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authorSona Sarmadi <sona.sarmadi@enea.com>2017-12-08 10:55:38 +0100
committerSona Sarmadi <sona.sarmadi@enea.com>2017-12-08 10:55:38 +0100
commit7253de7a4dc7b8e83dd3b3c79bbb837c510ba4d4 (patch)
treec73357b0133b18c22d56f78964c02996d89be969 /doc/book-enea-nfv-access-open-source
parent3d43372666f0a0780bccc9584b49b29ffa11f4aa (diff)
downloadnfv-access-documentation-7253de7a4dc7b8e83dd3b3c79bbb837c510ba4d4.tar.gz
Updated licenses files for nfv-access release 1.1.1
Signed-off-by: Sona Sarmadi <sona.sarmadi@enea.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/book-enea-nfv-access-open-source')
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@@ -1,3167 +1,1651 @@
1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> 1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN" 2<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
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">
6 7
7 <section id="licenses_packages"> 8 <title>Packages</title>
8 <title>Packages</title>
9 9
10 <!--This chapter contains a generated list of all packages that Enea Linux 10
11 <!--This chapter contains a generated list of all packages that Enea Linux
11supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package 12supports, e.g. busybox, with a short explanatory blurb and links to package
12specific documentation.--> 13specific documentation.-->
13 14
14 <informaltable> 15 <informaltable>
15 <tgroup cols="4"> 16 <tgroup cols="4">
16 <colspec colwidth="2*" /> 17 <colspec colwidth="2*"/>
17 18 <colspec colwidth="1*"/>
18 <colspec colwidth="2*" /> 19 <colspec colwidth="5*"/>
19 20 <colspec colwidth="2*"/>
20 <colspec colwidth="6*" /> 21
21 22 <thead>
22 <colspec colwidth="2*" /> 23 <row>
23 24 <entry align="center">Package Name</entry>
24 <thead> 25 <entry align="center">Version</entry>
25 <row> 26 <entry align="center">Description</entry>
26 <entry align="center">Package Name</entry> 27 <entry align="center">License</entry>
27 28 </row>
28 <entry align="center">Version</entry> 29 </thead>
29 30
30 <entry align="center">Description</entry> 31 <tbody valign="top">
31 32<row>
32 <entry align="center">License</entry> 33 <entry>acl</entry>
33 </row> 34 <entry>2.2.52</entry>
34 </thead> 35 <entry>Utilities for managing POSIX Access Control Lists.</entry>
35 36 <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry>
36 <tbody valign="top"> 37</row>
37 <row> 38<row>
38 <entry>acl</entry> 39 <entry>apache2</entry>
39 40 <entry>2.4.25</entry>
40 <entry>2.2.52</entry> 41 <entry>The Apache HTTP Server is a powerful efficient and extensible web server.</entry>
41 42 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
42 <entry>Utilities for managing POSIX Access Control Lists.</entry> 43</row>
43 44<row>
44 <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> 45 <entry>apr-util</entry>
45 </row> 46 <entry>1.5.4</entry>
46 47 <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) companion library.</entry>
47 <row> 48 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
48 <entry>apache2</entry> 49</row>
49 50<row>
50 <entry>2.4.25</entry> 51 <entry>apr</entry>
51 52 <entry>1.5.2</entry>
52 <entry>The Apache HTTP Server is a powerful efficient and 53 <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) library.</entry>
53 extensible web server.</entry> 54 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
54 55</row>
55 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 56<row>
56 </row> 57 <entry>apt</entry>
57 58 <entry>1.2.12</entry>
58 <row> 59 <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry>
59 <entry>apr-util</entry> 60 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
60 61</row>
61 <entry>1.5.4</entry> 62<row>
62 63 <entry>attr</entry>
63 <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) companion library.</entry> 64 <entry>2.4.47</entry>
64 65 <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended attributes.</entry>
65 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 66 <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry>
66 </row> 67</row>
67 68<row>
68 <row> 69 <entry>aufs-util</entry>
69 <entry>apr</entry> 70 <entry>3.14</entry>
70 71 <entry>Tools for managing AUFS mounts.</entry>
71 <entry>1.5.2</entry> 72 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
72 73</row>
73 <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) library.</entry> 74<row>
74 75 <entry>autoconf-archive</entry>
75 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 76 <entry>2016.09.16</entry>
76 </row> 77 <entry>autoconf-archive-native version 2016.09.16-r0.</entry>
77 78 <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
78 <row> 79</row>
79 <entry>apt</entry> 80<row>
80 81 <entry>autoconf</entry>
81 <entry>1.2.12</entry> 82 <entry>2.69</entry>
82 83 <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>
83 <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> 84 <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
84 85</row>
85 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 86<row>
86 </row> 87 <entry>automake</entry>
87 88 <entry>1.15</entry>
88 <row> 89 <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry>
89 <entry>attr</entry> 90 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
90 91</row>
91 <entry>2.4.47</entry> 92<row>
92 93 <entry>avahi</entry>
93 <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended 94 <entry>0.6.32</entry>
94 attributes.</entry> 95 <entry>"Avahi is a fully LGPL framework for Multicast DNS Service Discovery. It allows programs to publish and discover services and hosts running on a local network with no specific configuration. This tool implements IPv4LL ""Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses"" (IETF RFC3927) a protocol for automatic IP address configuration from the link-local 169.254.0.0/16 range without the need for a central server."</entry>
95 96 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
96 <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> 97</row>
97 </row> 98<row>
98 99 <entry>base-files</entry>
99 <row> 100 <entry>3.0.14</entry>
100 <entry>aufs-util</entry> 101 <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for the system.</entry>
101 102 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
102 <entry>3.14</entry> 103</row>
103 104<row>
104 <entry>Tools for managing AUFS mounts.</entry> 105 <entry>base-passwd</entry>
105 106 <entry>3.5.29</entry>
106 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 107 <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry>
107 </row> 108 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
108 109</row>
109 <row> 110<row>
110 <entry>autoconf-archive</entry> 111 <entry>bash-completion</entry>
111 112 <entry>2.5</entry>
112 <entry>2016.09.16</entry> 113 <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry>
113 114 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
114 <entry>autoconf-archive-native version 2016.09.16-r0.</entry> 115</row>
115 116<row>
116 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> 117 <entry>bash</entry>
117 </row> 118 <entry>4.3.30</entry>
118 119 <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry>
119 <row> 120 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
120 <entry>autoconf</entry> 121</row>
121 122<row>
122 <entry>2.69</entry> 123 <entry>bc</entry>
123 124 <entry>1.06</entry>
124 <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce 125 <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry>
125 shell scripts to automatically configure software source code 126 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
126 packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package 127</row>
127 from a template file that lists the operating system features that 128<row>
128 the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> 129 <entry>bind</entry>
129 130 <entry>9.10.3-P3</entry>
130 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> 131 <entry>ISC Internet Domain Name Server.</entry>
131 </row> 132 <entry> ISC, BSD</entry>
132 133</row>
133 <row> 134<row>
134 <entry>automake</entry> 135 <entry>binutils-cross-aarch64</entry>
135 136 <entry>2.28</entry>
136 <entry>1.15</entry> 137 <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>
137 138 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
138 <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating 139</row>
139 `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. 140<row>
140 Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> 141 <entry>binutils</entry>
141 142 <entry>2.28</entry>
142 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 143 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry>
143 </row> 144 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
144 145</row>
145 <row> 146<row>
146 <entry>avahi</entry> 147 <entry>bison</entry>
147 148 <entry>3.0.4</entry>
148 <entry>0.6.32</entry> 149 <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>
149 150 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
150 <entry>"Avahi is a fully LGPL framework for Multicast DNS Service 151</row>
151 Discovery. It allows programs to publish and discover services and 152<row>
152 hosts running on a local network with no specific configuration. 153 <entry>bjam</entry>
153 This tool implements IPv4LL ""Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 154 <entry>1.63.0</entry>
154 Link-Local Addresses"" (IETF RFC3927) a protocol for automatic IP 155 <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry>
155 address configuration from the link-local 169.254.0.0/16 range 156 <entry> BSL-1.0, MIT</entry>
156 without the need for a central server."</entry> 157</row>
157 158<row>
158 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 159 <entry>boost</entry>
159 </row> 160 <entry>1.63.0</entry>
160 161 <entry>Free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.</entry>
161 <row> 162 <entry> BSL-1.0, MIT</entry>
162 <entry>base-files</entry> 163</row>
163 164<row>
164 <entry>3.0.14</entry> 165 <entry>bridge-utils</entry>
165 166 <entry>1.5</entry>
166 <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory 167 <entry>Tools for ethernet bridging.</entry>
167 structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for 168 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
168 the system.</entry> 169</row>
169 170<row>
170 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 171 <entry>btrfs-tools</entry>
171 </row> 172 <entry>4.9.1</entry>
172 173 <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>
173 <row> 174 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
174 <entry>base-passwd</entry> 175</row>
175 176<row>
176 <entry>3.5.29</entry> 177 <entry>busybox</entry>
177 178 <entry>1.24.1</entry>
178 <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd 179 <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>
179 and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep 180 <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry>
180 the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> 181</row>
181 182<row>
182 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 183 <entry>bzip2</entry>
183 </row> 184 <entry>1.0.6</entry>
184 185 <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>
185 <row> 186 <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry>
186 <entry>bash-completion</entry> 187</row>
187 188<row>
188 <entry>2.5</entry> 189 <entry>ca-certificates</entry>
189 190 <entry>20161130</entry>
190 <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> 191 <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>
191 192 <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry>
192 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 193</row>
193 </row> 194<row>
194 195 <entry>cdrkit</entry>
195 <row> 196 <entry>1.1.11</entry>
196 <entry>bash</entry> 197 <entry>CD/DVD command line tools.</entry>
197 198 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
198 <entry>4.3.30</entry> 199</row>
199 200<row>
200 <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> 201 <entry>cmake</entry>
201 202 <entry>3.7.2</entry>
202 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 203 <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry>
203 </row> 204 <entry>BSD</entry>
204 205</row>
205 <row> 206<row>
206 <entry>bc</entry> 207 <entry>compose-file</entry>
207 208 <entry>3.0</entry>
208 <entry>1.06</entry> 209 <entry>Parser for the Compose file format (version 3)</entry>
209 210 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
210 <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> 211</row>
211 212<row>
212 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 213 <entry>containerd-docker</entry>
213 </row> 214 <entry>0.2.3</entry>
214 215 <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>
215 <row> 216 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
216 <entry>bind</entry> 217</row>
217 218<row>
218 <entry>9.10.3-P3</entry> 219 <entry>coreutils</entry>
219 220 <entry>8.26</entry>
220 <entry>ISC Internet Domain Name Server.</entry> 221 <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>
221 222 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
222 <entry>ISC, BSD</entry> 223</row>
223 </row> 224<row>
224 225 <entry>cross-localedef</entry>
225 <row> 226 <entry>2.25</entry>
226 <entry>binutils-cross-aarch64</entry> 227 <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry>
227 228 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
228 <entry>2.28</entry> 229</row>
229 230<row>
230 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main 231 <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry>
231 ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also 232 <entry>1.8</entry>
232 includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into 233 <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry>
233 filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and 234 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
234 extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy 235</row>
235 (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object 236<row>
236 information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> 237 <entry>curl</entry>
237 238 <entry>7.53.1</entry>
238 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 239 <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL transfers.</entry>
239 </row> 240 <entry>MIT</entry>
240 241</row>
241 <row> 242<row>
242 <entry>binutils</entry> 243 <entry>db</entry>
243 244 <entry>5.3.28</entry>
244 <entry>2.28</entry> 245 <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry>
245 246 <entry>Sleepycat</entry>
246 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main 247</row>
247 ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also 248<row>
248 includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into 249 <entry>dbus-glib</entry>
249 filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and 250 <entry>0.108</entry>
250 extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy 251 <entry>GLib bindings for the D-Bus message bus that integrate the D-Bus library with the GLib thread abstraction and main loop.</entry>
251 (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object 252 <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
252 information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> 253</row>
253 254<row>
254 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 255 <entry>dbus-test</entry>
255 </row> 256 <entry>1.10.14</entry>
256 257 <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing only).</entry>
257 <row> 258 <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
258 <entry>bison</entry> 259</row>
259 260<row>
260 <entry>3.0.4</entry> 261 <entry>dbus</entry>
261 262 <entry>1.10.14</entry>
262 <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts 263 <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>
263 an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser 264 <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
264 for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all 265</row>
265 properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no 266<row>
266 change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with 267 <entry>debianutils</entry>
267 little trouble.</entry> 268 <entry>4.8.1</entry>
268 269 <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry>
269 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 270 <entry> GPL-2.0</entry>
270 </row> 271</row>
271 272<row>
272 <row> 273 <entry>depmodwrapper</entry>
273 <entry>bjam</entry> 274 <entry>1.0</entry>
274 275 <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency indexer.</entry>
275 <entry>1.63.0</entry> 276 <entry>MIT</entry>
276 277</row>
277 <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry> 278<row>
278 279 <entry>dhcp</entry>
279 <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> 280 <entry>4.3.5</entry>
280 </row> 281 <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>
281 282 <entry>ISC</entry>
282 <row> 283</row>
283 <entry>boost</entry> 284<row>
284 285 <entry>diffutils</entry>
285 <entry>1.63.0</entry> 286 <entry>3.5</entry>
286 287 <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch files.</entry>
287 <entry>Free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.</entry> 288 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
288 289</row>
289 <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> 290<row>
290 </row> 291 <entry>dnsmasq</entry>
291 292 <entry>2.76</entry>
292 <row> 293 <entry>Lightweight easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP server.</entry>
293 <entry>bridge-utils</entry> 294 <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
294 295</row>
295 <entry>1.5</entry> 296<row>
296 297 <entry>docker</entry>
297 <entry>Tools for ethernet bridging.</entry> 298 <entry>1.13.0</entry>
298 299 <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>
299 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 300 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
300 </row> 301</row>
301 302<row>
302 <row> 303 <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry>
303 <entry>btrfs-tools</entry> 304 <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry>
304 305 <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry>
305 <entry>4.9.1</entry> 306 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
306 307</row>
307 <entry>Btrfs is a new copy on write filesystem for Linux aimed at 308<row>
308 implementing advanced features while focusing on fault tolerance 309 <entry>dpdk</entry>
309 repair and easy administration. This package contains utilities 310 <entry>17.08</entry>
310 (mkfs fsck btrfsctl) used to work with btrfs and an utility 311 <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry>
311 (btrfs-convert) to make a btrfs filesystem from an ext3.</entry> 312 <entry> BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
312 313</row>
313 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 314<row>
314 </row> 315 <entry>dpkg</entry>
315 316 <entry>1.18.10</entry>
316 <row> 317 <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry>
317 <entry>busybox</entry> 318 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
318 319</row>
319 <entry>1.24.1</entry> 320<row>
320 321 <entry>dtc</entry>
321 <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX 322 <entry>1.4.2</entry>
