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-rw-r--r--doc/book-enea-nfv-access-guest-open-source/doc/licenses.xml3616
-rw-r--r--doc/book-enea-nfv-access-open-source/doc/licenses.xml7284
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3 files changed, 5757 insertions, 13983 deletions
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-guest-open-source/doc/licenses.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-guest-open-source/doc/licenses.xml
index 6cd99e5..0df7b89 100644
--- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-guest-open-source/doc/licenses.xml
+++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-guest-open-source/doc/licenses.xml
@@ -3,2341 +3,1025 @@
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="5*" /> 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>apt</entry>
39 40 <entry>1.2.12</entry>
40 <entry>2.2.52</entry> 41 <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry>
41 42 <entry>GPL-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>attr</entry>
45 </row> 46 <entry>2.4.47</entry>
46 47 <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended attributes.</entry>
47 <row> 48 <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry>
48 <entry>apt</entry> 49</row>
49 50<row>
50 <entry>1.2.12</entry> 51 <entry>autoconf</entry>
51 52 <entry>2.69</entry>
52 <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> 53 <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce shell scripts to automatically configure software source code packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package from a template file that lists the operating system features that the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry>
53 54 <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
54 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 55</row>
55 </row> 56<row>
56 57 <entry>automake</entry>
57 <row> 58 <entry>1.15</entry>
58 <entry>attr</entry> 59 <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry>
59 60 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
60 <entry>2.4.47</entry> 61</row>
61 62<row>
62 <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended 63 <entry>base-files</entry>
63 attributes.</entry> 64 <entry>3.0.14</entry>
64 65 <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for the system.</entry>
65 <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> 66 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
66 </row> 67</row>
67 68<row>
68 <row> 69 <entry>base-passwd</entry>
69 <entry>autoconf</entry> 70 <entry>3.5.29</entry>
70 71 <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry>
71 <entry>2.69</entry> 72 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
72 73</row>
73 <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce 74<row>
74 shell scripts to automatically configure software source code 75 <entry>bash-completion</entry>
75 packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package 76 <entry>2.5</entry>
76 from a template file that lists the operating system features that 77 <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry>
77 the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> 78 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
78 79</row>
79 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> 80<row>
80 </row> 81 <entry>bash</entry>
81 82 <entry>4.3.30</entry>
82 <row> 83 <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry>
83 <entry>automake</entry> 84 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
84 85</row>
85 <entry>1.15</entry> 86<row>
86 87 <entry>bc</entry>
87 <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating 88 <entry>1.06</entry>
88 `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. 89 <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry>
89 Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> 90 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
90 91</row>
91 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 92<row>
92 </row> 93 <entry>binutils-cross-aarch64</entry>
93 94 <entry>2.28</entry>
94 <row> 95 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry>
95 <entry>base-files</entry> 96 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
96 97</row>
97 <entry>3.0.14</entry> 98<row>
98 99 <entry>binutils</entry>
99 <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory 100 <entry>2.28</entry>
100 structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for 101 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry>
101 the system.</entry> 102 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
102 103</row>
103 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 104<row>
104 </row> 105 <entry>bison</entry>
105 106 <entry>3.0.4</entry>
106 <row> 107 <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>
107 <entry>base-passwd</entry> 108 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
108 109</row>
109 <entry>3.5.29</entry> 110<row>
110 111 <entry>busybox</entry>
111 <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd 112 <entry>1.24.1</entry>
112 and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep 113 <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>
113 the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> 114 <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry>
114 115</row>
115 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 116<row>
116 </row> 117 <entry>bzip2</entry>
117 118 <entry>1.0.6</entry>
118 <row> 119 <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>
119 <entry>bash-completion</entry> 120 <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry>
120 121</row>
121 <entry>2.5</entry> 122<row>
122 123 <entry>ca-certificates</entry>
123 <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> 124 <entry>20161130</entry>
124 125 <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>
125 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 126 <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry>
126 </row> 127</row>
127 128<row>
128 <row> 129 <entry>coreutils</entry>
129 <entry>bash</entry> 130 <entry>8.26</entry>
130 131 <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>
131 <entry>4.3.30</entry> 132 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
132 133</row>
133 <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> 134<row>
134 135 <entry>cross-localedef</entry>
135 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 136 <entry>2.25</entry>
136 </row> 137 <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry>
137 138 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
138 <row> 139</row>
139 <entry>bc</entry> 140<row>
140 141 <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry>
141 <entry>1.06</entry> 142 <entry>1.8</entry>
142 143 <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry>
143 <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> 144 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
144 145</row>
145 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 146<row>
146 </row> 147 <entry>curl</entry>
147 148 <entry>7.53.1</entry>
148 <row> 149 <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL transfers.</entry>
149 <entry>binutils-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> 150 <entry>MIT</entry>
150 151</row>
151 <entry>2.28</entry> 152<row>
152 153 <entry>db</entry>
153 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main 154 <entry>5.3.28</entry>
154 ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also 155 <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry>
155 includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into 156 <entry>Sleepycat</entry>
156 filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and 157</row>
157 extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy 158<row>
158 (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object 159 <entry>dbus-test</entry>
159 information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> 160 <entry>1.10.14</entry>
160 161 <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing only).</entry>
161 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 162 <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
162 </row> 163</row>
163 164<row>
164 <row> 165 <entry>dbus</entry>
165 <entry>binutils-cross-x86_64</entry> 166 <entry>1.10.14</entry>
166 167 <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>
167 <entry>2.28</entry> 168 <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
168 169</row>
169 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main 170<row>
170 ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also 171 <entry>debianutils</entry>
171 includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into 172 <entry>4.8.1</entry>
172 filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and 173 <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry>
173 extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy 174 <entry> GPL-2.0</entry>
174 (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object 175</row>
175 information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> 176<row>
176 177 <entry>depmodwrapper</entry>
177 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 178 <entry>1.0</entry>
178 </row> 179 <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency indexer.</entry>
179 180 <entry>MIT</entry>
180 <row> 181</row>
181 <entry>binutils-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> 182<row>
182 183 <entry>diffutils</entry>
183 <entry>2.28</entry> 184 <entry>3.5</entry>
184 185 <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch files.</entry>
185 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main 186 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
186 ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also 187</row>
187 includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into 188<row>
188 filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and 189 <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry>
189 extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy 190 <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry>
190 (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object 191 <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry>
191 information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> 192 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
192 193</row>
193 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 194<row>
194 </row> 195 <entry>dpdk</entry>
195 196 <entry>17.08</entry>
196 <row> 197 <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry>
197 <entry>binutils</entry> 198 <entry> BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
198 199</row>
199 <entry>2.28</entry> 200<row>
200 201 <entry>dpkg</entry>
201 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main 202 <entry>1.18.10</entry>
202 ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also 203 <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry>
203 includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into 204 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
204 filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and 205</row>
205 extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy 206<row>
206 (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object 207 <entry>dtc</entry>
207 information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> 208 <entry>1.4.2</entry>
208 209 <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry>
209 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 210 <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry>
210 </row> 211</row>
211 212<row>
212 <row> 213 <entry>e2fsprogs</entry>
213 <entry>bison</entry> 214 <entry>1.43.4</entry>
214 215 <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry>
215 <entry>3.0.4</entry> 216 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry>
216 217</row>
217 <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts 218<row>
218 an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser 219 <entry>elfutils</entry>
219 for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all 220 <entry>0.168</entry>
220 properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no 221 <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object files.</entry>
221 change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with 222 <entry> GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry>
222 little trouble.</entry> 223</row>
223 224<row>
224 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 225 <entry>enea-nfv-access-guest</entry>
225 </row> 226 <entry>1.0</entry>
226 227 <entry>Image for the guest side of the Enea NFV Access Platform</entry>
227 <row> 228 <entry>MIT</entry>
228 <entry>busybox</entry> 229</row>
229 230<row>
230 <entry>1.24.1</entry> 231 <entry>expat</entry>
231 232 <entry>2.2.0</entry>
232 <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX 233 <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>
233 utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist 234 <entry>MIT</entry>
234 replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU 235</row>
235 fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have 236<row>
236 fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the 237 <entry>file</entry>
237 options that are included provide the expected functionality and 238 <entry>5.30</entry>
238 behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a 239 <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents and prints a description if a match is found.</entry>
239 fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded 240 <entry>BSD</entry>
240 system.</entry> 241</row>
241 242<row>
242 <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> 243 <entry>flex</entry>
243 </row> 244 <entry>2.6.0</entry>
244 245 <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in text.</entry>
245 <row> 246 <entry>BSD</entry>
246 <entry>bzip2</entry> 247</row>
247 248<row>
248 <entry>1.0.6</entry> 249 <entry>fuse</entry>
249 250 <entry>2.9.4</entry>
250 <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler 251 <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>
251 block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. 252 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
252 Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by 253</row>
253 more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the 254<row>
254 performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> 255 <entry>gawk</entry>
255 256 <entry>4.1.4</entry>
256 <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry> 257 <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>
257 </row> 258 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
258 259</row>
259 <row> 260<row>
260 <entry>ca-certificates</entry> 261 <entry>gcc-cross-aarch64</entry>
261 262 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
262 <entry>20161130</entry> 263 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
263 264 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
264 <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow 265</row>
265 SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL 266<row>
266 connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> 267 <entry>gcc-cross-initial-aarch64</entry>
267 268 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
268 <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> 269 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
269 </row> 270 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
270 271</row>
271 <row> 272<row>
272 <entry>chrpath</entry> 273 <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry>
273 274 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
274 <entry>0.16</entry> 275 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
275 276 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
276 <entry>chrpath allows you to change the rpath (where the 277</row>
277 application looks for libraries) in an application. It does not 278<row>
278 (yet) allow you to add an rpath if there isn't one 279 <entry>gcc</entry>
279 already.</entry> 280 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
280 281 <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry>
281 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 282 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry>
282 </row> 283</row>
283 284<row>
284 <row> 285 <entry>gdbm</entry>
285 <entry>cmake</entry> 286 <entry>1.12</entry>
286 287 <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry>
287 <entry>3.7.2</entry> 288 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
288 289</row>
289 <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> 290<row>
290 291 <entry>gettext-minimal</entry>
