongoDB database from Python. The bson package is an implementation of the BSON format for Python. The pymongo package is a native Python driver for MongoDB. The gridfs package is a gridfs implementation on top of pymongo.</entry> | 2272 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
2274 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2273 | </row> |
2275 | </row> | 2274 | |
2276 | <row> | 2275 | <row> |
2277 | <entry>python-pyopenssl</entry> | 2276 | <entry>makedepend</entry> |
2278 | <entry>16.2.0</entry> | 2277 | |
2279 | <entry>Simple Python wrapper around the OpenSSL library.</entry> | 2278 | <entry>1.0.5</entry> |
2280 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2279 | |
2281 | </row> | 2280 | <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence |
2282 | <row> | 2281 | and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include |
2283 | <entry>python-pyparsing</entry> | 2282 | #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else |
2284 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> | 2283 | directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives |
2285 | <entry>Python parsing module.</entry> | 2284 | would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can |
2286 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2285 | reference files having other #include directives and parsing will |
2287 | </row> | 2286 | occur in these files as well.</entry> |
2288 | <row> | 2287 | |
2289 | <entry>python-pysaml2</entry> | 2288 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2290 | <entry>3.0.2</entry> | 2289 | </row> |
2291 | <entry>Python implementation of SAML Version 2 to be used in a WSGI environment</entry> | 2290 | |
2292 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2291 | <row> |
2293 | </row> | 2292 | <entry>makedevs</entry> |
2294 | <row> | 2293 | |
2295 | <entry>python-pysmi</entry> | 2294 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> |
2296 | <entry>0.1.2</entry> | 2295 | |
2297 | <entry>A pure-Python implementation of SNMP/SMI MIB parsing and conversion library. Can produce PySNMP MIB modules. </entry> | 2296 | <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry> |
2298 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2297 | |
2299 | </row> | 2298 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2300 | <row> | 2299 | </row> |
2301 | <entry>python-pysnmp</entry> | 2300 | |
2302 | <entry>4.3.5</entry> | 2301 | <row> |
2303 | <entry>SNMP v1/v2c/v3 engine and apps written in pure-Python. Supports Manager/Agent/Proxy roles scriptable MIBs asynchronous operation (asyncio twisted asyncore) and multiple transports.</entry> | 2302 | <entry>meta-environment-inteld1521</entry> |
2304 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2303 | |
2305 | </row> | 2304 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2306 | <row> | 2305 | |
2307 | <entry>python-pysocks</entry> | 2306 | <entry>Package of environment files for SDK.</entry> |
2308 | <entry>1.6.6</entry> | 2307 | |
2309 | <entry>A Python SOCKS client module</entry> | 2308 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2310 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2309 | </row> |
2311 | </row> | 2310 | |
2312 | <row> | 2311 | <row> |
2313 | <entry>python-pytest</entry> | 2312 | <entry>meta-toolchain</entry> |
2314 | <entry>3.0.6</entry> | 2313 | |
2315 | <entry>Simple powerful teting with python.</entry> | 2314 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2316 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2315 | |
2317 | </row> | 2316 | <entry>Meta package for building a installable toolchain.</entry> |
2318 | <row> | 2317 | |
2319 | <entry>python-python-editor</entry> | 2318 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2320 | <entry>0.4</entry> | 2319 | </row> |
2321 | <entry>Programmatically open an editor capture the result</entry> | 2320 | |
2322 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2321 | <row> |
2323 | </row> | 2322 | <entry>mklibs</entry> |
2324 | <row> | 2323 | |
2325 | <entry>python-pytz</entry> | 2324 | <entry>0.1.43</entry> |
2326 | <entry>2017.2</entry> | 2325 | |
2327 | <entry>World timezone definitions modern and historical.</entry> | 2326 | <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only |
2328 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2327 | the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry> |
2329 | </row> | 2328 | |
2330 | <row> | 2329 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2331 | <entry>python-pyyaml</entry> | 2330 | </row> |
2332 | <entry>3.11</entry> | 2331 | |
2333 | <entry> YAML is a data serialization format designed for human readability and interaction with scripting languages. PyYAML is a YAML parser and emitter for Python. . PyYAML features a complete YAML 1.1 parser Unicode support pickle support capable extension API and sensible error messages. PyYAML supports standard YAML tags and provides Python-specific tags that allow to represent an arbitrary Python object. . PyYAML is applicable for a broad range of tasks from complex configuration files to object serialization and persistance. </entry> | 2332 | <row> |
2334 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2333 | <entry>mpfr</entry> |
2335 | </row> | 2334 | |
2336 | <row> | 2335 | <entry>3.1.5</entry> |
2337 | <entry>python-repoze.lru</entry> | 2336 | |
2338 | <entry>0.6</entry> | 2337 | <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point |
2339 | <entry>repoze.lru is a LRU (least recently used) cache implementation. Keys and values that are not used frequently will be evicted from the cache faster than keys and values that are used frequently. </entry> | 2338 | computations with exact rounding.</entry> |
2340 | <entry>BSD-Modification-copyright</entry> | 2339 | |
2341 | </row> | 2340 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> |
2342 | <row> | 2341 | </row> |
2343 | <entry>python-repoze.who</entry> | 2342 | |
2344 | <entry>2.2</entry> | 2343 | <row> |
2345 | <entry>An identification and authentication framework for WSGI</entry> | 2344 | <entry>mtools</entry> |
2346 | <entry>BSD-Modification</entry> | 2345 | |
2347 | </row> | 2346 | <entry>4.0.18</entry> |
2348 | <row> | 2347 | |
2349 | <entry>python-requests</entry> | 2348 | <entry>Mtools is a collection of utilities to access MS-DOS disks |
2350 | <entry>2.13.0</entry> | 2349 | from GNU and Unix without mounting them.</entry> |
2351 | <entry>Python HTTP for Humans.</entry> | 2350 | |
2352 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2351 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
2353 | </row> | 2352 | </row> |
2354 | <row> | 2353 | |
2355 | <entry>python-requestsexceptions</entry> | 2354 | <row> |
2356 | <entry>1.1.3</entry> | 2355 | <entry>nasm</entry> |
2357 | <entry>Import exceptions from potentially bundled packages in requests.</entry> | 2356 | |
2358 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2357 | <entry>2.12.02</entry> |
2359 | </row> | 2358 | |
2360 | <row> | 2359 | <entry>General-purpose x86 assembler.</entry> |
2361 | <entry>python-retrying</entry> | 2360 | |
2362 | <entry>1.3.3</entry> | 2361 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> |
2363 | <entry>Retrying</entry> | 2362 | </row> |
2364 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2363 | |
2365 | </row> | 2364 | <row> |
2366 | <row> | 2365 | <entry>ncurses</entry> |
2367 | <entry>python-rfc3986</entry> | 2366 | |
2368 | <entry>0.4.1</entry> | 2367 | <entry>6.0</entry> |
2369 | <entry>Validating URI References per RFC 3986</entry> | 2368 | |
2370 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2369 | <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo |
2371 | </row> | 2370 | tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple |
2372 | <row> | 2371 | highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of |
2373 | <entry>python-rfc3987</entry> | 2372 | keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable |
2374 | <entry>1.3.7</entry> | 2373 | windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using |
2375 | <entry>Parsing and validation of URIs (RFC 3986) and IRIs (RFC 3987).</entry> | 2374 | the gpm library.</entry> |
2376 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2375 | |
2377 | </row> | 2376 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2378 | <row> | 2377 | </row> |
2379 | <entry>python-routes</entry> | 2378 | |
2380 | <entry>2.4.1</entry> | 2379 | <row> |
2381 | <entry>A Python re-implementation of the Rails routes system.</entry> | 2380 | <entry>netbase</entry> |
2382 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2381 | |
2383 | </row> | 2382 | <entry>5.4</entry> |
2384 | <row> | 2383 | |
2385 | <entry>python-ryu</entry> | 2384 | <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for |
2386 | <entry>4.16</entry> | 2385 | basic TCP/IP based networking</entry> |
2387 | <entry>Ryu component-based software defined networking framework</entry> | 2386 | |
2388 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2387 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2389 | </row> | 2388 | </row> |
2390 | <row> | 2389 | |
2391 | <entry>python-setproctitle</entry> | 2390 | <row> |
2392 | <entry>1.1.10</entry> | 2391 | <entry>netcat-openbsd</entry> |
2393 | <entry>A Python module to customize the process title</entry> | 2392 | |
2394 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2393 | <entry>1.105</entry> |
2395 | </row> | 2394 | |
2396 | <row> | 2395 | <entry>A simple Unix utility which reads and writes data across |
2397 | <entry>python-setuptools-git</entry> | 2396 | network connections using TCP or UDP protocol. It is designed to |
2398 | <entry>1.1</entry> | 2397 | be a reliable 'back-end' tool that can be used directly or easily |
2399 | <entry>Plugin for setuptools that enables git integration</entry> | 2398 | driven by other programs and scripts. At the same time it is a |
2400 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2399 | feature-rich network debugging and exploration tool since it can |
2401 | </row> | 2400 | create almost any kind of connection you would need and has |
2402 | <row> | 2401 | several interesting built-in capabilities.</entry> |
2403 | <entry>python-setuptools</entry> | 2402 | |
2404 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | 2403 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> |
2405 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python packages.</entry> | 2404 | </row> |
2406 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2405 | |
2407 | </row> | 2406 | <row> |
2408 | <row> | 2407 | <entry>nettle</entry> |
2409 | <entry>python-simplegeneric</entry> | 2408 | |
2410 | <entry>0.8.1</entry> | 2409 | <entry>3.3</entry> |
2411 | <entry>Simple generic functions</entry> | 2410 | |
2412 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2411 | <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry> |
2413 | </row> | 2412 | |
2414 | <row> | 2413 | <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> |
2415 | <entry>python-simplejson</entry> | 2414 | </row> |
2416 | <entry>3.7.3</entry> | 2415 | |
2417 | <entry> JSON <http://json.org> encoder and decoder for Python 2.5+ and Python 3.3+. It is pure Python code with no dependencies but includes an optional C extension for a serious speed boost </entry> | 2416 | <row> |
2418 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2417 | <entry>nfs-utils</entry> |
2419 | </row> | 2418 | |
2420 | <row> | 2419 | <entry>1.3.4</entry> |
2421 | <entry>python-singledispatch</entry> | 2420 | |
2422 | <entry>3.4.0.3</entry> | 2421 | <entry>The nfs-utils package provides a daemon for the kernel NFS |
2423 | <entry>PEP 443 proposed to expose a mechanism in the functools standard library module in Python 3.4 that provides a simple form of generic programming known as single-dispatch generic functions. This library is a backport of this functionality to Python 2.6 - 3.3</entry> | 2422 | server and related tools.</entry> |
2424 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2423 | |
2425 | </row> | 2424 | <entry>MIT, GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> |
2426 | <row> | 2425 | </row> |
2427 | <entry>python-six</entry> | 2426 | |
2428 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | 2427 | <row> |
2429 | <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities</entry> | 2428 | <entry>nspr</entry> |
2430 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2429 | |
2431 | </row> | 2430 | <entry>4.13.1</entry> |
2432 | <row> | 2431 | |
2433 | <entry>python-sphinx</entry> | 2432 | <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry> |
2434 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | 2433 | |
2435 | <entry>Python documentation generator</entry> | 2434 | <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2436 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2435 | </row> |
2437 | </row> | 2436 | |
2438 | <row> | 2437 | <row> |
2439 | <entry>python-sqlalchemy-migrate</entry> | 2438 | <entry>nss</entry> |
2440 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> | 2439 | |
2441 | <entry>Database schema migration for SQLAlchemy</entry> | 2440 | <entry>3.28.1</entry> |
2442 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2441 | |
2443 | </row> | 2442 | <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries |
2444 | <row> | 2443 | designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled |
2445 | <entry>python-sqlalchemy</entry> | 2444 | client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can |
2446 | <entry>1.0.16</entry> | 2445 | support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME |
2447 | <entry>Python SQL toolkit and Object Relational Mapper that gives application developers the full power and flexibility of SQL</entry> | 2446 | X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry> |
2448 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2447 | |
2449 | </row> | 2448 | <entry>MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2450 | <row> | 2449 | </row> |
2451 | <entry>python-sqlparse</entry> | 2450 | |
2452 | <entry>0.1.16</entry> | 2451 | <row> |
2453 | <entry>Non-validating SQL parser module</entry> | 2452 | <entry>numactl</entry> |
2454 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2453 | |
2455 | </row> | 2454 | <entry>2.0.11</entry> |
2456 | <row> | 2455 | |
2457 | <entry>python-stevedore</entry> | 2456 | <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl |
2458 | <entry>1.19.1</entry> | 2457 | program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a |
2459 | <entry>Manage dynamic plugins for Python applications</entry> | 2458 | libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in |
2460 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2459 | applications.</entry> |
2461 | </row> | 2460 | |
2462 | <row> | 2461 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2463 | <entry>python-strict-rfc3339</entry> | 2462 | </row> |
2464 | <entry>0.7</entry> | 2463 | |
2465 | <entry>Strict simple lightweight RFC3339 function.s.</entry> | 2464 | <row> |
2466 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2465 | <entry>openssh</entry> |
2467 | </row> | 2466 | |
2468 | <row> | 2467 | <entry>7.4p1</entry> |
2469 | <entry>python-subunit</entry> | 2468 | |
2470 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | 2469 | <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh |
2471 | <entry>Python implementation of subunit test streaming protocol</entry> | 2470 | (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and |
2472 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2471 | for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry> |
2473 | </row> | 2472 | |
2474 | <row> | 2473 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
2475 | <entry>python-suds-jurko</entry> | 2474 | </row> |
2476 | <entry>0.6</entry> | 2475 | |
2477 | <entry>Lightweight SOAP client (Jurko's fork)</entry> | 2476 | <row> |
2478 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | 2477 | <entry>openssl</entry> |
2479 | </row> | 2478 | |
2480 | <row> | 2479 | <entry>1.0.2k</entry> |
2481 | <entry>python-swiftclient</entry> | 2480 | |
2482 | <entry>3.1.0</entry> | 2481 | <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic |
2483 | <entry>Client library for OpenStack Object Storage API</entry> | 2482 | tools.</entry> |
2484 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2483 | |
2485 | </row> | 2484 | <entry>OpenSSL</entry> |
2486 | <row> | 2485 | </row> |
2487 | <entry>python-sysv-ipc</entry> | 2486 | |
2488 | <entry>0.6.8</entry> | 2487 | <row> |
2489 | <entry>System V IPC primitives (semaphores shared memory and message queues) for Python</entry> | 2488 | <entry>openvswitch</entry> |
2490 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2489 | |
2491 | </row> | 2490 | <entry>2.8.1</entry> |
2492 | <row> | 2491 | |
2493 | <entry>python-tempita</entry> | 2492 | <entry>Open vSwitch is a production quality multilayer virtual |
2494 | <entry>0.5.3dev</entry> | 2493 | switch licensed under the open source Apache 2.0 license. It is |
2495 | <entry>A very small text templating language</entry> | 2494 | designed to enable massive network automation through programmatic |
2496 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2495 | extension while still supporting standard management interfaces |
2497 | </row> | 2496 | and protocols (e.g. NetFlow sFlow SPAN RSPAN CLI LACP |
2498 | <row> | 2497 | 802.1ag)</entry> |
2499 | <entry>python-termcolor</entry> | 2498 | |
2500 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | 2499 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
2501 | <entry>ANSII Color formatting for output in terminal</entry> | 2500 | </row> |
2502 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2501 | |
2503 | </row> | 2502 | <row> |
2504 | <row> | 2503 | <entry>opkg-utils</entry> |
2505 | <entry>python-testrepository</entry> | 2504 | |
2506 | <entry>0.0.20</entry> | 2505 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> |
2507 | <entry>A repository of test results</entry> | 2506 | |
2508 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2507 | <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry> |
2509 | </row> | 2508 | |
2510 | <row> | 2509 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2511 | <entry>python-testscenarios</entry> | 2510 | </row> |
2512 | <entry>0.5.0</entry> | 2511 | |
2513 | <entry>testscenarios: a pyunit extension for dependency injection</entry> | 2512 | <row> |
2514 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2513 | <entry>opkg</entry> |
2515 | </row> | 2514 | |
2516 | <row> | 2515 | <entry>0.3.4</entry> |
2517 | <entry>python-testtools</entry> | 2516 | |
2518 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> | 2517 | <entry>Open Package Manager.</entry> |
2519 | <entry>Extensions to the Python standard library unit testing framework</entry> | 2518 | |
2520 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2519 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2521 | </row> | 2520 | </row> |
2522 | <row> | 2521 | |
2523 | <entry>python-thrift</entry> | 2522 | <row> |
2524 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> | 2523 | <entry>os-release</entry> |
2525 | <entry>Python bindings for the Apache Thrift RPC system.</entry> | 2524 | |
2526 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2525 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2527 | </row> | 2526 | |
2528 | <row> | 2527 | <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system |
2529 | <entry>python-tinyrpc</entry> | 2528 | identification data.</entry> |
2530 | <entry>0.5</entry> | 2529 | |
2531 | <entry>A small modular transport and protocol neutral RPC library that among other things supports JSON-RPC and zmq.</entry> | 2530 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2532 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2531 | </row> |
2533 | </row> | 2532 | |
2534 | <row> | 2533 | <row> |
2535 | <entry>python-tooz</entry> | 2534 | <entry>ossp-uuid</entry> |
2536 | <entry>1.43.1</entry> | 2535 | |
2537 | <entry>Coordination library for distributed systems.</entry> | 2536 | <entry>1.6.2</entry> |
2538 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2537 | |
2539 | </row> | 2538 | <entry>OSSP uuid is a ISO-C:1999 application programming interface |
2540 | <row> | 2539 | (API) and corresponding command line interface (CLI) for the |
2541 | <entry>python-troveclient</entry> | 2540 | generation of DCE 1.1 ISO/IEC 11578:1996 and RFC 4122 compliant |
2542 | <entry>2.5.0</entry> | 2541 | Universally Unique Identifier (UUID). It supports DCE 1.1 variant |
2543 | <entry>Trove Client Library for OpenStack Datbase service</entry> | 2542 | UUIDs of version 1 (time and node based) version 3 (name based |
2544 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2543 | MD5) version 4 (random number based) and version 5 (name based |
2545 | </row> | 2544 | SHA-1).</entry> |
2546 | <row> | 2545 | |
2547 | <entry>python-twisted</entry> | 2546 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2548 | <entry>13.2.0</entry> | 2547 | </row> |
2549 | <entry>Twisted is an event-driven networking framework written in Python and licensed under the LGPL. Twisted supports TCP UDP SSL/TLS multicast Unix sockets a large number of protocols (including HTTP NNTP IMAP SSH IRC FTP and others) and much more.</entry> | 2548 | |
2550 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2549 | <row> |
2551 | </row> | 2550 | <entry>packagegroup-cloud-compute</entry> |
2552 | <row> | 2551 | |
2553 | <entry>python-unicodecsv</entry> | 2552 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2554 | <entry>0.14.1</entry> | 2553 | |
2555 | <entry>Python2's stdlib csv module replacement with unicode support.</entry> | 2554 | <entry>Configuration for OpenStack Compute node.</entry> |
2556 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2555 | |
2557 | </row> | 2556 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2558 | <row> | 2557 | </row> |
2559 | <entry>python-urllib3</entry> | 2558 | |
2560 | <entry>1.2</entry> | 2559 | <row> |
2561 | <entry>Python HTTP library with thread-safe connection pooling file post support sanity friendly and more.</entry> | 2560 | <entry>packagegroup-cloud-debug</entry> |
2562 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2561 | |
2563 | </row> | 2562 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2564 | <row> | 2563 | |
2565 | <entry>python-voluptuous</entry> | 2564 | <entry>Add debugging capabilities to cloud images.</entry> |
2566 | <entry>0.10.5</entry> | 2565 | |
2567 | <entry>Voluptuous is a Python data validation library</entry> | 2566 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2568 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2567 | </row> |
2569 | </row> | 2568 | |
2570 | <row> | 2569 | <row> |
2571 | <entry>python-waitress</entry> | 2570 | <entry>packagegroup-cloud-extras</entry> |
2572 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> | 2571 | |
2573 | <entry>Waitress WSGI server</entry> | 2572 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2574 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2573 | |
2575 | </row> | 2574 | <entry>Extra packages that improve the usability of |
2576 | <row> | 2575 | compute/control nodes.</entry> |
2577 | <entry>python-warlock</entry> | 2576 | |
2578 | <entry>1.2.0</entry> | 2577 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2579 | <entry>Build self-validating python objects using JSON schemas</entry> | 2578 | </row> |
2580 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2579 | |
2581 | </row> | 2580 | <row> |
2582 | <row> | 2581 | <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry> |
2583 | <entry>python-webob</entry> | 2582 | |
2584 | <entry>1.6.0</entry> | 2583 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2585 | <entry>WSGI request and response object</entry> | 2584 | |
2586 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2585 | <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the |
2587 | </row> | 2586 | system</entry> |
2588 | <row> | 2587 | |
2589 | <entry>python-websockify</entry> | 2588 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2590 | <entry>0.8.0</entry> | 2589 | </row> |
2591 | <entry>WebSockets support for any application/server</entry> | 2590 | |
2592 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | 2591 | <row> |
2593 | </row> | 2592 | <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry> |
2594 | <row> | 2593 | |
2595 | <entry>python-webtest</entry> | 2594 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2596 | <entry>2.0.21</entry> | 2595 | |
2597 | <entry>Helper to test WSGI applications</entry> | 2596 | <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry> |
2598 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2597 | |
2599 | </row> | 2598 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2600 | <row> | 2599 | </row> |
2601 | <entry>python-werkzeug</entry> | 2600 | |
2602 | <entry>0.10.4</entry> | 2601 | <row> |
2603 | <entry>The Swiss Army knife of Python web development</entry> | 2602 | <entry>packagegroup-core-standalone-sdk-target</entry> |
2604 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2603 | |
2605 | </row> | 2604 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2606 | <row> | 2605 | |
2607 | <entry>python-wrapt</entry> | 2606 | <entry>Target packages for the standalone SDK.</entry> |