322 utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist 323 <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry>
323 replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU 324 <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry>
324 fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have 325</row>
325 fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the 326<row>
326 options that are included provide the expected functionality and 327 <entry>e2fsprogs</entry>
327 behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a 328 <entry>1.43.4</entry>
328 fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded 329 <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry>
329 system.</entry> 330 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry>
330 331</row>
331 <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> 332<row>
332 </row> 333 <entry>ebtables</entry>
333 334 <entry>2.0.10-4</entry>
334 <row> 335 <entry>Utility for basic Ethernet frame filtering on a Linux bridge advanced logging MAC DNAT/SNAT and brouting.</entry>
335 <entry>bzip2</entry> 336 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
336 337</row>
337 <entry>1.0.6</entry> 338<row>
338 339 <entry>elfutils</entry>
339 <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler 340 <entry>0.168</entry>
340 block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. 341 <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object files.</entry>
341 Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by 342 <entry> GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry>
342 more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the 343</row>
343 performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> 344<row>
344 345 <entry>enea-nfv-access</entry>
345 <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry> 346 <entry>1.0</entry>
346 </row> 347 <entry>Image for the host side of the Enea NFV Access Platform</entry>
347 348 <entry>MIT</entry>
348 <row> 349</row>
349 <entry>ca-certificates</entry> 350<row>
350 351 <entry>expat</entry>
351 <entry>20161130</entry> 352 <entry>2.2.0</entry>
352 353 <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>
353 <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow 354 <entry>MIT</entry>
354 SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL 355</row>
355 connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> 356<row>
356 357 <entry>file</entry>
357 <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> 358 <entry>5.30</entry>
358 </row> 359 <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents and prints a description if a match is found.</entry>
359 360 <entry>BSD</entry>
360 <row> 361</row>
361 <entry>cdrkit</entry> 362<row>
362 363 <entry>findutils</entry>
363 <entry>1.1.11</entry> 364 <entry>4.6.0</entry>
364 365 <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>
365 <entry>CD/DVD command line tools.</entry> 366 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
366 367</row>
367 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 368<row>
368 </row> 369 <entry>flex</entry>
369 370 <entry>2.6.0</entry>
370 <row> 371 <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in text.</entry>
371 <entry>cmake</entry> 372 <entry>BSD</entry>
372 373</row>
373 <entry>3.7.2</entry> 374<row>
374 375 <entry>fuse</entry>
375 <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> 376 <entry>2.9.4</entry>
376 377 <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>
377 <entry>BSD</entry> 378 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
378 </row> 379</row>
379 380<row>
380 <row> 381 <entry>gawk</entry>
381 <entry>compose-file</entry> 382 <entry>4.1.4</entry>
382 383 <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>
383 <entry>3.0</entry> 384 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
384 385</row>
385 <entry>Parser for the Compose file format (version 3)</entry> 386<row>
386 387 <entry>gcc-cross-aarch64</entry>
387 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 388 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
388 </row> 389 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
389 390 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
390 <row> 391</row>
391 <entry>containerd-docker</entry> 392<row>
392 393 <entry>gcc-cross-initial-aarch64</entry>
393 <entry>0.2.3</entry> 394 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
394 395 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
395 <entry>containerd is a daemon to control runC built for 396 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
396 performance and density. containerd leverages runC's advanced 397</row>
397 features such as seccomp and user namespace support as well as 398<row>
398 checkpoint and restore for cloning and live migration of 399 <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry>
399 containers.</entry> 400 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
400 401 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
401 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 402 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
402 </row> 403</row>
403 404<row>
404 <row> 405 <entry>gcc</entry>
405 <entry>coreutils</entry> 406 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
406 407 <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry>
407 <entry>8.26</entry> 408 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry>
408 409</row>
409 <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and 410<row>
410 text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which 411 <entry>gdbm</entry>
411 are expected to exist on every system.</entry> 412 <entry>1.12</entry>
412 413 <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry>
413 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 414 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
414 </row> 415</row>
415 416<row>
416 <row> 417 <entry>gettext-minimal</entry>
417 <entry>cross-localedef</entry> 418 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry>
418 419 <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>
419 <entry>2.25</entry> 420 <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry>
420 421</row>
421 <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> 422<row>
422 423 <entry>gettext</entry>
423 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 424 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry>
424 </row> 425 <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>
425 426 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
426 <row> 427</row>
427 <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry> 428<row>
428 429 <entry>git</entry>
429 <entry>1.8</entry> 430 <entry>2.11.1</entry>
430 431 <entry>Distributed version control system.</entry>
431 <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> 432 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
432 433</row>
433 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 434<row>
434 </row> 435 <entry>glib-2.0</entry>
435 436 <entry>2.50.3</entry>
436 <row> 437 <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>
437 <entry>curl</entry> 438 <entry> LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry>
438 439</row>
439 <entry>7.53.1</entry> 440<row>
440 441 <entry>glibc-locale</entry>
441 <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL 442 <entry>2.25</entry>
442 transfers.</entry> 443 <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry>
443 444 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
444 <entry>MIT</entry> 445</row>
445 </row> 446<row>
446 447 <entry>glibc</entry>
447 <row> 448 <entry>2.25</entry>
448 <entry>db</entry> 449 <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most systems with the Linux kernel.</entry>
449 450 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
450 <entry>5.3.28</entry> 451</row>
451 452<row>
452 <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> 453 <entry>gmp</entry>
453 454 <entry>6.1.2</entry>
454 <entry>Sleepycat</entry> 455 <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point numbers</entry>
455 </row> 456 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
456 457</row>
457 <row> 458<row>
458 <entry>dbus-glib</entry> 459 <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry>
459 460 <entry>2014.1</entry>
460 <entry>0.108</entry> 461 <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry>
461 462 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
462 <entry>GLib bindings for the D-Bus message bus that integrate the 463</row>
463 D-Bus library with the GLib thread abstraction and main 464<row>
464 loop.</entry> 465 <entry>gnu-config</entry>
465 466 <entry>20150728</entry>
466 <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 467 <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a directory tree</entry>
467 </row> 468 <entry>GPLv2</entry>
468 469</row>
469 <row> 470<row>
470 <entry>dbus-test</entry> 471 <entry>gnutls</entry>
471 472 <entry>3.5.9</entry>
472 <entry>1.10.14</entry> 473 <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry>
473 474 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
474 <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing 475</row>
475 only).</entry> 476<row>
476 477 <entry>go-bootstrap</entry>
477 <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 478 <entry>1.4.3</entry>
478 </row> 479 <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>
479 480 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
480 <row> 481</row>
481 <entry>dbus</entry> 482<row>
482 483 <entry>go-capability</entry>
483 <entry>1.10.14</entry> 484 <entry>0.0</entry>
484 485 <entry>Utilities for manipulating POSIX capabilities in Go.</entry>
485 <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for 486 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
486 applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess 487</row>
487 communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes 488<row>
488 it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application 489 <entry>go-cli</entry>
489 or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when 490 <entry>1.1.0</entry>
490 their services are needed."</entry> 491 <entry>A small package for building command line apps in Go</entry>
491 492 <entry>MIT</entry>
492 <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 493</row>
493 </row> 494<row>
494 495 <entry>go-connections</entry>
495 <row> 496 <entry>0.2.1</entry>
496 <entry>debianutils</entry> 497 <entry>Utility package to work with network connections</entry>
497 498 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
498 <entry>4.8.1</entry> 499</row>
499 500<row>
500 <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> 501 <entry>go-context</entry>
501 502 <entry>git</entry>
502 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 503 <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry>
503 </row> 504 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
504 505</row>
505 <row> 506<row>
506 <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> 507 <entry>go-cross-aarch64</entry>
507 508 <entry>1.8</entry>
508 <entry>1.0</entry> 509 <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>
509 510 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
510 <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency 511</row>
511 indexer.</entry> 512<row>
512 513 <entry>go-dbus</entry>
513 <entry>MIT</entry> 514 <entry>4.0.0</entry>
514 </row> 515 <entry>Native Go bindings for D-Bus</entry>
515 516 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
516 <row> 517</row>
517 <entry>dhcp</entry> 518<row>
518 519 <entry>go-distribution</entry>
519 <entry>4.3.5</entry> 520 <entry>2.6.0</entry>
520 521 <entry>The Docker toolset to pack ship store and deliver content</entry>
521 <entry>DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) is a protocol 522 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
522 which allows individual devices on an IP network to get their own 523</row>
523 network configuration information from a server. DHCP helps make 524<row>
524 it easier to administer devices.</entry> 525 <entry>go-fsnotify</entry>
525 526 <entry>1.2.11</entry>
526 <entry>ISC</entry> 527 <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry>
527 </row> 528 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
528 529</row>
529 <row> 530<row>
530 <entry>diffutils</entry> 531 <entry>go-libtrust</entry>
531 532 <entry>0.0</entry>
532 <entry>3.5</entry> 533 <entry>Primitives for identity and authorization</entry>
533 534 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
534 <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp 535</row>
535 utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch 536<row>
536 files.</entry> 537 <entry>go-logrus</entry>
537 538 <entry>0.11.0</entry>
538 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 539 <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry>
539 </row> 540 <entry>MIT</entry>
540 541</row>
541 <row> 542<row>
542 <entry>dnsmasq</entry> 543 <entry>go-mux</entry>
543 544 <entry>git</entry>
544 <entry>2.76</entry> 545 <entry>A powerful URL router and dispatcher for golang.</entry>
545 546 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
546 <entry>Lightweight easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP 547</row>
547 server.</entry> 548<row>
548 549 <entry>go-patricia</entry>
549 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> 550 <entry>2.2.6</entry>
550 </row> 551 <entry>A generic patricia trie (also called radix tree) implemented in Go (Golang)</entry>
551 552 <entry>MIT</entry>
552 <row> 553</row>
553 <entry>docker</entry> 554<row>
554 555 <entry>go-pty</entry>
555 <entry>1.13.0</entry> 556 <entry>git</entry>
556 557 <entry>PTY interface for Go</entry>
557 <entry>Linux container runtime Docker complements kernel 558 <entry>MIT</entry>
558 namespacing with a high-level API which operates at the process 559</row>
559 level. It runs unix processes with strong guarantees of isolation 560<row>
560 and repeatability across servers. . Docker is a great building 561 <entry>go-systemd</entry>
561 block for automating distributed systems: large-scale web 562 <entry>4</entry>
562 deployments database clusters continuous deployment systems 563 <entry>Go bindings to systemd socket activation journal D-Bus and unit files</entry>
563 private PaaS service-oriented architectures etc. . This package 564 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
564 contains the daemon and client. Using docker.io is officially 565</row>
565 supported on x86_64 and arm (32-bit) hosts. Other architectures 566<row>
566 are considered experimental. . Also note that kernel version 3.10 567 <entry>gobject-introspection</entry>
567 or above is required for proper operation of the daemon process 568 <entry>1.50.0</entry>
568 and that any lower versions may have subtle and/or glaring 569 <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and language bindings.</entry>
569 issues.</entry> 570 <entry> LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
570 571</row>
571 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 572<row>
572 </row> 573 <entry>gperf</entry>
573 574 <entry>3.0.4</entry>
574 <row> 575 <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry>
575 <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> 576 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
576 577</row>
577 <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry> 578<row>
578 579 <entry>grep</entry>
579 <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> 580 <entry>3.0</entry>
580 581 <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry>
581 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 582 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
582 </row> 583</row>
583 584<row>
584 <row> 585 <entry>grpc-go</entry>
585 <entry>dpdk</entry> 586 <entry>1.4.0</entry>
586 587 <entry>The Go language implementation of gRPC. HTTP/2 based RPC</entry>
587 <entry>17.08</entry> 588 <entry>BSD</entry>
588 589</row>
589 <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry> 590<row>
590 591 <entry>gtk-doc</entry>
591 <entry>BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 592 <entry>1.25</entry>
592 </row> 593 <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>
593 594 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
594 <row> 595</row>
595 <entry>dpkg</entry> 596<row>
596 597 <entry>gzip</entry>
597 <entry>1.18.10</entry> 598 <entry>1.8</entry>
598 599 <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>
599 <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> 600 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
600 601</row>
601 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 602<row>
602 </row> 603 <entry>htop</entry>
603 604 <entry>1.0.3</entry>
604 <row> 605 <entry>htop process monitor.</entry>
605 <entry>dtc</entry> 606 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
606 607</row>
607 <entry>1.4.2</entry> 608<row>
608 609 <entry>icu</entry>
609 <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the 610 <entry>58.2</entry>
610 Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> 611 <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>
611 612 <entry>ICU</entry>
612 <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> 613</row>
613 </row> 614<row>
614 615 <entry>initscripts</entry>
615 <row> 616 <entry>1.0</entry>
616 <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> 617 <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>
617 618 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
618 <entry>1.43.4</entry> 619</row>
619 620<row>
620 <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of 621 <entry>inputproto</entry>
621 the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and 622 <entry>2.3.2</entry>
622 debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> 623 <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>
623 624 <entry> MIT</entry>
624 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> 625</row>
625 </row> 626<row>
626 627 <entry>intltool</entry>
627 <row> 628 <entry>0.51.0</entry>
628 <entry>ebtables</entry> 629 <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry>
629 630 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
630 <entry>2.0.10-4</entry> 631</row>
631 632<row>
632 <entry>Utility for basic Ethernet frame filtering on a Linux 633 <entry>iproute2</entry>
633 bridge advanced logging MAC DNAT/SNAT and brouting.</entry> 634 <entry>4.10.0</entry>
634 635 <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>
635 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 636 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
636 </row> 637</row>
637 638<row>
638 <row> 639 <entry>iptables</entry>
639 <entry>elfutils</entry> 640 <entry>1.6.1</entry>
640 641 <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to configure and control network packet filtering code in Linux.</entry>
641 <entry>0.168</entry> 642 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
642 643</row>
643 <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object 644<row>
644 files.</entry> 645 <entry>jansson</entry>
645 646 <entry>2.9</entry>
646 <entry>GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> 647 <entry>Jansson is a C library for encoding decoding and manipulating JSON data.</entry>
647 </row> 648 <entry>MIT</entry>
