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authorMiruna Paun <Miruna.Paun@enea.com>2017-10-11 18:37:25 +0200
committerMiruna Paun <Miruna.Paun@enea.com>2017-10-11 18:37:25 +0200
commit19488aacc5852a47294f4b644da971a74f40f6d2 (patch)
tree962ee67f58e47b1ab0fcae68b5b6bdf03e53c818 /doc/book-enea-nfv-access-open-source
parentec334b3da53471e66fb4cb07920fb6614895b06b (diff)
downloadnfv-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>
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/book-enea-nfv-access-open-source')
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@@ -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
12supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package 11supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package
13specific documentation.--> 12specific 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
2310The Academic Free License 4480The 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
2446This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its 4616This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its
2447copyright owner. 4617copyright 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
2664The Artistic License 4838The Artistic License
2665Preamble 4839Preamble
@@ -2752,11 +4926,13 @@ FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
2752 4926
2753The End 4927The 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>
2760Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. 4936Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California.
2761All rights reserved. 4937All rights reserved.
2762 4938
@@ -2783,11 +4959,13 @@ HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
2783LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 4959LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
2784OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 4960OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
2785SUCH DAMAGE. 4961SUCH 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
2792The FreeBSD Copyright 4970The FreeBSD Copyright
2793 4971
@@ -2815,11 +4993,13 @@ The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation are those
2815authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either 4993authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either
2816expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. 4994expressed 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
2824Copyright (c) &lt;YEAR&gt;, &lt;OWNER&gt; 5004Copyright (c) &lt;YEAR&gt;, &lt;OWNER&gt;
2825All rights reserved. 5005All rights reserved.
@@ -2846,11 +5026,13 @@ CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
2846WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH 5026WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
2847DAMAGE. 5027DAMAGE.
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
2855Copyright (c) &lt;year&gt;, &lt;copyright holder&gt; 5037Copyright (c) &lt;year&gt;, &lt;copyright holder&gt;
2856All rights reserved. 5038All 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
2881SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 5063SOFTWARE, 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
2889Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003 5073Boost 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,
2910ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER 5094ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
2911DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. 5095DEALINGS 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
2919Eclipse Public License - v 1.0 5105Eclipse 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
3102legal action under this Agreement more than one year after the cause of action arose. 5288legal action under this Agreement more than one year after the cause of action arose.
3103Each party waives its rights to a jury trial in any resulting litigation. 5289Each 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>
3127Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 5317Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3128This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation 5318This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
3129gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, 5319gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
3130with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. 5320with 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
3312GNU General Public License, version 1 5506GNU General Public License, version 1
3313 5507
@@ -3560,11 +5754,13 @@ necessary. Here a sample; alter the names:
3560 5754
3561That`s all there is to it! 5755That`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
3569GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 5765GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
3570 5766
@@ -3863,16 +6059,18 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this
3863what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this 6059what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this
3864License. 6060License.
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>
3871GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 6069GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
3872 6070
3873Version 3, 29 June 2007 6071Version 3, 29 June 2007
3874 6072
3875Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt; 6073Copyright Â&copy; 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt;
3876 6074
3877Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, 6075Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document,
3878but changing it is not allowed. 6076but changing it is not allowed.
@@ -4441,11 +6639,13 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this
4441what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this 6639what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this
4442License. But first, please read 6640License. But first, please read
4443&lt;http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html&gt;. 6641&lt;http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html&gt;.
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
4450insert GPL v3 text here 6650insert GPL v3 text here
4451 6651
@@ -4501,11 +6701,13 @@ consistent with the licensing of the Independent Modules.
4501The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that 6701The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that
4502third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. 6702third-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>
4509COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE 6711COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE
4510 6712
4511Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others 6713Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others
@@ -4536,16 +6738,18 @@ Software without prior written authorization of the copyright holder.
4536 6738
4537All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their 6739All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their
4538respective owners. 6740respective 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
4545ISC License: 6749ISC License:
4546 6750
4547Copyright &#169; 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") 6751Copyright &copy; 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC")
4548Copyright &#169; 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium 6752Copyright &copy; 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium
4549 6753
4550Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with 6754Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with
4551or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this 6755or 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
4558OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH 6762OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH
4559THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. 6763THE 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>
4566GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 6772GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
4567 6773
4568 6774
@@ -5146,11 +7352,13 @@ Ty Coon, President of Vice
5146 7352
5147That's all there is to it! 7353That'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
5155GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 7363GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
5156 7364
@@ -5578,16 +7786,18 @@ signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1990
5578Ty Coon, President of Vice 7786Ty Coon, President of Vice
5579That`s all there is to it! 7787That`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>
5586GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 7796GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
5587 7797
5588Version 3, 29 June 2007 7798Version 3, 29 June 2007
5589 7799
5590Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt; 7800Copyright Â&copy; 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt;
5591 7801
5592Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, 7802Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document,
5593but changing it is not allowed. 7803but changing it is not allowed.
@@ -5718,11 +7928,13 @@ If the Library as you received it specifies that a proxy can decide whether futu
5718versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public 7928versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public
5719statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose 7929statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose
5720that version for the Library. 7930that 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
5727This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of 7939This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of
5728any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is 7940any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is
@@ -5835,11 +8047,13 @@ Glenn Randers-Pehrson
5835glennrp at users.sourceforge.net 8047glennrp at users.sourceforge.net
5836December 9, 2010 8048December 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
5844MIT License 8058MIT License
5845 8059
@@ -5863,11 +8077,13 @@ LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
5863OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN 8077OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
5864THE SOFTWARE. 8078THE 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
5872MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE 8088MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE
5873Version 1.0 8089Version 1.0
@@ -6160,11 +8376,13 @@ All Rights Reserved.
6160 8376
6161Contributor(s): ______________________________________.`` 8377Contributor(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>
6168Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 8386Mozilla 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
6547NTP License (NTP) 8767NTP License (NTP)
6548 8768
@@ -6557,11 +8777,13 @@ of the software without specific, written prior permission. (TrademarkedName) ma
6557representations about the suitability this software for any purpose. It is provided 8777representations 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
6584OpenSSL License 8808OpenSSL 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>
6704This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License 8930This 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
6711PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 8939PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2
6712-------------------------------------------- 8940--------------------------------------------
@@ -6899,11 +9127,13 @@ WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
6899ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT 9127ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT
6900OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. 9128OF 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
6908The Sleepycat License 9138The Sleepycat License
6909Copyright (c) 1990-1999 9139Copyright (c) 1990-1999
@@ -6994,11 +9224,13 @@ LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
6994OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 9224OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
6995SUCH DAMAGE. 9225SUCH 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
7003zlib License 9235zlib 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>