2608 | <entry>1.10.8</entry> | 2607 | |
2609 | <entry>A Python module for decorators wrappers and monkey patching..</entry> | 2608 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2610 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2609 | </row> |
2611 | </row> | 2610 | |
2612 | <row> | 2611 | <row> |
2613 | <entry>python-wsme</entry> | 2612 | <entry>packagegroup-core-tools-debug</entry> |
2614 | <entry>0.9.1</entry> | 2613 | |
2615 | <entry>Simplify the writing of REST APIs and extend them with additional protocols</entry> | 2614 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2616 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2615 | |
2617 | </row> | 2616 | <entry>Debugging tools.</entry> |
2618 | <row> | 2617 | |
2619 | <entry>python-zake</entry> | 2618 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2620 | <entry>0.2.1</entry> | 2619 | </row> |
2621 | <entry>A python package that works to provide a nice set of testing utilities for the kazoo library.</entry> | 2620 | |
2622 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | 2621 | <row> |
2623 | </row> | 2622 | <entry>packagegroup-cross-canadian-inteld1521</entry> |
2624 | <row> | 2623 | |
2625 | <entry>python-zopeinterface</entry> | 2624 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2626 | <entry>4.3.3</entry> | 2625 | |
2627 | <entry>Interface definitions for Zope products.</entry> | 2626 | <entry>Host SDK package for cross canadian toolchain.</entry> |
2628 | <entry>ZPL-2.1</entry> | 2627 | |
2629 | </row> | 2628 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2630 | <row> | 2629 | </row> |
2631 | <entry>python</entry> | 2630 | |
2632 | <entry>2.7.13</entry> | 2631 | <row> |
2633 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | 2632 | <entry>packagegroup-sdk-host</entry> |
2634 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 2633 | |
2635 | </row> | 2634 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2636 | <row> | 2635 | |
2637 | <entry>python3-dbus</entry> | 2636 | <entry>Host packages for the standalone SDK or external |
2638 | <entry>1.2.4</entry> | 2637 | toolchain.</entry> |
2639 | <entry>Python bindings for the DBus inter-process communication system.</entry> | 2638 | |
2640 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2639 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2641 | </row> | 2640 | </row> |
2642 | <row> | 2641 | |
2643 | <entry>python3-iniparse</entry> | 2642 | <row> |
2644 | <entry>0.4</entry> | 2643 | <entry>parted</entry> |
2645 | <entry>Accessing and Modifying INI files.</entry> | 2644 | |
2646 | <entry> MIT, Python-2.0</entry> | 2645 | <entry>3.2</entry> |
2647 | </row> | 2646 | |
2648 | <row> | 2647 | <entry>Disk partition editing/resizing utility.</entry> |
2649 | <entry>python3-pycairo</entry> | 2648 | |
2650 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | 2649 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> |
2651 | <entry>Python bindings for the Cairo canvas library.</entry> | 2650 | </row> |
2652 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | 2651 | |
2653 | </row> | 2652 | <row> |
2654 | <row> | 2653 | <entry>pciutils</entry> |
2655 | <entry>python3-pygobject</entry> | 2654 | |
2656 | <entry>3.22.0</entry> | 2655 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> |
2657 | <entry>Python GObject bindings.</entry> | 2656 | |
2658 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2657 | <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable |
2659 | </row> | 2658 | access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based |
2660 | <row> | 2659 | on this library.</entry> |
2661 | <entry>python3-pygpgme</entry> | 2660 | |
2662 | <entry>0.3</entry> | 2661 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2663 | <entry>A Python module for working with OpenPGP messages.</entry> | 2662 | </row> |
2664 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2663 | |
2665 | </row> | 2664 | <row> |
2666 | <row> | 2665 | <entry>perl</entry> |
2667 | <entry>python3-setuptools</entry> | 2666 | |
2668 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | 2667 | <entry>5.24.1</entry> |
2669 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python packages.</entry> | 2668 | |
2670 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2669 | <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry> |
2671 | </row> | 2670 | |
2672 | <row> | 2671 | <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> |
2673 | <entry>python3-six</entry> | 2672 | </row> |
2674 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | 2673 | |
2675 | <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility library.</entry> | 2674 | <row> |
2676 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2675 | <entry>pigz</entry> |
2677 | </row> | 2676 | |
2678 | <row> | 2677 | <entry>2.3.4</entry> |
2679 | <entry>python3</entry> | 2678 | |
2680 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | 2679 | <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a |
2681 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | 2680 | fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple |
2682 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | 2681 | processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data. |
2683 | </row> | 2682 | pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread |
2684 | <row> | 2683 | libraries.</entry> |
2685 | <entry>qemu-helper</entry> | 2684 | |
2686 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2685 | <entry>Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry> |
2687 | <entry>Qemu helper scripts.</entry> | 2686 | </row> |
2688 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2687 | |
2689 | </row> | 2688 | <row> |
2690 | <row> | 2689 | <entry>pixman</entry> |
2691 | <entry>qemu</entry> | 2690 | |
2692 | <entry>2.8.0</entry> | 2691 | <entry>0.34.0</entry> |
2693 | <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry> | 2692 | |
2694 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2693 | <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions -- |
2695 | </row> | 2694 | a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the |
2696 | <row> | 2695 | Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric |
2697 | <entry>qemuwrapper</entry> | 2696 | primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry> |
2698 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2697 | |
2699 | <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry> | 2698 | <entry>MIT, PD</entry> |
2700 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2699 | </row> |
2701 | </row> | 2700 | |
2702 | <row> | 2701 | <row> |
2703 | <entry>quilt</entry> | 2702 | <entry>pixz</entry> |
2704 | <entry>0.65</entry> | 2703 | |
2705 | <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry> | 2704 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> |
2706 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2705 | |
2707 | </row> | 2706 | <entry>Parallel indexed xz compressor.</entry> |
2708 | <row> | 2707 | |
2709 | <entry>quota</entry> | 2708 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> |
2710 | <entry>4.03</entry> | 2709 | </row> |
2711 | <entry>Tools for monitoring & limiting user disk usage per filesystem.</entry> | 2710 | |
2712 | <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2711 | <row> |
2713 | </row> | 2712 | <entry>pkgconfig</entry> |
2714 | <row> | 2713 | |
2715 | <entry>randrproto</entry> | 2714 | <entry>0.29.1</entry> |
2716 | <entry>1.5.0</entry> | 2715 | |
2717 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry> | 2716 | <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling |
2718 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2717 | applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct |
2719 | </row> | 2718 | compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry> |
2720 | <row> | 2719 | |
2721 | <entry>readline</entry> | 2720 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2722 | <entry>7.0</entry> | 2721 | </row> |
2723 | <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous commands.</entry> | 2722 | |
2724 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2723 | <row> |
2725 | </row> | 2724 | <entry>pm-utils</entry> |
2726 | <row> | 2725 | |
2727 | <entry>renderproto</entry> | 2726 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> |
2728 | <entry>0.11.1</entry> | 2727 | |
2729 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X window system.</entry> | 2728 | <entry>Simple shell command line tools to suspend and |
2730 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2729 | hibernate.</entry> |
2731 | </row> | 2730 | |
2732 | <row> | 2731 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2733 | <entry>rpcbind</entry> | 2732 | </row> |
2734 | <entry>0.2.4</entry> | 2733 | |
2735 | <entry>The rpcbind utility is a server that converts RPC program numbers into universal addresses.</entry> | 2734 | <row> |
2736 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2735 | <entry>popt</entry> |
2737 | </row> | 2736 | |
2738 | <row> | 2737 | <entry>1.16</entry> |
2739 | <entry>rpm</entry> | 2738 | |
2740 | <entry>4.13.90</entry> | 2739 | <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry> |
2741 | <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line driven package management system capable of installing uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages. Each software package consists of an archive of files along with information about the package like its version a description etc.</entry> | 2740 | |
2742 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2741 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2743 | </row> | 2742 | </row> |
2744 | <row> | 2743 | |
2745 | <entry>rsync</entry> | 2744 | <row> |
2746 | <entry>3.1.2</entry> | 2745 | <entry>postgresql</entry> |
2747 | <entry>File synchronization tool.</entry> | 2746 | |
2748 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2747 | <entry>9.4.11</entry> |
2749 | </row> | 2748 | |
2750 | <row> | 2749 | <entry>PostgreSQL is an advanced Object-Relational database |
2751 | <entry>run-postinsts</entry> | 2750 | management system (DBMS) that supports almost all SQL constructs |
2752 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2751 | (including transactions subselects and user-defined types and |
2753 | <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target device.</entry> | 2752 | functions). The postgresql package includes the client programs |
2754 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2753 | and libraries that you'll need to access a PostgreSQL DBMS server. |
2755 | </row> | 2754 | These PostgreSQL client programs are programs that directly |
2756 | <row> | 2755 | manipulate the internal structure of PostgreSQL databases on a |
2757 | <entry>sed</entry> | 2756 | PostgreSQL server. These client programs can be located on the |
2758 | <entry>4.2.2</entry> | 2757 | same machine with the PostgreSQL server or may be on a remote |
2759 | <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry> | 2758 | machine which accesses a PostgreSQL server over a network |
2760 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2759 | connection. This package contains the docs in HTML for the whole |
2761 | </row> | 2760 | package as well as command-line utilities for managing PostgreSQL |
2762 | <row> | 2761 | databases on a PostgreSQL server. If you want to manipulate a |
2763 | <entry>sg3-utils</entry> | 2762 | PostgreSQL database on a local or remote PostgreSQL server you |
2764 | <entry>1.42</entry> | 2763 | need this package. You also need to install this package if you're |
2765 | <entry>This package contains low level utilities for devices that use the SCSI command set</entry> | 2764 | installing the postgresql-server package.</entry> |
2766 | <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> | 2765 | |
2767 | </row> | 2766 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
2768 | <row> | 2767 | </row> |
2769 | <entry>shadow-securetty</entry> | 2768 | |
2770 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 2769 | <row> |
2771 | <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry> | 2770 | <entry>postinst-intercept</entry> |
2772 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2771 | |
2773 | </row> | 2772 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2774 | <row> | 2773 | |
2775 | <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry> | 2774 | <entry>Postinstall scriptlets.</entry> |
2776 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 2775 | |
2777 | <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry> | 2776 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2778 | <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | 2777 | </row> |
2779 | </row> | 2778 | |
2780 | <row> | 2779 | <row> |
2781 | <entry>shadow</entry> | 2780 | <entry>prelink</entry> |
2782 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | 2781 | |
2783 | <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group data.</entry> | 2782 | <entry>1.0</entry> |
2784 | <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | 2783 | |
2785 | </row> | 2784 | <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF |
2786 | <row> | 2785 | shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations |
2787 | <entry>shared-mime-info</entry> | 2786 | need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up |
2788 | <entry>1.8</entry> | 2787 | faster.</entry> |
2789 | <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry> | 2788 | |
2790 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | 2789 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2791 | </row> | 2790 | </row> |
2792 | <row> | 2791 | |
2793 | <entry>spice-html5</entry> | 2792 | <row> |
2794 | <entry>0.1.4</entry> | 2793 | <entry>procps</entry> |
2795 | <entry> Spice Web client which runs entirely within a modern browser. It is limited in function a bit slow and lacks support for many features of Spice (audio video agents just to name a few). . The Simple Protocol for Independent Computing Environments (SPICE) is a remote display system built for virtual environments which allows you to view a computing 'desktop' environment not only on the machine where it is running but from anywhere on the Internet and from a wide variety of machine architectures. </entry> | 2794 | |
2796 | <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | 2795 | <entry>3.3.12</entry> |
2797 | </row> | 2796 | |
2798 | <row> | 2797 | <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide |
2799 | <entry>sqlite3</entry> | 2798 | system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The |
2800 | <entry>3.17.0</entry> | 2799 | package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and |
2801 | <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry> | 2800 | skill.</entry> |
2802 | <entry>PD</entry> | 2801 | |
2803 | </row> | 2802 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> |
2804 | <row> | 2803 | </row> |
2805 | <entry>strace</entry> | 2804 | |
2806 | <entry>4.16</entry> | 2805 | <row> |
2807 | <entry>System call tracing tool.</entry> | 2806 | <entry>pseudo</entry> |
2808 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2807 | |
2809 | </row> | 2808 | <entry>1.8.2</entry> |
2810 | <row> | 2809 | |
2811 | <entry>sudo</entry> | 2810 | <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal |
2812 | <entry>1.8.19p2</entry> | 2811 | user.</entry> |
2813 | <entry>Sudo (superuser do) allows a system administrator to give certain users (or groups of users) the ability to run some (or all) commands as root while logging all commands and arguments.</entry> | 2812 | |
2814 | <entry> ISC, BSD, Zlib</entry> | 2813 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> |
2815 | </row> | 2814 | </row> |
2816 | <row> | 2815 | |
2817 | <entry>swig</entry> | 2816 | <row> |
2818 | <entry>3.0.12</entry> | 2817 | <entry>ptest-runner</entry> |
2819 | <entry>SWIG - Simplified Wrapper and Interface Generator.</entry> | 2818 | |
2820 | <entry> BSD, GPL-3.0</entry> | 2819 | <entry>2.0.2</entry> |
2821 | </row> | 2820 | |
2822 | <row> | 2821 | <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program |
2823 | <entry>sysfsutils</entry> | 2822 | which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them |
2824 | <entry>2.1.0</entry> | 2823 | in sequence.</entry> |
2825 | <entry>Tools for working with the sysfs virtual filesystem. The tool 'systool' can query devices by bus class and topology.</entry> | 2824 | |
2826 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2825 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> |
2827 | </row> | 2826 | </row> |
2828 | <row> | 2827 | |
2829 | <entry>sysklogd</entry> | 2828 | <row> |
2830 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | 2829 | <entry>python-alembic</entry> |
2831 | <entry>The sysklogd package implements two system log daemons: syslogd klogd</entry> | 2830 | |
2832 | <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> | 2831 | <entry>0.8.10</entry> |
2833 | </row> | 2832 | |
2834 | <row> | 2833 | <entry>A database migration tool for SQLAlchemy.</entry> |
2835 | <entry>syslinux</entry> | 2834 | |
2836 | <entry>6.03</entry> | 2835 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2837 | <entry>Multi-purpose linux bootloader.</entry> | 2836 | </row> |
2838 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2837 | |
2839 | </row> | 2838 | <row> |
2840 | <row> | 2839 | <entry>python-amqp</entry> |
2841 | <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry> | 2840 | |
2842 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2841 | <entry>1.4.9</entry> |
2843 | <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit scripts.</entry> | 2842 | |
2844 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2843 | <entry>Low-level AMQP client for Python</entry> |
2845 | </row> | 2844 | |
2846 | <row> | 2845 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
2847 | <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry> | 2846 | </row> |
2848 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2847 | |
2849 | <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry> | 2848 | <row> |
2850 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2849 | <entry>python-amqplib</entry> |
2851 | </row> | 2850 | |
2852 | <row> | 2851 | <entry>1.0.2</entry> |
2853 | <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry> | 2852 | |
2854 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2853 | <entry>Python client for the Advanced Message Queuing Procotol |
2855 | <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry> | 2854 | (AMQP)</entry> |
2856 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2855 | |
2857 | </row> | 2856 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> |
2858 | <row> | 2857 | </row> |
2859 | <entry>systemd</entry> | 2858 | |
2860 | <entry>232</entry> | 2859 | <row> |
2861 | <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and automount points and implements an elaborate transactional dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in replacement for sysvinit.</entry> | 2860 | <entry>python-anyjson</entry> |
2862 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | 2861 | |
2863 | </row> | 2862 | <entry>0.3.3</entry> |
2864 | <row> | 2863 | |
2865 | <entry>systemtap</entry> | 2864 | <entry>Anyjson loads whichever is the fastest JSON module |
2866 | <entry>3.1</entry> | 2865 | installed and provides a uniform API regardless of which JSON |
2867 | <entry>Script-directed dynamic tracing and performance analysis tool for Linux.</entry> | 2866 | implementation is used.</entry> |
2868 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2867 | |
2869 | </row> | 2868 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2870 | <row> | 2869 | </row> |
2871 | <entry>tcl</entry> | 2870 | |
2872 | <entry>8.6.6</entry> | 2871 | <row> |
2873 | <entry>Tool Command Language.</entry> | 2872 | <entry>python-appdirs</entry> |
2874 | <entry> tcl, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2873 | |
2875 | </row> | 2874 | <entry>1.4.0</entry> |
2876 | <row> | 2875 | |
2877 | <entry>tcp-wrappers</entry> | 2876 | <entry>A small Python module for determining appropriate |
2878 | <entry>7.6</entry> | 2877 | platform-specific dirs e.g. a user data dir.</entry> |
2879 | <entry>Tools for monitoring and filtering incoming requests for tcp services.</entry> | 2878 | |
2880 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2879 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2881 | </row> | 2880 | </row> |
2882 | <row> | 2881 | |
2883 | <entry>tcpdump</entry> | 2882 | <row> |
2884 | <entry>4.9.0</entry> | 2883 | <entry>python-babel</entry> |
2885 | <entry>A sophisticated network protocol analyzer.</entry> | 2884 | |
2886 | <entry>BSD</entry> | 2885 | <entry>2.3.4</entry> |
2887 | </row> | 2886 | |
2888 | <row> | 2887 | <entry>A collection of tools for internationalizing Python |
2889 | <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry> | 2888 | applications</entry> |
2890 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2889 | |
2891 | <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry> | 2890 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
2892 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2891 | </row> |
2893 | </row> | 2892 | |
2894 | <row> | 2893 | <row> |
2895 | <entry>tgt</entry> | 2894 | <entry>python-beautifulsoup4</entry> |
2896 | <entry>1.0.67</entry> | 2895 | |
2897 | <entry>Linux SCSI target framework (tgt)</entry> | 2896 | <entry>4.4.1</entry> |
2898 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2897 | |
2899 | </row> | 2898 | <entry>Screen-scraping library</entry> |
2900 | <row> | 2899 | |
2901 | <entry>thin-provisioning-tools</entry> | 2900 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
2902 | <entry>0.6.3</entry> | 2901 | </row> |
2903 | <entry>A suite of tools for manipulating the metadata of the dm-thin device-mapper target.</entry> | 2902 | |
2904 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | 2903 | <row> |
2905 | </row> | 2904 | <entry>python-boto</entry> |
2906 | <row> | 2905 | |
2907 | <entry>tzcode</entry> | 2906 | <entry>2.34.0</entry> |
2908 | <entry>2017b</entry> | 2907 | |
2909 | <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump tzselect.</entry> | 2908 | <entry>Boto is a Python package that provides interfaces to Amazon |
2910 | <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2909 | Web Services. Currently all features work with Python 2.6 and 2.7. |
2911 | </row> | 2910 | Work is under way to support Python 3.3+ in the same codebase. |
2912 | <row> | 2911 | Modules are being ported one at a time with the help of the open |
2913 | <entry>tzdata</entry> | 2912 | source community so please check below for compatibility with |
2914 | <entry>2017b</entry> | 2913 | Python 3.3+.</entry> |
2915 | <entry>Timezone data.</entry> | 2914 | |
2916 | <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2915 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2917 | </row> | 2916 | </row> |
2918 | <row> | 2917 | |
2919 | <entry>unfs3</entry> | 2918 | <row> |
2920 | <entry>0.9.22.r497</entry> | 2919 | <entry>python-cachetools</entry> |
2921 | <entry>Userspace NFS server v3 protocol.</entry> | 2920 | |
2922 | <entry>unfs3</entry> | 2921 | <entry>1.1.5</entry> |
2923 | </row> | 2922 | |
2924 | <row> | 2923 | <entry>Extensible memoizing collections and decorators</entry> |
2925 | <entry>unifdef</entry> | 2924 | |
2926 | <entry>2.11</entry> | 2925 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2927 | <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry> | 2926 | </row> |
2928 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | 2927 | |
2929 | </row> | 2928 | <row> |
2930 | <row> | 2929 | <entry>python-castellan</entry> |
2931 | <entry>unzip</entry> | 2930 | |
2932 | <entry>6.0</entry> | 2931 | <entry>0.4.0</entry> |
2933 | <entry>Utilities for extracting and viewing files in .zip archives.</entry> | 2932 | |
2934 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | 2933 | <entry>Generic Key Manager interface for OpenStack</entry> |
2935 | </row> | 2934 | |
2936 | <row> | 2935 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
2937 | <entry>update-rc.d</entry> | 2936 | </row> |
2938 | <entry>0.7</entry> | 2937 | |
2939 | <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory structure.</entry> | 2938 | <row> |
2940 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2939 | <entry>python-ceilometer</entry> |
2941 | </row> | 2940 | |
2942 | <row> | 2941 | <entry>7.1.0</entry> |
2943 | <entry>util-linux</entry> | 2942 | |
2944 | <entry>2.29.1</entry> | 2943 | <entry>OpenStack Metering Component</entry> |
2945 | <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message management filesystem creation and system login.</entry> | 2944 | |
2946 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry> | 2945 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
2947 | </row> | 2946 | </row> |
2948 | <row> | 2947 | |
2949 | <entry>util-macros</entry> | 2948 | <row> |
2950 | <entry>1.19.1</entry> | 2949 | <entry>python-ceilometerclient</entry> |
2951 | <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry> | 2950 | |
2952 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2951 | <entry>2.6.2</entry> |
2953 | </row> | 2952 | |
2954 | <row> | 2953 | <entry>CLI and python client library for OpenStack |