648 649</row>
649 <row> 650<row>
650 <entry>enea-nfv-access</entry> 651 <entry>kbd</entry>
651 652 <entry>2.0.4</entry>
652 <entry>1.0</entry> 653 <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry>
653 654 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
654 <entry>Image for the host side of the Enea NFV Access 655</row>
655 Platform</entry> 656<row>
656 657 <entry>kbproto</entry>
657 <entry>MIT</entry> 658 <entry>1.0.7</entry>
658 </row> 659 <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>
659 660 <entry>MIT</entry>
660 <row> 661</row>
661 <entry>expat</entry> 662<row>
662 663 <entry>kern-tools</entry>
663 <entry>2.2.0</entry> 664 <entry>0.2</entry>
664 665 <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched kernels.</entry>
665 <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a 666 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
666 stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers 667</row>
667 for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start 668<row>
668 tags)</entry> 669 <entry>kmod</entry>
669 670 <entry>23</entry>
670 <entry>MIT</entry> 671 <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>
671 </row> 672 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
672 673</row>
673 <row> 674<row>
674 <entry>file</entry> 675 <entry>ldconfig</entry>
675 676 <entry>2.12.1</entry>
676 <entry>5.30</entry> 677 <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry>
677 678 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
678 <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents 679</row>
679 and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> 680<row>
680 681 <entry>libaio</entry>
681 <entry>BSD</entry> 682 <entry>0.3.110</entry>
682 </row> 683 <entry>Asynchronous input/output library that uses the kernels native interface</entry>
683 684 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
684 <row> 685</row>
685 <entry>findutils</entry> 686<row>
686 687 <entry>libarchive</entry>
687 <entry>4.6.0</entry> 688 <entry>3.2.2</entry>
688 689 <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry>
689 <entry>The GNU Find Utilities are the basic directory searching 690 <entry>BSD</entry>
690 utilities of the GNU operating system. These programs are 691</row>
691 typically used in conjunction with other programs to provide 692<row>
692 modular and powerful directory search and file locating 693 <entry>libbsd</entry>
693 capabilities to other commands.</entry> 694 <entry>0.8.3</entry>
694 695 <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>
695 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 696 <entry> BSD-4-Clause, ISC, PD</entry>
696 </row> 697</row>
697 698<row>
698 <row> 699 <entry>libcap</entry>
699 <entry>flex</entry> 700 <entry>2.25</entry>
700 701 <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry>
701 <entry>2.6.0</entry> 702 <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0</entry>
702 703</row>
703 <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool 704<row>
704 for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in 705 <entry>libcgroup</entry>
705 text.</entry> 706 <entry>0.41</entry>
706 707 <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>
707 <entry>BSD</entry> 708 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
708 </row> 709</row>
709 710<row>
710 <row> 711 <entry>libcheck</entry>
711 <entry>fuse</entry> 712 <entry>0.10.0</entry>
712 713 <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry>
713 <entry>2.9.4</entry> 714 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
714 715</row>
715 <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for 716<row>
716 userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux 717 <entry>libdaemon</entry>
717 kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non 718 <entry>0.14</entry>
718 privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem 719 <entry>Lightweight C library which eases the writing of UNIX daemons.</entry>
719 implementations.</entry> 720 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
720 721</row>
721 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> 722<row>
722 </row> 723 <entry>libdevmapper</entry>
723 724 <entry>2.02.166</entry>
724 <row> 725 <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in Linux.</entry>
725 <entry>gawk</entry> 726 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
726 727</row>
727 <entry>4.1.4</entry> 728<row>
728 729 <entry>libevent</entry>
729 <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk 730 <entry>2.0.22</entry>
730 interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and 731 <entry>An asynchronous event notification library.</entry>
731 easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> 732 <entry>BSD</entry>
732 733</row>
733 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 734<row>
734 </row> 735 <entry>libffi</entry>
735 736 <entry>3.2.1</entry>
736 <row> 737 <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>
737 <entry>gcc-cross-aarch64</entry> 738 <entry>MIT</entry>
738 739</row>
739 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 740<row>
740 741 <entry>libgcc</entry>
741 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 742 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
742 743 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
743 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 744 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
744 </row> 745</row>
745 746<row>
746 <row> 747 <entry>libgudev</entry>
747 <entry>gcc-cross-initial-aarch64</entry> 748 <entry>231</entry>
748 749 <entry>GObject wrapper for libudev.</entry>
749 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 750 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
750 751</row>
751 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 752<row>
752 753 <entry>libice</entry>
753 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 754 <entry>1.0.9</entry>
754 </row> 755 <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>
755 756 <entry>MIT</entry>
756 <row> 757</row>
757 <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> 758<row>
758 759 <entry>libidn</entry>
759 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 760 <entry>1.33</entry>
760 761 <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) working group.</entry>
761 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 762 <entry> LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
762 763</row>
763 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 764<row>
764 </row> 765 <entry>libmpc</entry>
765 766 <entry>1.0.3</entry>
766 <row> 767 <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>
767 <entry>gcc</entry> 768 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
768 769</row>
769 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 770<row>
770 771 <entry>libndp</entry>
771 <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry> 772 <entry>1.6</entry>
772 773 <entry>Library for IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol.</entry>
773 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> 774 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
774 </row> 775</row>
775 776<row>
776 <row> 777 <entry>libnewt</entry>
777 <entry>gdbm</entry> 778 <entry>0.52.19</entry>
778 779 <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>
779 <entry>1.12</entry> 780 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
780 781</row>
781 <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> 782<row>
782 783 <entry>libnl</entry>
783 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 784 <entry>3.2.29</entry>
784 </row> 785 <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink sockets.</entry>
785 786 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
786 <row> 787</row>
787 <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> 788<row>
788 789 <entry>libnss-mdns</entry>
789 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> 790 <entry>0.10</entry>
790 791 <entry>Name Service Switch module for Multicast DNS (zeroconf) name resolution.</entry>
791 <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building 792 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
792 autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup 793</row>
793 by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now 794<row>
794 only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> 795 <entry>libpcap</entry>
795 796 <entry>1.8.1</entry>
796 <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> 797 <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection security monitoring and network debugging.</entry>
797 </row> 798 <entry>BSD</entry>
798 799</row>
799 <row> 800<row>
800 <entry>gettext</entry> 801 <entry>libpciaccess</entry>
801 802 <entry>0.13.4</entry>
802 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> 803 <entry>libpciaccess provides functionality for X to access the PCI bus and devices in a platform-independent way.</entry>
803 804 <entry> MIT</entry>
804 <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to 805</row>
805 help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools 806<row>
806 include a set of conventions about how programs should be written 807 <entry>libpcre</entry>
807 to support message catalogs a directory and file naming 808 <entry>8.40</entry>
808 organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library 809 <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>
809 supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few 810 <entry>BSD</entry>
810 stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of 811</row>
811 translatable and already translated strings.</entry> 812<row>
812 813 <entry>libpng</entry>
813 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 814 <entry>1.6.28</entry>
814 </row> 815 <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry>
815 816 <entry>Libpng</entry>
816 <row> 817</row>
817 <entry>git</entry> 818<row>
818 819 <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry>
819 <entry>2.11.1</entry> 820 <entry>0.3</entry>
820 821 <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry>
821 <entry>Distributed version control system.</entry> 822 <entry>MIT</entry>
822 823</row>
823 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 824<row>
824 </row> 825 <entry>libsdl</entry>
825 826 <entry>1.2.15</entry>
826 <row> 827 <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>
827 <entry>glib-2.0</entry> 828 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
828 829</row>
829 <entry>2.50.3</entry> 830<row>
830 831 <entry>libsm</entry>
831 <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides 832 <entry>1.2.2</entry>
832 many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities 833 <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>
833 file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> 834 <entry>MIT</entry>
834 835</row>
835 <entry>LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> 836<row>
836 </row> 837 <entry>libtasn1</entry>
837 838 <entry>4.10</entry>
838 <row> 839 <entry>Library for ASN.1 and DER manipulation.</entry>
839 <entry>glibc-locale</entry> 840 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
840 841</row>
841 <entry>2.25</entry> 842<row>
842 843 <entry>libtool</entry>
843 <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> 844 <entry>2.4.6</entry>
844 845 <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>
845 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 846 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
846 </row> 847</row>
847 848<row>
848 <row> 849 <entry>libunistring</entry>
849 <entry>glibc</entry> 850 <entry>0.9.7</entry>
850 851 <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>
851 <entry>2.25</entry> 852 <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
852 853</row>
853 <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most 854<row>
854 systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> 855 <entry>libvirt</entry>
855 856 <entry>1.3.5</entry>
856 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 857 <entry>A toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities of recent versions of Linux.</entry>
857 </row> 858 <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry>
858 859</row>
859 <row> 860<row>
860 <entry>gmp</entry> 861 <entry>libx11</entry>
861 862 <entry>1.6.4</entry>
862 <entry>6.1.2</entry> 863 <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>
863 864 <entry> MIT, BSD</entry>
864 <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic 865</row>
865 operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point 866<row>
866 numbers</entry> 867 <entry>libxau</entry>
867 868 <entry>1.0.8</entry>
868 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> 869 <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X connections both client-side and server-side.</entry>
869 </row> 870 <entry>MIT</entry>
870 871</row>
871 <row> 872<row>
872 <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> 873 <entry>libxcb</entry>
873 874 <entry>1.12</entry>
874 <entry>2014.1</entry> 875 <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>
875 876 <entry>MIT</entry>
876 <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> 877</row>
877 878<row>
878 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> 879 <entry>libxdmcp</entry>
879 </row> 880 <entry>1.1.2</entry>
880 881 <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>
881 <row> 882 <entry>MIT</entry>
882 <entry>gnu-config</entry> 883</row>
883 884<row>
884 <entry>20150728</entry> 885 <entry>libxext</entry>
885 886 <entry>1.3.3</entry>
886 <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a 887 <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>
887 directory tree</entry> 888 <entry>MIT</entry>
888 889</row>
889 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-autoconf-exception</entry> 890<row>
890 </row> 891 <entry>libxkbcommon</entry>
891 892 <entry>0.7.1</entry>
892 <row> 893 <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB specification.</entry>
893 <entry>gnutls</entry> 894 <entry> MIT</entry>
894 895</row>
895 <entry>3.5.9</entry> 896<row>
896 897 <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry>
897 <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> 898 <entry>2.44</entry>
898 899 <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML documents.</entry>
899 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 900 <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
900 </row> 901</row>
901 902<row>
902 <row> 903 <entry>libxml2</entry>
903 <entry>go-bootstrap</entry> 904 <entry>2.9.4</entry>
904 905 <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2 includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible with Expat.</entry>
905 <entry>1.4.3</entry> 906 <entry>MIT</entry>
906 907</row>
907 <entry>The Go programming language is an open source project to 908<row>
908 make programmers more productive. Go is expressive concise clean 909 <entry>libxrandr</entry>
909 and efficient. Its concurrency mechanisms make it easy to write 910 <entry>1.5.1</entry>
910 programs that get the most out of multicore and networked machines 911 <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry>
911 while its novel type system enables flexible and modular program 912 <entry>MIT</entry>
912 construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code yet has the 913</row>
913 convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time 914<row>
914 reflection. It's a fast statically typed compiled language that 915 <entry>libxrender</entry>
915 feels like a dynamically typed interpreted language.</entry> 916 <entry>0.9.10</entry>
916 917 <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of them.</entry>
917 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> 918 <entry>MIT</entry>
918 </row> 919</row>
919 920<row>
920 <row> 921 <entry>libxslt</entry>
921 <entry>go-capability</entry> 922 <entry>1.1.29</entry>
922 923 <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry>
923 <entry>0.0</entry> 924 <entry>MIT</entry>
924 925</row>
925 <entry>Utilities for manipulating POSIX capabilities in 926<row>
926 Go.</entry> 927 <entry>linux-cavium</entry>
927 928 <entry>4.9-octeontx.sdk.6.1.0.p3.build.22</entry>
928 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> 929 <entry>Linux kernel.</entry>
929 </row> 930 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
930 931</row>
931 <row> 932<row>
932 <entry>go-cli</entry> 933 <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry>
933 934 <entry>4.10</entry>
934 <entry>1.1.0</entry> 935 <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's use.</entry>
935 936 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
936 <entry>A small package for building command line apps in 937</row>
937 Go</entry> 938<row>
938 939 <entry>lsb</entry>
939 <entry>MIT</entry> 940 <entry>4.1</entry>
940 </row> 941 <entry>LSB support for OpenEmbedded.</entry>
941 942 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
942 <row> 943</row>
943 <entry>go-connections</entry> 944<row>
944 945 <entry>lsbinitscripts</entry>
945 <entry>0.2.1</entry> 946 <entry>9.68</entry>
946 947 <entry>SysV init scripts which are only used in an LSB image.</entry>
947 <entry>Utility package to work with network connections</entry> 948 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
948 949</row>
949 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 950<row>
950 </row> 951 <entry>lvm2</entry>
951 952 <entry>2.02.166</entry>
952 <row> 953 <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in Linux.</entry>
953 <entry>go-context</entry> 954 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
954 955</row>
955 <entry>git</entry> 956<row>
956 957 <entry>lxc</entry>
957 <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> 958 <entry>2.0.0</entry>
958 959 <entry>lxc aims to use these new functionnalities to provide an userspace container object</entry>
959 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> 960 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
960 </row> 961</row>
961 962<row>
962 <row> 963 <entry>lxd</entry>
963 <entry>go-cross-aarch64</entry> 964 <entry>git</entry>
964 965 <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>
965 <entry>1.8</entry> 966 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
966 967</row>
967 <entry>The Go programming language is an open source project to 968<row>
968 make programmers more productive. Go is expressive concise clean 969 <entry>lz4</entry>
969 and efficient. Its concurrency mechanisms make it easy to write 970 <entry>131</entry>
970 programs that get the most out of multicore and networked machines 971 <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>
971 while its novel type system enables flexible and modular program 972 <entry>BSD</entry>
972 construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code yet has the 973</row>
973 convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time 974<row>
974 reflection. It's a fast statically typed compiled language that 975 <entry>lzo</entry>
975 feels like a dynamically typed interpreted language.</entry> 976 <entry>2.09</entry>
976 977 <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry>
977 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> 978 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
978 </row> 979</row>