291 <entry>BSD</entry> 292 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry>
292 </row> 293 <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>
293 294 <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry>
294 <row> 295</row>
295 <entry>coreutils</entry> 296<row>
296 297 <entry>gettext</entry>
297 <entry>8.26</entry> 298 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry>
298 299 <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>
299 <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and 300 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
300 text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which 301</row>
301 are expected to exist on every system.</entry> 302<row>
302 303 <entry>glib-2.0</entry>
303 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 304 <entry>2.50.3</entry>
304 </row> 305 <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>
305 306 <entry> LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry>
306 <row> 307</row>
307 <entry>cross-localedef</entry> 308<row>
308 309 <entry>glibc-locale</entry>
309 <entry>2.25</entry> 310 <entry>2.25</entry>
310 311 <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry>
311 <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> 312 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
312 313</row>
313 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 314<row>
314 </row> 315 <entry>glibc</entry>
315 316 <entry>2.25</entry>
316 <row> 317 <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most systems with the Linux kernel.</entry>
317 <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry> 318 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
318 319</row>
319 <entry>1.8</entry> 320<row>
320 321 <entry>gmp</entry>
321 <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> 322 <entry>6.1.2</entry>
322 323 <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point numbers</entry>
323 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 324 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
324 </row> 325</row>
325 326<row>
326 <row> 327 <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry>
327 <entry>curl</entry> 328 <entry>2014.1</entry>
328 329 <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry>
329 <entry>7.53.1</entry> 330 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
330 331</row>
331 <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL 332<row>
332 transfers.</entry> 333 <entry>gnu-config</entry>
333 334 <entry>20150728</entry>
334 <entry>MIT</entry> 335 <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a directory tree</entry>
335 </row> 336 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-autoconf-exception</entry>
336 337</row>
337 <row> 338<row>
338 <entry>db</entry> 339 <entry>gnutls</entry>
339 340 <entry>3.5.9</entry>
340 <entry>5.3.28</entry> 341 <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry>
341 342 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
342 <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> 343</row>
343 344<row>
344 <entry>Sleepycat</entry> 345 <entry>gperf</entry>
345 </row> 346 <entry>3.0.4</entry>
346 347 <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry>
347 <row> 348 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
348 <entry>dbus-test</entry> 349</row>
349 350<row>
350 <entry>1.10.14</entry> 351 <entry>grep</entry>
351 352 <entry>3.0</entry>
352 <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing 353 <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry>
353 only).</entry> 354 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
354 355</row>
355 <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 356<row>
356 </row> 357 <entry>gtk-doc</entry>
357 358 <entry>1.25</entry>
358 <row> 359 <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>
359 <entry>dbus</entry> 360 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
360 361</row>
361 <entry>1.10.14</entry> 362<row>
362 363 <entry>inputproto</entry>
363 <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for 364 <entry>2.3.2</entry>
364 applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess 365 <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>
365 communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes 366 <entry> MIT</entry>
366 it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application 367</row>
367 or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when 368<row>
368 their services are needed."</entry> 369 <entry>intltool</entry>
369 370 <entry>0.51.0</entry>
370 <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 371 <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry>
371 </row> 372 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
372 373</row>
373 <row> 374<row>
374 <entry>debianutils</entry> 375 <entry>iproute2</entry>
375 376 <entry>4.10.0</entry>
376 <entry>4.8.1</entry> 377 <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>
377 378 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
378 <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> 379</row>
379 380<row>
380 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 381 <entry>iptables</entry>
381 </row> 382 <entry>1.6.1</entry>
382 383 <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to configure and control network packet filtering code in Linux.</entry>
383 <row> 384 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
384 <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> 385</row>
385 386<row>
386 <entry>1.0</entry> 387 <entry>kbd</entry>
387 388 <entry>2.0.4</entry>
388 <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency 389 <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry>
389 indexer.</entry> 390 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
390 391</row>
391 <entry>MIT</entry> 392<row>
392 </row> 393 <entry>kbproto</entry>
393 394 <entry>1.0.7</entry>
394 <row> 395 <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>
395 <entry>diffutils</entry> 396 <entry>MIT</entry>
396 397</row>
397 <entry>3.5</entry> 398<row>
398 399 <entry>kern-tools</entry>
399 <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp 400 <entry>0.2</entry>
400 utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch 401 <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched kernels.</entry>
401 files.</entry> 402 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
402 403</row>
403 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 404<row>
404 </row> 405 <entry>kmod</entry>
405 406 <entry>23</entry>
406 <row> 407 <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>
407 <entry>dnf</entry> 408 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
408 409</row>
409 <entry>2.0.0</entry> 410<row>
410 411 <entry>ldconfig</entry>
411 <entry>Package manager forked from Yum using libsolv as a 412 <entry>2.12.1</entry>
412 dependency resolver.</entry> 413 <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry>
413 414 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
414 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 415</row>
415 </row> 416<row>
416 417 <entry>libarchive</entry>
417 <row> 418 <entry>3.2.2</entry>
418 <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> 419 <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry>
419 420 <entry>BSD</entry>
420 <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry> 421</row>
421 422<row>
422 <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> 423 <entry>libcap</entry>
423 424 <entry>2.25</entry>
424 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 425 <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry>
425 </row> 426 <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0</entry>
426 427</row>
427 <row> 428<row>
428 <entry>dpdk</entry> 429 <entry>libcgroup</entry>
429 430 <entry>0.41</entry>
430 <entry>17.08</entry> 431 <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>
431 432 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
432 <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry> 433</row>
433 434<row>
434 <entry>BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 435 <entry>libcheck</entry>
435 </row> 436 <entry>0.10.0</entry>
436 437 <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry>
437 <row> 438 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
438 <entry>dpkg</entry> 439</row>
439 440<row>
440 <entry>1.18.10</entry> 441 <entry>libffi</entry>
441 442 <entry>3.2.1</entry>
442 <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> 443 <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>
443 444 <entry>MIT</entry>
444 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 445</row>
445 </row> 446<row>
446 447 <entry>libgcc</entry>
447 <row> 448 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
448 <entry>dtc</entry> 449 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
449 450 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry>
450 <entry>1.4.2</entry> 451</row>
451 452<row>
452 <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the 453 <entry>libice</entry>
453 Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> 454 <entry>1.0.9</entry>
454 455 <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>
455 <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> 456 <entry>MIT</entry>
456 </row> 457</row>
457 458<row>
458 <row> 459 <entry>libidn</entry>
459 <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> 460 <entry>1.33</entry>
460 461 <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) working group.</entry>
461 <entry>1.43.4</entry> 462 <entry> LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
462 463</row>
463 <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of 464<row>
464 the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and 465 <entry>libmpc</entry>
465 debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> 466 <entry>1.0.3</entry>
466 467 <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>
467 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> 468 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
468 </row> 469</row>
469 470<row>
470 <row> 471 <entry>libnl</entry>
471 <entry>elfutils</entry> 472 <entry>3.2.29</entry>
472 473 <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink sockets.</entry>
473 <entry>0.168</entry> 474 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
474 475</row>
475 <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object 476<row>
476 files.</entry> 477 <entry>libpcap</entry>
477 478 <entry>1.8.1</entry>
478 <entry>GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> 479 <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection security monitoring and network debugging.</entry>
479 </row> 480 <entry>BSD</entry>
480 481</row>
481 <row> 482<row>
482 <entry>enea-nfv-access-guest</entry> 483 <entry>libpcre</entry>
483 484 <entry>8.40</entry>
484 <entry>1.0</entry> 485 <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>
485 486 <entry>BSD</entry>
486 <entry>Image for the guest side of Enea NFV Access.</entry> 487</row>
487 488<row>
488 <entry>MIT</entry> 489 <entry>libpng</entry>
489 </row> 490 <entry>1.6.28</entry>
490 491 <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry>
491 <row> 492 <entry>Libpng</entry>
492 <entry>expat</entry> 493</row>
493 494<row>
494 <entry>2.2.0</entry> 495 <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry>
495 496 <entry>0.3</entry>
496 <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a 497 <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry>
497 stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers 498 <entry>MIT</entry>
498 for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start 499</row>
499 tags)</entry> 500<row>
500 501 <entry>libsdl</entry>
501 <entry>MIT</entry> 502 <entry>1.2.15</entry>
502 </row> 503 <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>
503 504 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
504 <row> 505</row>
505 <entry>file</entry> 506<row>
506 507 <entry>libsm</entry>
507 <entry>5.30</entry> 508 <entry>1.2.2</entry>
508 509 <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>
509 <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents 510 <entry>MIT</entry>
510 and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> 511</row>
511 512<row>
512 <entry>BSD</entry> 513 <entry>libtool</entry>
513 </row> 514 <entry>2.4.6</entry>
514 515 <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>
515 <row> 516 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
516 <entry>flex</entry> 517</row>
517 518<row>
518 <entry>2.6.0</entry> 519 <entry>libunistring</entry>
519 520 <entry>0.9.7</entry>
520 <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool 521 <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>
521 for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in 522 <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
522 text.</entry> 523</row>
523 524<row>
524 <entry>BSD</entry> 525 <entry>libx11</entry>
525 </row> 526 <entry>1.6.4</entry>
526 527 <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>
527 <row> 528 <entry> MIT, BSD</entry>
528 <entry>fuse</entry> 529</row>
529 530<row>
530 <entry>2.9.4</entry> 531 <entry>libxau</entry>
531 532 <entry>1.0.8</entry>
532 <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for 533 <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X connections both client-side and server-side.</entry>
533 userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux 534 <entry>MIT</entry>
534 kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non 535</row>
535 privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem 536<row>
536 implementations.</entry> 537 <entry>libxcb</entry>
537 538 <entry>1.12</entry>
538 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> 539 <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>
539 </row> 540 <entry>MIT</entry>
540 541</row>
541 <row> 542<row>
542 <entry>gawk</entry> 543 <entry>libxdmcp</entry>
543 544 <entry>1.1.2</entry>
544 <entry>4.1.4</entry> 545 <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>
545 546 <entry>MIT</entry>
546 <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk 547</row>
547 interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and 548<row>
548 easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> 549 <entry>libxext</entry>
549 550 <entry>1.3.3</entry>
550 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 551 <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>
551 </row> 552 <entry>MIT</entry>
552 553</row>
553 <row> 554<row>
554 <entry>gcc-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> 555 <entry>libxkbcommon</entry>
555 556 <entry>0.7.1</entry>
556 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 557 <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB specification.</entry>
557 558 <entry> MIT</entry>
558 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers (cross-canadian for x86_64 559</row>
559 target).</entry> 560<row>
560 561 <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry>
561 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 562 <entry>2.44</entry>
562 </row> 563 <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML documents.</entry>
563 564 <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
564 <row> 565</row>
565 <entry>gcc-cross-initial-x86_64</entry> 566<row>
566 567 <entry>libxml2</entry>
567 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 568 <entry>2.9.4</entry>
568 569 <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>
569 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 570 <entry>MIT</entry>
570 571</row>
571 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 572<row>
572 </row> 573 <entry>libxrandr</entry>
573 574 <entry>1.5.1</entry>
574 <row> 575 <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>
575 <entry>gcc-cross-x86_64</entry> 576 <entry>MIT</entry>
576 577</row>
577 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 578<row>
578 579 <entry>libxrender</entry>
579 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 580 <entry>0.9.10</entry>
580 581 <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>
581 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 582 <entry>MIT</entry>
582 </row> 583</row>
583 584<row>
584 <row> 585 <entry>libxslt</entry>
585 <entry>gcc-crosssdk-initial-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> 586 <entry>1.1.29</entry>
586 587 <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry>
587 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 588 <entry>MIT</entry>
588 589</row>
589 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 590<row>
590 591 <entry>linux-cavium-dev</entry>