2955 | <entry>vim</entry> | 2954 | Ceilometer</entry> |
2956 | <entry>8.0.0427</entry> | 2955 | |
2957 | <entry>Vi IMproved - enhanced vi editor.</entry> | 2956 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
2958 | <entry>vim</entry> | 2957 | </row> |
2959 | </row> | 2958 | |
2960 | <row> | 2959 | <row> |
2961 | <entry>volatile-binds</entry> | 2960 | <entry>python-certifi</entry> |
2962 | <entry>1.0</entry> | 2961 | |
2963 | <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for read-only-rootfs</entry> | 2962 | <entry>2017.1.23</entry> |
2964 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2963 | |
2965 | </row> | 2964 | <entry>This installable Python package contains a CA Bundle that |
2966 | <row> | 2965 | you can reference in your Python code. This is useful for |
2967 | <entry>xcb-proto</entry> | 2966 | verifying HTTP requests for example. This is the same CA Bundle |
2968 | <entry>1.12</entry> | 2967 | which ships with the Requests codebase and is derived from Mozilla |
2969 | <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading support and extensibility.</entry> | 2968 | Firefox's canonical set.</entry> |
2970 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 2969 | |
2971 | </row> | 2970 | <entry>ISC</entry> |
2972 | <row> | 2971 | </row> |
2973 | <entry>xextproto</entry> | 2972 | |
2974 | <entry>7.3.0</entry> | 2973 | <row> |
2975 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also available.</entry> | 2974 | <entry>python-cffi</entry> |
2976 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2975 | |
2977 | </row> | 2976 | <entry>1.9.1</entry> |
2978 | <row> | 2977 | |
2979 | <entry>xineramaproto</entry> | 2978 | <entry>Foreign Function Interface for Python calling C |
2980 | <entry>1.2.1</entry> | 2979 | code.</entry> |
2981 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the Xinerama extension. This extension is used for retrieving information about physical output devices which may be combined into a single logical X screen.</entry> | 2980 | |
2982 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2981 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2983 | </row> | 2982 | </row> |
2984 | <row> | 2983 | |
2985 | <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry> | 2984 | <row> |
2986 | <entry>2.20</entry> | 2985 | <entry>python-cheetah</entry> |
2987 | <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window. The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based systems.</entry> | 2986 | |
2988 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2987 | <entry>2.4.4</entry> |
2989 | </row> | 2988 | |
2990 | <row> | 2989 | <entry>Python template engine and code generation tool.</entry> |
2991 | <entry>xmlto</entry> | 2990 | |
2992 | <entry>0.0.28</entry> | 2991 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
2993 | <entry>A shell-script tool for converting XML files to various formats.</entry> | 2992 | </row> |
2994 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 2993 | |
2995 | </row> | 2994 | <row> |
2996 | <row> | 2995 | <entry>python-cinderclient</entry> |
2997 | <entry>xproto</entry> | 2996 | |
2998 | <entry>7.0.31</entry> | 2997 | <entry>1.9.0</entry> |
2999 | <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window System.</entry> | 2998 | |
3000 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 2999 | <entry>Client library for OpenStack Cinder API.</entry> |
3001 | </row> | 3000 | |
3002 | <row> | 3001 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
3003 | <entry>xterm</entry> | 3002 | </row> |
3004 | <entry>325</entry> | 3003 | |
3005 | <entry>xterm is the standard terminal emulator for the X Window System.</entry> | 3004 | <row> |
3006 | <entry>MIT</entry> | 3005 | <entry>python-cliff</entry> |
3007 | </row> | 3006 | |
3008 | <row> | 3007 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> |
3009 | <entry>xtrans</entry> | 3008 | |
3010 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | 3009 | <entry>Command Line Interface Formulation Framework</entry> |
3011 | <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system and transport specific code into a single place. This API should be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of transports and support for new platforms without making any changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface code.</entry> | 3010 | |
3012 | <entry> MIT</entry> | 3011 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> |
3013 | </row> | 3012 | </row> |
3014 | <row> | 3013 | |
3015 | <entry>xz</entry> | 3014 | <row> |
3016 | <entry>5.2.3</entry> | 3015 | <entry>python-cmd2</entry> |
3017 | <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry> | 3016 | |
3018 | <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry> | 3017 | <entry>0.7.0</entry> |
3019 | </row> | 3018 | |
3020 | <row> | 3019 | <entry>Extra features for standard library's cmd module.</entry> |
3021 | <entry>yajl</entry> | 3020 | |
3022 | <entry>2.1.0</entry> | 3021 | <entry>MIT</entry> |
3023 | <entry>YAJL is a small event-driven (SAX-style) JSON parser written in ANSI C and a small validating JSON generator.</entry> | 3022 | </row> |
3024 | <entry>ISC</entry> | 3023 | |
3025 | </row> | 3024 | <row> |
3026 | <row> | 3025 | <entry>python-colorama</entry> |
3027 | <entry>zisofs-tools</entry> | 3026 | |
3028 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | 3027 | <entry>0.3.3</entry> |
3029 | <entry>Utilities for creating compressed CD-ROM filesystems.</entry> | 3028 | |
3030 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | 3029 | <entry>Simple cross-platform colored terminal text in |
3031 | </row> | 3030 | Python</entry> |
3032 | <row> | 3031 | |
3033 | <entry>zlib</entry> | 3032 | <entry>BSD</entry> |
3034 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> | 3033 | </row> |
3035 | <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data compression library which is used by many different programs.</entry> | 3034 | |
3036 | <entry>Zlib</entry> | 3035 | <row> |
3037 | </row> | 3036 | <entry>python-contextlib2</entry> |
3038 | </tbody> | 3037 | |
3039 | </tgroup> | 3038 | <entry>0.4.0</entry> |
3040 | </informaltable> | 3039 | |
3041 | </section> | 3040 | <entry>Backports and enhancements for the contextlib |
3042 | <section id="open_source_license"> | 3041 | module</entry> |
3043 | <title>Open Source Licenses</title> | 3042 | |
3044 | <section id="lic_0"> | 3043 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> |
3045 | <title>AFL-2.0</title> | 3044 | </row> |
3046 | <para><programlisting> | 3045 | |
3046 | <row> | ||
3047 | <entry>python-cotyledon</entry> | ||
3048 | |||
3049 | <entry>1.6.8</entry> | ||
3050 | |||
3051 | <entry>Cotyledon provides a framework for defining long-running | ||
3052 | services.</entry> | ||
3053 | |||
3054 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3055 | </row> | ||
3056 | |||
3057 | <row> | ||
3058 | <entry>python-coverage</entry> | ||
3059 | |||
3060 | <entry>4.0a5</entry> | ||
3061 | |||
3062 | <entry>Code coverage measurement for Python</entry> | ||
3063 | |||
3064 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3065 | </row> | ||
3066 | |||
3067 | <row> | ||
3068 | <entry>python-croniter</entry> | ||
3069 | |||
3070 | <entry>0.3.5</entry> | ||
3071 | |||
3072 | <entry>croniter provides iteration for datetime object with cron | ||
3073 | like format</entry> | ||
3074 | |||
3075 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3076 | </row> | ||
3077 | |||
3078 | <row> | ||
3079 | <entry>python-cryptography-vectors</entry> | ||
3080 | |||
3081 | <entry>1.7.2</entry> | ||
3082 | |||
3083 | <entry>Test vectors for the cryptography package..</entry> | ||
3084 | |||
3085 | <entry>Apache-2.0, BSD</entry> | ||
3086 | </row> | ||
3087 | |||
3088 | <row> | ||
3089 | <entry>python-cryptography</entry> | ||
3090 | |||
3091 | <entry>1.7.2</entry> | ||
3092 | |||
3093 | <entry>Provides cryptographic recipes and primitives to python | ||
3094 | developers.</entry> | ||
3095 | |||
3096 | <entry>Apache-2.0, BSD</entry> | ||
3097 | </row> | ||
3098 | |||
3099 | <row> | ||
3100 | <entry>python-cython</entry> | ||
3101 | |||
3102 | <entry>0.25.2</entry> | ||
3103 | |||
3104 | <entry>Cython is a language specially designed for writing Python | ||
3105 | extension modules. It's designed to bridge the gap between the | ||
3106 | nice high-level easy-to-use world of Python and the messy | ||
3107 | low-level world of C.</entry> | ||
3108 | |||
3109 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3110 | </row> | ||
3111 | |||
3112 | <row> | ||
3113 | <entry>python-dateutil</entry> | ||
3114 | |||
3115 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> | ||
3116 | |||
3117 | <entry>The dateutil module provides powerful extensions to the | ||
3118 | datetime module available in the Python standard library.</entry> | ||
3119 | |||
3120 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
3121 | </row> | ||
3122 | |||
3123 | <row> | ||
3124 | <entry>python-debtcollector</entry> | ||
3125 | |||
3126 | <entry>1.8.0</entry> | ||
3127 | |||
3128 | <entry>A collection of Python deprecation patterns and strategies | ||
3129 | that help you collect your technical debt in a non-destructive | ||
3130 | manner.</entry> | ||
3131 | |||
3132 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3133 | </row> | ||
3134 | |||
3135 | <row> | ||
3136 | <entry>python-decorator</entry> | ||
3137 | |||
3138 | <entry>4.0.11</entry> | ||
3139 | |||
3140 | <entry>The aim of the decorator module it to simplify the usage of | ||
3141 | decorators for the average programmer and to popularize decorators | ||
3142 | by showing various non-trivial examples. Of course as all | ||
3143 | techniques decorators can be abused and you should not try to | ||
3144 | solve every problem with a decorator just because you can.</entry> | ||
3145 | |||
3146 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3147 | </row> | ||
3148 | |||
3149 | <row> | ||
3150 | <entry>python-designateclient</entry> | ||
3151 | |||
3152 | <entry>2.3.0</entry> | ||
3153 | |||
3154 | <entry>Python bindings to the Designate API</entry> | ||
3155 | |||
3156 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3157 | </row> | ||
3158 | |||
3159 | <row> | ||
3160 | <entry>python-dogpile.cache</entry> | ||
3161 | |||
3162 | <entry>0.6.2</entry> | ||
3163 | |||
3164 | <entry>Python Dogpile Cache: A caching front-end based on the | ||
3165 | Dogpile lock</entry> | ||
3166 | |||
3167 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3168 | </row> | ||
3169 | |||
3170 | <row> | ||
3171 | <entry>python-ecdsa</entry> | ||
3172 | |||
3173 | <entry>0.13</entry> | ||
3174 | |||
3175 | <entry>ECDSA cryptographic signature library</entry> | ||
3176 | |||
3177 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3178 | </row> | ||
3179 | |||
3180 | <row> | ||
3181 | <entry>python-enum34</entry> | ||
3182 | |||
3183 | <entry>1.1.6</entry> | ||
3184 | |||
3185 | <entry>backport of Python 3.4's enum package.</entry> | ||
3186 | |||
3187 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
3188 | </row> | ||
3189 | |||
3190 | <row> | ||
3191 | <entry>python-eventlet</entry> | ||
3192 | |||
3193 | <entry>0.18.4</entry> | ||
3194 | |||
3195 | <entry>Highly concurrent networking library</entry> | ||
3196 | |||
3197 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3198 | </row> | ||
3199 | |||
3200 | <row> | ||
3201 | <entry>python-extras</entry> | ||
3202 | |||
3203 | <entry>1.0.0</entry> | ||
3204 | |||
3205 | <entry>Useful extra bits for Python - things that should be in the | ||
3206 | standard library</entry> | ||
3207 | |||
3208 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3209 | </row> | ||
3210 | |||
3211 | <row> | ||
3212 | <entry>python-fasteners</entry> | ||
3213 | |||
3214 | <entry>0.13.0</entry> | ||
3215 | |||
3216 | <entry>A python package that provides useful locks.</entry> | ||
3217 | |||
3218 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3219 | </row> | ||
3220 | |||
3221 | <row> | ||
3222 | <entry>python-feedparser</entry> | ||
3223 | |||
3224 | <entry>5.2.1</entry> | ||
3225 | |||
3226 | <entry>Python Atom and RSS feed parser.</entry> | ||
3227 | |||
3228 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | ||
3229 | </row> | ||
3230 | |||
3231 | <row> | ||
3232 | <entry>python-fixtures</entry> | ||
3233 | |||
3234 | <entry>3.0.0</entry> | ||
3235 | |||
3236 | <entry>Fixtures reusable state for writing clean tests and | ||
3237 | more</entry> | ||
3238 | |||
3239 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3240 | </row> | ||
3241 | |||
3242 | <row> | ||
3243 | <entry>python-flask</entry> | ||
3244 | |||
3245 | <entry>0.10.1</entry> | ||
3246 | |||
3247 | <entry>A microframework based on Werkzeug Jinja2 and good | ||
3248 | intentions</entry> | ||
3249 | |||
3250 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
3251 | </row> | ||
3252 | |||
3253 | <row> | ||
3254 | <entry>python-funcsigs</entry> | ||
3255 | |||
3256 | <entry>1.0.2</entry> | ||
3257 | |||
3258 | <entry>Python function signatures from PEP362 for Python 2.6 2.7 | ||
3259 | and 3.2+.</entry> | ||
3260 | |||
3261 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3262 | </row> | ||
3263 | |||
3264 | <row> | ||
3265 | <entry>python-functools32</entry> | ||
3266 | |||
3267 | <entry>3.2.3-2</entry> | ||
3268 | |||
3269 | <entry>Backport of the functools module from Python 3.2.3 for use | ||
3270 | on 2.7 and PyPy..</entry> | ||
3271 | |||
3272 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | ||
3273 | </row> | ||
3274 | |||
3275 | <row> | ||
3276 | <entry>python-futures</entry> | ||
3277 | |||
3278 | <entry>3.0.5</entry> | ||
3279 | |||
3280 | <entry>The concurrent.futures module provides a high-level | ||
3281 | interface for asynchronously executing callables.</entry> | ||
3282 | |||
3283 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3284 | </row> | ||
3285 | |||
3286 | <row> | ||
3287 | <entry>python-futurist</entry> | ||
3288 | |||
3289 | <entry>0.21.0</entry> | ||
3290 | |||
3291 | <entry>Useful additions to futures from the future</entry> | ||
3292 | |||
3293 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3294 | </row> | ||
3295 | |||
3296 | <row> | ||
3297 | <entry>python-glanceclient</entry> | ||
3298 | |||
3299 | <entry>2.5.0</entry> | ||
3300 | |||
3301 | <entry>Client library for Glance built on the OpenStack Images | ||
3302 | API</entry> | ||
3303 | |||
3304 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3305 | </row> | ||
3306 | |||
3307 | <row> | ||
3308 | <entry>python-greenlet</entry> | ||
3309 | |||
3310 | <entry>0.4.12</entry> | ||
3311 | |||
3312 | <entry>Python lightweight in-process concurrent | ||
3313 | programming.</entry> | ||
3314 | |||
3315 | <entry>MIT, Python-2.0</entry> | ||
3316 | </row> | ||
3317 | |||
3318 | <row> | ||
3319 | <entry>python-happybase</entry> | ||
3320 | |||
3321 | <entry>1.0.0</entry> | ||
3322 | |||
3323 | <entry>Python library to interact with Apache HBase</entry> | ||
3324 | |||
3325 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3326 | </row> | ||
3327 | |||
3328 | <row> | ||
3329 | <entry>python-httplib2</entry> | ||
3330 | |||
3331 | <entry>0.9.2</entry> | ||
3332 | |||
3333 | <entry>A comprehensive HTTP client library</entry> | ||
3334 | |||
3335 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3336 | </row> | ||
3337 | |||
3338 | <row> | ||
3339 | <entry>python-httpretty</entry> | ||
3340 | |||
3341 | <entry>0.8.14</entry> | ||
3342 | |||
3343 | <entry>HTTP client mock for Python</entry> | ||
3344 | |||
3345 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3346 | </row> | ||
3347 | |||
3348 | <row> | ||
3349 | <entry>python-idna</entry> | ||
3350 | |||
3351 | <entry>2.5</entry> | ||
3352 | |||
3353 | <entry>Internationalised Domain Names in Applications.</entry> | ||
3354 | |||
3355 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
3356 | </row> | ||
3357 | |||
3358 | <row> | ||
3359 | <entry>python-ipaddr</entry> | ||
3360 | |||
3361 | <entry>2.1.11</entry> | ||
3362 | |||
3363 | <entry>Google's IP address manipulation library</entry> | ||
3364 | |||
3365 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3366 | </row> | ||
3367 | |||
3368 | <row> | ||
3369 | <entry>python-ipaddress</entry> | ||
3370 | |||
3371 | <entry>1.0.18</entry> | ||
3372 | |||
3373 | <entry>Python 3.3+'s ipaddress for Python 2.6 2.7 3.2..</entry> | ||
3374 | |||
3375 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | ||
3376 | </row> | ||
3377 | |||
3378 | <row> | ||
3379 | <entry>python-iso8601</entry> | ||
3380 | |||
3381 | <entry>0.1.11</entry> | ||
3382 | |||
3383 | <entry>Simple module to parse ISO 8601 dates.</entry> | ||
3384 | |||
3385 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3386 | </row> | ||
3387 | |||
3388 | <row> | ||
3389 | <entry>python-itsdangerous</entry> | ||
3390 | |||
3391 | <entry>0.24</entry> | ||
3392 | |||
3393 | <entry>Various helpers to pass trusted data to untrusted | ||
3394 | environments and back</entry> | ||
3395 | |||
3396 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
3397 | </row> | ||
3398 | |||
3399 | <row> | ||
3400 | <entry>python-jinja2</entry> | ||
3401 | |||
3402 | <entry>2.9.5</entry> | ||
3403 | |||
3404 | <entry>Python Jinja2: A small but fast and easy to use stand-alone | ||
3405 | template engine written in pure python.</entry> | ||
3406 | |||
3407 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
3408 | </row> | ||
3409 | |||
3410 | <row> | ||
3411 | <entry>python-jsonpatch</entry> | ||
3412 | |||
3413 | <entry>1.15</entry> | ||
3414 | |||
3415 | <entry>Appling JSON patches in Python 2.6+ and 3.x.</entry> | ||
3416 | |||
3417 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3418 | </row> | ||
3419 | |||
3420 | <row> | ||
3421 | <entry>python-jsonpath-rw-ext</entry> | ||
3422 | |||
3423 | <entry>0.1.9</entry> | ||
3424 | |||
3425 | <entry>Extensions for JSONPath RW.</entry> | ||
3426 | |||
3427 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3428 | </row> | ||
3429 | |||
3430 | <row> | ||
3431 | <entry>python-jsonpath-rw</entry> | ||
3432 | |||
3433 | <entry>1.4.0</entry> | ||
3434 | |||
3435 | <entry>A robust and significantly extended implementation of | ||
3436 | JSONPath for Python</entry> | ||
3437 | |||
3438 | <entry>BSD+</entry> | ||
3439 | </row> | ||
3440 | |||
3441 | <row> | ||
3442 | <entry>python-jsonpointer</entry> | ||
3443 | |||
3444 | <entry>1.10</entry> | ||
3445 | |||
3446 | <entry>Resolve JSON Pointers in Python.</entry> | ||
3447 | |||
3448 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3449 | </row> | ||
3450 | |||
3451 | <row> | ||
3452 | <entry>python-jsonschema</entry> | ||
3453 | |||
3454 | <entry>2.6.0</entry> | ||
3455 | |||
3456 | <entry>An implementation of JSON Schema validation for | ||
3457 | Python.</entry> | ||
3458 | |||
3459 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3460 | </row> | ||
3461 | |||
3462 | <row> | ||
3463 | <entry>python-kafka</entry> | ||
3464 | |||
3465 | <entry>0.9.5</entry> | ||
3466 | |||
3467 | <entry>Python client for Apache Kafka.</entry> | ||
3468 | |||
3469 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3470 | </row> | ||
3471 | |||
3472 | <row> | ||
3473 | <entry>python-kazoo</entry> | ||
3474 | |||
3475 | <entry>2.4.0</entry> | ||
3476 | |||
3477 | <entry>Higher Level Zookeeper Client</entry> | ||
3478 | |||
3479 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3480 | </row> | ||
3481 | |||
3482 | <row> | ||
3483 | <entry>python-keystone</entry> | ||
3484 | |||
3485 | <entry>10.0.3</entry> | ||
3486 | |||
3487 | <entry>Authentication service for OpenStack</entry> | ||
3488 | |||
3489 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3490 | </row> | ||
3491 | |||
3492 | <row> | ||
3493 | <entry>python-keystoneauth1</entry> | ||
3494 | |||
3495 | <entry>2.12.3</entry> | ||
3496 | |||
3497 | <entry>Authentication Library for OpenStack Identity</entry> | ||
3498 | |||
3499 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3500 | </row> | ||
3501 | |||
3502 | <row> | ||
3503 | <entry>python-keystoneclient</entry> | ||
3504 | |||
3505 | <entry>3.5.1</entry> | ||
3506 | |||
3507 | <entry>Client library for OpenStack Identity API</entry> | ||
3508 | |||
3509 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3510 | </row> | ||
3511 | |||
3512 | <row> | ||
3513 | <entry>python-keystonemiddleware</entry> | ||
3514 | |||
3515 | <entry>4.9.1</entry> | ||
3516 | |||
3517 | <entry>Middleware for OpenStack Identity API</entry> | ||
3518 | |||
3519 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3520 | </row> | ||
3521 | |||
3522 | <row> | ||
3523 | <entry>python-kombu</entry> | ||
3524 | |||
3525 | <entry>3.0.37</entry> | ||
3526 | |||
3527 | <entry>A messaging framework for Python</entry> | ||
3528 | |||
3529 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3530 | </row> | ||
3531 | |||
3532 | <row> | ||
3533 | <entry>python-lockfile</entry> | ||
3534 | |||
3535 | <entry>0.12.2</entry> | ||
3536 | |||
3537 | <entry>Platform-independent file locking module</entry> | ||
3538 | |||
3539 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3540 | </row> | ||
3541 | |||
3542 | <row> | ||
3543 | <entry>python-logutils</entry> | ||
3544 | |||
3545 | <entry>0.3.3</entry> | ||
3546 | |||
3547 | <entry>Set of handlers for the Python standard library's logging | ||
3548 | package</entry> | ||
3549 | |||
3550 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3551 | </row> | ||
3552 | |||
3553 | <row> | ||
3554 | <entry>python-lxml</entry> | ||
3555 | |||
3556 | <entry>3.7.3</entry> | ||
3557 | |||
3558 | <entry>lxml is a Pythonic mature binding for the libxml2 and | ||
3559 | libxslt libraries. It provides safe and convenient access to these | ||
3560 | libraries using the ElementTree API. It extends the ElementTree | ||
3561 | API significantly to offer support for XPath RelaxNG XML Schema | ||
3562 | XSLT C14N and much more.</entry> | ||
3563 | |||
3564 | <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0, MIT, Python-2.0</entry> | ||
3565 | </row> | ||
3566 | |||
3567 | <row> | ||
3568 | <entry>python-mako</entry> | ||
3569 | |||
3570 | <entry>1.0.6</entry> | ||
3571 | |||
3572 | <entry>Templating library for Python.</entry> | ||
3573 | |||
3574 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3575 | </row> | ||
3576 | |||
3577 | <row> | ||
3578 | <entry>python-markupsafe</entry> | ||
3579 | |||
3580 | <entry>0.23</entry> | ||
3581 | |||
3582 | <entry>Implements a XML/HTML/XHTML Markup safe string for | ||
3583 | Python</entry> | ||
3584 | |||
3585 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
3586 | </row> | ||
3587 | |||
3588 | <row> | ||
3589 | <entry>python-mccabe</entry> | ||
3590 | |||
3591 | <entry>0.4.0</entry> | ||
3592 | |||
3593 | <entry>McCabe checker plugin for flake8.</entry> | ||
3594 | |||
3595 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3596 | </row> | ||
3597 | |||
3598 | <row> | ||
3599 | <entry>python-memcache</entry> | ||
3600 | |||
3601 | <entry>1.2.9</entry> | ||
3602 | |||
3603 | <entry>A comprehensive fast pure Python memcached client</entry> | ||
3604 | |||
3605 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3606 | </row> | ||
3607 | |||
3608 | <row> | ||
3609 | <entry>python-microversion-parse</entry> | ||
3610 | |||
3611 | <entry>0.1.2</entry> | ||
3612 | |||
3613 | <entry>OpenStack services use REST APIs which include HTTP | ||
3614 | headers. This package provides a simple parser for OpenStack | ||
3615 | microversion headers.</entry> | ||
3616 | |||
3617 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3618 | </row> | ||
3619 | |||
3620 | <row> | ||
3621 | <entry>python-mistralclient</entry> | ||
3622 | |||
3623 | <entry>2.1.2</entry> | ||
3624 | |||
3625 | <entry>Python client for Mistral REST API</entry> | ||
3626 | |||
3627 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3628 | </row> | ||
3629 | |||
3630 | <row> | ||
3631 | <entry>python-mock</entry> | ||
3632 | |||
3633 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> | ||
3634 | |||
3635 | <entry>A Python Mocking and Patching Library for Testing.</entry> | ||
3636 | |||
3637 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3638 | </row> | ||
3639 | |||
3640 | <row> | ||
3641 | <entry>python-monotonic</entry> | ||
3642 | |||
3643 | <entry>1.2</entry> | ||
3644 | |||
3645 | <entry>An implementation of time.monotonic() for Python 2.0 | ||
3646 | through 3.2.</entry> | ||
3647 | |||
3648 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3649 | </row> | ||
3650 | |||
3651 | <row> | ||
3652 | <entry>python-mox3</entry> | ||
3653 | |||
3654 | <entry>0.20.0</entry> | ||
3655 | |||
3656 | <entry>mox3: mock object framework for Python</entry> | ||
3657 | |||
3658 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3659 | </row> | ||
3660 | |||
3661 | <row> | ||
3662 | <entry>python-msgpack</entry> | ||
3663 | |||
3664 | <entry>0.4.8</entry> | ||
3665 | |||
3666 | <entry>MessagePack (de)serializer.</entry> | ||
3667 | |||
3668 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3669 | </row> | ||
3670 | |||
3671 | <row> | ||
3672 | <entry>python-ndg-httpsclient</entry> | ||
3673 | |||
3674 | <entry>0.4.2</entry> | ||
3675 | |||
3676 | <entry>Provides enhanced HTTPS support for httplib and urllib2 | ||
3677 | using PyOpenSSL</entry> | ||
3678 | |||
3679 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3680 | </row> | ||