979 980<row>
980 <row> 981 <entry>lzop</entry>
981 <entry>go-dbus</entry> 982 <entry>1.03</entry>
982 983 <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>
983 <entry>4.0.0</entry> 984 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
984 985</row>
985 <entry>Native Go bindings for D-Bus</entry> 986<row>
986 987 <entry>m4</entry>
987 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> 988 <entry>1.4.18</entry>
988 </row> 989 <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>
989 990 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
990 <row> 991</row>
991 <entry>go-distribution</entry> 992<row>
992 993 <entry>make</entry>
993 <entry>2.6.0</entry> 994 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
994 995 <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>
995 <entry>The Docker toolset to pack ship store and deliver 996 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
996 content</entry> 997</row>
997 998<row>
998 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 999 <entry>makedepend</entry>
999 </row> 1000 <entry>1.0.5</entry>
1000 1001 <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>
1001 <row> 1002 <entry>MIT</entry>
1002 <entry>go-fsnotify</entry> 1003</row>
1003 1004<row>
1004 <entry>1.2.11</entry> 1005 <entry>makedevs</entry>
1005 1006 <entry>1.0.1</entry>
1006 <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> 1007 <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry>
1007 1008 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1008 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> 1009</row>
1009 </row> 1010<row>
1010 1011 <entry>mklibs</entry>
1011 <row> 1012 <entry>0.1.43</entry>
1012 <entry>go-libtrust</entry> 1013 <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry>
1013 1014 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1014 <entry>0.0</entry> 1015</row>
1015 1016<row>
1016 <entry>Primitives for identity and authorization</entry> 1017 <entry>mozjs</entry>
1017 1018 <entry>17.0.0</entry>
1018 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 1019 <entry>SpiderMonkey is Mozilla's JavaScript engine written in C/C++.</entry>
1019 </row> 1020 <entry>MPL-2.0</entry>
1020 1021</row>
1021 <row> 1022<row>
1022 <entry>go-logrus</entry> 1023 <entry>mpfr</entry>
1023 1024 <entry>3.1.5</entry>
1024 <entry>0.11.0</entry> 1025 <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point computations with exact rounding.</entry>
1025 1026 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
1026 <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> 1027</row>
1027 1028<row>
1028 <entry>MIT</entry> 1029 <entry>ncurses</entry>
1029 </row> 1030 <entry>6.0</entry>
1030 1031 <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using the gpm library.</entry>
1031 <row> 1032 <entry>MIT</entry>
1032 <entry>go-mux</entry> 1033</row>
1033 1034<row>
1034 <entry>git</entry> 1035 <entry>net-snmp</entry>
1035 1036 <entry>5.7.3</entry>
1036 <entry>A powerful URL router and dispatcher for golang.</entry> 1037 <entry>Various tools relating to the Simple Network Management Protocol.</entry>
1037 1038 <entry>BSD</entry>
1038 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> 1039</row>
1039 </row> 1040<row>
1040 1041 <entry>netbase</entry>
1041 <row> 1042 <entry>5.4</entry>
1042 <entry>go-patricia</entry> 1043 <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for basic TCP/IP based networking</entry>
1043 1044 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1044 <entry>2.2.6</entry> 1045</row>
1045 1046<row>
1046 <entry>A generic patricia trie (also called radix tree) 1047 <entry>netcat-openbsd</entry>
1047 implemented in Go (Golang)</entry> 1048 <entry>1.105</entry>
1048 1049 <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>
1049 <entry>MIT</entry> 1050 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1050 </row> 1051</row>
1051 1052<row>
1052 <row> 1053 <entry>nettle</entry>
1053 <entry>go-pty</entry> 1054 <entry>3.3</entry>
1054 1055 <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry>
1055 <entry>git</entry> 1056 <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
1056 1057</row>
1057 <entry>PTY interface for Go</entry> 1058<row>
1058 1059 <entry>networkmanager</entry>
1059 <entry>MIT</entry> 1060 <entry>1.4.4</entry>
1060 </row> 1061 <entry>NetworkManager.</entry>
1061 1062 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1062 <row> 1063</row>
1063 <entry>go-systemd</entry> 1064<row>
1064 1065 <entry>notary</entry>
1065 <entry>4</entry> 1066 <entry>0.4.2</entry>
1066 1067 <entry>Notary is a Docker project that allows anyone to have trust over arbitrary collections of data</entry>
1067 <entry>Go bindings to systemd socket activation journal D-Bus and 1068 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1068 unit files</entry> 1069</row>
1069 1070<row>
1070 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 1071 <entry>nspr</entry>
1071 </row> 1072 <entry>4.13.1</entry>
1072 1073 <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry>
1073 <row> 1074 <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1074 <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> 1075</row>
1075 1076<row>
1076 <entry>1.50.0</entry> 1077 <entry>nss</entry>
1077 1078 <entry>3.28.1</entry>
1078 <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and 1079 <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>
1079 language bindings.</entry> 1080 <entry> MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1080 1081</row>
1081 <entry>LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 1082<row>
1082 </row> 1083 <entry>ntp</entry>
1083 1084 <entry>4.2.8p10</entry>
1084 <row> 1085 <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>
1085 <entry>gperf</entry> 1086 <entry>NTP</entry>
1086 1087</row>
1087 <entry>3.0.4</entry> 1088<row>
1088 1089 <entry>numactl</entry>
1089 <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> 1090 <entry>2.0.11</entry>
1090 1091 <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>
1091 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1092 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1092 </row> 1093</row>
1093 1094<row>
1094 <row> 1095 <entry>openssh</entry>
1095 <entry>grep</entry> 1096 <entry>7.4p1</entry>
1096 1097 <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>
1097 <entry>3.0</entry> 1098 <entry>BSD</entry>
1098 1099</row>
1099 <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> 1100<row>
1100 1101 <entry>openssl</entry>
1101 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1102 <entry>1.0.2k</entry>
1102 </row> 1103 <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic tools.</entry>
1103 1104 <entry>OpenSSL</entry>
1104 <row> 1105</row>
1105 <entry>grpc-go</entry> 1106<row>
1106 1107 <entry>openvswitch-module</entry>
1107 <entry>1.4.0</entry> 1108 <entry>2.8.1</entry>
1108 1109 <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>
1109 <entry>The Go language implementation of gRPC. HTTP/2 based 1110 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1110 RPC</entry> 1111</row>
1111 1112<row>
1112 <entry>BSD</entry> 1113 <entry>openvswitch</entry>
1113 </row> 1114 <entry>2.8.1</entry>
1114 1115 <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>
1115 <row> 1116 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1116 <entry>gtk-doc</entry> 1117</row>
1117 1118<row>
1118 <entry>1.25</entry> 1119 <entry>opkg-utils</entry>
1119 1120 <entry>0.3.4</entry>
1120 <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially 1121 <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry>
1121 formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of 1122 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1122 html documentation files from them</entry> 1123</row>
1123 1124<row>
1124 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1125 <entry>os-release</entry>
1125 </row> 1126 <entry>1.0</entry>
1126 1127 <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system identification data.</entry>
1127 <row> 1128 <entry>MIT</entry>
1128 <entry>gzip</entry> 1129</row>
1129 1130<row>
1130 <entry>1.8</entry> 1131 <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry>
1131 1132 <entry>1.0</entry>
1132 <entry>GNU Gzip is a popular data compression program originally 1133 <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the system</entry>
1133 written by Jean-loup Gailly for the GNU project. Mark Adler wrote 1134 <entry>MIT</entry>
1134 the decompression part</entry> 1135</row>
1135 1136<row>
1136 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1137 <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry>
1137 </row> 1138 <entry>1.0</entry>
1138 1139 <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry>
1139 <row> 1140 <entry>MIT</entry>
1140 <entry>htop</entry> 1141</row>
1141 1142<row>
1142 <entry>1.0.3</entry> 1143 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-docker</entry>
1143 1144 <entry>1.0</entry>
1144 <entry>htop process monitor.</entry> 1145 <entry>Packagegroup for Docker.</entry>
1145 1146 <entry>MIT</entry>
1146 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1147</row>
1147 </row> 1148<row>
1148 1149 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry>
1149 <row> 1150 <entry>1.0</entry>
1150 <entry>icu</entry> 1151 <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry>
1151 1152 <entry>MIT</entry>
1152 <entry>58.2</entry> 1153</row>
1153 1154<row>
1154 <entry>The International Component for Unicode (ICU) is a mature 1155 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-element-odm</entry>
1155 portable set of C/C++ and Java libraries for Unicode support 1156 <entry>1.0</entry>
1156 software internationalization (I18N) and globalization (G11N) 1157 <entry>Packagegroup for Element ODM.</entry>
1157 giving applications the same results on all platforms.</entry> 1158 <entry>MIT</entry>
1158 1159</row>
1159 <entry>ICU</entry> 1160<row>
1160 </row> 1161 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-host</entry>
1161 1162 <entry>1.0</entry>
1162 <row> 1163 <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups specific to the host side of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry>
1163 <entry>initscripts</entry> 1164 <entry>MIT</entry>
1164 1165</row>
1165 <entry>1.0</entry> 1166<row>
1166 1167 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-libvirt</entry>
1167 <entry>Initscripts provide the basic system startup initialization 1168 <entry>1.0</entry>
1168 scripts for the system. These scripts include actions such as 1169 <entry>Package group for libvirt.</entry>
1169 filesystem mounting fsck RTC manipulation and other actions 1170 <entry>MIT</entry>
1170 routinely performed at system startup. In addition the scripts are 1171</row>
1171 also used during system shutdown to reverse the actions performed 1172<row>
1172 at startup.</entry> 1173 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxc</entry>
1173 1174 <entry>1.0</entry>
1174 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1175 <entry>Packagegroup for LXC.</entry>
1175 </row> 1176 <entry>MIT</entry>
1176 1177</row>
1177 <row> 1178<row>
1178 <entry>inputproto</entry> 1179 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxd</entry>
1179 1180 <entry>1.0</entry>
1180 <entry>2.3.2</entry> 1181 <entry>Packagegroup for LXD.</entry>
1181 1182 <entry>MIT</entry>
1182 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input 1183</row>
1183 extension. The extension supports input devices other then the 1184<row>
1184 core X keyboard and pointer.</entry> 1185 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-ovs</entry>
1185 1186 <entry>1.0</entry>
1186 <entry>MIT</entry> 1187 <entry>Packagegroup for Open vSwitch.</entry>
1187 </row> 1188 <entry>MIT</entry>
1188 1189</row>
1189 <row> 1190<row>
1190 <entry>intltool</entry> 1191 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-qemu</entry>
1191 1192 <entry>1.0</entry>
1192 <entry>0.51.0</entry> 1193 <entry>Packagegroup for QEMU.</entry>
1193 1194 <entry>MIT</entry>
1194 <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry> 1195</row>
1195 1196<row>
1196 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1197 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry>
1197 </row> 1198 <entry>1.0</entry>
1198 1199 <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry>
1199 <row> 1200 <entry>MIT</entry>
1200 <entry>iproute2</entry> 1201</row>
1201 1202<row>
1202 <entry>4.10.0</entry> 1203 <entry>parted</entry>
1203 1204 <entry>3.2</entry>
1204 <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP / 1205 <entry>Disk partition editing/resizing utility.</entry>
1205 IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip 1206 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1206 and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6 1207</row>
1207 configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry> 1208<row>
1208 1209 <entry>partrt</entry>
1209 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1210 <entry>1.1</entry>
1210 </row> 1211 <entry>partrt is a tool for dividing a SMP Linux system into a real time domain and a non-real time domain.</entry>
1211 1212 <entry>BSD</entry>
1212 <row> 1213</row>
1213 <entry>iptables</entry> 1214<row>
1214 1215 <entry>pciutils</entry>
1215 <entry>1.6.1</entry> 1216 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
1216 1217 <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based on this library.</entry>
1217 <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to 1218 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1218 configure and control network packet filtering code in 1219</row>
1219 Linux.</entry> 1220<row>
1220 1221 <entry>perl</entry>
1221 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1222 <entry>5.24.1</entry>
1222 </row> 1223 <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry>
1223 1224 <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
1224 <row> 1225</row>
1225 <entry>jansson</entry> 1226<row>
1226 1227 <entry>pigz</entry>
1227 <entry>2.9</entry> 1228 <entry>2.3.4</entry>
1228 1229 <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>
1229 <entry>Jansson is a C library for encoding decoding and 1230 <entry> Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry>
1230 manipulating JSON data.</entry> 1231</row>
1231 1232<row>
1232 <entry>MIT</entry> 1233 <entry>pixman</entry>
1233 </row> 1234 <entry>0.34.0</entry>
1234 1235 <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>
1235 <row> 1236 <entry> MIT, PD</entry>
1236 <entry>kbd</entry> 1237</row>
1237 1238<row>
1238 <entry>2.0.4</entry> 1239 <entry>pkgconfig</entry>
1239 1240 <entry>0.29.1</entry>
1240 <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry> 1241 <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>
1241 1242 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1242 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1243</row>
1243 </row> 1244<row>
1244 1245 <entry>pm-utils</entry>
1245 <row> 1246 <entry>1.4.1</entry>
1246 <entry>kbproto</entry> 1247 <entry>Simple shell command line tools to suspend and hibernate.</entry>
1247 1248 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1248 <entry>1.0.7</entry> 1249</row>
1249 1250<row>
1250 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard 1251 <entry>polkit</entry>
1251 extension. This extension is used to control options related to 1252 <entry>0.113</entry>
1252 keyboard handling and layout.</entry> 1253 <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>
1253 1254 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
1254 <entry>MIT</entry> 1255</row>
1255 </row> 1256<row>
1256 1257 <entry>popt</entry>
1257 <row> 1258 <entry>1.16</entry>
1258 <entry>kern-tools</entry> 1259 <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry>
1259 1260 <entry>MIT</entry>
1260 <entry>0.2</entry> 1261</row>
1261 1262<row>
1262 <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched 1263 <entry>pps-tools</entry>
1263 kernels.</entry> 1264 <entry>0.0.0</entry>
1264 1265 <entry>User-space tools for LinuxPPS.</entry>
1265 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1266 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1266 </row> 1267</row>
1267 1268<row>
1268 <row> 1269 <entry>prelink</entry>
1269 <entry>kmod</entry> 1270 <entry>1.0</entry>
1270 1271 <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>
1271 <entry>23</entry> 1272 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1272 1273</row>
1273 <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux 1274<row>
1274 kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve 1275 <entry>procps</entry>
1275 dependencies and aliases.</entry> 1276 <entry>3.3.12</entry>
1276 1277 <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>
1277 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1278 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
1278 </row> 1279</row>
1279 1280<row>
1280 <row> 1281 <entry>pseudo</entry>
1281 <entry>ldconfig</entry> 1282 <entry>1.8.2</entry>
1282 1283 <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal user.</entry>
1283 <entry>2.12.1</entry> 1284 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
1284 1285</row>
1285 <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry> 1286<row>
1286 1287 <entry>ptest-runner</entry>
1287 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1288 <entry>2.0.2</entry>
1288 </row> 1289 <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them in sequence.</entry>
1289 1290 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1290 <row> 1291</row>
1291 <entry>libaio</entry> 1292<row>
1292 1293 <entry>python-futures</entry>
1293 <entry>0.3.110</entry> 1294 <entry>3.0.5</entry>
1294 1295 <entry>The concurrent.futures module provides a high-level interface for asynchronously executing callables.</entry>
1295 <entry>Asynchronous input/output library that uses the kernels 1296 <entry>BSD</entry>
1296 native interface</entry> 1297</row>
1297 1298<row>
1298 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1299 <entry>python-netaddr</entry>
1299 </row> 1300 <entry>0.7.19</entry>
1300 1301 <entry>A network address manipulation library for Python..</entry>
1301 <row> 1302 <entry>BSD</entry>
1302 <entry>libarchive</entry> 1303</row>
1303 1304<row>
1304 <entry>3.2.2</entry> 1305 <entry>python-netifaces</entry>
1305 1306 <entry>0.10.6</entry>
1306 <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing 1307 <entry>Portable network interface information..</entry>
1307 tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry> 1308 <entry>MIT</entry>
1308 1309</row>
1309 <entry>BSD</entry> 1310<row>
1310 </row> 1311 <entry>python-pip</entry>
1311 1312 <entry>9.0.1</entry>
1312 <row> 1313 <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python packages.</entry>
1313 <entry>libbsd</entry> 1314 <entry> MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1314 1315</row>
1315 <entry>0.8.3</entry> 1316<row>
1316 1317 <entry>python-psutil</entry>
1317 <entry>This library provides useful functions commonly found on 1318 <entry>5.2.0</entry>
1318 BSD systems and lacking on others like GNU systems thus making it 1319 <entry>A cross-platform process and system utilities module for Python.</entry>
1319 easier to port projects with strong BSD origins without needing to 1320 <entry>BSD</entry>
1320 embed the same code over and over again on each project.</entry> 1321</row>
1321 1322<row>