591 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 592 <entry>4.9-octeontx.sdk.6.1.0.p3.build.22</entry>
592 </row> 593 <entry>Linux kernel.</entry>
593 594 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
594 <row> 595</row>
595 <entry>gcc-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> 596<row>
596 597 <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry>
597 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 598 <entry>4.10</entry>
598 599 <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's use.</entry>
599 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 600 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
600 601</row>
601 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 602<row>
602 </row> 603 <entry>lzo</entry>
603 604 <entry>2.09</entry>
604 <row> 605 <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry>
605 <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> 606 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
606 607</row>
607 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 608<row>
608 609 <entry>lzop</entry>
609 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 610 <entry>1.03</entry>
610 611 <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>
611 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 612 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
612 </row> 613</row>
613 614<row>
614 <row> 615 <entry>m4</entry>
615 <entry>gcc</entry> 616 <entry>1.4.18</entry>
616 617 <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>
617 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 618 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
618 619</row>
619 <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry> 620<row>
620 621 <entry>make</entry>
621 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> 622 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
622 </row> 623 <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>
623 624 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
624 <row> 625</row>
625 <entry>gdb-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> 626<row>
626 627 <entry>makedepend</entry>
627 <entry>7.12.1</entry> 628 <entry>1.0.5</entry>
628 629 <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>
629 <entry>GNU debugger (cross-canadian gdb for x86_64 630 <entry>MIT</entry>
630 target).</entry> 631</row>
631 632<row>
632 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> 633 <entry>makedevs</entry>
633 </row> 634 <entry>1.0.1</entry>
634 635 <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry>
635 <row> 636 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
636 <entry>gdbm</entry> 637</row>
637 638<row>
638 <entry>1.12</entry> 639 <entry>mklibs</entry>
639 640 <entry>0.1.43</entry>
640 <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> 641 <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry>
641 642 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
642 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 643</row>
643 </row> 644<row>
644 645 <entry>mpfr</entry>
645 <row> 646 <entry>3.1.5</entry>
646 <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> 647 <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point computations with exact rounding.</entry>
647 648 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
648 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> 649</row>
649 650<row>
650 <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building 651 <entry>ncurses</entry>
651 autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup 652 <entry>6.0</entry>
652 by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now 653 <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>
653 only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> 654 <entry>MIT</entry>
654 655</row>
655 <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> 656<row>
656 </row> 657 <entry>netbase</entry>
657 658 <entry>5.4</entry>
658 <row> 659 <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for basic TCP/IP based networking</entry>
659 <entry>gettext</entry> 660 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
660 661</row>
661 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> 662<row>
662 663 <entry>nettle</entry>
663 <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to 664 <entry>3.3</entry>
664 help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools 665 <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry>
665 include a set of conventions about how programs should be written 666 <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
666 to support message catalogs a directory and file naming 667</row>
667 organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library 668<row>
668 supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few 669 <entry>nspr</entry>
669 stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of 670 <entry>4.13.1</entry>
670 translatable and already translated strings.</entry> 671 <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry>
671 672 <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
672 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 673</row>
673 </row> 674<row>
674 675 <entry>nss</entry>
675 <row> 676 <entry>3.28.1</entry>
676 <entry>glib-2.0</entry> 677 <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>
677 678 <entry> MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
678 <entry>2.50.3</entry> 679</row>
679 680<row>
680 <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides 681 <entry>numactl</entry>
681 many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities 682 <entry>2.0.11</entry>
682 file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> 683 <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>
683 684 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
684 <entry>LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> 685</row>
685 </row> 686<row>
686 687 <entry>openssh</entry>
687 <row> 688 <entry>7.4p1</entry>
688 <entry>glibc-locale</entry> 689 <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>
689 690 <entry>BSD</entry>
690 <entry>2.25</entry> 691</row>
691 692<row>
692 <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> 693 <entry>openssl</entry>
693 694 <entry>1.0.2k</entry>
694 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 695 <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic tools.</entry>
695 </row> 696 <entry>OpenSSL</entry>
696 697</row>
697 <row> 698<row>
698 <entry>glibc</entry> 699 <entry>opkg-utils</entry>
699 700 <entry>0.3.4</entry>
700 <entry>2.25</entry> 701 <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry>
701 702 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
702 <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most 703</row>
703 systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> 704<row>
704 705 <entry>os-release</entry>
705 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 706 <entry>1.0</entry>
706 </row> 707 <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system identification data.</entry>
707 708 <entry>MIT</entry>
708 <row> 709</row>
709 <entry>gmp</entry> 710<row>
710 711 <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry>
711 <entry>6.1.2</entry> 712 <entry>1.0</entry>
712 713 <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the system</entry>
713 <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic 714 <entry>MIT</entry>
714 operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point 715</row>
715 numbers</entry> 716<row>
716 717 <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry>
717 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> 718 <entry>1.0</entry>
718 </row> 719 <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry>
719 720 <entry>MIT</entry>
720 <row> 721</row>
721 <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> 722<row>
722 723 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry>
723 <entry>2014.1</entry> 724 <entry>1.0</entry>
724 725 <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry>
725 <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> 726 <entry>MIT</entry>
726 727</row>
727 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> 728<row>
728 </row> 729 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-guest</entry>
729 730 <entry>1.0</entry>
730 <row> 731 <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups specific to the guest side of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry>
731 <entry>gnu-config</entry> 732 <entry>MIT</entry>
732 733</row>
733 <entry>20150728</entry> 734<row>
734 735 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry>
735 <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a 736 <entry>1.0</entry>
736 directory tree</entry> 737 <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry>
737 738 <entry>MIT</entry>
738 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 739</row>
739 </row> 740<row>
740 741 <entry>pciutils</entry>
741 <row> 742 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
742 <entry>gnutls</entry> 743 <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based on this library.</entry>
743 744 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
744 <entry>3.5.9</entry> 745</row>
745 746<row>
746 <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> 747 <entry>perl</entry>
747 748 <entry>5.24.1</entry>
748 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 749 <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry>
749 </row> 750 <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
750 751</row>
751 <row> 752<row>
752 <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> 753 <entry>pigz</entry>
753 754 <entry>2.3.4</entry>
754 <entry>1.50.0</entry> 755 <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>
755 756 <entry> Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry>
756 <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and 757</row>
757 language bindings.</entry> 758<row>
758 759 <entry>pixman</entry>
759 <entry>LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 760 <entry>0.34.0</entry>
760 </row> 761 <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>
761 762 <entry> MIT, PD</entry>
762 <row> 763</row>
763 <entry>gperf</entry> 764<row>
764 765 <entry>pkgconfig</entry>
765 <entry>3.0.4</entry> 766 <entry>0.29.1</entry>
766 767 <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>
767 <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> 768 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
768 769</row>
769 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 770<row>
770 </row> 771 <entry>popt</entry>
771 772 <entry>1.16</entry>
772 <row> 773 <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry>
773 <entry>gpgme</entry> 774 <entry>MIT</entry>
774 775</row>
775 <entry>1.8.0</entry> 776<row>
776 777 <entry>prelink</entry>
777 <entry>GnuPG Made Easy (GPGME) is a library designed to make 778 <entry>1.0</entry>
778 access to GnuPG easier for applications. It provides a High-Level 779 <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>
779 Crypto API for encryption decryption signing signature 780 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
780 verification and key management</entry> 781</row>
781 782<row>
782 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 783 <entry>procps</entry>
783 </row> 784 <entry>3.3.12</entry>
784 785 <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>
785 <row> 786 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
786 <entry>grep</entry> 787</row>
787 788<row>
788 <entry>3.0</entry> 789 <entry>pseudo</entry>
789 790 <entry>1.8.2</entry>
790 <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> 791 <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal user.</entry>
791 792 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
792 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 793</row>
793 </row> 794<row>
794 795 <entry>ptest-runner</entry>
795 <row> 796 <entry>2.0.2</entry>
796 <entry>gtk-doc</entry> 797 <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them in sequence.</entry>
797 798 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
798 <entry>1.25</entry> 799</row>
799 800<row>
800 <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially 801 <entry>python</entry>
801 formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of 802 <entry>2.7.13</entry>
802 html documentation files from them</entry> 803 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
803 804 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
804 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 805</row>
805 </row> 806<row>
806 807 <entry>python3</entry>
807 <row> 808 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
808 <entry>inputproto</entry> 809 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
809 810 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
810 <entry>2.3.2</entry> 811</row>
811 812<row>
812 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input 813 <entry>qemu</entry>
813 extension. The extension supports input devices other then the 814 <entry>2.8.0</entry>
814 core X keyboard and pointer.</entry> 815 <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry>
815 816 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
816 <entry>MIT</entry> 817</row>
817 </row> 818<row>
818 819 <entry>qemuwrapper</entry>
819 <row> 820 <entry>1.0</entry>
820 <entry>intltool</entry> 821 <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry>
821 822 <entry>MIT</entry>
822 <entry>0.51.0</entry> 823</row>
823 824<row>
824 <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry> 825 <entry>quilt</entry>
825 826 <entry>0.65</entry>
826 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 827 <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry>
827 </row> 828 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
828 829</row>
829 <row> 830<row>
830 <entry>iproute2</entry> 831 <entry>randrproto</entry>
831 832 <entry>1.5.0</entry>
832 <entry>4.10.0</entry> 833 <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>
833 834 <entry>MIT</entry>
834 <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP / 835</row>
835 IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip 836<row>
836 and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6 837 <entry>readline</entry>
837 configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry> 838 <entry>7.0</entry>
838 839 <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>
839 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 840 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
840 </row> 841</row>
841 842<row>
842 <row> 843 <entry>renderproto</entry>
843 <entry>iptables</entry> 844 <entry>0.11.1</entry>
844 845 <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>
845 <entry>1.6.1</entry> 846 <entry>MIT</entry>
846 847</row>
847 <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to 848<row>
848 configure and control network packet filtering code in 849 <entry>rpm</entry>
849 Linux.</entry> 850 <entry>4.13.90</entry>
850 851 <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>
851 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 852 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
852 </row> 853</row>
853 854<row>
854 <row> 855 <entry>run-postinsts</entry>
855 <entry>kbd</entry> 856 <entry>1.0</entry>
856 857 <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target device.</entry>
857 <entry>2.0.4</entry> 858 <entry>MIT</entry>
858 859</row>
859 <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry> 860<row>
860 861 <entry>sed</entry>
861 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 862 <entry>4.2.2</entry>
862 </row> 863 <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry>
863 864 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
864 <row> 865</row>
865 <entry>kbproto</entry> 866<row>
866 867 <entry>shadow-securetty</entry>
867 <entry>1.0.7</entry> 868 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
868 869 <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry>
869 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard 870 <entry>MIT</entry>
870 extension. This extension is used to control options related to 871</row>
871 keyboard handling and layout.</entry> 872<row>
872 873 <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry>
873 <entry>MIT</entry> 874 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
874 </row> 875 <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry>
875 876 <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
876 <row> 877</row>
877 <entry>kern-tools</entry> 878<row>
878 879 <entry>shadow</entry>
879 <entry>0.2</entry> 880 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