3681 | |||
3682 | <row> | ||
3683 | <entry>python-netaddr</entry> | ||
3684 | |||
3685 | <entry>0.7.19</entry> | ||
3686 | |||
3687 | <entry>A network address manipulation library for Python..</entry> | ||
3688 | |||
3689 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
3690 | </row> | ||
3691 | |||
3692 | <row> | ||
3693 | <entry>python-netifaces</entry> | ||
3694 | |||
3695 | <entry>0.10.6</entry> | ||
3696 | |||
3697 | <entry>Portable network interface information..</entry> | ||
3698 | |||
3699 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
3700 | </row> | ||
3701 | |||
3702 | <row> | ||
3703 | <entry>python-neutron-lib</entry> | ||
3704 | |||
3705 | <entry>0.4.0</entry> | ||
3706 | |||
3707 | <entry>Neutron shared routines and utilities</entry> | ||
3708 | |||
3709 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3710 | </row> | ||
3711 | |||
3712 | <row> | ||
3713 | <entry>python-neutron</entry> | ||
3714 | |||
3715 | <entry>9.4.0</entry> | ||
3716 | |||
3717 | <entry>Neutron (virtual network service)</entry> | ||
3718 | |||
3719 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3720 | </row> | ||
3721 | |||
3722 | <row> | ||
3723 | <entry>python-neutronclient</entry> | ||
3724 | |||
3725 | <entry>6.0.0-gitAUTOINC</entry> | ||
3726 | |||
3727 | <entry>CLI and python client library for OpenStack Neutron</entry> | ||
3728 | |||
3729 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3730 | </row> | ||
3731 | |||
3732 | <row> | ||
3733 | <entry>python-nose</entry> | ||
3734 | |||
3735 | <entry>1.3.7</entry> | ||
3736 | |||
3737 | <entry>nose extends the test loading and running features of | ||
3738 | unittest making it easier to write find and run tests.</entry> | ||
3739 | |||
3740 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
3741 | </row> | ||
3742 | |||
3743 | <row> | ||
3744 | <entry>python-nova</entry> | ||
3745 | |||
3746 | <entry>14.0.7</entry> | ||
3747 | |||
3748 | <entry>Nova is a cloud computing fabric controller</entry> | ||
3749 | |||
3750 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3751 | </row> | ||
3752 | |||
3753 | <row> | ||
3754 | <entry>python-novaclient</entry> | ||
3755 | |||
3756 | <entry>6.0.1</entry> | ||
3757 | |||
3758 | <entry>Client library for OpenStack Compute API</entry> | ||
3759 | |||
3760 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3761 | </row> | ||
3762 | |||
3763 | <row> | ||
3764 | <entry>python-oauthlib</entry> | ||
3765 | |||
3766 | <entry>0.7.2</entry> | ||
3767 | |||
3768 | <entry>A generic spec-compliant thorough implementation of the | ||
3769 | OAuth request-signing logic</entry> | ||
3770 | |||
3771 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3772 | </row> | ||
3773 | |||
3774 | <row> | ||
3775 | <entry>python-openstack-nose</entry> | ||
3776 | |||
3777 | <entry>0.11</entry> | ||
3778 | |||
3779 | <entry>Openstack style output for nosetests</entry> | ||
3780 | |||
3781 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3782 | </row> | ||
3783 | |||
3784 | <row> | ||
3785 | <entry>python-os-brick</entry> | ||
3786 | |||
3787 | <entry>1.6.2</entry> | ||
3788 | |||
3789 | <entry>OpenStack Cinder brick library for managing local volume | ||
3790 | attaches</entry> | ||
3791 | |||
3792 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3793 | </row> | ||
3794 | |||
3795 | <row> | ||
3796 | <entry>python-os-client-config</entry> | ||
3797 | |||
3798 | <entry>1.21.1</entry> | ||
3799 | |||
3800 | <entry>OpenStack Client Configuation Library</entry> | ||
3801 | |||
3802 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3803 | </row> | ||
3804 | |||
3805 | <row> | ||
3806 | <entry>python-os-vif</entry> | ||
3807 | |||
3808 | <entry>1.2.1</entry> | ||
3809 | |||
3810 | <entry>A library for plugging and unplugging virtual interfaces in | ||
3811 | OpenStack</entry> | ||
3812 | |||
3813 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3814 | </row> | ||
3815 | |||
3816 | <row> | ||
3817 | <entry>python-os-win</entry> | ||
3818 | |||
3819 | <entry>1.2.2</entry> | ||
3820 | |||
3821 | <entry>Windows / Hyper-V library for OpenStack projects</entry> | ||
3822 | |||
3823 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3824 | </row> | ||
3825 | |||
3826 | <row> | ||
3827 | <entry>python-osc-lib</entry> | ||
3828 | |||
3829 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | ||
3830 | |||
3831 | <entry>OpenStackClient Library</entry> | ||
3832 | |||
3833 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3834 | </row> | ||
3835 | |||
3836 | <row> | ||
3837 | <entry>python-oslo.cache</entry> | ||
3838 | |||
3839 | <entry>1.14.1</entry> | ||
3840 | |||
3841 | <entry>An oslo.config enabled dogpile.cache</entry> | ||
3842 | |||
3843 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3844 | </row> | ||
3845 | |||
3846 | <row> | ||
3847 | <entry>python-oslo.concurrency</entry> | ||
3848 | |||
3849 | <entry>3.14.1</entry> | ||
3850 | |||
3851 | <entry>oslo.concurrency library</entry> | ||
3852 | |||
3853 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3854 | </row> | ||
3855 | |||
3856 | <row> | ||
3857 | <entry>python-oslo.config</entry> | ||
3858 | |||
3859 | <entry>3.17.1</entry> | ||
3860 | |||
3861 | <entry>API supporting parsing command line arguments and .ini | ||
3862 | style configuration files.</entry> | ||
3863 | |||
3864 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3865 | </row> | ||
3866 | |||
3867 | <row> | ||
3868 | <entry>python-oslo.context</entry> | ||
3869 | |||
3870 | <entry>2.9.0</entry> | ||
3871 | |||
3872 | <entry>Oslo Context Library</entry> | ||
3873 | |||
3874 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3875 | </row> | ||
3876 | |||
3877 | <row> | ||
3878 | <entry>python-oslo.db</entry> | ||
3879 | |||
3880 | <entry>4.13.6</entry> | ||
3881 | |||
3882 | <entry>oslo.db library</entry> | ||
3883 | |||
3884 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3885 | </row> | ||
3886 | |||
3887 | <row> | ||
3888 | <entry>python-oslo.i18n</entry> | ||
3889 | |||
3890 | <entry>3.9.0</entry> | ||
3891 | |||
3892 | <entry>oslo.i18n library</entry> | ||
3893 | |||
3894 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3895 | </row> | ||
3896 | |||
3897 | <row> | ||
3898 | <entry>python-oslo.log</entry> | ||
3899 | |||
3900 | <entry>3.16.1</entry> | ||
3901 | |||
3902 | <entry>Oslo Log Library</entry> | ||
3903 | |||
3904 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3905 | </row> | ||
3906 | |||
3907 | <row> | ||
3908 | <entry>python-oslo.messaging</entry> | ||
3909 | |||
3910 | <entry>5.10.2</entry> | ||
3911 | |||
3912 | <entry>Oslo Messaging API</entry> | ||
3913 | |||
3914 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3915 | </row> | ||
3916 | |||
3917 | <row> | ||
3918 | <entry>python-oslo.middleware</entry> | ||
3919 | |||
3920 | <entry>3.19.1</entry> | ||
3921 | |||
3922 | <entry>Oslo Middleware library</entry> | ||
3923 | |||
3924 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3925 | </row> | ||
3926 | |||
3927 | <row> | ||
3928 | <entry>python-oslo.policy</entry> | ||
3929 | |||
3930 | <entry>1.14.0</entry> | ||
3931 | |||
3932 | <entry>The Oslo Policy library provides support for RBAC policy | ||
3933 | enforcement across all OpenStack services.</entry> | ||
3934 | |||
3935 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3936 | </row> | ||
3937 | |||
3938 | <row> | ||
3939 | <entry>python-oslo.privsep</entry> | ||
3940 | |||
3941 | <entry>1.13.2</entry> | ||
3942 | |||
3943 | <entry>This library helps applications perform actions which | ||
3944 | require more or less privileges than they were started with in a | ||
3945 | safe easy to code and easy to use manner. For more information on | ||
3946 | why this is generally a good idea please read over the principle | ||
3947 | of least privilege and the specification which created this | ||
3948 | library.</entry> | ||
3949 | |||
3950 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3951 | </row> | ||
3952 | |||
3953 | <row> | ||
3954 | <entry>python-oslo.reports</entry> | ||
3955 | |||
3956 | <entry>1.14.0</entry> | ||
3957 | |||
3958 | <entry>oslo.reports library</entry> | ||
3959 | |||
3960 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3961 | </row> | ||
3962 | |||
3963 | <row> | ||
3964 | <entry>python-oslo.rootwrap</entry> | ||
3965 | |||
3966 | <entry>5.1.2</entry> | ||
3967 | |||
3968 | <entry>Oslo Rootwrap</entry> | ||
3969 | |||
3970 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3971 | </row> | ||
3972 | |||
3973 | <row> | ||
3974 | <entry>python-oslo.serialization</entry> | ||
3975 | |||
3976 | <entry>2.13.1</entry> | ||
3977 | |||
3978 | <entry>Oslo Serialization API</entry> | ||
3979 | |||
3980 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3981 | </row> | ||
3982 | |||
3983 | <row> | ||
3984 | <entry>python-oslo.service</entry> | ||
3985 | |||
3986 | <entry>1.16.1</entry> | ||
3987 | |||
3988 | <entry>oslo.service library</entry> | ||
3989 | |||
3990 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
3991 | </row> | ||
3992 | |||
3993 | <row> | ||
3994 | <entry>python-oslo.utils</entry> | ||
3995 | |||
3996 | <entry>3.16.1</entry> | ||
3997 | |||
3998 | <entry>Oslo utils</entry> | ||
3999 | |||
4000 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4001 | </row> | ||
4002 | |||
4003 | <row> | ||
4004 | <entry>python-oslo.versionedobjects</entry> | ||
4005 | |||
4006 | <entry>1.17.1</entry> | ||
4007 | |||
4008 | <entry>oslo.versionedobjects library</entry> | ||
4009 | |||
4010 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4011 | </row> | ||
4012 | |||
4013 | <row> | ||
4014 | <entry>python-oslotest</entry> | ||
4015 | |||
4016 | <entry>2.10.1</entry> | ||
4017 | |||
4018 | <entry>OpenStack test framework and test fixtures. The oslotest | ||
4019 | package can be cross-tested against its consuming projects to | ||
4020 | ensure that no changes to the library break the tests in those | ||
4021 | other projects.</entry> | ||
4022 | |||
4023 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4024 | </row> | ||
4025 | |||
4026 | <row> | ||
4027 | <entry>python-osprofiler</entry> | ||
4028 | |||
4029 | <entry>1.4.0</entry> | ||
4030 | |||
4031 | <entry>OpenStack Profiler Library</entry> | ||
4032 | |||
4033 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4034 | </row> | ||
4035 | |||
4036 | <row> | ||
4037 | <entry>python-pam</entry> | ||
4038 | |||
4039 | <entry>1.8.2</entry> | ||
4040 | |||
4041 | <entry>Python PAM module using ctypes py3/py2.</entry> | ||
4042 | |||
4043 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4044 | </row> | ||
4045 | |||
4046 | <row> | ||
4047 | <entry>python-paramiko</entry> | ||
4048 | |||
4049 | <entry>2.1.1</entry> | ||
4050 | |||
4051 | <entry>SSH2 protocol library</entry> | ||
4052 | |||
4053 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
4054 | </row> | ||
4055 | |||
4056 | <row> | ||
4057 | <entry>python-passlib</entry> | ||
4058 | |||
4059 | <entry>1.7.1</entry> | ||
4060 | |||
4061 | <entry>Passlib is a password hashing library for Python 2 & 3 | ||
4062 | which provides cross-platform implementations of over 30 password | ||
4063 | hashing algorithms as well as a framework for managing existing | ||
4064 | password hashes. It’s designed to be useful for a wide range of | ||
4065 | tasks from verifying a hash found in /etc/shadow to providing | ||
4066 | full-strength password hashing for multi-user | ||
4067 | applications.</entry> | ||
4068 | |||
4069 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4070 | </row> | ||
4071 | |||
4072 | <row> | ||
4073 | <entry>python-paste</entry> | ||
4074 | |||
4075 | <entry>2.0.3</entry> | ||
4076 | |||
4077 | <entry>Tools for using a Web Server Gateway Interface | ||
4078 | stack.</entry> | ||
4079 | |||
4080 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4081 | </row> | ||
4082 | |||
4083 | <row> | ||
4084 | <entry>python-pastedeploy</entry> | ||
4085 | |||
4086 | <entry>1.5.2</entry> | ||
4087 | |||
4088 | <entry>Load configure and compose WSGI applications and | ||
4089 | servers</entry> | ||
4090 | |||
4091 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4092 | </row> | ||
4093 | |||
4094 | <row> | ||
4095 | <entry>python-pbr</entry> | ||
4096 | |||
4097 | <entry>2.0.0</entry> | ||
4098 | |||
4099 | <entry>Python Build Reasonableness: PBR is a library that injects | ||
4100 | some useful and sensible default behaviors into your setuptools | ||
4101 | run</entry> | ||
4102 | |||
4103 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4104 | </row> | ||
4105 | |||
4106 | <row> | ||
4107 | <entry>python-pecan</entry> | ||
4108 | |||
4109 | <entry>1.2.1</entry> | ||
4110 | |||
4111 | <entry>WSGI object-dispatching web framework</entry> | ||
4112 | |||
4113 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4114 | </row> | ||
4115 | |||
4116 | <row> | ||
4117 | <entry>python-pep8</entry> | ||
4118 | |||
4119 | <entry>1.7.0</entry> | ||
4120 | |||
4121 | <entry>Python style guide checker.</entry> | ||
4122 | |||
4123 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4124 | </row> | ||
4125 | |||
4126 | <row> | ||
4127 | <entry>python-pika-pool</entry> | ||
4128 | |||
4129 | <entry>0.1.3</entry> | ||
4130 | |||
4131 | <entry>pools for your pikas.</entry> | ||
4132 | |||
4133 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
4134 | </row> | ||
4135 | |||
4136 | <row> | ||
4137 | <entry>python-pika</entry> | ||
4138 | |||
4139 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> | ||
4140 | |||
4141 | <entry>Pure Python RabbitMQ/AMQP 0-9-1 client library.</entry> | ||
4142 | |||
4143 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
4144 | </row> | ||
4145 | |||
4146 | <row> | ||
4147 | <entry>python-pip</entry> | ||
4148 | |||
4149 | <entry>9.0.1</entry> | ||
4150 | |||
4151 | <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python | ||
4152 | packages.</entry> | ||
4153 | |||
4154 | <entry>MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
4155 | </row> | ||
4156 | |||
4157 | <row> | ||
4158 | <entry>python-ply</entry> | ||
4159 | |||
4160 | <entry>3.10</entry> | ||
4161 | |||
4162 | <entry>Python ply: PLY is yet another implementation of lex and | ||
4163 | yacc for Python</entry> | ||
4164 | |||
4165 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4166 | </row> | ||
4167 | |||
4168 | <row> | ||
4169 | <entry>python-positional</entry> | ||
4170 | |||
4171 | <entry>1.1.1</entry> | ||
4172 | |||
4173 | <entry>Library to enforce positional or key-word arguments</entry> | ||
4174 | |||
4175 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4176 | </row> | ||
4177 | |||
4178 | <row> | ||
4179 | <entry>python-posix-ipc</entry> | ||
4180 | |||
4181 | <entry>1.0.0</entry> | ||
4182 | |||
4183 | <entry>POSIX IPC primitives (semaphores shared memory and message | ||
4184 | queues) for Python</entry> | ||
4185 | |||
4186 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4187 | </row> | ||
4188 | |||
4189 | <row> | ||
4190 | <entry>python-pretend</entry> | ||
4191 | |||
4192 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | ||
4193 | |||
4194 | <entry>A library for stubbing in Python.</entry> | ||
4195 | |||
4196 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4197 | </row> | ||
4198 | |||
4199 | <row> | ||
4200 | <entry>python-prettytable</entry> | ||
4201 | |||
4202 | <entry>0.7.2</entry> | ||
4203 | |||
4204 | <entry>Python library for displaying tabular data in a ASCII table | ||
4205 | format.</entry> | ||
4206 | |||
4207 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4208 | </row> | ||
4209 | |||
4210 | <row> | ||
4211 | <entry>python-psutil</entry> | ||
4212 | |||
4213 | <entry>5.2.0</entry> | ||
4214 | |||
4215 | <entry>A cross-platform process and system utilities module for | ||
4216 | Python.</entry> | ||
4217 | |||
4218 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4219 | </row> | ||
4220 | |||
4221 | <row> | ||
4222 | <entry>python-psycopg2</entry> | ||
4223 | |||
4224 | <entry>2.6.2</entry> | ||
4225 | |||
4226 | <entry>Python-PostgreSQL Database Adapter</entry> | ||
4227 | |||
4228 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
4229 | </row> | ||
4230 | |||
4231 | <row> | ||
4232 | <entry>python-py</entry> | ||
4233 | |||
4234 | <entry>1.4.32</entry> | ||
4235 | |||
4236 | <entry>Library with cross-python path ini-parsing io code log | ||
4237 | facilities.</entry> | ||
4238 | |||
4239 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4240 | </row> | ||
4241 | |||
4242 | <row> | ||
4243 | <entry>python-pyasn1</entry> | ||
4244 | |||
4245 | <entry>0.2.3</entry> | ||
4246 | |||
4247 | <entry>Python library implementing ASN.1 types..</entry> | ||
4248 | |||
4249 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | ||
4250 | </row> | ||
4251 | |||
4252 | <row> | ||
4253 | <entry>python-pycadf</entry> | ||
4254 | |||
4255 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | ||
4256 | |||
4257 | <entry>CADF Library</entry> | ||
4258 | |||
4259 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4260 | </row> | ||
4261 | |||
4262 | <row> | ||
4263 | <entry>python-pycparser</entry> | ||
4264 | |||
4265 | <entry>2.17</entry> | ||
4266 | |||
4267 | <entry>Parser of the C language written in pure Python.</entry> | ||
4268 | |||
4269 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
4270 | </row> | ||
4271 | |||
4272 | <row> | ||
4273 | <entry>python-pycrypto</entry> | ||
4274 | |||
4275 | <entry>2.6.1</entry> | ||
4276 | |||
4277 | <entry>Cryptographic modules for Python.</entry> | ||
4278 | |||
4279 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | ||
4280 | </row> | ||
4281 | |||
4282 | <row> | ||
4283 | <entry>python-pyflakes</entry> | ||
4284 | |||
4285 | <entry>1.2.3</entry> | ||
4286 | |||
4287 | <entry>passive checker of Python programs.</entry> | ||
4288 | |||
4289 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4290 | </row> | ||
4291 | |||
4292 | <row> | ||
4293 | <entry>python-pyinotify</entry> | ||
4294 | |||
4295 | <entry>0.9.6</entry> | ||
4296 | |||
4297 | <entry>Python pyinotify: Linux filesystem events | ||
4298 | monitoring</entry> | ||
4299 | |||
4300 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4301 | </row> | ||
4302 | |||
4303 | <row> | ||
4304 | <entry>python-pymongo</entry> | ||
4305 | |||
4306 | <entry>3.4.0</entry> | ||
4307 | |||
4308 | <entry>The PyMongo distribution contains tools for interacting | ||
4309 | with MongoDB database from Python. The bson package is an | ||
4310 | implementation of the BSON format for Python. The pymongo package | ||
4311 | is a native Python driver for MongoDB. The gridfs package is a | ||
4312 | gridfs implementation on top of pymongo.</entry> | ||
4313 | |||
4314 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4315 | </row> | ||
4316 | |||
4317 | <row> | ||
4318 | <entry>python-pyopenssl</entry> | ||
4319 | |||
4320 | <entry>16.2.0</entry> | ||
4321 | |||
4322 | <entry>Simple Python wrapper around the OpenSSL library.</entry> | ||
4323 | |||
4324 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4325 | </row> | ||
4326 | |||
4327 | <row> | ||
4328 | <entry>python-pyparsing</entry> | ||
4329 | |||
4330 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> | ||
4331 | |||
4332 | <entry>Python parsing module.</entry> | ||
4333 | |||
4334 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4335 | </row> | ||
4336 | |||
4337 | <row> | ||
4338 | <entry>python-pysaml2</entry> | ||
4339 | |||
4340 | <entry>3.0.2</entry> | ||
4341 | |||
4342 | <entry>Python implementation of SAML Version 2 to be used in a | ||
4343 | WSGI environment</entry> | ||
4344 | |||
4345 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4346 | </row> | ||
4347 | |||
4348 | <row> | ||
4349 | <entry>python-pysmi</entry> | ||
4350 | |||
4351 | <entry>0.1.2</entry> | ||
4352 | |||
4353 | <entry>A pure-Python implementation of SNMP/SMI MIB parsing and | ||
4354 | conversion library. Can produce PySNMP MIB modules.</entry> | ||
4355 | |||
4356 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4357 | </row> | ||
4358 | |||
4359 | <row> | ||
4360 | <entry>python-pysnmp</entry> | ||
4361 | |||
4362 | <entry>4.3.5</entry> | ||
4363 | |||
4364 | <entry>SNMP v1/v2c/v3 engine and apps written in pure-Python. | ||
4365 | Supports Manager/Agent/Proxy roles scriptable MIBs asynchronous | ||
4366 | operation (asyncio twisted asyncore) and multiple | ||
4367 | transports.</entry> | ||
4368 | |||
4369 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4370 | </row> | ||
4371 | |||
4372 | <row> | ||
4373 | <entry>python-pysocks</entry> | ||
4374 | |||
4375 | <entry>1.6.6</entry> | ||
4376 | |||
4377 | <entry>A Python SOCKS client module</entry> | ||
4378 | |||
4379 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4380 | </row> | ||
4381 | |||
4382 | <row> | ||
4383 | <entry>python-pytest</entry> | ||
4384 | |||
4385 | <entry>3.0.6</entry> | ||
4386 | |||
4387 | <entry>Simple powerful teting with python.</entry> | ||
4388 | |||
4389 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4390 | </row> | ||
4391 | |||
4392 | <row> | ||
4393 | <entry>python-python-editor</entry> | ||
4394 | |||
4395 | <entry>0.4</entry> | ||
4396 | |||
4397 | <entry>Programmatically open an editor capture the result</entry> | ||
4398 | |||
4399 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4400 | </row> | ||
4401 | |||
4402 | <row> | ||
4403 | <entry>python-pytz</entry> | ||
4404 | |||
4405 | <entry>2017.2</entry> | ||
4406 | |||
4407 | <entry>World timezone definitions modern and historical.</entry> | ||
4408 | |||
4409 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4410 | </row> | ||
4411 | |||
4412 | <row> | ||
4413 | <entry>python-pyyaml</entry> | ||
4414 | |||
4415 | <entry>3.11</entry> | ||
4416 | |||
4417 | <entry>YAML is a data serialization format designed for human | ||
4418 | readability and interaction with scripting languages. PyYAML is a | ||
4419 | YAML parser and emitter for Python. . PyYAML features a complete | ||
4420 | YAML 1.1 parser Unicode support pickle support capable extension | ||
4421 | API and sensible error messages. PyYAML supports standard YAML | ||
4422 | tags and provides Python-specific tags that allow to represent an | ||
4423 | arbitrary Python object. . PyYAML is applicable for a broad range | ||
4424 | of tasks from complex configuration files to object serialization | ||
4425 | and persistance.</entry> | ||
4426 | |||
4427 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4428 | </row> | ||
4429 | |||
4430 | <row> | ||
4431 | <entry>python-repoze.lru</entry> | ||
4432 | |||
4433 | <entry>0.6</entry> | ||
4434 | |||
4435 | <entry>repoze.lru is a LRU (least recently used) cache | ||
4436 | implementation. Keys and values that are not used frequently will | ||
4437 | be evicted from the cache faster than keys and values that are | ||
4438 | used frequently.</entry> | ||
4439 | |||
4440 | <entry>BSD-Modification-copyright</entry> | ||
4441 | </row> | ||
4442 | |||
4443 | <row> | ||
4444 | <entry>python-repoze.who</entry> | ||
4445 | |||
4446 | <entry>2.2</entry> | ||
4447 | |||
4448 | <entry>An identification and authentication framework for | ||
4449 | WSGI</entry> | ||
4450 | |||
4451 | <entry>BSD-Modification</entry> | ||
4452 | </row> | ||
4453 | |||
4454 | <row> | ||
4455 | <entry>python-requests</entry> | ||
4456 | |||
4457 | <entry>2.13.0</entry> | ||
4458 | |||
4459 | <entry>Python HTTP for Humans.</entry> | ||
4460 | |||
4461 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4462 | </row> | ||
4463 | |||
4464 | <row> | ||
4465 | <entry>python-requestsexceptions</entry> | ||
4466 | |||
4467 | <entry>1.1.3</entry> | ||
4468 | |||
4469 | <entry>Import exceptions from potentially bundled packages in | ||
4470 | requests.</entry> | ||
4471 | |||
4472 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4473 | </row> | ||
4474 | |||
4475 | <row> | ||
4476 | <entry>python-retrying</entry> | ||
4477 | |||
4478 | <entry>1.3.3</entry> | ||
4479 | |||
4480 | <entry>Retrying</entry> | ||
4481 | |||
4482 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4483 | </row> | ||
4484 | |||
4485 | <row> | ||
4486 | <entry>python-rfc3986</entry> | ||
4487 | |||
4488 | <entry>0.4.1</entry> | ||
4489 | |||
4490 | <entry>Validating URI References per RFC 3986</entry> | ||
4491 | |||
4492 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4493 | </row> | ||
4494 | |||
4495 | <row> | ||
4496 | <entry>python-rfc3987</entry> | ||
4497 | |||
4498 | <entry>1.3.7</entry> | ||
4499 | |||
4500 | <entry>Parsing and validation of URIs (RFC 3986) and IRIs (RFC | ||
4501 | 3987).</entry> | ||
4502 | |||
4503 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
4504 | </row> | ||
4505 | |||
4506 | <row> | ||
4507 | <entry>python-routes</entry> | ||
4508 | |||
4509 | <entry>2.4.1</entry> | ||
4510 | |||
4511 | <entry>A Python re-implementation of the Rails routes | ||
4512 | system.</entry> | ||
4513 | |||
4514 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4515 | </row> | ||
4516 | |||
4517 | <row> | ||
4518 | <entry>python-ryu</entry> | ||
4519 | |||
4520 | <entry>4.16</entry> | ||
4521 | |||
4522 | <entry>Ryu component-based software defined networking | ||
4523 | framework</entry> | ||
4524 | |||
4525 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4526 | </row> | ||
4527 | |||
4528 | <row> | ||
4529 | <entry>python-setproctitle</entry> | ||
4530 | |||
4531 | <entry>1.1.10</entry> | ||
4532 | |||
4533 | <entry>A Python module to customize the process title</entry> | ||