1322 <entry>BSD-4-Clause, ISC, PD</entry> 1323 <entry>python-setuptools</entry>
1323 </row> 1324 <entry>32.1.1</entry>
1324 1325 <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python packages.</entry>
1325 <row> 1326 <entry>MIT</entry>
1326 <entry>libcap</entry> 1327</row>
1327 1328<row>
1328 <entry>2.25</entry> 1329 <entry>python-six</entry>
1329 1330 <entry>1.10.0</entry>
1330 <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry> 1331 <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities</entry>
1331 1332 <entry>MIT</entry>
1332 <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> 1333</row>
1333 </row> 1334<row>
1334 1335 <entry>python-twisted</entry>
1335 <row> 1336 <entry>13.2.0</entry>
1336 <entry>libcgroup</entry> 1337 <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>
1337 1338 <entry>MIT</entry>
1338 <entry>0.41</entry> 1339</row>
1339 1340<row>
1340 <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group 1341 <entry>python-zopeinterface</entry>
1341 file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account 1342 <entry>4.3.3</entry>
1342 and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of 1343 <entry>Interface definitions for Zope products.</entry>
1343 processes.</entry> 1344 <entry>ZPL-2.1</entry>
1344 1345</row>
1345 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1346<row>
1346 </row> 1347 <entry>python</entry>
1347 1348 <entry>2.7.13</entry>
1348 <row> 1349 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
1349 <entry>libcheck</entry> 1350 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
1350 1351</row>
1351 <entry>0.10.0</entry> 1352<row>
1352 1353 <entry>python3</entry>
1353 <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry> 1354 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
1354 1355 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
1355 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1356 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
1356 </row> 1357</row>
1357 1358<row>
1358 <row> 1359 <entry>qemu</entry>
1359 <entry>libdaemon</entry> 1360 <entry>2.8.0</entry>
1360 1361 <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry>
1361 <entry>0.14</entry> 1362 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1362 1363</row>
1363 <entry>Lightweight C library which eases the writing of UNIX 1364<row>
1364 daemons.</entry> 1365 <entry>qemuwrapper</entry>
1365 1366 <entry>1.0</entry>
1366 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1367 <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry>
1367 </row> 1368 <entry>MIT</entry>
1368 1369</row>
1369 <row> 1370<row>
1370 <entry>libdevmapper</entry> 1371 <entry>quilt</entry>
1371 1372 <entry>0.65</entry>
1372 <entry>2.02.166</entry> 1373 <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry>
1373 1374 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1374 <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in 1375</row>
1375 Linux.</entry> 1376<row>
1376 1377 <entry>randrproto</entry>
1377 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> 1378 <entry>1.5.0</entry>
1378 </row> 1379 <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>
1379 1380 <entry>MIT</entry>
1380 <row> 1381</row>
1381 <entry>libevent</entry> 1382<row>
1382 1383 <entry>readline</entry>
1383 <entry>2.0.22</entry> 1384 <entry>7.0</entry>
1384 1385 <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>
1385 <entry>An asynchronous event notification library.</entry> 1386 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1386 1387</row>
1387 <entry>BSD</entry> 1388<row>
1388 </row> 1389 <entry>renderproto</entry>
1389 1390 <entry>0.11.1</entry>
1390 <row> 1391 <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>
1391 <entry>libffi</entry> 1392 <entry>MIT</entry>
1392 1393</row>
1393 <entry>3.2.1</entry> 1394<row>
1394 1395 <entry>rpm</entry>
1395 <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level 1396 <entry>4.13.90</entry>
1396 programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows 1397 <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>
1397 a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface 1398 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1398 description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function 1399</row>
1399 Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for 1400<row>
1400 the interface that allows code written in one language to call 1401 <entry>rsync</entry>
1401 code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only 1402 <entry>3.1.2</entry>
1402 provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured 1403 <entry>File synchronization tool.</entry>
1403 foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that 1404 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1404 handles type conversions for values passed between the two 1405</row>
1405 languages.</entry> 1406<row>
1406 1407 <entry>run-postinsts</entry>
1407 <entry>MIT</entry> 1408 <entry>1.0</entry>
1408 </row> 1409 <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target device.</entry>
1409 1410 <entry>MIT</entry>
1410 <row> 1411</row>
1411 <entry>libgcc</entry> 1412<row>
1412 1413 <entry>runc-docker</entry>
1413 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 1414 <entry>1.0.0-rc2</entry>
1414 1415 <entry>runc is a CLI tool for spawning and running containers according to the OCI specification.</entry>
1415 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 1416 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1416 1417</row>
1417 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 1418<row>
1418 </row> 1419 <entry>sed</entry>
1419 1420 <entry>4.2.2</entry>
1420 <row> 1421 <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry>
1421 <entry>libgudev</entry> 1422 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1422 1423</row>
1423 <entry>231</entry> 1424<row>
1424 1425 <entry>shadow-securetty</entry>
1425 <entry>GObject wrapper for libudev.</entry> 1426 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
1426 1427 <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry>
1427 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1428 <entry>MIT</entry>
1428 </row> 1429</row>
1429 1430<row>
1430 <row> 1431 <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry>
1431 <entry>libice</entry> 1432 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
1432 1433 <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry>
1433 <entry>1.0.9</entry> 1434 <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
1434 1435</row>
1435 <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic 1436<row>
1436 framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream 1437 <entry>shadow</entry>
1437 transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up 1438 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
1438 and shutting down connections for performing authentication for 1439 <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group data.</entry>
1439 negotiating versions and for reporting errors.</entry> 1440 <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
1440 1441</row>
1441 <entry>MIT</entry> 1442<row>
1442 </row> 1443 <entry>shared-mime-info</entry>
1443 1444 <entry>1.8</entry>
1444 <row> 1445 <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry>
1445 <entry>libidn</entry> 1446 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
1446 1447</row>
1447 <entry>1.33</entry> 1448<row>
1448 1449 <entry>simpleproxy</entry>
1449 <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA 1450 <entry>1.0</entry>
1450 specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names 1451 <entry>Simpleproxy.</entry>
1451 (IDN) working group.</entry> 1452 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1452 1453</row>
1453 <entry>LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry> 1454<row>
1454 </row> 1455 <entry>slang</entry>
1455 1456 <entry>2.3.1a</entry>
1456 <row> 1457 <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>
1457 <entry>libmpc</entry> 1458 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1458 1459</row>
1459 <entry>1.0.3</entry> 1460<row>
1460 1461 <entry>sqlite3</entry>
1461 <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers 1462 <entry>3.17.0</entry>
1462 with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the 1463 <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry>
1463 result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as 1464 <entry>PD</entry>
1464 Mpfr</entry> 1465</row>
1465 1466<row>
1466 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> 1467 <entry>squashfs-tools</entry>
1467 </row> 1468 <entry>4.3</entry>
1468 1469 <entry>Tools for manipulating SquashFS filesystems.</entry>
1469 <row> 1470 <entry> GPL-2.0, PD</entry>
1470 <entry>libndp</entry> 1471</row>
1471 1472<row>
1472 <entry>1.6</entry> 1473 <entry>sysfsutils</entry>
1473 1474 <entry>2.1.0</entry>
1474 <entry>Library for IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol.</entry> 1475 <entry>Tools for working with the sysfs virtual filesystem. The tool 'systool' can query devices by bus class and topology.</entry>
1475 1476 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1476 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1477</row>
1477 </row> 1478<row>
1478 1479 <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry>
1479 <row> 1480 <entry>1.0</entry>
1480 <entry>libnewt</entry> 1481 <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit scripts.</entry>
1481 1482 <entry>MIT</entry>
1482 <entry>0.52.19</entry> 1483</row>
1483 1484<row>
1484 <entry>Newt is a programming library for color text mode widget 1485 <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry>
1485 based user interfaces. Newt can be used to add stacked windows 1486 <entry>1.0</entry>
1486 entry widgets checkboxes radio buttons labels plain text fields 1487 <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry>
1487 scrollbars etc. to text mode user interfaces. This package also 1488 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1488 contains the shared library needed by programs built with newt as 1489</row>
1489 well as a /usr/bin/dialog replacement called whiptail. Newt is 1490<row>
1490 based on the slang library.</entry> 1491 <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry>
1491 1492 <entry>1.0</entry>
1492 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> 1493 <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry>
1493 </row> 1494 <entry>MIT</entry>
1494 1495</row>
1495 <row> 1496<row>
1496 <entry>libnl</entry> 1497 <entry>systemd</entry>
1497 1498 <entry>232</entry>
1498 <entry>3.2.29</entry> 1499 <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>
1499 1500 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1500 <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink 1501</row>
1501 sockets.</entry> 1502<row>
1502 1503 <entry>tar</entry>
1503 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1504 <entry>1.29</entry>
1504 </row> 1505 <entry>GNU tar saves many files together into a single tape or disk archive and can restore individual files from the archive.</entry>
1505 1506 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1506 <row> 1507</row>
1507 <entry>libnss-mdns</entry> 1508<row>
1508 1509 <entry>tcpdump</entry>
1509 <entry>0.10</entry> 1510 <entry>4.9.0</entry>
1510 1511 <entry>A sophisticated network protocol analyzer.</entry>
1511 <entry>Name Service Switch module for Multicast DNS (zeroconf) 1512 <entry>BSD</entry>
1512 name resolution.</entry> 1513</row>
1513 1514<row>
1514 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1515 <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry>
1515 </row> 1516 <entry>1.0</entry>
1516 1517 <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry>
1517 <row> 1518 <entry>MIT</entry>
1518 <entry>libpcap</entry> 1519</row>
1519 1520<row>
1520 <entry>1.8.1</entry> 1521 <entry>thin-provisioning-tools</entry>
1521 1522 <entry>0.6.3</entry>
1522 <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network 1523 <entry>A suite of tools for manipulating the metadata of the dm-thin device-mapper target.</entry>
1523 monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection 1524 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1524 security monitoring and network debugging.</entry> 1525</row>
1525 1526<row>
1526 <entry>BSD</entry> 1527 <entry>tunctl</entry>
1527 </row> 1528 <entry>1.5</entry>
1528 1529 <entry>Tool for controlling the Linux TUN/TAP driver.</entry>
1529 <row> 1530 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1530 <entry>libpciaccess</entry> 1531</row>
1531 1532<row>
1532 <entry>0.13.4</entry> 1533 <entry>tzcode</entry>
1533 1534 <entry>2017b</entry>
1534 <entry>libpciaccess provides functionality for X to access the PCI 1535 <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump tzselect.</entry>
1535 bus and devices in a platform-independent way.</entry> 1536 <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1536 1537</row>
1537 <entry>MIT</entry> 1538<row>
1538 </row> 1539 <entry>tzdata</entry>
1539 1540 <entry>2017b</entry>
1540 <row> 1541 <entry>Timezone data.</entry>
1541 <entry>libpcre</entry> 1542 <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1542 1543</row>
1543 <entry>8.40</entry> 1544<row>
1544 1545 <entry>u-boot-mkimage</entry>
1545 <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement 1546 <entry>2017.01</entry>
1546 regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and 1547 <entry>U-Boot bootloader image creation tool.</entry>
1547 semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set 1548 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1548 of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular 1549</row>
1549 expression API.</entry> 1550<row>
1550 1551 <entry>unifdef</entry>
1551 <entry>BSD</entry> 1552 <entry>2.11</entry>
1552 </row> 1553 <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry>
1553 1554 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
1554 <row> 1555</row>
1555 <entry>libpng</entry> 1556<row>
1556 1557 <entry>unzip</entry>
1557 <entry>1.6.28</entry> 1558 <entry>6.0</entry>
1558 1559 <entry>Utilities for extracting and viewing files in .zip archives.</entry>
1559 <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry> 1560 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1560 1561</row>
1561 <entry>Libpng</entry> 1562<row>
1562 </row> 1563 <entry>update-rc.d</entry>
1563 1564 <entry>0.7</entry>
1564 <row> 1565 <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory structure.</entry>
1565 <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry> 1566 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1566 1567</row>
1567 <entry>0.3</entry> 1568<row>
1568 1569 <entry>util-linux</entry>
1569 <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions 1570 <entry>2.29.1</entry>
1570 not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry> 1571 <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>
1571 1572 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry>
1572 <entry>MIT</entry> 1573</row>
1573 </row> 1574<row>
1574 1575 <entry>util-macros</entry>
1575 <row> 1576 <entry>1.19.1</entry>
1576 <entry>libsdl</entry> 1577 <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry>
1577 1578 <entry> MIT</entry>
1578 <entry>1.2.15</entry> 1579</row>
1579 1580<row>
1580 <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia 1581 <entry>vala</entry>
1581 library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard 1582 <entry>0.34.4</entry>
1582 mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video 1583 <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>
1583 framebuffer.</entry> 1584 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
1584 1585</row>
1585 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1586<row>
1586 </row> 1587 <entry>volatile-binds</entry>
1587 1588 <entry>1.0</entry>
1588 <row> 1589 <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for read-only-rootfs</entry>
1589 <entry>libsm</entry> 1590 <entry>MIT</entry>
1590 1591</row>
1591 <entry>1.2.2</entry> 1592<row>
1592 1593 <entry>xcb-proto</entry>
1593 <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level 1594 <entry>1.12</entry>
1594 \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session 1595 <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>
1595 Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for 1596 <entry>MIT</entry>
1596 users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of 1597</row>
1597 clients each of which has a particular state."</entry> 1598<row>
1598 1599 <entry>xextproto</entry>
1599 <entry>MIT</entry> 1600 <entry>7.3.0</entry>
1600 </row> 1601 <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>
1601 1602 <entry> MIT</entry>
1602 <row> 1603</row>
1603 <entry>libtasn1</entry> 1604<row>
1604 1605 <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry>
1605 <entry>4.10</entry> 1606 <entry>2.20</entry>
1606 1607 <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>
1607 <entry>Library for ASN.1 and DER manipulation.</entry> 1608 <entry> MIT</entry>
1608 1609</row>
1609 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1610<row>
1610 </row> 1611 <entry>xproto</entry>
1611 1612 <entry>7.0.31</entry>
1612 <row> 1613 <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window System.</entry>
1613 <entry>libtool</entry> 1614 <entry> MIT</entry>
1614 1615</row>
1615 <entry>2.4.6</entry> 1616<row>
1616 1617 <entry>xtrans</entry>
1617 <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script. 1618 <entry>1.3.5</entry>
1618 Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types 1619 <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>
1619 (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry> 1620 <entry> MIT</entry>
1620 1621</row>
1621 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1622<row>
1622 </row> 1623 <entry>xz</entry>
1623 1624 <entry>5.2.3</entry>
1624 <row> 1625 <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry>
1625 <entry>libunistring</entry> 1626 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry>
1626 1627</row>
1627 <entry>0.9.7</entry> 1628<row>
1628 1629 <entry>yajl</entry>
1629 <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may 1630 <entry>2.1.0</entry>
1630 consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese 1631 <entry>YAJL is a small event-driven (SAX-style) JSON parser written in ANSI C and a small validating JSON generator.</entry>
1631 Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left 1632 <entry>ISC</entry>
1632 writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX 1633</row>
1633 platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for 1634<row>
1634 dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In 1635 <entry>zlib</entry>
1635 fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their 1636 <entry>1.2.11</entry>
1636 base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides 1637 <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data compression library which is used by many different programs.</entry>
1637 functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C 1638 <entry>Zlib</entry>
1638 strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains 1639</row>
1639 documentation.</entry> 1640 </tbody>
1640 1641 </tgroup>
1641 <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 1642 </informaltable>