880 881 <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group data.</entry>
881 <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched 882 <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
882 kernels.</entry> 883</row>
883 884<row>
884 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 885 <entry>shared-mime-info</entry>
885 </row> 886 <entry>1.8</entry>
886 887 <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry>
887 <row> 888 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
888 <entry>kmod</entry> 889</row>
889 890<row>
890 <entry>23</entry> 891 <entry>sqlite3</entry>
891 892 <entry>3.17.0</entry>
892 <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux 893 <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry>
893 kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve 894 <entry>PD</entry>
894 dependencies and aliases.</entry> 895</row>
895 896<row>
896 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 897 <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry>
897 </row> 898 <entry>1.0</entry>
898 899 <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit scripts.</entry>
899 <row> 900 <entry>MIT</entry>
900 <entry>ldconfig</entry> 901</row>
901 902<row>
902 <entry>2.12.1</entry> 903 <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry>
903 904 <entry>1.0</entry>
904 <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry> 905 <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry>
905 906 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
906 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 907</row>
907 </row> 908<row>
908 909 <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry>
909 <row> 910 <entry>1.0</entry>
910 <entry>libarchive</entry> 911 <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry>
911 912 <entry>MIT</entry>
912 <entry>3.2.2</entry> 913</row>
913 914<row>
914 <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing 915 <entry>systemd</entry>
915 tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry> 916 <entry>232</entry>
916 917 <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>
917 <entry>BSD</entry> 918 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
918 </row> 919</row>
919 920<row>
920 <row> 921 <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry>
921 <entry>libassuan</entry> 922 <entry>1.0</entry>
922 923 <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry>
923 <entry>2.4.3</entry> 924 <entry>MIT</entry>
924 925</row>
925 <entry>IPC library used by GnuPG and GPGME.</entry> 926<row>
926 927 <entry>tzcode</entry>
927 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 928 <entry>2017b</entry>
928 </row> 929 <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump tzselect.</entry>
929 930 <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
930 <row> 931</row>
931 <entry>libcap</entry> 932<row>
932 933 <entry>tzdata</entry>
933 <entry>2.25</entry> 934 <entry>2017b</entry>
934 935 <entry>Timezone data.</entry>
935 <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry> 936 <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
936 937</row>
937 <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> 938<row>
938 </row> 939 <entry>u-boot-mkimage</entry>
939 940 <entry>2017.01</entry>
940 <row> 941 <entry>U-Boot bootloader image creation tool.</entry>
941 <entry>libcgroup</entry> 942 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
942 943</row>
943 <entry>0.41</entry> 944<row>
944 945 <entry>unifdef</entry>
945 <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group 946 <entry>2.11</entry>
946 file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account 947 <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry>
947 and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of 948 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
948 processes.</entry> 949</row>
949 950<row>
950 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 951 <entry>update-rc.d</entry>
951 </row> 952 <entry>0.7</entry>
952 953 <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory structure.</entry>
953 <row> 954 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
954 <entry>libcheck</entry> 955</row>
955 956<row>
956 <entry>0.10.0</entry> 957 <entry>util-linux</entry>
957 958 <entry>2.29.1</entry>
958 <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry> 959 <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>
959 960 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry>
960 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 961</row>
961 </row> 962<row>
962 963 <entry>util-macros</entry>
963 <row> 964 <entry>1.19.1</entry>
964 <entry>libcomps</entry> 965 <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry>
965 966 <entry> MIT</entry>
966 <entry>0.1.8</entry> 967</row>
967 968<row>
968 <entry>Libcomps is alternative for yum.comps library (which is for 969 <entry>volatile-binds</entry>
969 managing rpm package groups)..</entry> 970 <entry>1.0</entry>
970 971 <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for read-only-rootfs</entry>
971 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 972 <entry>MIT</entry>
972 </row> 973</row>
973 974<row>
974 <row> 975 <entry>xcb-proto</entry>
975 <entry>libdnf</entry> 976 <entry>1.12</entry>
976 977 <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>
977 <entry>0.2.3</entry> 978 <entry>MIT</entry>
978 979</row>
979 <entry>Library providing simplified C and Python API to 980<row>
980 libsolv.</entry> 981 <entry>xextproto</entry>
981 982 <entry>7.3.0</entry>
982 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 983 <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>
983 </row> 984 <entry> MIT</entry>
984 985</row>
985 <row> 986<row>
986 <entry>libffi</entry> 987 <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry>
987 988 <entry>2.20</entry>
988 <entry>3.2.1</entry> 989 <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>
989 990 <entry> MIT</entry>
990 <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level 991</row>
991 programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows 992<row>
992 a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface 993 <entry>xproto</entry>
993 description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function 994 <entry>7.0.31</entry>
994 Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for 995 <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window System.</entry>
995 the interface that allows code written in one language to call 996 <entry> MIT</entry>
996 code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only 997</row>
997 provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured 998<row>
998 foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that 999 <entry>xtrans</entry>
999 handles type conversions for values passed between the two 1000 <entry>1.3.5</entry>
1000 languages.</entry> 1001 <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>
1001 1002 <entry> MIT</entry>
1002 <entry>MIT</entry> 1003</row>
1003 </row> 1004<row>
1004 1005 <entry>xz</entry>
1005 <row> 1006 <entry>5.2.3</entry>
1006 <entry>libgcc</entry> 1007 <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry>
1007 1008 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry>
1008 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 1009</row>
1009 1010<row>
1010 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 1011 <entry>zlib</entry>
1011 1012 <entry>1.2.11</entry>
1012 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 1013 <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data compression library which is used by many different programs.</entry>
1013 </row> 1014 <entry>Zlib</entry>
1014 1015</row>
1015 <row> 1016 </tbody>
1016 <entry>libgpg-error</entry> 1017 </tgroup>
1017 1018 </informaltable>
1018 <entry>1.26</entry>
1019
1020 <entry>Small library that defines common error values for all
1021 GnuPG components.</entry>
1022
1023 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1024 </row>
1025
1026 <row>
1027 <entry>libice</entry>
1028
1029 <entry>1.0.9</entry>
1030
1031 <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic
1032 framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream
1033 transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up
1034 and shutting down connections for performing authentication for
1035 negotiating versions and for reporting errors.</entry>
1036
1037 <entry>MIT</entry>
1038 </row>
1039
1040 <row>
1041 <entry>libidn</entry>
1042
1043 <entry>1.33</entry>
1044
1045 <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA
1046 specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names
1047 (IDN) working group.</entry>
1048
1049 <entry>LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
1050 </row>
1051
1052 <row>
1053 <entry>libmpc</entry>
1054
1055 <entry>1.0.3</entry>
1056
1057 <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers
1058 with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the
1059 result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as
1060 Mpfr</entry>
1061
1062 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
1063 </row>
1064
1065 <row>
1066 <entry>libnl</entry>
1067
1068 <entry>3.2.29</entry>
1069
1070 <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink
1071 sockets.</entry>
1072
1073 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
1074 </row>
1075
1076 <row>
1077 <entry>libpcap</entry>
1078
1079 <entry>1.8.1</entry>
1080
1081 <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network
1082 monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection
1083 security monitoring and network debugging.</entry>
1084
1085 <entry>BSD</entry>
1086 </row>
1087
1088 <row>
1089 <entry>libpcre</entry>
1090
1091 <entry>8.40</entry>
1092
1093 <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement
1094 regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and
1095 semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set
1096 of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular
1097 expression API.</entry>
1098
1099 <entry>BSD</entry>
1100 </row>
1101
1102 <row>
1103 <entry>libpng</entry>
1104
1105 <entry>1.6.28</entry>
1106
1107 <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry>
1108
1109 <entry>Libpng</entry>
1110 </row>
1111
1112 <row>
1113 <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry>
1114
1115 <entry>0.3</entry>
1116
1117 <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions
1118 not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry>
1119
1120 <entry>MIT</entry>
1121 </row>
1122
1123 <row>
1124 <entry>librepo</entry>
1125
1126 <entry>1.7.20</entry>
1127
1128 <entry>A library providing C and Python (libcURL like) API for
1129 downloading linux repository metadata and packages..</entry>
1130
1131 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
1132 </row>
1133
1134 <row>
1135 <entry>libsdl</entry>
1136
1137 <entry>1.2.15</entry>
1138
1139 <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia
1140 library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard
1141 mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video
1142 framebuffer.</entry>
1143
1144 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
1145 </row>
1146
1147 <row>
1148 <entry>libsm</entry>
1149
1150 <entry>1.2.2</entry>
1151
1152 <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level
1153 \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session
1154 Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for
1155 users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of
1156 clients each of which has a particular state."</entry>
1157
1158 <entry>MIT</entry>
1159 </row>
1160
1161 <row>
1162 <entry>libsolv</entry>
1163
1164 <entry>0.6.26</entry>
1165
1166 <entry>Library for solving packages and reading
1167 repositories.</entry>
1168
1169 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1170 </row>
1171
1172 <row>
1173 <entry>libtool</entry>
1174
1175 <entry>2.4.6</entry>
1176
1177 <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script.
1178 Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types
1179 (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry>
1180
1181 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1182 </row>
1183
1184 <row>
1185 <entry>libunistring</entry>
1186
1187 <entry>0.9.7</entry>
1188
1189 <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may
1190 consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese
1191 Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left
1192 writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX
1193 platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for
1194 dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In
1195 fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their
1196 base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides
1197 functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C
1198 strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains
1199 documentation.</entry>
1200
1201 <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
1202 </row>
1203
1204 <row>
1205 <entry>libx11</entry>
1206
1207 <entry>1.6.4</entry>
1208
1209 <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window
1210 System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for
1211 the basic functions of the window system.</entry>
1212
1213 <entry>MIT, BSD</entry>
1214 </row>
1215
1216 <row>
1217 <entry>libxau</entry>
1218
1219 <entry>1.0.8</entry>
1220
1221 <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11
1222 authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X
1223 connections both client-side and server-side.</entry>
1224
1225 <entry>MIT</entry>
1226 </row>
1227
1228 <row>
1229 <entry>libxcb</entry>
1230
1231 <entry>1.12</entry>
1232
1233 <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement
1234 for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access
1235 to the protocol improved threading support and
1236 extensibility.</entry>
1237
1238 <entry>MIT</entry>
1239 </row>
1240
1241 <row>
1242 <entry>libxdmcp</entry>
1243
1244 <entry>1.1.2</entry>
1245
1246 <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol
1247 (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous
1248 display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal
1249 (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime
1250 example of an autonomous display.</entry>
1251
1252 <entry>MIT</entry>
1253 </row>
1254
1255 <row>
1256 <entry>libxext</entry>
1257
1258 <entry>1.3.3</entry>
1259
1260 <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to
1261 several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol
1262 extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX
1263 MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC
1264 TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small
1265 set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X
1266 protocol extensions.</entry>
1267
1268 <entry>MIT</entry>
1269 </row>
1270
1271 <row>
1272 <entry>libxkbcommon</entry>
1273
1274 <entry>0.7.1</entry>
1275
1276 <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which
1277 processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB
1278 specification.</entry>
1279
1280 <entry>MIT</entry>
1281 </row>
1282
1283 <row>
1284 <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry>
1285
1286 <entry>2.44</entry>
1287
1288 <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML
1289 documents.</entry>
1290
1291 <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
1292 </row>
1293
1294 <row>
1295 <entry>libxml2</entry>
1296
1297 <entry>2.9.4</entry>
1298
1299 <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML
1300 files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for
1301 both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a
1302 parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2
1303 includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It
1304 also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible
1305 with Expat.</entry>
1306
1307 <entry>MIT</entry>
1308 </row>
1309
1310 <row>
1311 <entry>libxrandr</entry>
1312
1313 <entry>1.5.1</entry>
1314
1315 <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for
1316 short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root
1317 window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate
1318 Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix
1319 Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry>
1320
1321 <entry>MIT</entry>
1322 </row>
1323
1324 <row>
1325 <entry>libxrender</entry>
1326
1327 <entry>0.9.10</entry>
1328
1329 <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image
1330 composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the