4534 | |||
4535 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4536 | </row> | ||
4537 | |||
4538 | <row> | ||
4539 | <entry>python-setuptools-git</entry> | ||
4540 | |||
4541 | <entry>1.1</entry> | ||
4542 | |||
4543 | <entry>Plugin for setuptools that enables git integration</entry> | ||
4544 | |||
4545 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4546 | </row> | ||
4547 | |||
4548 | <row> | ||
4549 | <entry>python-setuptools</entry> | ||
4550 | |||
4551 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | ||
4552 | |||
4553 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python | ||
4554 | packages.</entry> | ||
4555 | |||
4556 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4557 | </row> | ||
4558 | |||
4559 | <row> | ||
4560 | <entry>python-simplegeneric</entry> | ||
4561 | |||
4562 | <entry>0.8.1</entry> | ||
4563 | |||
4564 | <entry>Simple generic functions</entry> | ||
4565 | |||
4566 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4567 | </row> | ||
4568 | |||
4569 | <row> | ||
4570 | <entry>python-simplejson</entry> | ||
4571 | |||
4572 | <entry>3.7.3</entry> | ||
4573 | |||
4574 | <entry>JSON <http://json.org> encoder and decoder for Python | ||
4575 | 2.5+ and Python 3.3+. It is pure Python code with no dependencies | ||
4576 | but includes an optional C extension for a serious speed | ||
4577 | boost</entry> | ||
4578 | |||
4579 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4580 | </row> | ||
4581 | |||
4582 | <row> | ||
4583 | <entry>python-singledispatch</entry> | ||
4584 | |||
4585 | <entry>3.4.0.3</entry> | ||
4586 | |||
4587 | <entry>PEP 443 proposed to expose a mechanism in the functools | ||
4588 | standard library module in Python 3.4 that provides a simple form | ||
4589 | of generic programming known as single-dispatch generic functions. | ||
4590 | This library is a backport of this functionality to Python 2.6 - | ||
4591 | 3.3</entry> | ||
4592 | |||
4593 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4594 | </row> | ||
4595 | |||
4596 | <row> | ||
4597 | <entry>python-six</entry> | ||
4598 | |||
4599 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | ||
4600 | |||
4601 | <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities</entry> | ||
4602 | |||
4603 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4604 | </row> | ||
4605 | |||
4606 | <row> | ||
4607 | <entry>python-sphinx</entry> | ||
4608 | |||
4609 | <entry>1.4.1</entry> | ||
4610 | |||
4611 | <entry>Python documentation generator</entry> | ||
4612 | |||
4613 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4614 | </row> | ||
4615 | |||
4616 | <row> | ||
4617 | <entry>python-sqlalchemy-migrate</entry> | ||
4618 | |||
4619 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> | ||
4620 | |||
4621 | <entry>Database schema migration for SQLAlchemy</entry> | ||
4622 | |||
4623 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4624 | </row> | ||
4625 | |||
4626 | <row> | ||
4627 | <entry>python-sqlalchemy</entry> | ||
4628 | |||
4629 | <entry>1.0.16</entry> | ||
4630 | |||
4631 | <entry>Python SQL toolkit and Object Relational Mapper that gives | ||
4632 | application developers the full power and flexibility of | ||
4633 | SQL</entry> | ||
4634 | |||
4635 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4636 | </row> | ||
4637 | |||
4638 | <row> | ||
4639 | <entry>python-sqlparse</entry> | ||
4640 | |||
4641 | <entry>0.1.16</entry> | ||
4642 | |||
4643 | <entry>Non-validating SQL parser module</entry> | ||
4644 | |||
4645 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4646 | </row> | ||
4647 | |||
4648 | <row> | ||
4649 | <entry>python-stevedore</entry> | ||
4650 | |||
4651 | <entry>1.19.1</entry> | ||
4652 | |||
4653 | <entry>Manage dynamic plugins for Python applications</entry> | ||
4654 | |||
4655 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4656 | </row> | ||
4657 | |||
4658 | <row> | ||
4659 | <entry>python-strict-rfc3339</entry> | ||
4660 | |||
4661 | <entry>0.7</entry> | ||
4662 | |||
4663 | <entry>Strict simple lightweight RFC3339 function.s.</entry> | ||
4664 | |||
4665 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
4666 | </row> | ||
4667 | |||
4668 | <row> | ||
4669 | <entry>python-subunit</entry> | ||
4670 | |||
4671 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | ||
4672 | |||
4673 | <entry>Python implementation of subunit test streaming | ||
4674 | protocol</entry> | ||
4675 | |||
4676 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4677 | </row> | ||
4678 | |||
4679 | <row> | ||
4680 | <entry>python-suds-jurko</entry> | ||
4681 | |||
4682 | <entry>0.6</entry> | ||
4683 | |||
4684 | <entry>Lightweight SOAP client (Jurko's fork)</entry> | ||
4685 | |||
4686 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | ||
4687 | </row> | ||
4688 | |||
4689 | <row> | ||
4690 | <entry>python-swiftclient</entry> | ||
4691 | |||
4692 | <entry>3.1.0</entry> | ||
4693 | |||
4694 | <entry>Client library for OpenStack Object Storage API</entry> | ||
4695 | |||
4696 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4697 | </row> | ||
4698 | |||
4699 | <row> | ||
4700 | <entry>python-sysv-ipc</entry> | ||
4701 | |||
4702 | <entry>0.6.8</entry> | ||
4703 | |||
4704 | <entry>System V IPC primitives (semaphores shared memory and | ||
4705 | message queues) for Python</entry> | ||
4706 | |||
4707 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4708 | </row> | ||
4709 | |||
4710 | <row> | ||
4711 | <entry>python-tempita</entry> | ||
4712 | |||
4713 | <entry>0.5.3dev</entry> | ||
4714 | |||
4715 | <entry>A very small text templating language</entry> | ||
4716 | |||
4717 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4718 | </row> | ||
4719 | |||
4720 | <row> | ||
4721 | <entry>python-termcolor</entry> | ||
4722 | |||
4723 | <entry>1.1.0</entry> | ||
4724 | |||
4725 | <entry>ANSII Color formatting for output in terminal</entry> | ||
4726 | |||
4727 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4728 | </row> | ||
4729 | |||
4730 | <row> | ||
4731 | <entry>python-testrepository</entry> | ||
4732 | |||
4733 | <entry>0.0.20</entry> | ||
4734 | |||
4735 | <entry>A repository of test results</entry> | ||
4736 | |||
4737 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4738 | </row> | ||
4739 | |||
4740 | <row> | ||
4741 | <entry>python-testscenarios</entry> | ||
4742 | |||
4743 | <entry>0.5.0</entry> | ||
4744 | |||
4745 | <entry>testscenarios: a pyunit extension for dependency | ||
4746 | injection</entry> | ||
4747 | |||
4748 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4749 | </row> | ||
4750 | |||
4751 | <row> | ||
4752 | <entry>python-testtools</entry> | ||
4753 | |||
4754 | <entry>2.2.0</entry> | ||
4755 | |||
4756 | <entry>Extensions to the Python standard library unit testing | ||
4757 | framework</entry> | ||
4758 | |||
4759 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4760 | </row> | ||
4761 | |||
4762 | <row> | ||
4763 | <entry>python-thrift</entry> | ||
4764 | |||
4765 | <entry>0.10.0</entry> | ||
4766 | |||
4767 | <entry>Python bindings for the Apache Thrift RPC system.</entry> | ||
4768 | |||
4769 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4770 | </row> | ||
4771 | |||
4772 | <row> | ||
4773 | <entry>python-tinyrpc</entry> | ||
4774 | |||
4775 | <entry>0.5</entry> | ||
4776 | |||
4777 | <entry>A small modular transport and protocol neutral RPC library | ||
4778 | that among other things supports JSON-RPC and zmq.</entry> | ||
4779 | |||
4780 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4781 | </row> | ||
4782 | |||
4783 | <row> | ||
4784 | <entry>python-tooz</entry> | ||
4785 | |||
4786 | <entry>1.43.1</entry> | ||
4787 | |||
4788 | <entry>Coordination library for distributed systems.</entry> | ||
4789 | |||
4790 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4791 | </row> | ||
4792 | |||
4793 | <row> | ||
4794 | <entry>python-troveclient</entry> | ||
4795 | |||
4796 | <entry>2.5.0</entry> | ||
4797 | |||
4798 | <entry>Trove Client Library for OpenStack Datbase service</entry> | ||
4799 | |||
4800 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4801 | </row> | ||
4802 | |||
4803 | <row> | ||
4804 | <entry>python-twisted</entry> | ||
4805 | |||
4806 | <entry>13.2.0</entry> | ||
4807 | |||
4808 | <entry>Twisted is an event-driven networking framework written in | ||
4809 | Python and licensed under the LGPL. Twisted supports TCP UDP | ||
4810 | SSL/TLS multicast Unix sockets a large number of protocols | ||
4811 | (including HTTP NNTP IMAP SSH IRC FTP and others) and much | ||
4812 | more.</entry> | ||
4813 | |||
4814 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4815 | </row> | ||
4816 | |||
4817 | <row> | ||
4818 | <entry>python-unicodecsv</entry> | ||
4819 | |||
4820 | <entry>0.14.1</entry> | ||
4821 | |||
4822 | <entry>Python2's stdlib csv module replacement with unicode | ||
4823 | support.</entry> | ||
4824 | |||
4825 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4826 | </row> | ||
4827 | |||
4828 | <row> | ||
4829 | <entry>python-urllib3</entry> | ||
4830 | |||
4831 | <entry>1.2</entry> | ||
4832 | |||
4833 | <entry>Python HTTP library with thread-safe connection pooling | ||
4834 | file post support sanity friendly and more.</entry> | ||
4835 | |||
4836 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4837 | </row> | ||
4838 | |||
4839 | <row> | ||
4840 | <entry>python-voluptuous</entry> | ||
4841 | |||
4842 | <entry>0.10.5</entry> | ||
4843 | |||
4844 | <entry>Voluptuous is a Python data validation library</entry> | ||
4845 | |||
4846 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4847 | </row> | ||
4848 | |||
4849 | <row> | ||
4850 | <entry>python-waitress</entry> | ||
4851 | |||
4852 | <entry>1.0.1</entry> | ||
4853 | |||
4854 | <entry>Waitress WSGI server</entry> | ||
4855 | |||
4856 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4857 | </row> | ||
4858 | |||
4859 | <row> | ||
4860 | <entry>python-warlock</entry> | ||
4861 | |||
4862 | <entry>1.2.0</entry> | ||
4863 | |||
4864 | <entry>Build self-validating python objects using JSON | ||
4865 | schemas</entry> | ||
4866 | |||
4867 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4868 | </row> | ||
4869 | |||
4870 | <row> | ||
4871 | <entry>python-webob</entry> | ||
4872 | |||
4873 | <entry>1.6.0</entry> | ||
4874 | |||
4875 | <entry>WSGI request and response object</entry> | ||
4876 | |||
4877 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4878 | </row> | ||
4879 | |||
4880 | <row> | ||
4881 | <entry>python-websockify</entry> | ||
4882 | |||
4883 | <entry>0.8.0</entry> | ||
4884 | |||
4885 | <entry>WebSockets support for any application/server</entry> | ||
4886 | |||
4887 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | ||
4888 | </row> | ||
4889 | |||
4890 | <row> | ||
4891 | <entry>python-webtest</entry> | ||
4892 | |||
4893 | <entry>2.0.21</entry> | ||
4894 | |||
4895 | <entry>Helper to test WSGI applications</entry> | ||
4896 | |||
4897 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4898 | </row> | ||
4899 | |||
4900 | <row> | ||
4901 | <entry>python-werkzeug</entry> | ||
4902 | |||
4903 | <entry>0.10.4</entry> | ||
4904 | |||
4905 | <entry>The Swiss Army knife of Python web development</entry> | ||
4906 | |||
4907 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
4908 | </row> | ||
4909 | |||
4910 | <row> | ||
4911 | <entry>python-wrapt</entry> | ||
4912 | |||
4913 | <entry>1.10.8</entry> | ||
4914 | |||
4915 | <entry>A Python module for decorators wrappers and monkey | ||
4916 | patching..</entry> | ||
4917 | |||
4918 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
4919 | </row> | ||
4920 | |||
4921 | <row> | ||
4922 | <entry>python-wsme</entry> | ||
4923 | |||
4924 | <entry>0.9.1</entry> | ||
4925 | |||
4926 | <entry>Simplify the writing of REST APIs and extend them with | ||
4927 | additional protocols</entry> | ||
4928 | |||
4929 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4930 | </row> | ||
4931 | |||
4932 | <row> | ||
4933 | <entry>python-zake</entry> | ||
4934 | |||
4935 | <entry>0.2.1</entry> | ||
4936 | |||
4937 | <entry>A python package that works to provide a nice set of | ||
4938 | testing utilities for the kazoo library.</entry> | ||
4939 | |||
4940 | <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> | ||
4941 | </row> | ||
4942 | |||
4943 | <row> | ||
4944 | <entry>python-zopeinterface</entry> | ||
4945 | |||
4946 | <entry>4.3.3</entry> | ||
4947 | |||
4948 | <entry>Interface definitions for Zope products.</entry> | ||
4949 | |||
4950 | <entry>ZPL-2.1</entry> | ||
4951 | </row> | ||
4952 | |||
4953 | <row> | ||
4954 | <entry>python</entry> | ||
4955 | |||
4956 | <entry>2.7.13</entry> | ||
4957 | |||
4958 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | ||
4959 | |||
4960 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | ||
4961 | </row> | ||
4962 | |||
4963 | <row> | ||
4964 | <entry>python3-dbus</entry> | ||
4965 | |||
4966 | <entry>1.2.4</entry> | ||
4967 | |||
4968 | <entry>Python bindings for the DBus inter-process communication | ||
4969 | system.</entry> | ||
4970 | |||
4971 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
4972 | </row> | ||
4973 | |||
4974 | <row> | ||
4975 | <entry>python3-iniparse</entry> | ||
4976 | |||
4977 | <entry>0.4</entry> | ||
4978 | |||
4979 | <entry>Accessing and Modifying INI files.</entry> | ||
4980 | |||
4981 | <entry>MIT, Python-2.0</entry> | ||
4982 | </row> | ||
4983 | |||
4984 | <row> | ||
4985 | <entry>python3-pycairo</entry> | ||
4986 | |||
4987 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | ||
4988 | |||
4989 | <entry>Python bindings for the Cairo canvas library.</entry> | ||
4990 | |||
4991 | <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> | ||
4992 | </row> | ||
4993 | |||
4994 | <row> | ||
4995 | <entry>python3-pygobject</entry> | ||
4996 | |||
4997 | <entry>3.22.0</entry> | ||
4998 | |||
4999 | <entry>Python GObject bindings.</entry> | ||
5000 | |||
5001 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
5002 | </row> | ||
5003 | |||
5004 | <row> | ||
5005 | <entry>python3-pygpgme</entry> | ||
5006 | |||
5007 | <entry>0.3</entry> | ||
5008 | |||
5009 | <entry>A Python module for working with OpenPGP messages.</entry> | ||
5010 | |||
5011 | <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
5012 | </row> | ||
5013 | |||
5014 | <row> | ||
5015 | <entry>python3-setuptools</entry> | ||
5016 | |||
5017 | <entry>32.1.1</entry> | ||
5018 | |||
5019 | <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python | ||
5020 | packages.</entry> | ||
5021 | |||
5022 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5023 | </row> | ||
5024 | |||
5025 | <row> | ||
5026 | <entry>python3-six</entry> | ||
5027 | |||
5028 | <entry>1.10.0</entry> | ||
5029 | |||
5030 | <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility library.</entry> | ||
5031 | |||
5032 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5033 | </row> | ||
5034 | |||
5035 | <row> | ||
5036 | <entry>python3</entry> | ||
5037 | |||
5038 | <entry>3.5.2</entry> | ||
5039 | |||
5040 | <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry> | ||
5041 | |||
5042 | <entry>Python-2.0</entry> | ||
5043 | </row> | ||
5044 | |||
5045 | <row> | ||
5046 | <entry>qemu-helper</entry> | ||
5047 | |||
5048 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
5049 | |||
5050 | <entry>Qemu helper scripts.</entry> | ||
5051 | |||
5052 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
5053 | </row> | ||
5054 | |||
5055 | <row> | ||
5056 | <entry>qemu</entry> | ||
5057 | |||
5058 | <entry>2.8.0</entry> | ||
5059 | |||
5060 | <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry> | ||
5061 | |||
5062 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
5063 | </row> | ||
5064 | |||
5065 | <row> | ||
5066 | <entry>qemuwrapper</entry> | ||
5067 | |||
5068 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
5069 | |||
5070 | <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry> | ||
5071 | |||
5072 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5073 | </row> | ||
5074 | |||
5075 | <row> | ||
5076 | <entry>quilt</entry> | ||
5077 | |||
5078 | <entry>0.65</entry> | ||
5079 | |||
5080 | <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry> | ||
5081 | |||
5082 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
5083 | </row> | ||
5084 | |||
5085 | <row> | ||
5086 | <entry>quota</entry> | ||
5087 | |||
5088 | <entry>4.03</entry> | ||
5089 | |||
5090 | <entry>Tools for monitoring & limiting user disk usage per | ||
5091 | filesystem.</entry> | ||
5092 | |||
5093 | <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
5094 | </row> | ||
5095 | |||
5096 | <row> | ||
5097 | <entry>randrproto</entry> | ||
5098 | |||
5099 | <entry>1.5.0</entry> | ||
5100 | |||
5101 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize | ||
5102 | Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability | ||
5103 | to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry> | ||
5104 | |||
5105 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5106 | </row> | ||
5107 | |||
5108 | <row> | ||
5109 | <entry>readline</entry> | ||
5110 | |||
5111 | <entry>7.0</entry> | ||
5112 | |||
5113 | <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for | ||
5114 | use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they | ||
5115 | are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The | ||
5116 | Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list | ||
5117 | of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit | ||
5118 | those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous | ||
5119 | commands.</entry> | ||
5120 | |||
5121 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
5122 | </row> | ||
5123 | |||
5124 | <row> | ||
5125 | <entry>renderproto</entry> | ||
5126 | |||
5127 | <entry>0.11.1</entry> | ||
5128 | |||
5129 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering | ||
5130 | extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X | ||
5131 | window system.</entry> | ||
5132 | |||
5133 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5134 | </row> | ||
5135 | |||
5136 | <row> | ||
5137 | <entry>rpcbind</entry> | ||
5138 | |||
5139 | <entry>0.2.4</entry> | ||
5140 | |||
5141 | <entry>The rpcbind utility is a server that converts RPC program | ||
5142 | numbers into universal addresses.</entry> | ||
5143 | |||
5144 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
5145 | </row> | ||
5146 | |||
5147 | <row> | ||
5148 | <entry>rpm</entry> | ||
5149 | |||
5150 | <entry>4.13.90</entry> | ||
5151 | |||
5152 | <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line | ||
5153 | driven package management system capable of installing | ||
5154 | uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages. | ||
5155 | Each software package consists of an archive of files along with | ||
5156 | information about the package like its version a description | ||
5157 | etc.</entry> | ||
5158 | |||
5159 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
5160 | </row> | ||
5161 | |||
5162 | <row> | ||
5163 | <entry>rsync</entry> | ||
5164 | |||
5165 | <entry>3.1.2</entry> | ||
5166 | |||
5167 | <entry>File synchronization tool.</entry> | ||
5168 | |||
5169 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
5170 | </row> | ||
5171 | |||
5172 | <row> | ||
5173 | <entry>run-postinsts</entry> | ||
5174 | |||
5175 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
5176 | |||
5177 | <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target | ||
5178 | device.</entry> | ||
5179 | |||
5180 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5181 | </row> | ||
5182 | |||
5183 | <row> | ||
5184 | <entry>sed</entry> | ||
5185 | |||
5186 | <entry>4.2.2</entry> | ||
5187 | |||
5188 | <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry> | ||
5189 | |||
5190 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
5191 | </row> | ||
5192 | |||
5193 | <row> | ||
5194 | <entry>sg3-utils</entry> | ||
5195 | |||
5196 | <entry>1.42</entry> | ||
5197 | |||
5198 | <entry>This package contains low level utilities for devices that | ||
5199 | use the SCSI command set</entry> | ||
5200 | |||
5201 | <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> | ||
5202 | </row> | ||
5203 | |||
5204 | <row> | ||
5205 | <entry>shadow-securetty</entry> | ||
5206 | |||
5207 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
5208 | |||
5209 | <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry> | ||
5210 | |||
5211 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5212 | </row> | ||
5213 | |||
5214 | <row> | ||
5215 | <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry> | ||
5216 | |||
5217 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
5218 | |||
5219 | <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry> | ||
5220 | |||
5221 | <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | ||
5222 | </row> | ||
5223 | |||
5224 | <row> | ||
5225 | <entry>shadow</entry> | ||
5226 | |||
5227 | <entry>4.2.1</entry> | ||
5228 | |||
5229 | <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group | ||
5230 | data.</entry> | ||
5231 | |||
5232 | <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry> | ||
5233 | </row> | ||
5234 | |||
5235 | <row> | ||
5236 | <entry>shared-mime-info</entry> | ||
5237 | |||
5238 | <entry>1.8</entry> | ||
5239 | |||
5240 | <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry> | ||
5241 | |||
5242 | <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> | ||
5243 | </row> | ||
5244 | |||
5245 | <row> | ||
5246 | <entry>spice-html5</entry> | ||
5247 | |||
5248 | <entry>0.1.4</entry> | ||
5249 | |||
5250 | <entry>Spice Web client which runs entirely within a modern | ||
5251 | browser. It is limited in function a bit slow and lacks support | ||
5252 | for many features of Spice (audio video agents just to name a | ||
5253 | few). . The Simple Protocol for Independent Computing Environments | ||
5254 | (SPICE) is a remote display system built for virtual environments | ||
5255 | which allows you to view a computing 'desktop' environment not | ||
5256 | only on the machine where it is running but from anywhere on the | ||
5257 | Internet and from a wide variety of machine architectures.</entry> | ||
5258 | |||
5259 | <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> | ||
5260 | </row> | ||
5261 | |||
5262 | <row> | ||
5263 | <entry>sqlite3</entry> | ||
5264 | |||
5265 | <entry>3.17.0</entry> | ||
5266 | |||
5267 | <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry> | ||
5268 | |||
5269 | <entry>PD</entry> | ||
5270 | </row> | ||
5271 | |||
5272 | <row> | ||
5273 | <entry>strace</entry> | ||
5274 | |||
5275 | <entry>4.16</entry> | ||
5276 | |||
5277 | <entry>System call tracing tool.</entry> | ||
5278 | |||
5279 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
5280 | </row> | ||
5281 | |||
5282 | <row> | ||
5283 | <entry>sudo</entry> | ||
5284 | |||
5285 | <entry>1.8.19p2</entry> | ||
5286 | |||
5287 | <entry>Sudo (superuser do) allows a system administrator to give | ||
5288 | certain users (or groups of users) the ability to run some (or | ||
5289 | all) commands as root while logging all commands and | ||
5290 | arguments.</entry> | ||
5291 | |||
5292 | <entry>ISC, BSD, Zlib</entry> | ||
5293 | </row> | ||
5294 | |||
5295 | <row> | ||
5296 | <entry>swig</entry> | ||
5297 | |||
5298 | <entry>3.0.12</entry> | ||
5299 | |||
5300 | <entry>SWIG - Simplified Wrapper and Interface Generator.</entry> | ||
5301 | |||
5302 | <entry>BSD, GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
5303 | </row> | ||
5304 | |||
5305 | <row> | ||
5306 | <entry>sysfsutils</entry> | ||
5307 | |||
5308 | <entry>2.1.0</entry> | ||
5309 | |||
5310 | <entry>Tools for working with the sysfs virtual filesystem. The | ||
5311 | tool 'systool' can query devices by bus class and | ||
5312 | topology.</entry> | ||
5313 | |||
5314 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
5315 | </row> | ||
5316 | |||
5317 | <row> | ||
5318 | <entry>sysklogd</entry> | ||
5319 | |||
5320 | <entry>1.5.1</entry> | ||
5321 | |||
5322 | <entry>The sysklogd package implements two system log daemons: | ||
5323 | syslogd klogd</entry> | ||
5324 | |||
5325 | <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> | ||
5326 | </row> | ||
5327 | |||
5328 | <row> | ||
5329 | <entry>syslinux</entry> | ||
5330 | |||
5331 | <entry>6.03</entry> | ||
5332 | |||
5333 | <entry>Multi-purpose linux bootloader.</entry> | ||
5334 | |||
5335 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
5336 | </row> | ||
5337 | |||
5338 | <row> | ||
5339 | <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry> | ||
5340 | |||
5341 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
5342 | |||
5343 | <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit | ||
5344 | scripts.</entry> | ||
5345 | |||
5346 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5347 | </row> | ||
5348 | |||
5349 | <row> | ||
5350 | <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry> | ||
5351 | |||
5352 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
5353 | |||
5354 | <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry> | ||
5355 | |||
5356 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
5357 | </row> | ||
5358 | |||
5359 | <row> | ||
5360 | <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry> | ||
5361 | |||
5362 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