1642 </row> 1643 </section>
1643 1644 <section id="open_source_license">
1644 <row> 1645 <title>Open Source Licenses</title>
1645 <entry>libvirt</entry> 1646<section id="lic_0">
1646 1647<title>AFL-2.0</title>
1647 <entry>1.3.5</entry> 1648<para><programlisting>
1648
1649 <entry>A toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities
1650 of recent versions of Linux.</entry>
1651
1652 <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry>
1653 </row>
1654
1655 <row>
1656 <entry>libx11</entry>
1657
1658 <entry>1.6.4</entry>
1659
1660 <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window
1661 System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for
1662 the basic functions of the window system.</entry>
1663
1664 <entry>MIT, BSD</entry>
1665 </row>
1666
1667 <row>
1668 <entry>libxau</entry>
1669
1670 <entry>1.0.8</entry>
1671
1672 <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11
1673 authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X
1674 connections both client-side and server-side.</entry>
1675
1676 <entry>MIT</entry>
1677 </row>
1678
1679 <row>
1680 <entry>libxcb</entry>
1681
1682 <entry>1.12</entry>
1683
1684 <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement
1685 for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access
1686 to the protocol improved threading support and
1687 extensibility.</entry>
1688
1689 <entry>MIT</entry>
1690 </row>
1691
1692 <row>
1693 <entry>libxdmcp</entry>
1694
1695 <entry>1.1.2</entry>
1696
1697 <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol
1698 (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous
1699 display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal
1700 (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime
1701 example of an autonomous display.</entry>
1702
1703 <entry>MIT</entry>
1704 </row>
1705
1706 <row>
1707 <entry>libxext</entry>
1708
1709 <entry>1.3.3</entry>
1710
1711 <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to
1712 several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol
1713 extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX
1714 MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC
1715 TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small
1716 set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X
1717 protocol extensions.</entry>
1718
1719 <entry>MIT</entry>
1720 </row>
1721
1722 <row>
1723 <entry>libxkbcommon</entry>
1724
1725 <entry>0.7.1</entry>
1726
1727 <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which
1728 processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB
1729 specification.</entry>
1730
1731 <entry>MIT</entry>
1732 </row>
1733
1734 <row>
1735 <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry>
1736
1737 <entry>2.44</entry>
1738
1739 <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML
1740 documents.</entry>
1741
1742 <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
1743 </row>
1744
1745 <row>
1746 <entry>libxml2</entry>
1747
1748 <entry>2.9.4</entry>
1749
1750 <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML
1751 files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for
1752 both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a
1753 parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2
1754 includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It
1755 also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible
1756 with Expat.</entry>
1757
1758 <entry>MIT</entry>
1759 </row>
1760
1761 <row>
1762 <entry>libxrandr</entry>
1763
1764 <entry>1.5.1</entry>
1765
1766 <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for
1767 short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root
1768 window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate
1769 Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix
1770 Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry>
1771
1772 <entry>MIT</entry>
1773 </row>
1774
1775 <row>
1776 <entry>libxrender</entry>
1777
1778 <entry>0.9.10</entry>
1779
1780 <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image
1781 composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the
1782 X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by
1783 client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text
1784 is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of
1785 them.</entry>
1786
1787 <entry>MIT</entry>
1788 </row>
1789
1790 <row>
1791 <entry>libxslt</entry>
1792
1793 <entry>1.1.29</entry>
1794
1795 <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry>
1796
1797 <entry>MIT</entry>
1798 </row>
1799
1800 <row>
1801 <entry>linux-cavium</entry>
1802
1803 <entry>4.9-octeontx.sdk.-<para>6.1.0.p3.build.22</para></entry>
1804
1805 <entry>Linux kernel.</entry>
1806
1807 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1808 </row>
1809
1810 <row>
1811 <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry>
1812
1813 <entry>4.10</entry>
1814
1815 <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's
1816 use.</entry>
1817
1818 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1819 </row>
1820
1821 <row>
1822 <entry>lsb</entry>
1823
1824 <entry>4.1</entry>
1825
1826 <entry>LSB support for OpenEmbedded.</entry>
1827
1828 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1829 </row>
1830
1831 <row>
1832 <entry>lsbinitscripts</entry>
1833
1834 <entry>9.68</entry>
1835
1836 <entry>SysV init scripts which are only used in an LSB
1837 image.</entry>
1838
1839 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1840 </row>
1841
1842 <row>
1843 <entry>lvm2</entry>
1844
1845 <entry>2.02.166</entry>
1846
1847 <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in
1848 Linux.</entry>
1849
1850 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
1851 </row>
1852
1853 <row>
1854 <entry>lxc</entry>
1855
1856 <entry>2.0.0</entry>
1857
1858 <entry>lxc aims to use these new functionnalities to provide an
1859 userspace container object</entry>
1860
1861 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1862 </row>
1863
1864 <row>
1865 <entry>lxd</entry>
1866
1867 <entry>git</entry>
1868
1869 <entry>"LXD is a container ""hypervisor"" and a new user
1870 experience for LXC Specifically it's made of three components: - A
1871 system-wide daemon (lxd) - A command line client (lxc) - An
1872 OpenStack Nova plugin (nova-compute-lxd)"</entry>
1873
1874 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1875 </row>
1876
1877 <row>
1878 <entry>lz4</entry>
1879
1880 <entry>131</entry>
1881
1882 <entry>LZ4 is a very fast lossless compression algorithm providing
1883 compression speed at 400 MB/s per core scalable with multi-cores
1884 CPU. It also features an extremely fast decoder with speed in
1885 multiple GB/s per core typically reaching RAM speed limits on
1886 multi-core systems.</entry>
1887
1888 <entry>BSD</entry>
1889 </row>
1890
1891 <row>
1892 <entry>lzo</entry>
1893
1894 <entry>2.09</entry>
1895
1896 <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry>
1897
1898 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1899 </row>
1900
1901 <row>
1902 <entry>lzop</entry>
1903
1904 <entry>1.03</entry>
1905
1906 <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a
1907 companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression
1908 library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher
1909 compression and decompression speed at the cost of some
1910 \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed
1911 with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with
1912 reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry>
1913
1914 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1915 </row>
1916
1917 <row>
1918 <entry>m4</entry>
1919
1920 <entry>1.4.18</entry>
1921
1922 <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro
1923 processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some
1924 extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters
1925 to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files
1926 running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry>
1927
1928 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1929 </row>
1930
1931 <row>
1932 <entry>make</entry>
1933
1934 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
1935
1936 <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables
1937 and other non-source files of a program from the program's source
1938 files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a
1939 file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files
1940 and how to compute it from other files.</entry>
1941
1942 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
1943 </row>
1944
1945 <row>
1946 <entry>makedepend</entry>
1947
1948 <entry>1.0.5</entry>
1949
1950 <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence
1951 and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include
1952 #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else
1953 directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives
1954 would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can
1955 reference files having other #include directives and parsing will
1956 occur in these files as well.</entry>
1957
1958 <entry>MIT</entry>
1959 </row>
1960
1961 <row>
1962 <entry>makedevs</entry>
1963
1964 <entry>1.0.1</entry>
1965
1966 <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry>
1967
1968 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1969 </row>
1970
1971 <row>
1972 <entry>mklibs</entry>
1973
1974 <entry>0.1.43</entry>
1975
1976 <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only
1977 the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry>
1978
1979 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1980 </row>
1981
1982 <row>
1983 <entry>mozjs</entry>
1984
1985 <entry>17.0.0</entry>
1986
1987 <entry>SpiderMonkey is Mozilla's JavaScript engine written in
1988 C/C++.</entry>
1989
1990 <entry>MPL-2.0</entry>
1991 </row>
1992
1993 <row>
1994 <entry>mpfr</entry>
1995
1996 <entry>3.1.5</entry>
1997
1998 <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point
1999 computations with exact rounding.</entry>
2000
2001 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
2002 </row>
2003
2004 <row>
2005 <entry>ncurses</entry>
2006
2007 <entry>6.0</entry>
2008
2009 <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo
2010 tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple
2011 highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of
2012 keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable
2013 windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using
2014 the gpm library.</entry>
2015
2016 <entry>MIT</entry>
2017 </row>
2018
2019 <row>
2020 <entry>net-snmp</entry>
2021
2022 <entry>5.7.3</entry>
2023
2024 <entry>Various tools relating to the Simple Network Management
2025 Protocol.</entry>
2026
2027 <entry>BSD</entry>
2028 </row>
2029
2030 <row>
2031 <entry>netbase</entry>
2032
2033 <entry>5.4</entry>
2034
2035 <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for
2036 basic TCP/IP based networking</entry>
2037
2038 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2039 </row>
2040
2041 <row>
2042 <entry>netcat-openbsd</entry>
2043
2044 <entry>1.105</entry>
2045
2046 <entry>A simple Unix utility which reads and writes data across
2047 network connections using TCP or UDP protocol. It is designed to
2048 be a reliable 'back-end' tool that can be used directly or easily
2049 driven by other programs and scripts. At the same time it is a
2050 feature-rich network debugging and exploration tool since it can
2051 create almost any kind of connection you would need and has
2052 several interesting built-in capabilities.</entry>
2053
2054 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
2055 </row>
2056
2057 <row>
2058 <entry>nettle</entry>
2059
2060 <entry>3.3</entry>
2061
2062 <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry>
2063
2064 <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
2065 </row>
2066
2067 <row>
2068 <entry>networkmanager</entry>
2069
2070 <entry>1.4.4</entry>
2071
2072 <entry>NetworkManager.</entry>
2073
2074 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2075 </row>
2076
2077 <row>
2078 <entry>notary</entry>
2079
2080 <entry>0.4.2</entry>
2081
2082 <entry>Notary is a Docker project that allows anyone to have trust
2083 over arbitrary collections of data</entry>
2084
2085 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2086 </row>
2087
2088 <row>
2089 <entry>nspr</entry>
2090
2091 <entry>4.13.1</entry>
2092
2093 <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry>
2094
2095 <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2096 </row>
2097
2098 <row>
2099 <entry>nss</entry>
2100
2101 <entry>3.28.1</entry>
2102
2103 <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries
2104 designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled
2105 client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can
2106 support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME
2107 X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry>
2108
2109 <entry>MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2110 </row>
2111
2112 <row>
2113 <entry>ntp</entry>
2114
2115 <entry>4.2.8p10</entry>
2116
2117 <entry>The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is used to synchronize the
2118 time of a computer client or server to another server or reference
2119 time source such as a radio or satellite receiver or
2120 modem.</entry>
2121
2122 <entry>NTP</entry>
2123 </row>
2124
2125 <row>
2126 <entry>numactl</entry>
2127
2128 <entry>2.0.11</entry>
2129
2130 <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl
2131 program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a
2132 libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in
2133 applications.</entry>
2134
2135 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2136 </row>
2137
2138 <row>
2139 <entry>openssh</entry>
2140
2141 <entry>7.4p1</entry>
2142
2143 <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh
2144 (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and
2145 for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry>
2146
2147 <entry>BSD</entry>
2148 </row>
2149
2150 <row>
2151 <entry>openssl</entry>
2152
2153 <entry>1.0.2k</entry>
2154
2155 <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic
2156 tools.</entry>
2157
2158 <entry>OpenSSL</entry>
2159 </row>
2160
2161 <row>
2162 <entry>openvswitch</entry>
2163
2164 <entry>2.8.1</entry>
2165
2166 <entry>Open vSwitch is a production quality multilayer virtual
2167 switch licensed under the open source Apache 2.0 license. It is
2168 designed to enable massive network automation through programmatic
2169 extension while still supporting standard management interfaces
2170 and protocols (e.g. NetFlow sFlow SPAN RSPAN CLI LACP
2171 802.1ag)</entry>
2172
2173 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2174 </row>
2175
2176 <row>
2177 <entry>opkg-utils</entry>
2178
2179 <entry>0.3.4</entry>
2180
2181 <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry>
2182
2183 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2184 </row>
2185
2186 <row>
2187 <entry>os-release</entry>
2188
2189 <entry>1.0</entry>
2190
2191 <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system
2192 identification data.</entry>
2193
2194 <entry>MIT</entry>
2195 </row>
2196
2197 <row>
2198 <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry>
2199
2200 <entry>1.0</entry>
2201
2202 <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the
2203 system</entry>
2204
2205 <entry>MIT</entry>
2206 </row>
2207
2208 <row>
2209 <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry>
2210
2211 <entry>1.0</entry>
2212
2213 <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry>
2214
2215 <entry>MIT</entry>
2216 </row>
2217
2218 <row>
2219 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-docker</entry>
2220
2221 <entry>1.0</entry>
2222
2223 <entry>Packagegroup for Docker.</entry>
2224
2225 <entry>MIT</entry>
2226 </row>
2227
2228 <row>
2229 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry>
2230
2231 <entry>1.0</entry>
2232
2233 <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry>
2234
2235 <entry>MIT</entry>
2236 </row>
2237
2238 <row>
2239 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-element-odm</entry>
2240
2241 <entry>1.0</entry>
2242
2243 <entry>Packagegroup for Element ODM.</entry>
2244
2245 <entry>MIT</entry>
2246 </row>
2247
2248 <row>
2249 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-host</entry>
2250
2251 <entry>1.0</entry>
2252
2253 <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups
2254 specific to the host side of the Enea Linux Virtualization
2255 Profile.</entry>
2256
2257 <entry>MIT</entry>
2258 </row>
2259
2260 <row>
2261 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-libvirt</entry>
2262
2263 <entry>1.0</entry>
2264
2265 <entry>Package group for libvirt.</entry>
2266
2267 <entry>MIT</entry>
2268 </row>
2269
2270 <row>
2271 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxc</entry>
2272
2273 <entry>1.0</entry>
2274
2275 <entry>Packagegroup for LXC.</entry>
2276
2277 <entry>MIT</entry>
2278 </row>
2279
2280 <row>
2281 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxd</entry>
2282
2283 <entry>1.0</entry>
2284
2285 <entry>Packagegroup for LXD.</entry>
2286
2287 <entry>MIT</entry>
2288 </row>
2289
2290 <row>
2291 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-ovs</entry>
2292
2293 <entry>1.0</entry>
2294
2295 <entry>Packagegroup for Open vSwitch.</entry>
2296
2297 <entry>MIT</entry>
2298 </row>
2299
2300 <row>
2301 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-qemu</entry>
2302
2303 <entry>1.0</entry>
2304
2305 <entry>Packagegroup for QEMU.</entry>
2306
2307 <entry>MIT</entry>
2308 </row>
2309
2310 <row>
2311 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry>
2312
2313 <entry>1.0</entry>
2314
2315 <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups
2316 required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux
2317 Virtualization Profile.</entry>
2318
2319 <entry>MIT</entry>
2320 </row>
2321
2322 <row>
2323 <entry>parted</entry>
2324
2325 <entry>3.2</entry>
2326
2327 <entry>Disk partition editing/resizing utility.</entry>
2328
2329 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2330 </row>
2331
2332 <row>
2333 <entry>partrt</entry>
2334
2335 <entry>1.1</entry>
2336
2337 <entry>partrt is a tool for dividing a SMP Linux system into a
2338 real time domain and a non-real time domain.</entry>
2339
2340 <entry>BSD</entry>
2341 </row>
2342
2343 <row>
2344 <entry>pciutils</entry>
2345
2346 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
2347
2348 <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable
2349 access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based
2350 on this library.</entry>
2351
2352 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2353 </row>
2354
2355 <row>
2356 <entry>perl</entry>
2357
2358 <entry>5.24.1</entry>
2359
2360 <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry>
2361
2362 <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
2363 </row>
2364
2365 <row>
2366 <entry>pigz</entry>
2367
2368 <entry>2.3.4</entry>
2369
2370 <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a
2371 fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple
2372 processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data.