1331 X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by
1332 client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text
1333 is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of
1334 them.</entry>
1335
1336 <entry>MIT</entry>
1337 </row>
1338
1339 <row>
1340 <entry>libxslt</entry>
1341
1342 <entry>1.1.29</entry>
1343
1344 <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry>
1345
1346 <entry>MIT</entry>
1347 </row>
1348
1349 <row>
1350 <entry>linux-intel-guest</entry>
1351
1352 <entry>4.9.47</entry>
1353
1354 <entry>Linux kernel.</entry>
1355
1356 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1357 </row>
1358
1359 <row>
1360 <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry>
1361
1362 <entry>4.10</entry>
1363
1364 <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's
1365 use.</entry>
1366
1367 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1368 </row>
1369
1370 <row>
1371 <entry>lzo</entry>
1372
1373 <entry>2.09</entry>
1374
1375 <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry>
1376
1377 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1378 </row>
1379
1380 <row>
1381 <entry>lzop</entry>
1382
1383 <entry>1.03</entry>
1384
1385 <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a
1386 companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression
1387 library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher
1388 compression and decompression speed at the cost of some
1389 \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed
1390 with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with
1391 reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry>
1392
1393 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1394 </row>
1395
1396 <row>
1397 <entry>m4</entry>
1398
1399 <entry>1.4.18</entry>
1400
1401 <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro
1402 processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some
1403 extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters
1404 to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files
1405 running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry>
1406
1407 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1408 </row>
1409
1410 <row>
1411 <entry>make</entry>
1412
1413 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
1414
1415 <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables
1416 and other non-source files of a program from the program's source
1417 files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a
1418 file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files
1419 and how to compute it from other files.</entry>
1420
1421 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
1422 </row>
1423
1424 <row>
1425 <entry>makedepend</entry>
1426
1427 <entry>1.0.5</entry>
1428
1429 <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence
1430 and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include
1431 #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else
1432 directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives
1433 would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can
1434 reference files having other #include directives and parsing will
1435 occur in these files as well.</entry>
1436
1437 <entry>MIT</entry>
1438 </row>
1439
1440 <row>
1441 <entry>makedevs</entry>
1442
1443 <entry>1.0.1</entry>
1444
1445 <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry>
1446
1447 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1448 </row>
1449
1450 <row>
1451 <entry>meta-environment-qemux86-64</entry>
1452
1453 <entry>1.0</entry>
1454
1455 <entry>Package of environment files for SDK.</entry>
1456
1457 <entry>MIT</entry>
1458 </row>
1459
1460 <row>
1461 <entry>meta-toolchain</entry>
1462
1463 <entry>1.0</entry>
1464
1465 <entry>Meta package for building a installable toolchain.</entry>
1466
1467 <entry>MIT</entry>
1468 </row>
1469
1470 <row>
1471 <entry>mklibs</entry>
1472
1473 <entry>0.1.43</entry>
1474
1475 <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only
1476 the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry>
1477
1478 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1479 </row>
1480
1481 <row>
1482 <entry>mpfr</entry>
1483
1484 <entry>3.1.5</entry>
1485
1486 <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point
1487 computations with exact rounding.</entry>
1488
1489 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
1490 </row>
1491
1492 <row>
1493 <entry>ncurses</entry>
1494
1495 <entry>6.0</entry>
1496
1497 <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo
1498 tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple
1499 highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of
1500 keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable
1501 windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using
1502 the gpm library.</entry>
1503
1504 <entry>MIT</entry>
1505 </row>
1506
1507 <row>
1508 <entry>netbase</entry>
1509
1510 <entry>5.4</entry>
1511
1512 <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for
1513 basic TCP/IP based networking</entry>
1514
1515 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1516 </row>
1517
1518 <row>
1519 <entry>nettle</entry>
1520
1521 <entry>3.3</entry>
1522
1523 <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry>
1524
1525 <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
1526 </row>
1527
1528 <row>
1529 <entry>nspr</entry>
1530
1531 <entry>4.13.1</entry>
1532
1533 <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry>
1534
1535 <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1536 </row>
1537
1538 <row>
1539 <entry>nss</entry>
1540
1541 <entry>3.28.1</entry>
1542
1543 <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries
1544 designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled
1545 client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can
1546 support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME
1547 X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry>
1548
1549 <entry>MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1550 </row>
1551
1552 <row>
1553 <entry>numactl</entry>
1554
1555 <entry>2.0.11</entry>
1556
1557 <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl
1558 program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a
1559 libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in
1560 applications.</entry>
1561
1562 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1563 </row>
1564
1565 <row>
1566 <entry>openssh</entry>
1567
1568 <entry>7.4p1</entry>
1569
1570 <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh
1571 (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and
1572 for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry>
1573
1574 <entry>BSD</entry>
1575 </row>
1576
1577 <row>
1578 <entry>openssl</entry>
1579
1580 <entry>1.0.2k</entry>
1581
1582 <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic
1583 tools.</entry>
1584
1585 <entry>OpenSSL</entry>
1586 </row>
1587
1588 <row>
1589 <entry>opkg-utils</entry>
1590
1591 <entry>0.3.4</entry>
1592
1593 <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry>
1594
1595 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1596 </row>
1597
1598 <row>
1599 <entry>opkg</entry>
1600
1601 <entry>0.3.4</entry>
1602
1603 <entry>Open Package Manager.</entry>
1604
1605 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1606 </row>
1607
1608 <row>
1609 <entry>os-release</entry>
1610
1611 <entry>1.0</entry>
1612
1613 <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system
1614 identification data.</entry>
1615
1616 <entry>MIT</entry>
1617 </row>
1618
1619 <row>
1620 <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry>
1621
1622 <entry>1.0</entry>
1623
1624 <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the
1625 system</entry>
1626
1627 <entry>MIT</entry>
1628 </row>
1629
1630 <row>
1631 <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry>
1632
1633 <entry>1.0</entry>
1634
1635 <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry>
1636
1637 <entry>MIT</entry>
1638 </row>
1639
1640 <row>
1641 <entry>packagegroup-core-standalone-sdk-target</entry>
1642
1643 <entry>1.0</entry>
1644
1645 <entry>Target packages for the standalone SDK.</entry>
1646
1647 <entry>MIT</entry>
1648 </row>
1649
1650 <row>
1651 <entry>packagegroup-cross-canadian-qemux86-64</entry>
1652
1653 <entry>1.0</entry>
1654
1655 <entry>Host SDK package for cross canadian toolchain.</entry>
1656
1657 <entry>MIT</entry>
1658 </row>
1659
1660 <row>
1661 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry>
1662
1663 <entry>1.0</entry>
1664
1665 <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry>
1666
1667 <entry>MIT</entry>
1668 </row>
1669
1670 <row>
1671 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-guest</entry>
1672
1673 <entry>1.0</entry>
1674
1675 <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups
1676 specific to the guest side of the Enea Linux Virtualization
1677 Profile.</entry>
1678
1679 <entry>MIT</entry>
1680 </row>
1681
1682 <row>
1683 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry>
1684
1685 <entry>1.0</entry>
1686
1687 <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups
1688 required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux
1689 Virtualization Profile.</entry>
1690
1691 <entry>MIT</entry>
1692 </row>
1693
1694 <row>
1695 <entry>packagegroup-sdk-host</entry>
1696
1697 <entry>1.0</entry>
1698
1699 <entry>Host packages for the standalone SDK or external
1700 toolchain.</entry>
1701
1702 <entry>MIT</entry>
1703 </row>
1704
1705 <row>
1706 <entry>pciutils</entry>
1707
1708 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
1709
1710 <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable
1711 access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based
1712 on this library.</entry>
1713
1714 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1715 </row>
1716
1717 <row>
1718 <entry>perl</entry>
1719
1720 <entry>5.24.1</entry>
1721
1722 <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry>
1723
1724 <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
1725 </row>
1726
1727 <row>
1728 <entry>pigz</entry>
1729
1730 <entry>2.3.4</entry>
1731
1732 <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a
1733 fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple
1734 processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data.
1735 pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread
1736 libraries.</entry>
1737
1738 <entry>Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry>
1739 </row>
1740
1741 <row>
1742 <entry>pixman</entry>
1743
1744 <entry>0.34.0</entry>
1745
1746 <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions --
1747 a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the
1748 Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric
1749 primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry>
1750
1751 <entry>MIT, PD</entry>
1752 </row>
1753
1754 <row>
1755 <entry>pixz</entry>
1756
1757 <entry>1.0.6</entry>
1758
1759 <entry>Parallel indexed xz compressor.</entry>
1760
1761 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
1762 </row>
1763
1764 <row>
1765 <entry>pkgconfig</entry>
1766
1767 <entry>0.29.1</entry>
1768
1769 <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling
1770 applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct
1771 compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry>
1772
1773 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1774 </row>
1775
1776 <row>
1777 <entry>popt</entry>
1778
1779 <entry>1.16</entry>
1780
1781 <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry>
1782
1783 <entry>MIT</entry>
1784 </row>
1785
1786 <row>
1787 <entry>postinst-intercept</entry>
1788
1789 <entry>1.0</entry>
1790
1791 <entry>Postinstall scriptlets.</entry>
1792
1793 <entry>MIT</entry>
1794 </row>
1795
1796 <row>
1797 <entry>prelink</entry>
1798
1799 <entry>1.0</entry>
1800
1801 <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF
1802 shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations
1803 need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up
1804 faster.</entry>
1805
1806 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1807 </row>
1808
1809 <row>
1810 <entry>procps</entry>
1811
1812 <entry>3.3.12</entry>
1813
1814 <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide
1815 system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The
1816 package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and
1817 skill.</entry>
1818
1819 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
1820 </row>
1821
1822 <row>
1823 <entry>pseudo</entry>
1824
1825 <entry>1.8.2</entry>
1826
1827 <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal
1828 user.</entry>
1829
1830 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
1831 </row>
1832
1833 <row>
1834 <entry>ptest-runner</entry>
1835
1836 <entry>2.0.2</entry>
1837
1838 <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program
1839 which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them
1840 in sequence.</entry>
1841
1842 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1843 </row>
1844
1845 <row>
1846 <entry>python</entry>
1847
1848 <entry>2.7.13</entry>
1849
1850 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
1851
1852 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
1853 </row>
1854
1855 <row>
1856 <entry>python3-iniparse</entry>
1857
1858 <entry>0.4</entry>
1859
1860 <entry>Accessing and Modifying INI files.</entry>
1861
1862 <entry>MIT, Python-2.0</entry>
1863 </row>
1864
1865 <row>
1866 <entry>python3-pygpgme</entry>
1867
1868 <entry>0.3</entry>
1869
1870 <entry>A Python module for working with OpenPGP messages.</entry>
1871
1872 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
1873 </row>
1874
1875 <row>
1876 <entry>python3-setuptools</entry>
1877
1878 <entry>32.1.1</entry>
1879
1880 <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python
1881 packages.</entry>
1882
1883 <entry>MIT</entry>
1884 </row>
1885
1886 <row>
1887 <entry>python3-six</entry>
1888
1889 <entry>1.10.0</entry>
1890
1891 <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility library.</entry>
1892
1893 <entry>MIT</entry>
1894 </row>
1895
1896 <row>
1897 <entry>python3</entry>
1898
1899 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
1900
1901 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
1902
1903 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
1904 </row>
1905
1906 <row>
1907 <entry>qemu-helper</entry>
1908
1909 <entry>1.0</entry>
1910
1911 <entry>Helper utilities needed by the runqemu script.</entry>
1912
1913 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1914 </row>
1915
1916 <row>
1917 <entry>qemu</entry>
1918
1919 <entry>2.8.0</entry>
1920
1921 <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry>
1922
1923 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1924 </row>
1925
1926 <row>
1927 <entry>qemuwrapper</entry>
1928
1929 <entry>1.0</entry>
1930
1931 <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry>
1932
1933 <entry>MIT</entry>
1934 </row>
1935
1936 <row>
1937 <entry>quilt</entry>
1938
1939 <entry>0.65</entry>
1940
1941 <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry>
1942
1943 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1944 </row>
1945
1946 <row>
1947 <entry>randrproto</entry>
1948
1949 <entry>1.5.0</entry>
1950
1951 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize
1952 Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability
1953 to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry>
1954
1955 <entry>MIT</entry>
1956 </row>
1957
1958 <row>
1959 <entry>readline</entry>
1960
1961 <entry>7.0</entry>
1962
1963 <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for
1964 use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they
1965 are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The
1966 Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list
1967 of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit
1968 those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous
1969 commands.</entry>
1970
1971 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1972 </row>
1973
1974 <row>
1975 <entry>renderproto</entry>
1976
1977 <entry>0.11.1</entry>
1978
1979 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering
1980 extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X
1981 window system.</entry>
1982
1983 <entry>MIT</entry>
1984 </row>
1985
1986 <row>
1987 <entry>rpm</entry>
1988
1989 <entry>4.13.90</entry>
1990
1991 <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line
1992 driven package management system capable of installing
1993 uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages.