5363 | |||
5364 | <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry> | ||
5365 | |||
5366 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5367 | </row> | ||
5368 | |||
5369 | <row> | ||
5370 | <entry>systemd</entry> | ||
5371 | |||
5372 | <entry>232</entry> | ||
5373 | |||
5374 | <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux | ||
5375 | compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides | ||
5376 | aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus | ||
5377 | activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of | ||
5378 | daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports | ||
5379 | snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and | ||
5380 | automount points and implements an elaborate transactional | ||
5381 | dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in | ||
5382 | replacement for sysvinit.</entry> | ||
5383 | |||
5384 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> | ||
5385 | </row> | ||
5386 | |||
5387 | <row> | ||
5388 | <entry>systemtap</entry> | ||
5389 | |||
5390 | <entry>3.1</entry> | ||
5391 | |||
5392 | <entry>Script-directed dynamic tracing and performance analysis | ||
5393 | tool for Linux.</entry> | ||
5394 | |||
5395 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
5396 | </row> | ||
5397 | |||
5398 | <row> | ||
5399 | <entry>tcl</entry> | ||
5400 | |||
5401 | <entry>8.6.6</entry> | ||
5402 | |||
5403 | <entry>Tool Command Language.</entry> | ||
5404 | |||
5405 | <entry>tcl, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
5406 | </row> | ||
5407 | |||
5408 | <row> | ||
5409 | <entry>tcp-wrappers</entry> | ||
5410 | |||
5411 | <entry>7.6</entry> | ||
5412 | |||
5413 | <entry>Tools for monitoring and filtering incoming requests for | ||
5414 | tcp services.</entry> | ||
5415 | |||
5416 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
5417 | </row> | ||
5418 | |||
5419 | <row> | ||
5420 | <entry>tcpdump</entry> | ||
5421 | |||
5422 | <entry>4.9.0</entry> | ||
5423 | |||
5424 | <entry>A sophisticated network protocol analyzer.</entry> | ||
5425 | |||
5426 | <entry>BSD</entry> | ||
5427 | </row> | ||
5428 | |||
5429 | <row> | ||
5430 | <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry> | ||
5431 | |||
5432 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
5433 | |||
5434 | <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry> | ||
5435 | |||
5436 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5437 | </row> | ||
5438 | |||
5439 | <row> | ||
5440 | <entry>tgt</entry> | ||
5441 | |||
5442 | <entry>1.0.67</entry> | ||
5443 | |||
5444 | <entry>Linux SCSI target framework (tgt)</entry> | ||
5445 | |||
5446 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
5447 | </row> | ||
5448 | |||
5449 | <row> | ||
5450 | <entry>thin-provisioning-tools</entry> | ||
5451 | |||
5452 | <entry>0.6.3</entry> | ||
5453 | |||
5454 | <entry>A suite of tools for manipulating the metadata of the | ||
5455 | dm-thin device-mapper target.</entry> | ||
5456 | |||
5457 | <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> | ||
5458 | </row> | ||
5459 | |||
5460 | <row> | ||
5461 | <entry>tzcode</entry> | ||
5462 | |||
5463 | <entry>2017b</entry> | ||
5464 | |||
5465 | <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump | ||
5466 | tzselect.</entry> | ||
5467 | |||
5468 | <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
5469 | </row> | ||
5470 | |||
5471 | <row> | ||
5472 | <entry>tzdata</entry> | ||
5473 | |||
5474 | <entry>2017b</entry> | ||
5475 | |||
5476 | <entry>Timezone data.</entry> | ||
5477 | |||
5478 | <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
5479 | </row> | ||
5480 | |||
5481 | <row> | ||
5482 | <entry>unfs3</entry> | ||
5483 | |||
5484 | <entry>0.9.22.r497</entry> | ||
5485 | |||
5486 | <entry>Userspace NFS server v3 protocol.</entry> | ||
5487 | |||
5488 | <entry>unfs3</entry> | ||
5489 | </row> | ||
5490 | |||
5491 | <row> | ||
5492 | <entry>unifdef</entry> | ||
5493 | |||
5494 | <entry>2.11</entry> | ||
5495 | |||
5496 | <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry> | ||
5497 | |||
5498 | <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> | ||
5499 | </row> | ||
5500 | |||
5501 | <row> | ||
5502 | <entry>unzip</entry> | ||
5503 | |||
5504 | <entry>6.0</entry> | ||
5505 | |||
5506 | <entry>Utilities for extracting and viewing files in .zip | ||
5507 | archives.</entry> | ||
5508 | |||
5509 | <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> | ||
5510 | </row> | ||
5511 | |||
5512 | <row> | ||
5513 | <entry>update-rc.d</entry> | ||
5514 | |||
5515 | <entry>0.7</entry> | ||
5516 | |||
5517 | <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of | ||
5518 | symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory | ||
5519 | structure.</entry> | ||
5520 | |||
5521 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
5522 | </row> | ||
5523 | |||
5524 | <row> | ||
5525 | <entry>util-linux</entry> | ||
5526 | |||
5527 | <entry>2.29.1</entry> | ||
5528 | |||
5529 | <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration | ||
5530 | utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more | ||
5531 | important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message | ||
5532 | management filesystem creation and system login.</entry> | ||
5533 | |||
5534 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry> | ||
5535 | </row> | ||
5536 | |||
5537 | <row> | ||
5538 | <entry>util-macros</entry> | ||
5539 | |||
5540 | <entry>1.19.1</entry> | ||
5541 | |||
5542 | <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry> | ||
5543 | |||
5544 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5545 | </row> | ||
5546 | |||
5547 | <row> | ||
5548 | <entry>vim</entry> | ||
5549 | |||
5550 | <entry>8.0.0427</entry> | ||
5551 | |||
5552 | <entry>Vi IMproved - enhanced vi editor.</entry> | ||
5553 | |||
5554 | <entry>vim</entry> | ||
5555 | </row> | ||
5556 | |||
5557 | <row> | ||
5558 | <entry>volatile-binds</entry> | ||
5559 | |||
5560 | <entry>1.0</entry> | ||
5561 | |||
5562 | <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for | ||
5563 | read-only-rootfs</entry> | ||
5564 | |||
5565 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5566 | </row> | ||
5567 | |||
5568 | <row> | ||
5569 | <entry>xcb-proto</entry> | ||
5570 | |||
5571 | <entry>1.12</entry> | ||
5572 | |||
5573 | <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding | ||
5574 | (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint | ||
5575 | latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading | ||
5576 | support and extensibility.</entry> | ||
5577 | |||
5578 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5579 | </row> | ||
5580 | |||
5581 | <row> | ||
5582 | <entry>xextproto</entry> | ||
5583 | |||
5584 | <entry>7.3.0</entry> | ||
5585 | |||
5586 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X | ||
5587 | extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS | ||
5588 | Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD | ||
5589 | Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC | ||
5590 | XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also | ||
5591 | available.</entry> | ||
5592 | |||
5593 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5594 | </row> | ||
5595 | |||
5596 | <row> | ||
5597 | <entry>xineramaproto</entry> | ||
5598 | |||
5599 | <entry>1.2.1</entry> | ||
5600 | |||
5601 | <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the Xinerama | ||
5602 | extension. This extension is used for retrieving information about | ||
5603 | physical output devices which may be combined into a single | ||
5604 | logical X screen.</entry> | ||
5605 | |||
5606 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5607 | </row> | ||
5608 | |||
5609 | <row> | ||
5610 | <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry> | ||
5611 | |||
5612 | <entry>2.20</entry> | ||
5613 | |||
5614 | <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window. | ||
5615 | The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently | ||
5616 | released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window | ||
5617 | System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based | ||
5618 | systems.</entry> | ||
5619 | |||
5620 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5621 | </row> | ||
5622 | |||
5623 | <row> | ||
5624 | <entry>xmlto</entry> | ||
5625 | |||
5626 | <entry>0.0.28</entry> | ||
5627 | |||
5628 | <entry>A shell-script tool for converting XML files to various | ||
5629 | formats.</entry> | ||
5630 | |||
5631 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
5632 | </row> | ||
5633 | |||
5634 | <row> | ||
5635 | <entry>xproto</entry> | ||
5636 | |||
5637 | <entry>7.0.31</entry> | ||
5638 | |||
5639 | <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window | ||
5640 | System.</entry> | ||
5641 | |||
5642 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5643 | </row> | ||
5644 | |||
5645 | <row> | ||
5646 | <entry>xterm</entry> | ||
5647 | |||
5648 | <entry>325</entry> | ||
5649 | |||
5650 | <entry>xterm is the standard terminal emulator for the X Window | ||
5651 | System.</entry> | ||
5652 | |||
5653 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5654 | </row> | ||
5655 | |||
5656 | <row> | ||
5657 | <entry>xtrans</entry> | ||
5658 | |||
5659 | <entry>1.3.5</entry> | ||
5660 | |||
5661 | <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system | ||
5662 | and transport specific code into a single place. This API should | ||
5663 | be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window | ||
5664 | System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of | ||
5665 | transports and support for new platforms without making any | ||
5666 | changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface | ||
5667 | code.</entry> | ||
5668 | |||
5669 | <entry>MIT</entry> | ||
5670 | </row> | ||
5671 | |||
5672 | <row> | ||
5673 | <entry>xz</entry> | ||
5674 | |||
5675 | <entry>5.2.3</entry> | ||
5676 | |||
5677 | <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry> | ||
5678 | |||
5679 | <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry> | ||
5680 | </row> | ||
5681 | |||
5682 | <row> | ||
5683 | <entry>yajl</entry> | ||
5684 | |||
5685 | <entry>2.1.0</entry> | ||
5686 | |||
5687 | <entry>YAJL is a small event-driven (SAX-style) JSON parser | ||
5688 | written in ANSI C and a small validating JSON generator.</entry> | ||
5689 | |||
5690 | <entry>ISC</entry> | ||
5691 | </row> | ||
5692 | |||
5693 | <row> | ||
5694 | <entry>zisofs-tools</entry> | ||
5695 | |||
5696 | <entry>1.0.8</entry> | ||
5697 | |||
5698 | <entry>Utilities for creating compressed CD-ROM | ||
5699 | filesystems.</entry> | ||
5700 | |||
5701 | <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> | ||
5702 | </row> | ||
5703 | |||
5704 | <row> | ||
5705 | <entry>zlib</entry> | ||
5706 | |||
5707 | <entry>1.2.11</entry> | ||
5708 | |||
5709 | <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data | ||
5710 | compression library which is used by many different | ||
5711 | programs.</entry> | ||
5712 | |||
5713 | <entry>Zlib</entry> | ||
5714 | </row> | ||
5715 | </tbody> | ||
5716 | </tgroup> | ||
5717 | </informaltable> | ||
5718 | </section> | ||
5719 | |||
5720 | <section id="open_source_license"> | ||
5721 | <title>Open Source Licenses</title> | ||
5722 | |||
5723 | <section id="lic_0"> | ||
5724 | <title>AFL-2.0</title> | ||
5725 | |||
5726 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3047 | 5727 | ||
3048 | The Academic Free License | 5728 | The Academic Free License |
3049 | v. 2.0 | 5729 | v. 2.0 |
@@ -3184,11 +5864,13 @@ Permission is hereby granted to copy and distribute this license without modific | |||
3184 | This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its | 5864 | This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its |
3185 | copyright owner. | 5865 | copyright owner. |
3186 | 5866 | ||
3187 | </programlisting></para></section> | 5867 | </programlisting></para> |
5868 | </section> | ||
5869 | |||
5870 | <section id="lic_1"> | ||
5871 | <title>Apache-2.0</title> | ||
3188 | 5872 | ||
3189 | <section id="lic_1"> | 5873 | <para><programlisting> |
3190 | <title>Apache-2.0</title> | ||
3191 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3192 | 5874 | ||
3193 | 5875 | ||
3194 | Apache License | 5876 | Apache License |
@@ -3393,11 +6075,13 @@ copyright owner. | |||
3393 | See the License for the specific language governing permissions and | 6075 | See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
3394 | limitations under the License. | 6076 | limitations under the License. |
3395 | 6077 | ||
3396 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6078 | </programlisting></para> |
6079 | </section> | ||
3397 | 6080 | ||
3398 | <section id="lic_2"> | 6081 | <section id="lic_2"> |
3399 | <title>Artistic-1.0</title> | 6082 | <title>Artistic-1.0</title> |
3400 | <para><programlisting> | 6083 | |
6084 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3401 | 6085 | ||
3402 | The Artistic License | 6086 | The Artistic License |
3403 | Preamble | 6087 | Preamble |
@@ -3490,11 +6174,13 @@ FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. | |||
3490 | 6174 | ||
3491 | The End | 6175 | The End |
3492 | 6176 | ||
3493 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6177 | </programlisting></para> |
6178 | </section> | ||
6179 | |||
6180 | <section id="lic_3"> | ||
6181 | <title>BSD</title> | ||
3494 | 6182 | ||
3495 | <section id="lic_3"> | 6183 | <para><programlisting> |
3496 | <title>BSD</title> | ||
3497 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3498 | Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. | 6184 | Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. |
3499 | All rights reserved. | 6185 | All rights reserved. |
3500 | 6186 | ||
@@ -3521,11 +6207,13 @@ HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT | |||
3521 | LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY | 6207 | LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY |
3522 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF | 6208 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF |
3523 | SUCH DAMAGE. | 6209 | SUCH DAMAGE. |
3524 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6210 | </programlisting></para> |
6211 | </section> | ||
3525 | 6212 | ||
3526 | <section id="lic_4"> | 6213 | <section id="lic_4"> |
3527 | <title>BSD-2-Clause</title> | 6214 | <title>BSD-2-Clause</title> |
3528 | <para><programlisting> | 6215 | |
6216 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3529 | 6217 | ||
3530 | The FreeBSD Copyright | 6218 | The FreeBSD Copyright |
3531 | 6219 | ||
@@ -3553,11 +6241,13 @@ The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation are those | |||
3553 | authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either | 6241 | authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either |
3554 | expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. | 6242 | expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. |
3555 | 6243 | ||
3556 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6244 | </programlisting></para> |
6245 | </section> | ||
6246 | |||
6247 | <section id="lic_5"> | ||
6248 | <title>BSD-3-Clause</title> | ||
3557 | 6249 | ||
3558 | <section id="lic_5"> | 6250 | <para><programlisting> |
3559 | <title>BSD-3-Clause</title> | ||
3560 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3561 | 6251 | ||
3562 | Copyright (c) <YEAR>, <OWNER> | 6252 | Copyright (c) <YEAR>, <OWNER> |
3563 | All rights reserved. | 6253 | All rights reserved. |
@@ -3584,11 +6274,13 @@ CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING | |||
3584 | WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH | 6274 | WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH |
3585 | DAMAGE. | 6275 | DAMAGE. |
3586 | 6276 | ||
3587 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6277 | </programlisting></para> |
6278 | </section> | ||
3588 | 6279 | ||
3589 | <section id="lic_6"> | 6280 | <section id="lic_6"> |
3590 | <title>BSD-4-Clause</title> | 6281 | <title>BSD-4-Clause</title> |
3591 | <para><programlisting> | 6282 | |
6283 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3592 | 6284 | ||
3593 | Copyright (c) <year>, <copyright holder> | 6285 | Copyright (c) <year>, <copyright holder> |
3594 | All rights reserved. | 6286 | All rights reserved. |
@@ -3618,11 +6310,13 @@ ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT | |||
3618 | (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS | 6310 | (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS |
3619 | SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. | 6311 | SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
3620 | 6312 | ||
3621 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6313 | </programlisting></para> |
6314 | </section> | ||
6315 | |||
6316 | <section id="lic_7"> | ||
6317 | <title>BSL-1.0</title> | ||
3622 | 6318 | ||
3623 | <section id="lic_7"> | 6319 | <para><programlisting> |
3624 | <title>BSL-1.0</title> | ||
3625 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3626 | 6320 | ||
3627 | Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003 | 6321 | Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003 |
3628 | 6322 | ||
@@ -3648,11 +6342,13 @@ FOR ANY DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, | |||
3648 | ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER | 6342 | ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER |
3649 | DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. | 6343 | DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. |
3650 | 6344 | ||
3651 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6345 | </programlisting></para> |
6346 | </section> | ||
3652 | 6347 | ||
3653 | <section id="lic_8"> | 6348 | <section id="lic_8"> |
3654 | <title>Elfutils-Exception</title> | 6349 | <title>Elfutils-Exception</title> |
3655 | <para><programlisting> | 6350 | |
6351 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3656 | This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed | 6352 | This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed |
3657 | to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. | 6353 | to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. |
3658 | For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files | 6354 | For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files |
@@ -3665,20 +6361,24 @@ DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. | |||
3665 | libdw.h | 6361 | libdw.h |
3666 | libdwfl.h | 6362 | libdwfl.h |
3667 | 6363 | ||
3668 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6364 | </programlisting></para> |
6365 | </section> | ||
6366 | |||
6367 | <section id="lic_9"> | ||
6368 | <title>FSF-Unlimited</title> | ||
3669 | 6369 | ||
3670 | <section id="lic_9"> | 6370 | <para><programlisting> |
3671 | <title>FSF-Unlimited</title> | ||
3672 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3673 | Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. | 6371 | Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
3674 | This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation | 6372 | This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation |
3675 | gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, | 6373 | gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, |
3676 | with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. | 6374 | with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. |
3677 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6375 | </programlisting></para> |
6376 | </section> | ||
3678 | 6377 | ||
3679 | <section id="lic_10"> | 6378 | <section id="lic_10"> |
3680 | <title>FreeType</title> | 6379 | <title>FreeType</title> |
3681 | <para><programlisting> | 6380 | |
6381 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3682 | The FreeType Project LICENSE | 6382 | The FreeType Project LICENSE |
3683 | ---------------------------- | 6383 | ---------------------------- |
3684 | 6384 | ||
@@ -3849,11 +6549,13 @@ Legal Terms | |||
3849 | 6549 | ||
3850 | --- end of FTL.TXT --- | 6550 | --- end of FTL.TXT --- |
3851 | 6551 | ||
3852 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6552 | </programlisting></para> |
6553 | </section> | ||
6554 | |||
6555 | <section id="lic_11"> | ||
6556 | <title>GPL-1.0</title> | ||
3853 | 6557 | ||
3854 | <section id="lic_11"> | 6558 | <para><programlisting> |
3855 | <title>GPL-1.0</title> | ||
3856 | <para><programlisting> | ||
3857 | 6559 | ||
3858 | GNU General Public License, version 1 | 6560 | GNU General Public License, version 1 |
3859 | 6561 | ||
@@ -4106,11 +6808,13 @@ necessary. Here a sample; alter the names: | |||
4106 | 6808 | ||
4107 | That`s all there is to it! | 6809 | That`s all there is to it! |
4108 | 6810 | ||
4109 | </programlisting></para></section> | 6811 | </programlisting></para> |
6812 | </section> | ||
4110 | 6813 | ||
4111 | <section id="lic_12"> | 6814 | <section id="lic_12"> |
4112 | <title>GPL-2.0</title> | 6815 | <title>GPL-2.0</title> |
4113 | <para><programlisting> | 6816 | |
6817 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4114 | 6818 | ||
4115 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 6819 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
4116 | 6820 | ||
@@ -4409,16 +7113,18 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this | |||
4409 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this | 7113 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this |
4410 | License. | 7114 | License. |
4411 | 7115 | ||
4412 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7116 | </programlisting></para> |
7117 | </section> | ||
7118 | |||
7119 | <section id="lic_13"> | ||
7120 | <title>GPL-3.0</title> | ||
4413 | 7121 | ||
4414 | <section id="lic_13"> | 7122 | <para><programlisting> |
4415 | <title>GPL-3.0</title> | ||
4416 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4417 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 7123 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
4418 | 7124 | ||
4419 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 | 7125 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 |
4420 | 7126 | ||
4421 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> | 7127 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> |
4422 | 7128 | ||
4423 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, | 7129 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, |
4424 | but changing it is not allowed. | 7130 | but changing it is not allowed. |
@@ -4987,11 +7693,13 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this | |||
4987 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this | 7693 | what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this |
4988 | License. But first, please read | 7694 | License. But first, please read |
4989 | <http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>. | 7695 | <http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html>. |
4990 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7696 | </programlisting></para> |
7697 | </section> | ||
4991 | 7698 | ||
4992 | <section id="lic_14"> | 7699 | <section id="lic_14"> |
4993 | <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title> | 7700 | <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title> |
4994 | <para><programlisting> | 7701 | |
7702 | <para><programlisting> | ||
4995 | 7703 | ||
4996 | insert GPL v3 text here | 7704 | insert GPL v3 text here |
4997 | 7705 | ||
@@ -5047,11 +7755,13 @@ consistent with the licensing of the Independent Modules. | |||
5047 | The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that | 7755 | The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that |
5048 | third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. | 7756 | third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. |
5049 | 7757 | ||
5050 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7758 | </programlisting></para> |
7759 | </section> | ||
7760 | |||
7761 | <section id="lic_15"> | ||
7762 | <title>ICU</title> | ||
5051 | 7763 | ||
5052 | <section id="lic_15"> | 7764 | <para><programlisting> |
5053 | <title>ICU</title> | ||
5054 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5055 | COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE | 7765 | COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE |
5056 | 7766 | ||
5057 | Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others | 7767 | Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others |
@@ -5082,16 +7792,18 @@ Software without prior written authorization of the copyright holder. | |||
5082 | 7792 | ||
5083 | All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their | 7793 | All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their |
5084 | respective owners. | 7794 | respective owners. |
5085 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7795 | </programlisting></para> |
7796 | </section> | ||
5086 | 7797 | ||
5087 | <section id="lic_16"> | 7798 | <section id="lic_16"> |
5088 | <title>ISC</title> | 7799 | <title>ISC</title> |
5089 | <para><programlisting> | 7800 | |
7801 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5090 | 7802 | ||
5091 | ISC License: | 7803 | ISC License: |
5092 | 7804 | ||
5093 | Copyright © 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") | 7805 | Copyright © 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") |