2373 pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread
2374 libraries.</entry>
2375
2376 <entry>Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry>
2377 </row>
2378
2379 <row>
2380 <entry>pixman</entry>
2381
2382 <entry>0.34.0</entry>
2383
2384 <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions --
2385 a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the
2386 Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric
2387 primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry>
2388
2389 <entry>MIT, PD</entry>
2390 </row>
2391
2392 <row>
2393 <entry>pkgconfig</entry>
2394
2395 <entry>0.29.1</entry>
2396
2397 <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling
2398 applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct
2399 compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry>
2400
2401 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2402 </row>
2403
2404 <row>
2405 <entry>pm-utils</entry>
2406
2407 <entry>1.4.1</entry>
2408
2409 <entry>Simple shell command line tools to suspend and
2410 hibernate.</entry>
2411
2412 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2413 </row>
2414
2415 <row>
2416 <entry>polkit</entry>
2417
2418 <entry>0.113</entry>
2419
2420 <entry>The polkit package is an application-level toolkit for
2421 defining and handling the policy that allows unprivileged
2422 processes to speak to privileged processes.</entry>
2423
2424 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
2425 </row>
2426
2427 <row>
2428 <entry>popt</entry>
2429
2430 <entry>1.16</entry>
2431
2432 <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry>
2433
2434 <entry>MIT</entry>
2435 </row>
2436
2437 <row>
2438 <entry>pps-tools</entry>
2439
2440 <entry>0.0.0</entry>
2441
2442 <entry>User-space tools for LinuxPPS.</entry>
2443
2444 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2445 </row>
2446
2447 <row>
2448 <entry>prelink</entry>
2449
2450 <entry>1.0</entry>
2451
2452 <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF
2453 shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations
2454 need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up
2455 faster.</entry>
2456
2457 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2458 </row>
2459
2460 <row>
2461 <entry>procps</entry>
2462
2463 <entry>3.3.12</entry>
2464
2465 <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide
2466 system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The
2467 package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and
2468 skill.</entry>
2469
2470 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
2471 </row>
2472
2473 <row>
2474 <entry>pseudo</entry>
2475
2476 <entry>1.8.2</entry>
2477
2478 <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal
2479 user.</entry>
2480
2481 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2482 </row>
2483
2484 <row>
2485 <entry>ptest-runner</entry>
2486
2487 <entry>2.0.2</entry>
2488
2489 <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program
2490 which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them
2491 in sequence.</entry>
2492
2493 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2494 </row>
2495
2496 <row>
2497 <entry>python-futures</entry>
2498
2499 <entry>3.0.5</entry>
2500
2501 <entry>The concurrent.futures module provides a high-level
2502 interface for asynchronously executing callables.</entry>
2503
2504 <entry>BSD</entry>
2505 </row>
2506
2507 <row>
2508 <entry>python-netaddr</entry>
2509
2510 <entry>0.7.19</entry>
2511
2512 <entry>A network address manipulation library for Python..</entry>
2513
2514 <entry>BSD</entry>
2515 </row>
2516
2517 <row>
2518 <entry>python-netifaces</entry>
2519
2520 <entry>0.10.6</entry>
2521
2522 <entry>Portable network interface information..</entry>
2523
2524 <entry>MIT</entry>
2525 </row>
2526
2527 <row>
2528 <entry>python-pip</entry>
2529
2530 <entry>9.0.1</entry>
2531
2532 <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python
2533 packages.</entry>
2534
2535 <entry>MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2536 </row>
2537
2538 <row>
2539 <entry>python-psutil</entry>
2540
2541 <entry>5.2.0</entry>
2542
2543 <entry>A cross-platform process and system utilities module for
2544 Python.</entry>
2545
2546 <entry>BSD</entry>
2547 </row>
2548
2549 <row>
2550 <entry>python-setuptools</entry>
2551
2552 <entry>32.1.1</entry>
2553
2554 <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python
2555 packages.</entry>
2556
2557 <entry>MIT</entry>
2558 </row>
2559
2560 <row>
2561 <entry>python-six</entry>
2562
2563 <entry>1.10.0</entry>
2564
2565 <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities</entry>
2566
2567 <entry>MIT</entry>
2568 </row>
2569
2570 <row>
2571 <entry>python-twisted</entry>
2572
2573 <entry>13.2.0</entry>
2574
2575 <entry>Twisted is an event-driven networking framework written in
2576 Python and licensed under the LGPL. Twisted supports TCP UDP
2577 SSL/TLS multicast Unix sockets a large number of protocols
2578 (including HTTP NNTP IMAP SSH IRC FTP and others) and much
2579 more.</entry>
2580
2581 <entry>MIT</entry>
2582 </row>
2583
2584 <row>
2585 <entry>python-zopeinterface</entry>
2586
2587 <entry>4.3.3</entry>
2588
2589 <entry>Interface definitions for Zope products.</entry>
2590
2591 <entry>ZPL-2.1</entry>
2592 </row>
2593
2594 <row>
2595 <entry>python</entry>
2596
2597 <entry>2.7.13</entry>
2598
2599 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
2600
2601 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
2602 </row>
2603
2604 <row>
2605 <entry>python3</entry>
2606
2607 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
2608
2609 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
2610
2611 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
2612 </row>
2613
2614 <row>
2615 <entry>qemu</entry>
2616
2617 <entry>2.8.0</entry>
2618
2619 <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry>
2620
2621 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2622 </row>
2623
2624 <row>
2625 <entry>qemuwrapper</entry>
2626
2627 <entry>1.0</entry>
2628
2629 <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry>
2630
2631 <entry>MIT</entry>
2632 </row>
2633
2634 <row>
2635 <entry>quilt</entry>
2636
2637 <entry>0.65</entry>
2638
2639 <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry>
2640
2641 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2642 </row>
2643
2644 <row>
2645 <entry>randrproto</entry>
2646
2647 <entry>1.5.0</entry>
2648
2649 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize
2650 Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability
2651 to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry>
2652
2653 <entry>MIT</entry>
2654 </row>
2655
2656 <row>
2657 <entry>readline</entry>
2658
2659 <entry>7.0</entry>
2660
2661 <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for
2662 use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they
2663 are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The
2664 Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list
2665 of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit
2666 those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous
2667 commands.</entry>
2668
2669 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2670 </row>
2671
2672 <row>
2673 <entry>renderproto</entry>
2674
2675 <entry>0.11.1</entry>
2676
2677 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering
2678 extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X
2679 window system.</entry>
2680
2681 <entry>MIT</entry>
2682 </row>
2683
2684 <row>
2685 <entry>rpm</entry>
2686
2687 <entry>4.13.90</entry>
2688
2689 <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line
2690 driven package management system capable of installing
2691 uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages.
2692 Each software package consists of an archive of files along with
2693 information about the package like its version a description
2694 etc.</entry>
2695
2696 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2697 </row>
2698
2699 <row>
2700 <entry>rsync</entry>
2701
2702 <entry>3.1.2</entry>
2703
2704 <entry>File synchronization tool.</entry>
2705
2706 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2707 </row>
2708
2709 <row>
2710 <entry>run-postinsts</entry>
2711
2712 <entry>1.0</entry>
2713
2714 <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target
2715 device.</entry>
2716
2717 <entry>MIT</entry>
2718 </row>
2719
2720 <row>
2721 <entry>runc-docker</entry>
2722
2723 <entry>1.0.0-rc2</entry>
2724
2725 <entry>runc is a CLI tool for spawning and running containers
2726 according to the OCI specification.</entry>
2727
2728 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2729 </row>
2730
2731 <row>
2732 <entry>sed</entry>
2733
2734 <entry>4.2.2</entry>
2735
2736 <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry>
2737
2738 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2739 </row>
2740
2741 <row>
2742 <entry>shadow-securetty</entry>
2743
2744 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
2745
2746 <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry>
2747
2748 <entry>MIT</entry>
2749 </row>
2750
2751 <row>
2752 <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry>
2753
2754 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
2755
2756 <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry>
2757
2758 <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
2759 </row>
2760
2761 <row>
2762 <entry>shadow</entry>
2763
2764 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
2765
2766 <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group
2767 data.</entry>
2768
2769 <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
2770 </row>
2771
2772 <row>
2773 <entry>shared-mime-info</entry>
2774
2775 <entry>1.8</entry>
2776
2777 <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry>
2778
2779 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
2780 </row>
2781
2782 <row>
2783 <entry>simpleproxy</entry>
2784
2785 <entry>1.0</entry>
2786
2787 <entry>Simpleproxy.</entry>
2788
2789 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2790 </row>
2791
2792 <row>
2793 <entry>slang</entry>
2794
2795 <entry>2.3.1a</entry>
2796
2797 <entry>S-Lang is an interpreted language and a programming
2798 library. The S-Lang language was designed so that it can be easily
2799 embedded into a program to provide the program with a powerful
2800 extension language. The S-Lang library provided in this package
2801 provides the S-Lang extension language. S-Lang's syntax resembles
2802 C which makes it easy to recode S-Lang procedures in C if you need
2803 to.</entry>
2804
2805 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2806 </row>
2807
2808 <row>
2809 <entry>sqlite3</entry>
2810
2811 <entry>3.17.0</entry>
2812
2813 <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry>
2814
2815 <entry>PD</entry>
2816 </row>
2817
2818 <row>
2819 <entry>squashfs-tools</entry>
2820
2821 <entry>4.3</entry>
2822
2823 <entry>Tools for manipulating SquashFS filesystems.</entry>
2824
2825 <entry>GPL-2.0, PD</entry>
2826 </row>
2827
2828 <row>
2829 <entry>sysfsutils</entry>
2830
2831 <entry>2.1.0</entry>
2832
2833 <entry>Tools for working with the sysfs virtual filesystem. The
2834 tool 'systool' can query devices by bus class and
2835 topology.</entry>
2836
2837 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2838 </row>
2839
2840 <row>
2841 <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry>
2842
2843 <entry>1.0</entry>
2844
2845 <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit
2846 scripts.</entry>
2847
2848 <entry>MIT</entry>
2849 </row>
2850
2851 <row>
2852 <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry>
2853
2854 <entry>1.0</entry>
2855
2856 <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry>
2857
2858 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2859 </row>
2860
2861 <row>
2862 <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry>
2863
2864 <entry>1.0</entry>
2865
2866 <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry>
2867
2868 <entry>MIT</entry>
2869 </row>
2870
2871 <row>
2872 <entry>systemd</entry>
2873
2874 <entry>232</entry>
2875
2876 <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux
2877 compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides
2878 aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus
2879 activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of
2880 daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports
2881 snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and
2882 automount points and implements an elaborate transactional
2883 dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in
2884 replacement for sysvinit.</entry>
2885
2886 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2887 </row>
2888
2889 <row>
2890 <entry>tar</entry>
2891
2892 <entry>1.29</entry>
2893
2894 <entry>GNU tar saves many files together into a single tape or
2895 disk archive and can restore individual files from the
2896 archive.</entry>
2897
2898 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2899 </row>
2900
2901 <row>
2902 <entry>tcpdump</entry>
2903
2904 <entry>4.9.0</entry>
2905
2906 <entry>A sophisticated network protocol analyzer.</entry>
2907
2908 <entry>BSD</entry>
2909 </row>
2910
2911 <row>
2912 <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry>
2913
2914 <entry>1.0</entry>
2915
2916 <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry>
2917
2918 <entry>MIT</entry>
2919 </row>
2920
2921 <row>
2922 <entry>thin-provisioning-tools</entry>
2923
2924 <entry>0.6.3</entry>
2925
2926 <entry>A suite of tools for manipulating the metadata of the
2927 dm-thin device-mapper target.</entry>
2928
2929 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2930 </row>
2931
2932 <row>
2933 <entry>tunctl</entry>
2934
2935 <entry>1.5</entry>
2936
2937 <entry>Tool for controlling the Linux TUN/TAP driver.</entry>
2938
2939 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2940 </row>
2941
2942 <row>
2943 <entry>tzcode</entry>
2944
2945 <entry>2017b</entry>
2946
2947 <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump
2948 tzselect.</entry>
2949
2950 <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
2951 </row>
2952
2953 <row>
2954 <entry>tzdata</entry>
2955
2956 <entry>2017b</entry>
2957
2958 <entry>Timezone data.</entry>
2959
2960 <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
2961 </row>
2962
2963 <row>
2964 <entry>u-boot-mkimage</entry>
2965
2966 <entry>2017.01</entry>
2967
2968 <entry>U-Boot bootloader image creation tool.</entry>
2969
2970 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2971 </row>
2972
2973 <row>
2974 <entry>unifdef</entry>
2975
2976 <entry>2.11</entry>
2977
2978 <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry>
2979
2980 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
2981 </row>
2982
2983 <row>
2984 <entry>unzip</entry>
2985
2986 <entry>6.0</entry>
2987
2988 <entry>Utilities for extracting and viewing files in .zip
2989 archives.</entry>
2990
2991 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
2992 </row>
2993
2994 <row>
2995 <entry>update-rc.d</entry>
2996
2997 <entry>0.7</entry>
2998
2999 <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of
3000 symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory
3001 structure.</entry>
3002
3003 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3004 </row>
3005
3006 <row>
3007 <entry>util-linux</entry>
3008
3009 <entry>2.29.1</entry>
3010
3011 <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration
3012 utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more
3013 important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message
3014 management filesystem creation and system login.</entry>
3015
3016 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry>
3017 </row>
3018
3019 <row>
3020 <entry>util-macros</entry>
3021
3022 <entry>1.19.1</entry>
3023
3024 <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry>
3025
3026 <entry>MIT</entry>
3027 </row>
3028
3029 <row>
3030 <entry>vala</entry>
3031
3032 <entry>0.34.4</entry>
3033
3034 <entry>Vala is a C#-like language dedicated to ease GObject
3035 programming. Vala compiles to plain C and has no runtime
3036 environment nor penalities whatsoever.</entry>
3037
3038 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
3039 </row>
3040
3041 <row>
3042 <entry>volatile-binds</entry>
3043
3044 <entry>1.0</entry>
3045
3046 <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for
3047 read-only-rootfs</entry>
3048
3049 <entry>MIT</entry>
3050 </row>
3051
3052 <row>
3053 <entry>xcb-proto</entry>
3054
3055 <entry>1.12</entry>
3056
3057 <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding
3058 (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint
3059 latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading
3060 support and extensibility.</entry>
3061
3062 <entry>MIT</entry>
3063 </row>
3064
3065 <row>
3066 <entry>xextproto</entry>
3067
3068 <entry>7.3.0</entry>
3069
3070 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X
3071 extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS
3072 Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD
3073 Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC
3074 XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also
3075 available.</entry>
3076
3077 <entry>MIT</entry>
3078 </row>
3079
3080 <row>
3081 <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry>
3082
3083 <entry>2.20</entry>
3084
3085 <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window.
3086 The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently
3087 released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window
3088 System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based
3089 systems.</entry>
3090
3091 <entry>MIT</entry>
3092 </row>
3093
3094 <row>
3095 <entry>xproto</entry>
3096
3097 <entry>7.0.31</entry>
3098
3099 <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window
3100 System.</entry>
3101
3102 <entry>MIT</entry>
3103 </row>
3104
3105 <row>
3106 <entry>xtrans</entry>
3107
3108 <entry>1.3.5</entry>
3109
3110 <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system
3111 and transport specific code into a single place. This API should
3112 be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window
3113 System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of
3114 transports and support for new platforms without making any
3115 changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface
3116 code.</entry>
3117
3118 <entry>MIT</entry>
3119 </row>
3120
3121 <row>
3122 <entry>xz</entry>
3123
3124 <entry>5.2.3</entry>
3125
3126 <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry>
3127
3128 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry>
3129 </row>
3130
3131 <row>
3132 <entry>yajl</entry>
3133
3134 <entry>2.1.0</entry>
3135
3136 <entry>YAJL is a small event-driven (SAX-style) JSON parser
3137 written in ANSI C and a small validating JSON generator.</entry>
3138
3139 <entry>ISC</entry>
3140 </row>
3141
3142 <row>
3143 <entry>zlib</entry>
3144
3145 <entry>1.2.11</entry>
3146
3147 <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data
3148 compression library which is used by many different
3149 programs.</entry>
3150
3151 <entry>Zlib</entry>
3152 </row>
3153 </tbody>
3154 </tgroup>
3155 </informaltable>
3156 </section>
3157
3158 <section id="open_source_license">
3159 <title>Open Source Licenses</title>
3160
3161 <section id="lic_0">
3162 <title>AFL-2.0</title>
3163
3164 <para><programlisting>
3165 1649
3166The Academic Free License 1650The Academic Free License
3167 v. 2.0 1651 v. 2.0
@@ -3302,13 +1786,11 @@ Permission is hereby granted to copy and distribute this license without modific
3302This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its 1786This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its
3303copyright owner. 1787copyright owner.