1994 Each software package consists of an archive of files along with
1995 information about the package like its version a description
1996 etc.</entry>
1997
1998 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1999 </row>
2000
2001 <row>
2002 <entry>run-postinsts</entry>
2003
2004 <entry>1.0</entry>
2005
2006 <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target
2007 device.</entry>
2008
2009 <entry>MIT</entry>
2010 </row>
2011
2012 <row>
2013 <entry>sed</entry>
2014
2015 <entry>4.2.2</entry>
2016
2017 <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry>
2018
2019 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2020 </row>
2021
2022 <row>
2023 <entry>shadow-securetty</entry>
2024
2025 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
2026
2027 <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry>
2028
2029 <entry>MIT</entry>
2030 </row>
2031
2032 <row>
2033 <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry>
2034
2035 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
2036
2037 <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry>
2038
2039 <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
2040 </row>
2041
2042 <row>
2043 <entry>shadow</entry>
2044
2045 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
2046
2047 <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group
2048 data.</entry>
2049
2050 <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
2051 </row>
2052
2053 <row>
2054 <entry>shared-mime-info</entry>
2055
2056 <entry>1.8</entry>
2057
2058 <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry>
2059
2060 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
2061 </row>
2062
2063 <row>
2064 <entry>sqlite3</entry>
2065
2066 <entry>3.17.0</entry>
2067
2068 <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry>
2069
2070 <entry>PD</entry>
2071 </row>
2072
2073 <row>
2074 <entry>swig</entry>
2075
2076 <entry>3.0.12</entry>
2077
2078 <entry>SWIG - Simplified Wrapper and Interface Generator.</entry>
2079
2080 <entry>BSD, GPL-3.0</entry>
2081 </row>
2082
2083 <row>
2084 <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry>
2085
2086 <entry>1.0</entry>
2087
2088 <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit
2089 scripts.</entry>
2090
2091 <entry>MIT</entry>
2092 </row>
2093
2094 <row>
2095 <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry>
2096
2097 <entry>1.0</entry>
2098
2099 <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry>
2100
2101 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2102 </row>
2103
2104 <row>
2105 <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry>
2106
2107 <entry>1.0</entry>
2108
2109 <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry>
2110
2111 <entry>MIT</entry>
2112 </row>
2113
2114 <row>
2115 <entry>systemd</entry>
2116
2117 <entry>232</entry>
2118
2119 <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux
2120 compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides
2121 aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus
2122 activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of
2123 daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports
2124 snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and
2125 automount points and implements an elaborate transactional
2126 dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in
2127 replacement for sysvinit.</entry>
2128
2129 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2130 </row>
2131
2132 <row>
2133 <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry>
2134
2135 <entry>1.0</entry>
2136
2137 <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry>
2138
2139 <entry>MIT</entry>
2140 </row>
2141
2142 <row>
2143 <entry>tzcode</entry>
2144
2145 <entry>2017b</entry>
2146
2147 <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump
2148 tzselect.</entry>
2149
2150 <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
2151 </row>
2152
2153 <row>
2154 <entry>tzdata</entry>
2155
2156 <entry>2017b</entry>
2157
2158 <entry>Timezone data.</entry>
2159
2160 <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
2161 </row>
2162
2163 <row>
2164 <entry>unfs3</entry>
2165
2166 <entry>0.9.22.r497</entry>
2167
2168 <entry>Userspace NFS server v3 protocol.</entry>
2169
2170 <entry>unfs3</entry>
2171 </row>
2172
2173 <row>
2174 <entry>unifdef</entry>
2175
2176 <entry>2.11</entry>
2177
2178 <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry>
2179
2180 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
2181 </row>
2182
2183 <row>
2184 <entry>update-rc.d</entry>
2185
2186 <entry>0.7</entry>
2187
2188 <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of
2189 symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory
2190 structure.</entry>
2191
2192 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2193 </row>
2194
2195 <row>
2196 <entry>util-linux</entry>
2197
2198 <entry>2.29.1</entry>
2199
2200 <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration
2201 utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more
2202 important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message
2203 management filesystem creation and system login.</entry>
2204
2205 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry>
2206 </row>
2207
2208 <row>
2209 <entry>util-macros</entry>
2210
2211 <entry>1.19.1</entry>
2212
2213 <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry>
2214
2215 <entry>MIT</entry>
2216 </row>
2217
2218 <row>
2219 <entry>v86d</entry>
2220
2221 <entry>0.1.10</entry>
2222
2223 <entry>User support binary for the uvesafb kernel module.</entry>
2224
2225 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2226 </row>
2227
2228 <row>
2229 <entry>volatile-binds</entry>
2230
2231 <entry>1.0</entry>
2232
2233 <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for
2234 read-only-rootfs</entry>
2235
2236 <entry>MIT</entry>
2237 </row>
2238
2239 <row>
2240 <entry>xcb-proto</entry>
2241
2242 <entry>1.12</entry>
2243
2244 <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding
2245 (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint
2246 latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading
2247 support and extensibility.</entry>
2248
2249 <entry>MIT</entry>
2250 </row>
2251
2252 <row>
2253 <entry>xextproto</entry>
2254
2255 <entry>7.3.0</entry>
2256
2257 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X
2258 extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS
2259 Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD
2260 Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC
2261 XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also
2262 available.</entry>
2263
2264 <entry>MIT</entry>
2265 </row>
2266
2267 <row>
2268 <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry>
2269
2270 <entry>2.20</entry>
2271
2272 <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window.
2273 The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently
2274 released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window
2275 System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based
2276 systems.</entry>
2277
2278 <entry>MIT</entry>
2279 </row>
2280
2281 <row>
2282 <entry>xproto</entry>
2283
2284 <entry>7.0.31</entry>
2285
2286 <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window
2287 System.</entry>
2288
2289 <entry>MIT</entry>
2290 </row>
2291
2292 <row>
2293 <entry>xtrans</entry>
2294
2295 <entry>1.3.5</entry>
2296
2297 <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system
2298 and transport specific code into a single place. This API should
2299 be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window
2300 System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of
2301 transports and support for new platforms without making any
2302 changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface
2303 code.</entry>
2304
2305 <entry>MIT</entry>
2306 </row>
2307
2308 <row>
2309 <entry>xz</entry>
2310
2311 <entry>5.2.3</entry>
2312
2313 <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry>
2314
2315 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry>
2316 </row>
2317
2318 <row>
2319 <entry>zlib</entry>
2320
2321 <entry>1.2.11</entry>
2322
2323 <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data
2324 compression library which is used by many different
2325 programs.</entry>
2326
2327 <entry>Zlib</entry>
2328 </row>
2329 </tbody>
2330 </tgroup>
2331 </informaltable>
2332 </section> 1019 </section>
2333 1020 <section id="open_source_license">
2334 <section id="open_source_license"> 1021 <title>Open Source Licenses</title>
2335 <title>Open Source Licenses</title> 1022<section id="lic_0">
2336 1023<title>AFL-2.0</title>
2337 <section id="lic_0"> 1024<para><programlisting>
2338 <title>AFL-2.0</title>
2339
2340 <para><programlisting>
2341 1025
2342The Academic Free License 1026The Academic Free License
2343 v. 2.0 1027 v. 2.0
@@ -2478,13 +1162,11 @@ Permission is hereby granted to copy and distribute this license without modific
2478This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its 1162This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its
2479copyright owner. 1163copyright owner.
2480 1164
2481</programlisting></para> 1165</programlisting></para></section>
2482 </section>
2483 1166
2484 <section id="lic_1"> 1167<section id="lic_1">
2485 <title>Apache-2.0</title> 1168<title>Apache-2.0</title>
2486 1169<para><programlisting>
2487 <para><programlisting>
2488 1170
2489 1171
2490 Apache License 1172 Apache License
@@ -2689,13 +1371,11 @@ copyright owner.
2689 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 1371 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
2690 limitations under the License. 1372 limitations under the License.
2691 1373
2692</programlisting></para> 1374</programlisting></para></section>
2693 </section>
2694
2695 <section id="lic_2">
2696 <title>Artistic-1.0</title>
2697 1375
2698 <para><programlisting> 1376<section id="lic_2">
1377<title>Artistic-1.0</title>
1378<para><programlisting>
2699 1379
2700The Artistic License 1380The Artistic License
2701Preamble 1381Preamble
@@ -2788,13 +1468,11 @@ FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
2788 1468
2789The End 1469The End
2790 1470
2791</programlisting></para> 1471</programlisting></para></section>
2792 </section>
2793
2794 <section id="lic_3">
2795 <title>BSD</title>
2796 1472
2797 <para><programlisting> 1473<section id="lic_3">
1474<title>BSD</title>
1475<para><programlisting>
2798Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. 1476Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California.
2799All rights reserved. 1477All rights reserved.
2800 1478
@@ -2821,13 +1499,11 @@ HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
2821LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 1499LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
2822OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 1500OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
2823SUCH DAMAGE. 1501SUCH DAMAGE.
2824</programlisting></para> 1502</programlisting></para></section>
2825 </section>
2826 1503
2827 <section id="lic_4"> 1504<section id="lic_4">
2828 <title>BSD-2-Clause</title> 1505<title>BSD-2-Clause</title>
2829 1506<para><programlisting>
2830 <para><programlisting>
2831 1507
2832The FreeBSD Copyright 1508The FreeBSD Copyright
2833 1509
@@ -2855,13 +1531,11 @@ The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation are those
2855authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either 1531authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either
2856expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. 1532expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project.
2857 1533
2858</programlisting></para> 1534</programlisting></para></section>
2859 </section>
2860
2861 <section id="lic_5">
2862 <title>BSD-3-Clause</title>
2863 1535
2864 <para><programlisting> 1536<section id="lic_5">
1537<title>BSD-3-Clause</title>
1538<para><programlisting>
2865 1539
2866Copyright (c) &lt;YEAR&gt;, &lt;OWNER&gt; 1540Copyright (c) &lt;YEAR&gt;, &lt;OWNER&gt;
2867All rights reserved. 1541All rights reserved.
@@ -2888,13 +1562,11 @@ CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
2888WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH 1562WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
2889DAMAGE. 1563DAMAGE.
2890 1564
2891</programlisting></para> 1565</programlisting></para></section>
2892 </section>
2893
2894 <section id="lic_6">
2895 <title>BSD-4-Clause</title>
2896 1566
2897 <para><programlisting> 1567<section id="lic_6">
1568<title>BSD-4-Clause</title>
1569<para><programlisting>
2898 1570
2899Copyright (c) &lt;year&gt;, &lt;copyright holder&gt; 1571Copyright (c) &lt;year&gt;, &lt;copyright holder&gt;
2900All rights reserved. 1572All rights reserved.
@@ -2924,13 +1596,11 @@ ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
2924(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS 1596(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
2925SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 1597SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
2926 1598
2927</programlisting></para> 1599</programlisting></para></section>
2928 </section>
2929 1600
2930 <section id="lic_7"> 1601<section id="lic_7">
2931 <title>Elfutils-Exception</title> 1602<title>Elfutils-Exception</title>
2932 1603<para><programlisting>
2933 <para><programlisting>
2934 This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed 1604 This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed
2935 to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. 1605 to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils.
2936 For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files 1606 For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files
@@ -2943,24 +1613,20 @@ SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
2943 libdw.h 1613 libdw.h
2944 libdwfl.h 1614 libdwfl.h
2945 1615
2946</programlisting></para> 1616</programlisting></para></section>
2947 </section>
2948
2949 <section id="lic_8">
2950 <title>FSF-Unlimited</title>
2951 1617
2952 <para><programlisting> 1618<section id="lic_8">
1619<title>FSF-Unlimited</title>
1620<para><programlisting>
2953Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 1621Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
2954This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation 1622This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
2955gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, 1623gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
2956with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. 1624with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
2957</programlisting></para> 1625</programlisting></para></section>
2958 </section>
2959 1626
2960 <section id="lic_9"> 1627<section id="lic_9">
2961 <title>GPL-1.0</title> 1628<title>GPL-1.0</title>
2962 1629<para><programlisting>
2963 <para><programlisting>
2964 1630
2965GNU General Public License, version 1 1631GNU General Public License, version 1
2966 1632
@@ -3213,13 +1879,11 @@ necessary. Here a sample; alter the names:
3213 1879
3214That`s all there is to it! 1880That`s all there is to it!