5094 | Copyright © 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium | 7806 | Copyright © 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium |
5095 | 7807 | ||
5096 | Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with | 7808 | Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with |
5097 | or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this | 7809 | or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this |
@@ -5104,11 +7816,13 @@ DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN AC | |||
5104 | OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH | 7816 | OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH |
5105 | THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. | 7817 | THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. |
5106 | 7818 | ||
5107 | </programlisting></para></section> | 7819 | </programlisting></para> |
7820 | </section> | ||
7821 | |||
7822 | <section id="lic_17"> | ||
7823 | <title>LGPL-2.0</title> | ||
5108 | 7824 | ||
5109 | <section id="lic_17"> | 7825 | <para><programlisting> |
5110 | <title>LGPL-2.0</title> | ||
5111 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5112 | GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 7826 | GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
5113 | 7827 | ||
5114 | 7828 | ||
@@ -5692,11 +8406,13 @@ Ty Coon, President of Vice | |||
5692 | 8406 | ||
5693 | That's all there is to it! | 8407 | That's all there is to it! |
5694 | 8408 | ||
5695 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8409 | </programlisting></para> |
8410 | </section> | ||
5696 | 8411 | ||
5697 | <section id="lic_18"> | 8412 | <section id="lic_18"> |
5698 | <title>LGPL-2.1</title> | 8413 | <title>LGPL-2.1</title> |
5699 | <para><programlisting> | 8414 | |
8415 | <para><programlisting> | ||
5700 | 8416 | ||
5701 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 8417 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
5702 | 8418 | ||
@@ -6124,16 +8840,18 @@ signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1990 | |||
6124 | Ty Coon, President of Vice | 8840 | Ty Coon, President of Vice |
6125 | That`s all there is to it! | 8841 | That`s all there is to it! |
6126 | 8842 | ||
6127 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8843 | </programlisting></para> |
8844 | </section> | ||
8845 | |||
8846 | <section id="lic_19"> | ||
8847 | <title>LGPL-3.0</title> | ||
6128 | 8848 | ||
6129 | <section id="lic_19"> | 8849 | <para><programlisting> |
6130 | <title>LGPL-3.0</title> | ||
6131 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6132 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE | 8850 | GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE |
6133 | 8851 | ||
6134 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 | 8852 | Version 3, 29 June 2007 |
6135 | 8853 | ||
6136 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> | 8854 | Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. <http://fsf.org/> |
6137 | 8855 | ||
6138 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, | 8856 | Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, |
6139 | but changing it is not allowed. | 8857 | but changing it is not allowed. |
@@ -6264,11 +8982,13 @@ If the Library as you received it specifies that a proxy can decide whether futu | |||
6264 | versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public | 8982 | versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public |
6265 | statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose | 8983 | statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose |
6266 | that version for the Library. | 8984 | that version for the Library. |
6267 | </programlisting></para></section> | 8985 | </programlisting></para> |
8986 | </section> | ||
6268 | 8987 | ||
6269 | <section id="lic_20"> | 8988 | <section id="lic_20"> |
6270 | <title>Libpng</title> | 8989 | <title>Libpng</title> |
6271 | <para><programlisting> | 8990 | |
8991 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6272 | 8992 | ||
6273 | This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of | 8993 | This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of |
6274 | any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is | 8994 | any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is |
@@ -6381,11 +9101,13 @@ Glenn Randers-Pehrson | |||
6381 | glennrp at users.sourceforge.net | 9101 | glennrp at users.sourceforge.net |
6382 | December 9, 2010 | 9102 | December 9, 2010 |
6383 | 9103 | ||
6384 | </programlisting></para></section> | 9104 | </programlisting></para> |
9105 | </section> | ||
9106 | |||
9107 | <section id="lic_21"> | ||
9108 | <title>MIT</title> | ||
6385 | 9109 | ||
6386 | <section id="lic_21"> | 9110 | <para><programlisting> |
6387 | <title>MIT</title> | ||
6388 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6389 | 9111 | ||
6390 | MIT License | 9112 | MIT License |
6391 | 9113 | ||
@@ -6409,11 +9131,13 @@ LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, | |||
6409 | OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN | 9131 | OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN |
6410 | THE SOFTWARE. | 9132 | THE SOFTWARE. |
6411 | 9133 | ||
6412 | </programlisting></para></section> | 9134 | </programlisting></para> |
9135 | </section> | ||
6413 | 9136 | ||
6414 | <section id="lic_22"> | 9137 | <section id="lic_22"> |
6415 | <title>MPL-1.0</title> | 9138 | <title>MPL-1.0</title> |
6416 | <para><programlisting> | 9139 | |
9140 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6417 | 9141 | ||
6418 | MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE | 9142 | MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE |
6419 | Version 1.0 | 9143 | Version 1.0 |
@@ -6706,11 +9430,13 @@ All Rights Reserved. | |||
6706 | 9430 | ||
6707 | Contributor(s): ______________________________________.`` | 9431 | Contributor(s): ______________________________________.`` |
6708 | 9432 | ||
6709 | </programlisting></para></section> | 9433 | </programlisting></para> |
9434 | </section> | ||
9435 | |||
9436 | <section id="lic_23"> | ||
9437 | <title>MPL-2.0</title> | ||
6710 | 9438 | ||
6711 | <section id="lic_23"> | 9439 | <para><programlisting> |
6712 | <title>MPL-2.0</title> | ||
6713 | <para><programlisting> | ||
6714 | Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 | 9440 | Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 |
6715 | ================================== | 9441 | ================================== |
6716 | 9442 | ||
@@ -7084,11 +9810,13 @@ Exhibit B - "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses" Notice | |||
7084 | 9810 | ||
7085 | This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as | 9811 | This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as |
7086 | defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. | 9812 | defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. |
7087 | </programlisting></para></section> | 9813 | </programlisting></para> |
9814 | </section> | ||
7088 | 9815 | ||
7089 | <section id="lic_24"> | 9816 | <section id="lic_24"> |
7090 | <title>OASIS</title> | 9817 | <title>OASIS</title> |
7091 | <para><programlisting> | 9818 | |
9819 | <para><programlisting> | ||
7092 | Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute the DocBook DTD and | 9820 | Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute the DocBook DTD and |
7093 | its accompanying documentation for any purpose and without fee is | 9821 | its accompanying documentation for any purpose and without fee is |
7094 | hereby granted in perpetuity, provided that the above copyright | 9822 | hereby granted in perpetuity, provided that the above copyright |
@@ -7102,11 +9830,13 @@ Exhibit B - "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses" Notice | |||
7102 | additional notations, label your DTD as a variant of DocBook. See | 9830 | additional notations, label your DTD as a variant of DocBook. See |
7103 | the maintenance documentation for more information. | 9831 | the maintenance documentation for more information. |
7104 | 9832 | ||
7105 | </programlisting></para></section> | 9833 | </programlisting></para> |
9834 | </section> | ||
9835 | |||
9836 | <section id="lic_25"> | ||
9837 | <title>OpenSSL</title> | ||
7106 | 9838 | ||
7107 | <section id="lic_25"> | 9839 | <para><programlisting> |
7108 | <title>OpenSSL</title> | ||
7109 | <para><programlisting> | ||
7110 | 9840 | ||
7111 | OpenSSL License | 9841 | OpenSSL License |
7112 | 9842 | ||
@@ -7223,17 +9953,21 @@ put under another distribution licence | |||
7223 | 9953 | ||
7224 | 9954 | ||
7225 | 9955 | ||
7226 | </programlisting></para></section> | 9956 | </programlisting></para> |
9957 | </section> | ||
7227 | 9958 | ||
7228 | <section id="lic_26"> | 9959 | <section id="lic_26"> |
7229 | <title>PD</title> | 9960 | <title>PD</title> |
7230 | <para><programlisting> | 9961 | |
9962 | <para><programlisting> | ||
7231 | This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License | 9963 | This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License |
7232 | </programlisting></para></section> | 9964 | </programlisting></para> |
9965 | </section> | ||
9966 | |||
9967 | <section id="lic_27"> | ||
9968 | <title>Python-2.0</title> | ||
7233 | 9969 | ||
7234 | <section id="lic_27"> | 9970 | <para><programlisting> |
7235 | <title>Python-2.0</title> | ||
7236 | <para><programlisting> | ||
7237 | 9971 | ||
7238 | PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 | 9972 | PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 |
7239 | -------------------------------------------- | 9973 | -------------------------------------------- |
@@ -7426,11 +10160,13 @@ WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN | |||
7426 | ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT | 10160 | ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT |
7427 | OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. | 10161 | OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. |
7428 | 10162 | ||
7429 | </programlisting></para></section> | 10163 | </programlisting></para> |
10164 | </section> | ||
7430 | 10165 | ||
7431 | <section id="lic_28"> | 10166 | <section id="lic_28"> |
7432 | <title>Sleepycat</title> | 10167 | <title>Sleepycat</title> |
7433 | <para><programlisting> | 10168 | |
10169 | <para><programlisting> | ||
7434 | 10170 | ||
7435 | The Sleepycat License | 10171 | The Sleepycat License |
7436 | Copyright (c) 1990-1999 | 10172 | Copyright (c) 1990-1999 |
@@ -7521,11 +10257,13 @@ LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY | |||
7521 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF | 10257 | OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF |
7522 | SUCH DAMAGE. | 10258 | SUCH DAMAGE. |
7523 | 10259 | ||
7524 | </programlisting></para></section> | 10260 | </programlisting></para> |
10261 | </section> | ||
10262 | |||
10263 | <section id="lic_29"> | ||
10264 | <title>Zlib</title> | ||
7525 | 10265 | ||
7526 | <section id="lic_29"> | 10266 | <para><programlisting> |
7527 | <title>Zlib</title> | ||
7528 | <para><programlisting> | ||
7529 | 10267 | ||
7530 | zlib License | 10268 | zlib License |
7531 | 10269 | ||
@@ -7547,11 +10285,13 @@ zlib License | |||
7547 | 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. | 10285 | 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. |
7548 | 10286 | ||
7549 | 10287 | ||
7550 | </programlisting></para></section> | 10288 | </programlisting></para> |
10289 | </section> | ||
7551 | 10290 | ||
7552 | <section id="lic_30"> | 10291 | <section id="lic_30"> |
7553 | <title>tcl</title> | 10292 | <title>tcl</title> |
7554 | <para><programlisting> | 10293 | |
10294 | <para><programlisting> | ||
7555 | This software is copyrighted by the Regents of the University of | 10295 | This software is copyrighted by the Regents of the University of |
7556 | California, Sun Microsystems, Inc., Scriptics Corporation, ActiveState | 10296 | California, Sun Microsystems, Inc., Scriptics Corporation, ActiveState |
7557 | Corporation and other parties. The following terms apply to all files | 10297 | Corporation and other parties. The following terms apply to all files |
@@ -7592,11 +10332,13 @@ Government shall have only "Restricted Rights" as defined in Clause | |||
7592 | authors grant the U.S. Government and others acting in its behalf | 10332 | authors grant the U.S. Government and others acting in its behalf |
7593 | permission to use and distribute the software in accordance with the | 10333 | permission to use and distribute the software in accordance with the |
7594 | terms specified in this license. | 10334 | terms specified in this license. |
7595 | </programlisting></para></section> | 10335 | </programlisting></para> |
10336 | </section> | ||
10337 | |||
10338 | <section id="lic_31"> | ||
10339 | <title>unfs3</title> | ||
7596 | 10340 | ||
7597 | <section id="lic_31"> | 10341 | <para><programlisting> |
7598 | <title>unfs3</title> | ||
7599 | <para><programlisting> | ||
7600 | UNFS3 user-space NFSv3 server | 10342 | UNFS3 user-space NFSv3 server |
7601 | (C) 2003, Pascal Schmidt <unfs3-server@ewetel.net> | 10343 | (C) 2003, Pascal Schmidt <unfs3-server@ewetel.net> |
7602 | 10344 | ||
@@ -7621,11 +10363,13 @@ OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, | |||
7621 | WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR | 10363 | WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR |
7622 | OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF | 10364 | OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF |
7623 | ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. | 10365 | ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
7624 | </programlisting></para></section> | 10366 | </programlisting></para> |
10367 | </section> | ||
7625 | 10368 | ||
7626 | <section id="lic_32"> | 10369 | <section id="lic_32"> |
7627 | <title>vim</title> | 10370 | <title>vim</title> |
7628 | <para><programlisting> | 10371 | |
10372 | <para><programlisting> | ||
7629 | VIM LICENSE | 10373 | VIM LICENSE |
7630 | 10374 | ||
7631 | I) There are no restrictions on distributing unmodified copies of Vim except | 10375 | I) There are no restrictions on distributing unmodified copies of Vim except |
@@ -7708,10 +10452,11 @@ IV) It is not allowed to remove this license from the distribution of the Vim | |||
7708 | === | 10452 | === |
7709 | Read more about this license at | 10453 | Read more about this license at |
7710 | http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/uganda.html#license | 10454 | http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/uganda.html#license |
7711 | </programlisting></para></section> | 10455 | </programlisting></para> |
7712 | 10456 | </section> | |
7713 | </section> | 10457 | </section> |
7714 | <section id="proprietary_license"> | 10458 | |
7715 | <title>Proprietary Licenses</title> | 10459 | <section id="proprietary_license"> |
7716 | </section> | 10460 | <title>Proprietary Licenses</title> |
7717 | </chapter> | 10461 | </section> |
10462 | </chapter> \ No newline at end of file | ||
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/about_release.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/about_release.xml index 9aa4866..6ca8568 100644 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/about_release.xml +++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/about_release.xml | |||
@@ -4,19 +4,19 @@ | |||
4 | <chapter id="relinfo-about-release"> | 4 | <chapter id="relinfo-about-release"> |
5 | <title>About This Release</title> | 5 | <title>About This Release</title> |
6 | 6 | ||
7 | <para>This release of Enea NFV Access <xi:include | 7 | <para>Enea NFV Access <xi:include href="eltf_params_updated.xml" |
8 | href="eltf_params_updated.xml" xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" | 8 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" |
9 | xpointer="element(EneaLinux_REL_VER/1)" /> provides a publicly available | 9 | xpointer="element(EneaLinux_REL_VER/1)" /> adds support for Element ODM |
10 | Enea NFV Access distribution for a selected set of targets.<remark>INFO | 10 | integration and updates certain components for better |
11 | <emphasis role="bold">eltf_params_updated.xml</emphasis> contains many | 11 | performance.<remark>INFO <emphasis |
12 | parameters in the book, also in the open source books, and MUST be created | 12 | role="bold">eltf_params_updated.xml</emphasis> contains many parameters in |
13 | FROM <emphasis role="bold">eltf_params_template.xml</emphasis>. The | 13 | the book, also in the open source books, and MUST be created FROM <emphasis |
14 | parameters are automatically used in the books, via xi:include statements, | 14 | role="bold">eltf_params_template.xml</emphasis>. The parameters are |
15 | similar to how parameters from pardoc-distro.xml are included in the book. | 15 | automatically used in the books, via xi:include statements, similar to how |
16 | Read the file <emphasis | 16 | parameters from pardoc-distro.xml are included in the book. Read the file |
17 | role="bold">eltf_params_updated_template_how_to_use.txt</emphasis> for | 17 | <emphasis role="bold">eltf_params_updated_template_how_to_use.txt</emphasis> |
18 | important details about formats and how to do! The idea is that ELTF will | 18 | for important details about formats and how to do! The idea is that ELTF |
19 | auto-create/update it.</remark></para> | 19 | will auto-create/update it.</remark></para> |
20 | 20 | ||
21 | <section id="release-content"> | 21 | <section id="release-content"> |
22 | <title>NFV Access Release content</title> | 22 | <title>NFV Access Release content</title> |
@@ -60,37 +60,36 @@ | |||
60 | -- enea-glibc-x86_64-enea-image-virtualization-guest-sdk / | 60 | -- enea-glibc-x86_64-enea-image-virtualization-guest-sdk / |
61 | -core2-64-toolchain-7.0.sh | 61 | -core2-64-toolchain-7.0.sh |
62 | /* self-extracting archive installing cross-compilation | 62 | /* self-extracting archive installing cross-compilation |
63 | toolchain for the guest (QEMU x86-64) */ | 63 | toolchain for the guest (QEMU x86-64) */</programlisting> |
64 | </programlisting> | ||
65 | 64 | ||
66 | <para>For each combination of image and target, the following set of | 65 | <para>For each combination of image and target, the following set of |
67 | artifacts is available:</para> | 66 | artifacts is available:</para> |
68 | 67 | ||
69 | <programlisting>-- bzImage | 68 | <programlisting>-- bzImage |
70 | /* kernel image */ | 69 | /* kernel image */ |
71 | -- bzImage-<target>.bin | 70 | -- bzImage-target.bin |
72 | /* kernel image, same as above */ | 71 | /* kernel image, same as above */ |
73 | -- config-<target>.config | 72 | -- config-target.config |
74 | /* kernel configuration file */ | 73 | /* kernel configuration file */ |
75 | -- core-image-minimal-initramfs-<target>.cpio.gz | 74 | -- core-image-minimal-initramfs-target.cpio.gz |
76 | /* cpio archive of the initramfs */ | 75 | /* cpio archive of the initramfs */ |
77 | -- core-image-minimal-initramfs-<target>.qemuboot.conf | 76 | -- core-image-minimal-initramfs-target.qemuboot.conf |
78 | /* qemu config file for the initramfs image */ | 77 | /* qemu config file for the initramfs image */ |
79 | -- <image-name>-<target>.ext4 | 78 | -- image-name-target.ext4 |
80 | /* EXT4 image of the rootfs */ | 79 | /* EXT4 image of the rootfs */ |
81 | -- <image-name>-<target>.hddimg | 80 | -- image-name-target.hddimg |
82 | /* msdos filesystem containing syslinux, kernel, initrd and rootfs image */ | 81 | /* msdos filesystem containing syslinux, kernel, initrd and rootfs image */ |
83 | -- <image-name>-<target>.iso | 82 | -- image-name-target.iso |
84 | /* CD .iso image */ | 83 | /* CD .iso image */ |
85 | -- <image-name>-<target>.qemuboot.conf | 84 | -- image-name-target.qemuboot.conf |
86 | /* qemu config file for the image */ | 85 | /* qemu config file for the image */ |
87 | -- <image-name>-<target>.tar.gz | 86 | -- image-name-target.tar.gz |
88 | /* tar archive of the image */ | 87 | /* tar archive of the image */ |
89 | -- <image-name>-<target>.wic | 88 | -- image-name-target.wic |
90 | /* Wic image */ | 89 | /* Wic image */ |
91 | -- microcode.cpio | 90 | -- microcode.cpio |
92 | /* kernel microcode data */ | 91 | /* kernel microcode data */ |
93 | -- modules-<target>.tgz | 92 | -- modules-target.tgz |
94 | /* external kernel modules */ | 93 | /* external kernel modules */ |
95 | -- ovmf.*.qcow2 | 94 | -- ovmf.*.qcow2 |
96 | /* ovmf firmware for uefi support in qemu */ | 95 | /* ovmf firmware for uefi support in qemu */ |
@@ -105,21 +104,18 @@ | |||
105 | <section id="relinfo-supported-host-environment"> | 104 | <section id="relinfo-supported-host-environment"> |
106 | <title>Supported Host Environment</title> | 105 | <title>Supported Host Environment</title> |
107 | 106 | ||
108 | <itemizedlist> | 107 | <para>The following environments have been validated as host environments |
109 | <para>The following environments have been validated as host | 108 | for Enea NFV Access 1.0: <emphasis role="bold">Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, |
110 | environments for Enea NFV Access 1.0:</para> | 109 | 64bit</emphasis>.</para> |
111 | 110 | ||
112 | <listitem> | 111 | <para><remark>Hardcoded now in this XML file. Might be moved to the |
113 | <para>Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, 64bit<remark>Hardcoded now in this XML file. | 112 | parameter file later.</remark><remark>INFO Below is a complete section |
114 | Might be moved to the parameter file later.</remark><remark>INFO Below | 113 | with ID "eltf-target-tables-section" included from |
115 | is a complete section with ID "eltf-target-tables-section" included | 114 | elft_params_updated.xml. It contains a variable number of target tables |
116 | from elft_params_updated.xml. It contains a variable number of target | 115 | and the section title should be "Supported Targets with Parameters". It |
117 | tables and the section title should be "Supported Targets with | 116 | has have a short sentence about what it is in the beginning. The subtitles |
118 | Parameters". It has have a short sentence about what it is in the | 117 | shall have the directory name of the target in the |
119 | beginning. The subtitles shall have the directory name of the target | 118 | manifest.</remark></para> |
120 | in the manifest.</remark></para> | ||
121 | </listitem> | ||
122 | </itemizedlist> | ||
123 | 119 | ||
124 | <para>For more details on system requirements and how to configure the | 120 | <para>For more details on system requirements and how to configure the |
125 | host environment, please see <xref | 121 | host environment, please see <xref |
@@ -133,11 +129,14 @@ | |||
133 | <section id="relinfo-provided-sdk"> | 129 | <section id="relinfo-provided-sdk"> |
134 | <title>Provided Toolchain(s) (SDK)</title> | 130 | <title>Provided Toolchain(s) (SDK)</title> |
135 | 131 | ||
136 | <para>The SDK contains toolchains supporting cross-compilation of | 132 | <para>The provided SDK contains toolchains supporting cross-compilation of |
137 | applications for the targets on an x86_64b host. <remark>(Possibly add | 133 | applications for both the host and the guest targets on an x86_64 |
138 | this in later) See the <trademark class="registered">Enea</trademark> NFV | 134 | machine.</para> |
139 | Access Application Development Guide for information on how to build and | 135 | |
140 | install a toolchain.</remark></para> | 136 | <para><remark>(Possibly add this in later) See the <trademark |
137 | class="registered">Enea</trademark> NFV Access Application Development | ||
138 | Guide for information on how to build and install a | ||
139 | toolchain.</remark></para> | ||
141 | </section> | 140 | </section> |
142 | 141 | ||
143 | <section id="relinfo-documentation"> | 142 | <section id="relinfo-documentation"> |
@@ -146,31 +145,50 @@ | |||
146 | <para>Enea NFV Access is provided with the following set of | 145 | <para>Enea NFV Access is provided with the following set of |
147 | documents:</para> | 146 | documents:</para> |
148 | 147 | ||
149 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact"> | 148 | <itemizedlist> |
149 | <listitem> | ||
150 | <para>Enea NFV Access Release Information - This document, describing | ||
151 | the Enea NFV Access release content.</para> | ||
152 | </listitem> | ||
153 | |||
154 | <listitem> | ||
155 | <para>Enea NFV Access Guide - A document describing how to use Enea | ||
156 | NFV Access, as well as use cases and benchmark results.</para> | ||
157 | </listitem> | ||
158 | |||
159 | <listitem> | ||
160 | <para>Enea NFV Access Open Source Report - A document containing the | ||
161 | open source and license information pertaining to packages provided | ||
162 | with Enea NFV Access.</para> | ||
163 | </listitem> | ||
164 | |||
150 | <listitem> | 165 | <listitem> |
151 | <para>Enea NFV Access Release Information – This document, | 166 | <para>Enea NFV Access Developer's Open Source Report - A document |
152 | describing the Enea NFV Access release content.</para> | 167 | containing open source and license information pertaining to packages |
168 | provided with Enea NFV Access for application developers.</para> | ||
153 | </listitem> | 169 | </listitem> |
154 | 170 | ||
155 | <listitem> | 171 | <listitem> |