3304 1788
3305</programlisting></para> 1789</programlisting></para></section>
3306 </section>
3307 1790
3308 <section id="lic_1"> 1791<section id="lic_1">
3309 <title>Apache-2.0</title> 1792<title>Apache-2.0</title>
3310 1793<para><programlisting>
3311 <para><programlisting>
3312 1794
3313 1795
3314 Apache License 1796 Apache License
@@ -3513,13 +1995,11 @@ copyright owner.
3513 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 1995 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
3514 limitations under the License. 1996 limitations under the License.
3515 1997
3516</programlisting></para> 1998</programlisting></para></section>
3517 </section>
3518
3519 <section id="lic_2">
3520 <title>Artistic-1.0</title>
3521 1999
3522 <para><programlisting> 2000<section id="lic_2">
2001<title>Artistic-1.0</title>
2002<para><programlisting>
3523 2003
3524The Artistic License 2004The Artistic License
3525Preamble 2005Preamble
@@ -3612,13 +2092,11 @@ FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
3612 2092
3613The End 2093The End
3614 2094
3615</programlisting></para> 2095</programlisting></para></section>
3616 </section>
3617 2096
3618 <section id="lic_3"> 2097<section id="lic_3">
3619 <title>BSD</title> 2098<title>BSD</title>
3620 2099<para><programlisting>
3621 <para><programlisting>
3622Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. 2100Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California.
3623All rights reserved. 2101All rights reserved.
3624 2102
@@ -3645,13 +2123,11 @@ HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
3645LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 2123LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
3646OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 2124OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
3647SUCH DAMAGE. 2125SUCH DAMAGE.
3648</programlisting></para> 2126</programlisting></para></section>
3649 </section>
3650
3651 <section id="lic_4">
3652 <title>BSD-2-Clause</title>
3653 2127
3654 <para><programlisting> 2128<section id="lic_4">
2129<title>BSD-2-Clause</title>
2130<para><programlisting>
3655 2131
3656The FreeBSD Copyright 2132The FreeBSD Copyright
3657 2133
@@ -3679,13 +2155,11 @@ The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation are those
3679authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either 2155authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either
3680expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. 2156expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project.
3681 2157
3682</programlisting></para> 2158</programlisting></para></section>
3683 </section>
3684 2159
3685 <section id="lic_5"> 2160<section id="lic_5">
3686 <title>BSD-3-Clause</title> 2161<title>BSD-3-Clause</title>
3687 2162<para><programlisting>
3688 <para><programlisting>
3689 2163
3690Copyright (c) &lt;YEAR&gt;, &lt;OWNER&gt; 2164Copyright (c) &lt;YEAR&gt;, &lt;OWNER&gt;
3691All rights reserved. 2165All rights reserved.
@@ -3712,13 +2186,11 @@ CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
3712WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH 2186WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
3713DAMAGE. 2187DAMAGE.
3714 2188
3715</programlisting></para> 2189</programlisting></para></section>
3716 </section>
3717
3718 <section id="lic_6">
3719 <title>BSD-4-Clause</title>
3720 2190
3721 <para><programlisting> 2191<section id="lic_6">
2192<title>BSD-4-Clause</title>
2193<para><programlisting>
3722 2194
3723Copyright (c) &lt;year&gt;, &lt;copyright holder&gt; 2195Copyright (c) &lt;year&gt;, &lt;copyright holder&gt;
3724All rights reserved. 2196All rights reserved.
@@ -3748,13 +2220,11 @@ ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
3748(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS 2220(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
3749SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 2221SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
3750 2222
3751</programlisting></para> 2223</programlisting></para></section>
3752 </section>
3753 2224
3754 <section id="lic_7"> 2225<section id="lic_7">
3755 <title>BSL-1.0</title> 2226<title>BSL-1.0</title>
3756 2227<para><programlisting>
3757 <para><programlisting>
3758 2228
3759Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003 2229Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003
3760 2230
@@ -3780,13 +2250,11 @@ FOR ANY DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE,
3780ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER 2250ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
3781DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. 2251DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
3782 2252
3783</programlisting></para> 2253</programlisting></para></section>
3784 </section>
3785
3786 <section id="lic_8">
3787 <title>Elfutils-Exception</title>
3788 2254
3789 <para><programlisting> 2255<section id="lic_8">
2256<title>Elfutils-Exception</title>
2257<para><programlisting>
3790 This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed 2258 This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed
3791 to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. 2259 to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils.
3792 For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files 2260 For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files
@@ -3799,24 +2267,20 @@ DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
3799 libdw.h 2267 libdw.h
3800 libdwfl.h 2268 libdwfl.h
3801 2269
3802</programlisting></para> 2270</programlisting></para></section>
3803 </section>
3804 2271
3805 <section id="lic_9"> 2272<section id="lic_9">
3806 <title>FSF-Unlimited</title> 2273<title>FSF-Unlimited</title>
3807 2274<para><programlisting>
3808 <para><programlisting>
3809Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 2275Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3810This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation 2276This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
3811gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, 2277gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
3812with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. 2278with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
3813</programlisting></para> 2279</programlisting></para></section>
3814 </section>
3815
3816 <section id="lic_10">
3817 <title>GPL-1.0</title>
3818 2280
3819 <para><programlisting> 2281<section id="lic_10">
2282<title>GPL-1.0</title>
2283<para><programlisting>
3820 2284
3821GNU General Public License, version 1 2285GNU General Public License, version 1
3822 2286
@@ -4069,13 +2533,11 @@ necessary. Here a sample; alter the names:
4069 2533
4070That`s all there is to it! 2534That`s all there is to it!
4071 2535
4072</programlisting></para> 2536</programlisting></para></section>
4073 </section>
4074 2537
4075 <section id="lic_11"> 2538<section id="lic_11">
4076 <title>GPL-2.0</title> 2539<title>GPL-2.0</title>
4077 2540<para><programlisting>
4078 <para><programlisting>
4079 2541
4080GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 2542GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
4081 2543
@@ -4374,18 +2836,16 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this
4374what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this 2836what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this
4375License. 2837License.
4376 2838
4377</programlisting></para> 2839</programlisting></para></section>
4378 </section>
4379
4380 <section id="lic_12">
4381 <title>GPL-3.0</title>
4382 2840
4383 <para><programlisting> 2841<section id="lic_12">
2842<title>GPL-3.0</title>
2843<para><programlisting>
4384GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 2844GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
4385 2845
4386Version 3, 29 June 2007 2846Version 3, 29 June 2007
4387 2847
4388Copyright Â&copy; 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt; 2848Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt;
4389 2849
4390Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, 2850Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document,
4391but changing it is not allowed. 2851but changing it is not allowed.
@@ -4954,13 +3414,11 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this
4954what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this 3414what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this
4955License. But first, please read 3415License. But first, please read
4956&lt;http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html&gt;. 3416&lt;http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html&gt;.
4957</programlisting></para> 3417</programlisting></para></section>
4958 </section>
4959
4960 <section id="lic_13">
4961 <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title>
4962 3418
4963 <para><programlisting> 3419<section id="lic_13">
3420<title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title>
3421<para><programlisting>
4964 3422
4965insert GPL v3 text here 3423insert GPL v3 text here
4966 3424
@@ -5016,13 +3474,11 @@ consistent with the licensing of the Independent Modules.
5016The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that 3474The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that
5017third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. 3475third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC.
5018 3476
5019</programlisting></para> 3477</programlisting></para></section>
5020 </section>
5021 3478
5022 <section id="lic_14"> 3479<section id="lic_14">
5023 <title>ICU</title> 3480<title>ICU</title>
5024 3481<para><programlisting>
5025 <para><programlisting>
5026COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE 3482COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE
5027 3483
5028Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others 3484Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others
@@ -5053,18 +3509,16 @@ Software without prior written authorization of the copyright holder.
5053 3509
5054All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their 3510All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their
5055respective owners. 3511respective owners.
5056</programlisting></para> 3512</programlisting></para></section>
5057 </section>
5058
5059 <section id="lic_15">
5060 <title>ISC</title>
5061 3513
5062 <para><programlisting> 3514<section id="lic_15">
3515<title>ISC</title>
3516<para><programlisting>
5063 3517
5064ISC License: 3518ISC License:
5065 3519
5066Copyright &copy; 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") 3520Copyright &#169; 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC")
5067Copyright &copy; 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium 3521Copyright &#169; 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium
5068 3522
5069Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with 3523Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with
5070or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this 3524or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this
@@ -5077,13 +3531,11 @@ DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN AC
5077OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH 3531OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH
5078THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. 3532THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
5079 3533
5080</programlisting></para> 3534</programlisting></para></section>
5081 </section>
5082 3535
5083 <section id="lic_16"> 3536<section id="lic_16">
5084 <title>LGPL-2.0</title> 3537<title>LGPL-2.0</title>
5085 3538<para><programlisting>
5086 <para><programlisting>
5087GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 3539GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
5088 3540
5089 3541
@@ -5667,13 +4119,11 @@ Ty Coon, President of Vice
5667 4119
5668That's all there is to it! 4120That's all there is to it!
5669 4121
5670</programlisting></para> 4122</programlisting></para></section>
5671 </section>
5672
5673 <section id="lic_17">
5674 <title>LGPL-2.1</title>
5675 4123
5676 <para><programlisting> 4124<section id="lic_17">
4125<title>LGPL-2.1</title>
4126<para><programlisting>
5677 4127
5678GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 4128GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
5679 4129
@@ -6101,18 +4551,16 @@ signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1990
6101Ty Coon, President of Vice 4551Ty Coon, President of Vice
6102That`s all there is to it! 4552That`s all there is to it!
6103 4553
6104</programlisting></para> 4554</programlisting></para></section>
6105 </section>
6106 4555
6107 <section id="lic_18"> 4556<section id="lic_18">
6108 <title>LGPL-3.0</title> 4557<title>LGPL-3.0</title>
6109 4558<para><programlisting>
6110 <para><programlisting>
6111GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 4559GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
6112 4560
6113Version 3, 29 June 2007 4561Version 3, 29 June 2007
6114 4562
6115Copyright Â&copy; 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt; 4563Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt;
6116 4564
6117Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, 4565Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document,
6118but changing it is not allowed. 4566but changing it is not allowed.
@@ -6243,13 +4691,11 @@ If the Library as you received it specifies that a proxy can decide whether futu
6243versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public 4691versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public
6244statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose 4692statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose
6245that version for the Library. 4693that version for the Library.
6246</programlisting></para> 4694</programlisting></para></section>
6247 </section>
6248
6249 <section id="lic_19">
6250 <title>Libpng</title>
6251 4695
6252 <para><programlisting> 4696<section id="lic_19">
4697<title>Libpng</title>
4698<para><programlisting>
6253 4699
6254This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of 4700This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of
6255any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is 4701any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is
@@ -6362,13 +4808,11 @@ Glenn Randers-Pehrson
6362glennrp at users.sourceforge.net 4808glennrp at users.sourceforge.net
6363December 9, 2010 4809December 9, 2010
6364 4810
6365</programlisting></para> 4811</programlisting></para></section>
6366 </section>
6367 4812
6368 <section id="lic_20"> 4813<section id="lic_20">
6369 <title>MIT</title> 4814<title>MIT</title>
6370 4815<para><programlisting>
6371 <para><programlisting>
6372 4816
6373MIT License 4817MIT License
6374 4818
@@ -6392,13 +4836,11 @@ LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
6392OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN 4836OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
6393THE SOFTWARE. 4837THE SOFTWARE.
6394 4838
6395</programlisting></para> 4839</programlisting></para></section>
6396 </section>
6397
6398 <section id="lic_21">
6399 <title>MPL-2.0</title>
6400 4840
6401 <para><programlisting> 4841<section id="lic_21">
4842<title>MPL-2.0</title>
4843<para><programlisting>
6402Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 4844Mozilla Public License Version 2.0
6403================================== 4845==================================
6404 4846
@@ -6772,13 +5214,11 @@ Exhibit B - "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses" Notice
6772 5214
6773 This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as 5215 This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as
6774 defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. 5216 defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0.
6775</programlisting></para> 5217</programlisting></para></section>
6776 </section>
6777 5218
6778 <section id="lic_22"> 5219<section id="lic_22">
6779 <title>NTP</title> 5220<title>NTP</title>
6780 5221<para><programlisting>
6781 <para><programlisting>
6782 5222
6783NTP License (NTP) 5223NTP License (NTP)
6784 5224
@@ -6793,13 +5233,11 @@ of the software without specific, written prior permission. (TrademarkedName) ma
6793representations about the suitability this software for any purpose. It is provided 5233representations about the suitability this software for any purpose. It is provided
6794"as is" without express or implied warranty. 5234"as is" without express or implied warranty.
6795 5235
6796</programlisting></para> 5236</programlisting></para></section>
6797 </section>
6798
6799 <section id="lic_23">
6800 <title>OpenSSL</title>
6801 5237
6802 <para><programlisting> 5238<section id="lic_23">
5239<title>OpenSSL</title>
5240<para><programlisting>
6803 5241
6804OpenSSL License 5242OpenSSL License
6805 5243
@@ -6916,21 +5354,17 @@ put under another distribution licence
6916 5354
6917 5355
6918 5356
6919</programlisting></para> 5357</programlisting></para></section>
6920 </section>
6921 5358
6922 <section id="lic_24"> 5359<section id="lic_24">
6923 <title>PD</title> 5360<title>PD</title>
6924 5361<para><programlisting>
6925 <para><programlisting>
6926This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License 5362This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License
6927</programlisting></para> 5363</programlisting></para></section>
6928 </section>
6929
6930 <section id="lic_25">
6931 <title>Python-2.0</title>
6932 5364
6933 <para><programlisting> 5365<section id="lic_25">
5366<title>Python-2.0</title>
5367<para><programlisting>
6934 5368
6935PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 5369PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2
6936-------------------------------------------- 5370--------------------------------------------
@@ -7123,13 +5557,11 @@ WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
7123ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT 5557ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT
7124OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. 5558OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
7125 5559
7126</programlisting></para> 5560</programlisting></para></section>
7127 </section>
7128 5561
7129 <section id="lic_26"> 5562<section id="lic_26">
7130 <title>Sleepycat</title> 5563<title>Sleepycat</title>
7131 5564<para><programlisting>
7132 <para><programlisting>
7133 5565
7134The Sleepycat License 5566The Sleepycat License
7135Copyright (c) 1990-1999 5567Copyright (c) 1990-1999
@@ -7220,13 +5652,11 @@ LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
7220OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 5652OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
7221SUCH DAMAGE. 5653SUCH DAMAGE.
7222 5654
7223</programlisting></para> 5655</programlisting></para></section>
7224 </section>
7225
7226 <section id="lic_27">
7227 <title>Zlib</title>
7228 5656
7229 <para><programlisting> 5657<section id="lic_27">
5658<title>Zlib</title>
5659<para><programlisting>
7230 5660
7231zlib License 5661zlib License
7232 5662
@@ -7248,11 +5678,10 @@ zlib License
7248 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. 5678 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution.
7249 5679
7250 5680
7251</programlisting></para> 5681</programlisting></para></section>
7252 </section>
7253 </section>
7254 5682
7255 <section id="proprietary_license"> 5683 </section>
7256 <title>Proprietary Licenses</title> 5684 <section id="proprietary_license">
7257 </section> 5685 <title>Proprietary Licenses</title>
7258</chapter> \ No newline at end of file 5686 </section>
5687</chapter>