3215 1881
3216</programlisting></para> 1882</programlisting></para></section>
3217 </section>
3218
3219 <section id="lic_10">
3220 <title>GPL-2.0</title>
3221 1883
3222 <para><programlisting> 1884<section id="lic_10">
1885<title>GPL-2.0</title>
1886<para><programlisting>
3223 1887
3224GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 1888GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
3225 1889
@@ -3518,18 +2182,16 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this
3518what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this 2182what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this
3519License. 2183License.
3520 2184
3521</programlisting></para> 2185</programlisting></para></section>
3522 </section>
3523 2186
3524 <section id="lic_11"> 2187<section id="lic_11">
3525 <title>GPL-3.0</title> 2188<title>GPL-3.0</title>
3526 2189<para><programlisting>
3527 <para><programlisting>
3528GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 2190GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
3529 2191
3530Version 3, 29 June 2007 2192Version 3, 29 June 2007
3531 2193
3532Copyright Â&copy; 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt; 2194Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt;
3533 2195
3534Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, 2196Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document,
3535but changing it is not allowed. 2197but changing it is not allowed.
@@ -4098,13 +2760,11 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this
4098what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this 2760what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this
4099License. But first, please read 2761License. But first, please read
4100&lt;http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html&gt;. 2762&lt;http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html&gt;.
4101</programlisting></para> 2763</programlisting></para></section>
4102 </section>
4103
4104 <section id="lic_12">
4105 <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title>
4106 2764
4107 <para><programlisting> 2765<section id="lic_12">
2766<title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title>
2767<para><programlisting>
4108 2768
4109insert GPL v3 text here 2769insert GPL v3 text here
4110 2770
@@ -4160,13 +2820,11 @@ consistent with the licensing of the Independent Modules.
4160The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that 2820The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that
4161third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. 2821third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC.
4162 2822
4163</programlisting></para> 2823</programlisting></para></section>
4164 </section>
4165
4166 <section id="lic_13">
4167 <title>LGPL-2.0</title>
4168 2824
4169 <para><programlisting> 2825<section id="lic_13">
2826<title>LGPL-2.0</title>
2827<para><programlisting>
4170GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 2828GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
4171 2829
4172 2830
@@ -4750,13 +3408,11 @@ Ty Coon, President of Vice
4750 3408
4751That's all there is to it! 3409That's all there is to it!
4752 3410
4753</programlisting></para> 3411</programlisting></para></section>
4754 </section>
4755 3412
4756 <section id="lic_14"> 3413<section id="lic_14">
4757 <title>LGPL-2.1</title> 3414<title>LGPL-2.1</title>
4758 3415<para><programlisting>
4759 <para><programlisting>
4760 3416
4761GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 3417GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
4762 3418
@@ -5184,18 +3840,16 @@ signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1990
5184Ty Coon, President of Vice 3840Ty Coon, President of Vice
5185That`s all there is to it! 3841That`s all there is to it!
5186 3842
5187</programlisting></para> 3843</programlisting></para></section>
5188 </section>
5189
5190 <section id="lic_15">
5191 <title>LGPL-3.0</title>
5192 3844
5193 <para><programlisting> 3845<section id="lic_15">
3846<title>LGPL-3.0</title>
3847<para><programlisting>
5194GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 3848GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
5195 3849
5196Version 3, 29 June 2007 3850Version 3, 29 June 2007
5197 3851
5198Copyright Â&copy; 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt; 3852Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt;
5199 3853
5200Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, 3854Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document,
5201but changing it is not allowed. 3855but changing it is not allowed.
@@ -5326,13 +3980,11 @@ If the Library as you received it specifies that a proxy can decide whether futu
5326versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public 3980versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public
5327statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose 3981statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose
5328that version for the Library. 3982that version for the Library.
5329</programlisting></para> 3983</programlisting></para></section>
5330 </section>
5331
5332 <section id="lic_16">
5333 <title>Libpng</title>
5334 3984
5335 <para><programlisting> 3985<section id="lic_16">
3986<title>Libpng</title>
3987<para><programlisting>
5336 3988
5337This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of 3989This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of
5338any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is 3990any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is
@@ -5445,13 +4097,11 @@ Glenn Randers-Pehrson
5445glennrp at users.sourceforge.net 4097glennrp at users.sourceforge.net
5446December 9, 2010 4098December 9, 2010
5447 4099
5448</programlisting></para> 4100</programlisting></para></section>
5449 </section>
5450 4101
5451 <section id="lic_17"> 4102<section id="lic_17">
5452 <title>MIT</title> 4103<title>MIT</title>
5453 4104<para><programlisting>
5454 <para><programlisting>
5455 4105
5456MIT License 4106MIT License
5457 4107
@@ -5475,13 +4125,11 @@ LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
5475OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN 4125OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
5476THE SOFTWARE. 4126THE SOFTWARE.
5477 4127
5478</programlisting></para> 4128</programlisting></para></section>
5479 </section>
5480
5481 <section id="lic_18">
5482 <title>MPL-2.0</title>
5483 4129
5484 <para><programlisting> 4130<section id="lic_18">
4131<title>MPL-2.0</title>
4132<para><programlisting>
5485Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 4133Mozilla Public License Version 2.0
5486================================== 4134==================================
5487 4135
@@ -5855,13 +4503,11 @@ Exhibit B - "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses" Notice
5855 4503
5856 This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as 4504 This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as
5857 defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. 4505 defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0.
5858</programlisting></para> 4506</programlisting></para></section>
5859 </section>
5860
5861 <section id="lic_19">
5862 <title>OpenSSL</title>
5863 4507
5864 <para><programlisting> 4508<section id="lic_19">
4509<title>OpenSSL</title>
4510<para><programlisting>
5865 4511
5866OpenSSL License 4512OpenSSL License
5867 4513
@@ -5978,21 +4624,17 @@ put under another distribution licence
5978 4624
5979 4625
5980 4626
5981</programlisting></para> 4627</programlisting></para></section>
5982 </section>
5983 4628
5984 <section id="lic_20"> 4629<section id="lic_20">
5985 <title>PD</title> 4630<title>PD</title>
5986 4631<para><programlisting>
5987 <para><programlisting>
5988This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License 4632This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License
5989</programlisting></para> 4633</programlisting></para></section>
5990 </section>
5991
5992 <section id="lic_21">
5993 <title>Python-2.0</title>
5994 4634
5995 <para><programlisting> 4635<section id="lic_21">
4636<title>Python-2.0</title>
4637<para><programlisting>
5996 4638
5997PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 4639PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2
5998-------------------------------------------- 4640--------------------------------------------
@@ -6185,13 +4827,11 @@ WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
6185ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT 4827ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT
6186OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. 4828OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
6187 4829
6188</programlisting></para> 4830</programlisting></para></section>
6189 </section>
6190
6191 <section id="lic_22">
6192 <title>Sleepycat</title>
6193 4831
6194 <para><programlisting> 4832<section id="lic_22">
4833<title>Sleepycat</title>
4834<para><programlisting>
6195 4835
6196The Sleepycat License 4836The Sleepycat License
6197Copyright (c) 1990-1999 4837Copyright (c) 1990-1999
@@ -6282,13 +4922,11 @@ LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
6282OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 4922OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
6283SUCH DAMAGE. 4923SUCH DAMAGE.
6284 4924
6285</programlisting></para> 4925</programlisting></para></section>
6286 </section>
6287 4926
6288 <section id="lic_23"> 4927<section id="lic_23">
6289 <title>Zlib</title> 4928<title>Zlib</title>
6290 4929<para><programlisting>
6291 <para><programlisting>
6292 4930
6293zlib License 4931zlib License
6294 4932
@@ -6310,42 +4948,10 @@ zlib License
6310 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. 4948 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution.
6311 4949
6312 4950
6313</programlisting></para> 4951</programlisting></para></section>
6314 </section>
6315
6316 <section id="lic_24">
6317 <title>unfs3</title>
6318
6319 <para><programlisting>
6320UNFS3 user-space NFSv3 server
6321(C) 2003, Pascal Schmidt &lt;unfs3-server@ewetel.net&gt;
6322 4952
6323Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6324modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
6325
63261. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
6327 this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
63282. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
6329 this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
6330 and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
63313. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
6332 derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
6333
6334THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
6335WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
6336MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO
6337EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
6338SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
6339PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS;
6340OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY,
6341WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR
6342OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF
6343ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
6344</programlisting></para>
6345 </section>
6346 </section> 4953 </section>
6347 4954 <section id="proprietary_license">
6348 <section id="proprietary_license"> 4955 <title>Proprietary Licenses</title>
6349 <title>Proprietary Licenses</title>
6350 </section> 4956 </section>
6351</chapter> \ No newline at end of file 4957</chapter>
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-open-source/doc/licenses.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-open-source/doc/licenses.xml
index c0ef5c5..f039d08 100644
--- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-open-source/doc/licenses.xml
+++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-open-source/doc/licenses.xml
@@ -3,4459 +3,1643 @@
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="5*" /> 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>alsa-lib</entry> 49</row>
49 50<row>
50 <entry>1.1.3</entry> 51 <entry>apr</entry>
51 52 <entry>1.5.2</entry>
52 <entry>ALSA sound library.</entry> 53 <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) library.</entry>
53 54 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
54 <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> 55</row>
55 </row> 56<row>
56 57 <entry>apt</entry>
57 <row> 58 <entry>1.2.12</entry>
58 <entry>ant</entry> 59 <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry>
59 60 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
60 <entry>1.8.1</entry> 61</row>
61 62<row>
62 <entry>Another Neat Tool - build system for Java</entry> 63 <entry>attr</entry>
63 64 <entry>2.4.47</entry>
64 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 65 <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended attributes.</entry>
65 </row> 66 <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry>
66 67</row>
67 <row> 68<row>
68 <entry>antlr</entry> 69 <entry>aufs-util</entry>
69 70 <entry>3.14</entry>
70 <entry>2.7.7</entry> 71 <entry>Tools for managing AUFS mounts.</entry>
71 72 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
72 <entry>Framework for constructing recognizers interpreters 73</row>
73 compilers and translators</entry> 74<row>
74 75 <entry>autoconf-archive</entry>
75 <entry>PD</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>apache2</entry> 80<row>
80 81 <entry>autoconf</entry>
81 <entry>2.4.25</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>The Apache HTTP Server is a powerful efficient and 84 <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
84 extensible web server.</entry> 85</row>
85 86<row>
86 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 87 <entry>automake</entry>
87 </row> 88 <entry>1.15</entry>
88 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 <row> 90 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
90 <entry>apr-util</entry> 91</row>
91 92<row>
92 <entry>1.5.4</entry> 93 <entry>avahi</entry>
93 94 <entry>0.6.32</entry>
94 <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) companion library.</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>Apache-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>apr</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>1.5.2</entry> 103</row>
103 104<row>
104 <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) library.</entry> 105 <entry>base-passwd</entry>
105 106 <entry>3.5.29</entry>
106 <entry>Apache-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>apt</entry> 111 <entry>bash-completion</entry>
111 112 <entry>2.5</entry>
112 <entry>1.2.12</entry> 113 <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry>
113 114 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
114 <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> 115</row>
115 116<row>
116 <entry>GPL-2.0</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>asciidoc</entry> 121</row>
121 122<row>
122 <entry>8.6.9</entry> 123 <entry>bc</entry>
123 124 <entry>1.06</entry>
124 <entry>AsciiDoc is a text document format for writing short 125 <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry>
125 documents articles books and UNIX man pages.</entry> 126 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
126 127</row>
127 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 128<row>
128 </row> 129 <entry>bind</entry>
129 130 <entry>9.10.3-P3</entry>
130 <row> 131 <entry>ISC Internet Domain Name Server.</entry>
131 <entry>atk</entry> 132 <entry> ISC, BSD</entry>
132 133</row>
133 <entry>2.22.0</entry> 134<row>
134 135 <entry>binutils-cross-aarch64</entry>
135 <entry>Accessibility toolkit for GNOME.</entry> 136 <entry>2.28</entry>