156 | <para>Enea NFV Access Guide – A document describing how to use | 172 | <para>Enea NFV Access Guest Open Source Report - A document containing |
157 | Enea NFV Access, as well as use cases and benchmark results.</para> | 173 | open source and license information concerning packages provided with |
174 | Enea NFV Access for a guest target.</para> | ||
158 | </listitem> | 175 | </listitem> |
159 | 176 | ||
160 | <listitem> | 177 | <listitem> |
161 | <para>Enea NFV Access Open Source Report – A document containing | 178 | <para>Enea NFV Access Guest Developer's Open Source Report - A |
162 | the open source and license information pertaining to packages | 179 | document detailing the open source and license information of packages |
163 | provided with Enea NFV Access.</para> | 180 | provided with Enea NFV Access for application developers on a guest |
181 | target.</para> | ||
164 | </listitem> | 182 | </listitem> |
165 | 183 | ||
166 | <listitem> | 184 | <listitem> |
167 | <para>Enea NFV Access Test Report – The document that summarizes | 185 | <para>Enea NFV Access Test Report - The document that summarizes the |
168 | the test results for the Enea NFV Access release.</para> | 186 | test results for the Enea NFV Access release.</para> |
169 | </listitem> | 187 | </listitem> |
170 | 188 | ||
171 | <listitem> | 189 | <listitem> |
172 | <para>Enea NFV Access Security Report – The document that lists | 190 | <para>Enea NFV Access Security Report - The document that lists all |
173 | all security fixes included in the Enea NFV Access release.</para> | 191 | security fixes included in the Enea NFV Access release.</para> |
174 | </listitem> | 192 | </listitem> |
175 | </itemizedlist> | 193 | </itemizedlist> |
176 | </section> | 194 | </section> |
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/book.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/book.xml index f98751b..1ce7046 100644 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/book.xml +++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/book.xml | |||
@@ -10,7 +10,9 @@ | |||
10 | <subtitle>Release Version <xi:include href="eltf_params_updated.xml" | 10 | <subtitle>Release Version <xi:include href="eltf_params_updated.xml" |
11 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" | 11 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" |
12 | xpointer="element(EneaLinux_REL_VER/1)" /></subtitle> | 12 | xpointer="element(EneaLinux_REL_VER/1)" /></subtitle> |
13 | |||
13 | <!-- OLINKDBPATH_USED_BY_XMLMIND ../../s_docbuild/olinkdb --> | 14 | <!-- OLINKDBPATH_USED_BY_XMLMIND ../../s_docbuild/olinkdb --> |
15 | |||
14 | <xi:include href="../../s_docbuild/template/docsrc_common/bookinfo_userdoc.xml" | 16 | <xi:include href="../../s_docbuild/template/docsrc_common/bookinfo_userdoc.xml" |
15 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" /> | 17 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" /> |
16 | 18 | ||
@@ -23,9 +25,6 @@ | |||
23 | <xi:include href="getting_enea_nfv_access.xml" | 25 | <xi:include href="getting_enea_nfv_access.xml" |
24 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" /> | 26 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" /> |
25 | 27 | ||
26 | <!-- <xi:include href="build_boot_generated.xml" | ||
27 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" /> --> | ||
28 | |||
29 | <xi:include href="main_changes.xml" | 28 | <xi:include href="main_changes.xml" |
30 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" /> | 29 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" /> |
31 | 30 | ||
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/build_boot_template.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/build_boot_template.xml deleted file mode 100644 index e39dd81..0000000 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/build_boot_template.xml +++ /dev/null | |||
@@ -1,34 +0,0 @@ | |||
1 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> | ||
2 | <!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN" | ||
3 | "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd"> | ||
4 | <chapter id="relinfo-build-boot"> | ||
5 | <title>Target Specific Instructions</title> | ||
6 | |||
7 | <para>If the source has been fetched (<xref | ||
8 | linkend="relinfo-getting-source" />), there will be a target specific README | ||
9 | file containing the build and boot instructions. To make it easier for the | ||
10 | reader, the contents of this file(s) have been extracted into the following | ||
11 | sections.</para> | ||
12 | |||
13 | <note> | ||
14 | <para>The build process duration may vary and be longer than expected in | ||
15 | some cases, depending on the individual build resources and parameters of | ||
16 | each target/machine supported in this release.</para> | ||
17 | </note> | ||
18 | |||
19 | <para><remark>NOTE: Only EDIT THE TEMPLATE build_boot_template.xml file here | ||
20 | and also only edit the manifest template ".README" (name starting by a dot)! | ||
21 | A new build_boot_generated.xml file is created from the template and | ||
22 | sections are added below automatically from the README files for each target | ||
23 | when building the book! Only in the template file you see a line below with | ||
24 | SCRIPT_...._HERE and the text telling that this is a template | ||
25 | file.</remark></para> | ||
26 | |||
27 | <para>SCRIPT_INCLUDES_BUILD_BOOT_SECTIONS_HERE</para> | ||
28 | |||
29 | <para><emphasis role="bold">This is a template file which you can edit. When | ||
30 | the book is built, a new XML chapter file is created where the above part of | ||
31 | this file is copied to the new XML file and all from the line above is | ||
32 | replaced automatically by build and boot sections from the README | ||
33 | files!</emphasis></para> | ||
34 | </chapter> \ No newline at end of file | ||
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/eltf_params_updated.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/eltf_params_updated.xml index 7be944e..bc2acb3 100644 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/eltf_params_updated.xml +++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/eltf_params_updated.xml | |||
@@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ export PATH=~/bin:$PATH</programlisting></para> | |||
42 | correct also compared to the "previous" REL VER in pardoc-distro.xml | 42 | correct also compared to the "previous" REL VER in pardoc-distro.xml |
43 | "prev_baseline".</bridgehead> | 43 | "prev_baseline".</bridgehead> |
44 | 44 | ||
45 | <para id="EneaLinux_REL_VER"><phrase>1.0</phrase></para> | 45 | <para id="EneaLinux_REL_VER"><phrase>1.1</phrase></para> |
46 | 46 | ||
47 | <para id="Yocto_VER"><phrase>2.1</phrase></para> | 47 | <para id="Yocto_VER"><phrase>2.1</phrase></para> |
48 | 48 | ||
@@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ repo sync</programlisting></para> | |||
128 | <entry>Poky version</entry> | 128 | <entry>Poky version</entry> |
129 | 129 | ||
130 | <entry>Git-commit-id: | 130 | <entry>Git-commit-id: |
131 | 75ca53211488a3e268037a44ee2a7ac5c7181bd2</entry> | 131 | f01b909a266498853e6b3f10e6b39f2d95148129</entry> |
132 | </row> | 132 | </row> |
133 | 133 | ||
134 | <row> | 134 | <row> |
@@ -146,8 +146,7 @@ repo sync</programlisting></para> | |||
146 | <row> | 146 | <row> |
147 | <entry>Supported Drivers</entry> | 147 | <entry>Supported Drivers</entry> |
148 | 148 | ||
149 | <entry>Ethernet, I2C, SPI, PCI Express, USB, Flash, | 149 | <entry>Ethernet, RTC, UART</entry> |
150 | SD/SDHC/SDXC, RTC</entry> | ||
151 | </row> | 150 | </row> |
152 | </tbody> | 151 | </tbody> |
153 | </tgroup> | 152 | </tgroup> |
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/getting_enea_nfv_access.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/getting_enea_nfv_access.xml index ccbf8d3..ecc9d65 100644 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/getting_enea_nfv_access.xml +++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/getting_enea_nfv_access.xml | |||
@@ -4,207 +4,27 @@ | |||
4 | <chapter id="relinfo-getting-enea-nfv-access"> | 4 | <chapter id="relinfo-getting-enea-nfv-access"> |
5 | <title>Getting Enea NFV Access</title> | 5 | <title>Getting Enea NFV Access</title> |
6 | 6 | ||
7 | <para>Enea NFV Access is available as both pre-built binary images and | 7 | <para>Enea NFV Access releases are available as pre-built binaries ready for |
8 | source code. Both serve a specific purpose and each have their advantages. | 8 | download on the <ulink |
9 | However, using the pre-built binary images allows for getting up and running | 9 | url="https://portal.enea.com/login/?redirect_to=https%3A%2F%2Fportal.enea.com%2F">Enea |
10 | faster. Please refer to the sections below for details on how to get Enea | 10 | Download Portal</ulink>. Log in using the credentials provided by |
11 | NFV Access as pre-built binary images or source code.</para> | 11 | Enea.</para> |
12 | 12 | ||
13 | <remark>fix this para above to not sound so EL influenced</remark> | 13 | <para>Using the menu at the top, browse to the NFV section, which will |
14 | 14 | provide access to a <literal>Files</literal> section and an <literal>Online | |
15 | <section id="relinfo-getting-pre-built-images"> | 15 | Documentation</literal> section. The <literal>Files</literal> section lists |
16 | <title>Getting Pre-built Binaries</title> | 16 | each Enea NFV release version as a separate download package. Clicking on |
17 | 17 | any of the release packages will provide further details such as the date | |
18 | <para>Enea NFV Access pre-built binaries are available for download on | 18 | when it was made available, the file size and the changelog. Most |
19 | <ulink | 19 | importantly, it provides access to the download links.</para> |
20 | url="https://portal.enea.com/login/?redirect_to=https%3A%2F%2Fportal.enea.com%2F">Enea | 20 | |
21 | Download Portal</ulink>. Log in using the credentials provided. Using the | 21 | <para>Each archive is mirrored in several places, geographically. Choose the |
22 | menu, browse to the <emphasis role="bold">Linux</emphasis> section. You | 22 | archive in the region closest to you for better download speeds. For details |
23 | will now have access to the <emphasis role="bold">Files</emphasis> section | 23 | about the contents of the release package, please refer to section <xref |
24 | and the <emphasis role="bold">Online Documentation</emphasis> | 24 | linkend="release-content"/>.</para> |
25 | section.</para> | 25 | |
26 | 26 | <para>The <literal>Online documentation</literal> section provides quick | |
27 | <remark>fix this para above to not sound so EL influenced</remark> | 27 | access to the documents delivered with the release. For details about the |
28 | 28 | books delivered and their purpose, please refer to <xref | |
29 | <para>The Files section lists each Enea NFV Access distribution, one for | 29 | linkend="relinfo-documentation"/>.</para> |
30 | each version and profile, as a separate download package. Clicking on the | ||
31 | name of the distribution will open a new page, which presents further | ||
32 | details about the content of the release and a list of downloadable | ||
33 | archives, one for each hardware target included in the release. Each | ||
34 | archive provides the following content:</para> | ||
35 | |||
36 | <itemizedlist> | ||
37 | <listitem> | ||
38 | <para><emphasis>images</emphasis> directory – this directory | ||
39 | includes the binary image files needed to boot the target with Enea | ||
40 | NFV Access. This includes the kernel, the root file system, device | ||
41 | tree, etc.</para> | ||
42 | </listitem> | ||
43 | |||
44 | <listitem> | ||
45 | <para><emphasis>sdk</emphasis> directory – this directory | ||
46 | includes the installer for the SDK.</para> | ||
47 | </listitem> | ||
48 | |||
49 | <listitem> | ||
50 | <para><emphasis>rpm/deb</emphasis> directory – this directory | ||
51 | contains all the packages included in the distribution in rpm/deb | ||
52 | format, which can be installed using the package manager.</para> | ||
53 | </listitem> | ||
54 | </itemizedlist> | ||
55 | |||
56 | <para>For faster downloads, each archive is mirrored in several places, | ||
57 | geographically. Choose the archive in the region closest to you.</para> | ||
58 | |||
59 | <para>The Documentation section lists all the documents delivered with the | ||
60 | release:</para> | ||
61 | |||
62 | <itemizedlist> | ||
63 | <listitem condition="hidden"> | ||
64 | <para><emphasis role="bold">Enea NFV Access Developer’s | ||
65 | Guide</emphasis> -intended for Enea NFV Access developers, who want to | ||
66 | configure and build customized NFV Access kernel images for embedded | ||
67 | system targets, using the Yocto configuration and build system.</para> | ||
68 | </listitem> | ||
69 | |||
70 | <listitem condition="hidden"> | ||
71 | <para><emphasis role="bold">Enea NFV Access Application Developer's | ||
72 | Guide</emphasis> - dedicated to Enea NFV Access application | ||
73 | developers, who want to build and run applications.</para> | ||
74 | </listitem> | ||
75 | |||
76 | <listitem> | ||
77 | <para><emphasis role="bold">Enea NFV Access Guide</emphasis> - | ||
78 | provides further information meant to get the most out of the | ||
79 | virtualization features.</para> | ||
80 | </listitem> | ||
81 | |||
82 | <listitem> | ||
83 | <para><emphasis role="bold">Enea NFV Access Open Source | ||
84 | Report</emphasis> - contains the open source and license information | ||
85 | pertaining to packages provided with this release of Enea NFV | ||
86 | Access.</para> | ||
87 | </listitem> | ||
88 | |||
89 | <listitem> | ||
90 | <para><emphasis role="bold">Enea NFV Access Eclipse Open Source | ||
91 | Report</emphasis> - contains the open source and license information | ||
92 | pertaining to the Eclipse package provided with this release of Enea | ||
93 | NFV Access.</para> | ||
94 | </listitem> | ||
95 | |||
96 | <listitem> | ||
97 | <para><emphasis role="bold">Enea NFV Access Release Info</emphasis> - | ||
98 | provides information about the current released distribution for a | ||
99 | selected set of targets, along with installation requirements and | ||
100 | procedures.</para> | ||
101 | </listitem> | ||
102 | </itemizedlist> | ||
103 | </section> | ||
104 | |||
105 | <section condition="hidden" id="relinfo-getting-source"> | ||
106 | <title>Getting the Sources</title> | ||
107 | |||
108 | <para>Enea NFV Access sources are available for cloning from a set of Git | ||
109 | repositories on <ulink url="https://git.enea.com">git.enea.com</ulink>. | ||
110 | Since Enea NFV Access requires multiple repositories, Google Repo tool is | ||
111 | used in order to manage configurations and make the cloning step simpler. | ||
112 | Google Repo tool uses files, known as manifests, which store a list of | ||
113 | tuples (repository URL, version). The Repo tool is then used to traverse | ||
114 | the list of tuples in the manifest file and clone the specified versions | ||
115 | of each repository. See <ulink | ||
116 | url="https://code.google.com/p/git-repo/">https://code.google.com/p/git-repo/</ulink> | ||
117 | for more info.</para> | ||
118 | |||
119 | <section id="getting-source-code-step-one"> | ||
120 | <title>Get access to git.enea.com</title> | ||
121 | |||
122 | <para>In order to get access to git.enea.com, a ssh key is required for | ||
123 | Git authentication. If you don't already have such a key, follow the | ||
124 | steps below to generate one:</para> | ||
125 | |||
126 | <orderedlist> | ||
127 | <listitem> | ||
128 | <para>Generate the ssh key pair:</para> | ||
129 | |||
130 | <programlisting>$ ssh-keygen -t rsa</programlisting> | ||
131 | |||
132 | <para>When asked for a password, just press Enter. This will create | ||
133 | two files in the .ssh directory in your home directory.</para> | ||
134 | |||
135 | <programlisting>id_rsa | ||
136 | id_rsa.pub</programlisting> | ||
137 | </listitem> | ||
138 | |||
139 | <listitem> | ||
140 | <para>Copy the public key into an authorized_keys file:</para> | ||
141 | |||
142 | <programlisting>$ cat id_rsa.pub >> authorized_keys</programlisting> | ||
143 | </listitem> | ||
144 | </orderedlist> | ||
145 | |||
146 | <para>Once these steps are done and you have a valid ssh key pair, send | ||
147 | the public key, <emphasis>id_rsa.pub</emphasis>, via email to | ||
148 | <email>mailto:git_support@list.enea.se</email> in order to get access to | ||
149 | <ulink url="https://git.enea.com">git.enea.com</ulink>.</para> | ||
150 | </section> | ||
151 | |||
152 | <section id="getting-source-code-step-two"> | ||
153 | <title>Get Sources</title> | ||
154 | |||
155 | <para>To use the Repo tool to download the sources for Enea NFV Access, | ||
156 | do the following:</para> | ||
157 | |||
158 | <orderedlist> | ||
159 | <listitem condition="hidden"> | ||
160 | <para>Make sure that the repo tool is installed. If not, do the | ||
161 | following: <remark>Below is include of ID | ||
162 | "eltf-getting-repo-install-command" from | ||
163 | eltf_params_updated.xml</remark></para> | ||
164 | |||
165 | <xi:include href="eltf_params_updated.xml" | ||
166 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" | ||
167 | xpointer="element(eltf-getting-repo-install-command/1)" /> | ||
168 | </listitem> | ||
169 | |||
170 | <listitem> | ||
171 | <para>Define the MACHINE from one of the targets listed | ||
172 | here,<remark>Below is the "machine_list" programlisting in | ||
173 | machine_list_generated.xml created by the make system by extracting | ||
174 | from the manifest</remark></para> | ||
175 | |||
176 | <xi:include href="machine_list_generated.xml" | ||
177 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" | ||
178 | xpointer="element(machine-list/1)" /> | ||
179 | </listitem> | ||
180 | |||
181 | <listitem> | ||
182 | <para>Then use the repo command below:<remark> Below is include of | ||
183 | ID "eltf-repo-cloning-enea-linux" from eltf_params_updated.xml. Here | ||
184 | the $MACHINE shall be given!</remark></para> | ||
185 | |||
186 | <xi:include href="eltf_params_updated.xml" | ||
187 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" | ||
188 | xpointer="element(eltf-repo-cloning-enea-linux/1)" /> | ||
189 | </listitem> | ||
190 | </orderedlist> | ||
191 | |||
192 | <para>Once the source code is downloaded, the current directory will | ||
193 | contain a README file with instructions on how to build the distro and | ||
194 | boot the machine you choose. For ease of use, these instructions are | ||
195 | also copied into this document, see <xref | ||
196 | linkend="relinfo-build-boot" />.</para> | ||
197 | |||
198 | <para>It's not necessary to explicitly clone the manifest repository | ||
199 | since that is done automatically by the repo tool. To see the current | ||
200 | manifest, use the following command:</para> | ||
201 | |||
202 | <programlisting>$ repo manifest</programlisting> | ||
203 | |||
204 | <remark>The UG should be updated with instructions on how to add | ||
205 | customizations. That section should also contain more info about the | ||
206 | manifest: the manifest templates, using a branch instead of the tag EL6, | ||
207 | etc. When this is done a reference from here should be added.</remark> | ||
208 | </section> | ||
209 | </section> | ||
210 | </chapter> \ No newline at end of file | 30 | </chapter> \ No newline at end of file |
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/known_bugs_and_limitations.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/known_bugs_and_limitations.xml index e3f068a..c4f42ac 100644 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/known_bugs_and_limitations.xml +++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/known_bugs_and_limitations.xml | |||
@@ -10,14 +10,14 @@ | |||
10 | when they will be included by the open source project. Remaining issues are | 10 | when they will be included by the open source project. Remaining issues are |
11 | listed below.<remark>INFO: The <emphasis role="bold">Release-Specific | 11 | listed below.<remark>INFO: The <emphasis role="bold">Release-Specific |
12 | Problems</emphasis> section further down is generated from JIRA with | 12 | Problems</emphasis> section further down is generated from JIRA with |
13 | gen_known_issues.py, but that script is HARDCODED with affectedversion "Enea | 13 | gen_known_issues.py, but that script is HARDCODED with affectedversion |
14 | NFV Access 1.0" and needs to be adapted when a release info for another ENFV | 14 | "EL7_3-virtualization" and needs to be adapted when a release info for |
15 | Access version changes.</remark></para> | 15 | another ENFV Access version changes.</remark></para> |
16 | 16 | ||
17 | <section id="release-specific-limitations"> | 17 | <section id="release-specific-limitations"> |
18 | <title>Release-Specific Limitations</title> | 18 | <title>Release-Specific Limitations</title> |
19 | 19 | ||
20 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact"> | 20 | <itemizedlist> |
21 | <listitem> | 21 | <listitem> |
22 | <para><emphasis role="bold">PDF navigation</emphasis>: When using | 22 | <para><emphasis role="bold">PDF navigation</emphasis>: When using |
23 | links to open other PDFs, or jump to another place in the same PDF, | 23 | links to open other PDFs, or jump to another place in the same PDF, |
@@ -27,10 +27,6 @@ | |||
27 | As a workaround, open the HTML version of the | 27 | As a workaround, open the HTML version of the |
28 | document.<remark>LXCR-3283</remark></para> | 28 | document.<remark>LXCR-3283</remark></para> |
29 | </listitem> | 29 | </listitem> |
30 | |||
31 | <listitem> | ||
32 | <para></para> | ||
33 | </listitem> | ||
34 | </itemizedlist> | 30 | </itemizedlist> |
35 | </section> | 31 | </section> |
36 | 32 | ||
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/main_changes.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/main_changes.xml index e3dff3b..f032b65 100644 --- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/main_changes.xml +++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-release-info/doc/main_changes.xml | |||
@@ -4,43 +4,42 @@ | |||
4 | <chapter id="relinfo-changes"> | 4 | <chapter id="relinfo-changes"> |
5 | <title>Main Changes</title> | 5 | <title>Main Changes</title> |
6 | 6 | ||
7 | <para>N/A. This is the first release of Enea NFV Access.</para> | 7 | <para>This chapter provides information about the new features added in the |
8 | current release, as well as details on the provided packages and the | ||
9 | backwards compatibility with previous versions of Enea NFV Access.</para> | ||
8 | 10 | ||
9 | <section id="relinfo-changes-other"> | 11 | <section id="relinfo-changes-other"> |
10 | <title>New Features</title> | 12 | <title>New Features</title> |
11 | 13 | ||
12 | <remark>Based in the Jira query: 'project = CPDX and fixVersion = "Enea | 14 | <itemizedlist> |
13 | NFV Access 1.0"'</remark> | 15 | <listitem> |
16 | <para>Added support for integrating Element ODM</para> | ||
17 | </listitem> | ||
14 | 18 | ||
15 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact"> | ||
16 | <listitem> | 19 | <listitem> |
17 | <para></para> | 20 | <para>Updated the DPDK package to version x.x</para> |
18 | </listitem> | 21 | </listitem> |
19 | 22 | ||
20 | <listitem> | 23 | <listitem> |
21 | <para></para> | 24 | <para>Updated the ODP package to version y.y</para> |
22 | </listitem> | 25 | </listitem> |
23 | </itemizedlist> | 26 | </itemizedlist> |
24 | 27 | ||
25 | <para>For details, see the Git logs for the repositories specified in the | 28 | <para>For details, see the Git logs for the repositories specified in the |
26 | manifest files. See <xref linkend="relinfo-getting-enea-nfv-access" /> for | 29 | manifest files. See <xref linkend="relinfo-getting-enea-nfv-access"/> for |
27 | more inf on repos and the manifest.</para> | 30 | more information on repos and the manifest.</para> |
28 | </section> | 31 | </section> |
29 | 32 | ||
30 | <section id="packages"> | 33 | <section id="packages"> |
31 | <title>Provided Packages</title> | 34 | <title>Provided Packages</title> |
32 | 35 | ||
33 | <para></para> | 36 | <para>For more information on the packages provided, please refer to the |
37 | Enea NFV Access Open Source Reports provided with this release.</para> | ||
34 | </section> | 38 | </section> |
35 | 39 | ||
36 | <section id="relinfo-backward-compat"> | 40 | <section id="relinfo-backward-compat"> |
37 | <title>Compatibility</title> | 41 | <title>Compatibility</title> |
38 | 42 | ||
39 | <para></para> | 43 | <remark>FIXME, THIS NEEDS INFO OR ELSE SHOULD BE HIDDEN</remark> |
40 | </section> | 44 | </section> |
41 | |||
42 | <!-- | ||
43 | <xi:include href="pkgdiff_generated.xml" | ||
44 | xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" /> | ||
45 | --> | ||
46 | </chapter> \ No newline at end of file | 45 | </chapter> \ No newline at end of file |
diff --git a/doc/gen_known_issues.py b/doc/gen_known_issues.py index d552769..65af23f 100644 --- a/doc/gen_known_issues.py +++ b/doc/gen_known_issues.py | |||
@@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ def jira_query(query): | |||
58 | conditions = ("project=LXCR", | 58 | conditions = ("project=LXCR", |
59 | "issueType=bug", | 59 | "issueType=bug", |
60 | "resolution=Unresolved", | 60 | "resolution=Unresolved", |
61 | 'affectedversion="Enea NFV Access 1.0"' | 61 | 'affectedversion="EL7_3-virtualization"' |
62 | ) | 62 | ) |
63 | 63 | ||
64 | bugs = [] | 64 | bugs = [] |