136 137 <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 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> 138 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
138 </row> 139</row>
139 140<row>
140 <row> 141 <entry>binutils</entry>
141 <entry>attr</entry> 142 <entry>2.28</entry>
142 143 <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 <entry>2.4.47</entry> 144 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
144 145</row>
145 <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended 146<row>
146 attributes.</entry> 147 <entry>bison</entry>
147 148 <entry>3.0.4</entry>
148 <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</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 </row> 150 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
150 151</row>
151 <row> 152<row>
152 <entry>aufs-util</entry> 153 <entry>bjam</entry>
153 154 <entry>1.63.0</entry>
154 <entry>3.14</entry> 155 <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry>
155 156 <entry> BSL-1.0, MIT</entry>
156 <entry>Tools for managing AUFS mounts.</entry> 157</row>
157 158<row>
158 <entry>GPL-2.0</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>autoconf-archive</entry> 163</row>
163 164<row>
164 <entry>2016.09.16</entry> 165 <entry>bridge-utils</entry>
165 166 <entry>1.5</entry>
166 <entry>autoconf-archive-native version 2016.09.16-r0.</entry> 167 <entry>Tools for ethernet bridging.</entry>
167 168 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
168 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> 169</row>
169 </row> 170<row>
170 171 <entry>btrfs-tools</entry>
171 <row> 172 <entry>4.9.1</entry>
172 <entry>autoconf</entry> 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>
173 174 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
174 <entry>2.69</entry> 175</row>
175 176<row>
176 <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce 177 <entry>busybox</entry>
177 shell scripts to automatically configure software source code 178 <entry>1.24.1</entry>
178 packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package 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 from a template file that lists the operating system features that 180 <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry>
180 the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> 181</row>
181 182<row>
182 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</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>autogen</entry> 187</row>
187 188<row>
188 <entry>5.18.12</entry> 189 <entry>ca-certificates</entry>
189 190 <entry>20161130</entry>
190 <entry>AutoGen is a tool designed to simplify the creation and 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 maintenance of programs that contain large amounts of repetitious 192 <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry>
192 text. It is especially valuable in programs that have several 193</row>
193 blocks of text that must be kept synchronized.</entry> 194<row>
194 195 <entry>cdrkit</entry>
195 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 196 <entry>1.1.11</entry>
196 </row> 197 <entry>CD/DVD command line tools.</entry>
197 198 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
198 <row> 199</row>
199 <entry>automake</entry> 200<row>
200 201 <entry>cmake</entry>
201 <entry>1.15</entry> 202 <entry>3.7.2</entry>
202 203 <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry>
203 <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating 204 <entry>BSD</entry>
204 `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. 205</row>
205 Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> 206<row>
206 207 <entry>compose-file</entry>
207 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 208 <entry>3.0</entry>
208 </row> 209 <entry>Parser for the Compose file format (version 3)</entry>
209 210 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
210 <row> 211</row>
211 <entry>avahi</entry> 212<row>
212 213 <entry>containerd-docker</entry>
213 <entry>0.6.32</entry> 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 <entry>"Avahi is a fully LGPL framework for Multicast DNS Service 216 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
216 Discovery. It allows programs to publish and discover services and 217</row>
217 hosts running on a local network with no specific configuration. 218<row>
218 This tool implements IPv4LL ""Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 219 <entry>coreutils</entry>
219 Link-Local Addresses"" (IETF RFC3927) a protocol for automatic IP 220 <entry>8.26</entry>
220 address configuration from the link-local 169.254.0.0/16 range 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 without the need for a central server."</entry> 222 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
222 223</row>
223 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 224<row>
224 </row> 225 <entry>cross-localedef</entry>
225 226 <entry>2.25</entry>
226 <row> 227 <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry>
227 <entry>avalon-framework-api</entry> 228 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
228 229</row>
229 <entry>4.3</entry> 230<row>
230 231 <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry>
231 <entry>Common way for components to be created initialized 232 <entry>1.8</entry>
232 configured started. (API-only)</entry> 233 <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry>
233 234 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
234 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 235</row>
235 </row> 236<row>
236 237 <entry>curl</entry>
237 <row> 238 <entry>7.53.1</entry>
238 <entry>babeltrace</entry> 239 <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL transfers.</entry>
239 240 <entry>MIT</entry>
240 <entry>1.5.2</entry> 241</row>
241 242<row>
242 <entry>Babeltrace provides trace read and write libraries in host 243 <entry>db</entry>
243 side as well as a trace converter which used to convert LTTng 2.0 244 <entry>5.3.28</entry>
244 traces into human-readable log.</entry> 245 <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry>
245 246 <entry>Sleepycat</entry>
246 <entry>MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> 247</row>
247 </row> 248<row>
248 249 <entry>dbus-glib</entry>
249 <row> 250 <entry>0.108</entry>
250 <entry>base-files</entry> 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>
251 252 <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
252 <entry>3.0.14</entry> 253</row>
253 254<row>
254 <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory 255 <entry>dbus-test</entry>
255 structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for 256 <entry>1.10.14</entry>
256 the system.</entry> 257 <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing only).</entry>
257 258 <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
258 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 259</row>
259 </row> 260<row>
260 261 <entry>dbus</entry>
261 <row> 262 <entry>1.10.14</entry>
262 <entry>base-passwd</entry> 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>
263 264 <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
264 <entry>3.5.29</entry> 265</row>
265 266<row>
266 <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd 267 <entry>debianutils</entry>
267 and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep 268 <entry>4.8.1</entry>
268 the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> 269 <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry>
269 270 <entry> GPL-2.0</entry>
270 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 271</row>
271 </row> 272<row>
272 273 <entry>depmodwrapper</entry>
273 <row> 274 <entry>1.0</entry>
274 <entry>bash-completion</entry> 275 <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency indexer.</entry>
275 276 <entry>MIT</entry>
276 <entry>2.5</entry> 277</row>
277 278<row>
278 <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> 279 <entry>dhcp</entry>
279 280 <entry>4.3.5</entry>
280 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 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 </row> 282 <entry>ISC</entry>
282 283</row>
283 <row> 284<row>
284 <entry>bash</entry> 285 <entry>diffutils</entry>
285 286 <entry>3.5</entry>
286 <entry>4.3.30</entry> 287 <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch files.</entry>
287 288 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
288 <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> 289</row>
289 290<row>
290 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 291 <entry>dnsmasq</entry>
291 </row> 292 <entry>2.76</entry>
292 293 <entry>Lightweight easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP server.</entry>
293 <row> 294 <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
294 <entry>bc</entry> 295</row>
295 296<row>
296 <entry>1.06</entry> 297 <entry>docker</entry>
297 298 <entry>1.13.0</entry>
298 <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> 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>
299 300 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
300 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 301</row>
301 </row> 302<row>
302 303 <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry>
303 <row> 304 <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry>
304 <entry>bcel</entry> 305 <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry>
305 306 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
306 <entry>5.2</entry> 307</row>
307 308<row>
308 <entry>Java Bytecode manipulation library</entry> 309 <entry>dpdk</entry>
309 310 <entry>17.08</entry>
310 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 311 <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry>
311 </row> 312 <entry> BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
312 313</row>
313 <row> 314<row>
314 <entry>bdwgc</entry> 315 <entry>dpkg</entry>
315 316 <entry>1.18.10</entry>
316 <entry>7.6.0</entry> 317 <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry>
317 318 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
318 <entry>The Boehm-Demers-Weiser conservative garbage collector can 319</row>
319 be used as a garbage collecting replacement for C malloc or C++ 320<row>
320 new. It allows you to allocate memory basically as you normally 321 <entry>dtc</entry>
321 would without explicitly deallocating memory that is no longer 322 <entry>1.4.2</entry>
322 useful. The collector automatically recycles memory when it 323 <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry>
323 determines that it can no longer be otherwise accessed. The 324 <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry>
324 collector is also used by a number of programming language 325</row>
325 implementations that either use C as intermediate code want to 326<row>
326 facilitate easier interoperation with C libraries or just prefer 327 <entry>e2fsprogs</entry>
327 the simple collector interface. Alternatively the garbage 328 <entry>1.43.4</entry>
328 collector may be used as a leak detector for C or C++ programs 329 <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry>
329 though that is not its primary goal. Empirically this collector 330 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry>
330 works with most unmodified C programs simply by replacing malloc 331</row>
331 with GC_malloc calls replacing realloc with GC_realloc calls and 332<row>
332 removing free calls.</entry> 333 <entry>ebtables</entry>
333 334 <entry>2.0.10-4</entry>
334 <entry>MIT</entry> 335 <entry>Utility for basic Ethernet frame filtering on a Linux bridge advanced logging MAC DNAT/SNAT and brouting.</entry>
335 </row> 336 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
336 337</row>
337 <row> 338<row>
338 <entry>bind</entry> 339 <entry>elfutils</entry>
339 340 <entry>0.168</entry>
340 <entry>9.10.3-P3</entry> 341 <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object files.</entry>
341 342 <entry> GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry>
342 <entry>ISC Internet Domain Name Server.</entry> 343</row>
343 344<row>
344 <entry>ISC, BSD</entry> 345 <entry>enea-nfv-access</entry>
345 </row> 346 <entry>1.0</entry>
346 347 <entry>Image for the host side of the Enea NFV Access Platform</entry>
347 <row> 348 <entry>MIT</entry>
348 <entry>binutils-cross-x86_64</entry> 349</row>
349 350<row>
350 <entry>2.28</entry> 351 <entry>expat</entry>
351 352 <entry>2.2.0</entry>
352 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main 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 ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also 354 <entry>MIT</entry>
354 includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into 355</row>
355 filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and 356<row>
356 extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy 357 <entry>file</entry>
357 (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object 358 <entry>5.30</entry>
358 information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> 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 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 361</row>
361 </row> 362<row>
362 363 <entry>findutils</entry>
363 <row> 364 <entry>4.6.0</entry>
364 <entry>binutils</entry> 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>
365 366 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
366 <entry>2.28</entry> 367</row>
367 368<row>
368 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main 369 <entry>flex</entry>
369 ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also 370 <entry>2.6.0</entry>
370 includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into 371 <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in text.</entry>
371 filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and 372 <entry>BSD</entry>
372 extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy 373</row>
373 (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object 374<row>
374 information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> 375 <entry>fuse</entry>
375 376 <entry>2.9.4</entry>
376 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 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 </row> 378 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
378 379</row>
379 <row> 380<row>
380 <entry>bison</entry> 381 <entry>gawk</entry>
381 382 <entry>4.1.4</entry>
382 <entry>3.0.4</entry> 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>
383 384 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
384 <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts 385</row>
385 an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser 386<row>
386 for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all 387 <entry>gcc-cross-aarch64</entry>
387 properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no 388 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
388 change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with 389 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
389 little trouble.</entry> 390 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
390 391</row>
391 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 392<row>
392 </row> 393 <entry>gcc-cross-initial-aarch64</entry>
393 394 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
394 <row> 395 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
395 <entry>bjam</entry> 396 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
396 397</row>
397 <entry>1.63.0</entry> 398<row>
398 399 <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry>
399 <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry> 400 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
400 401 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
401 <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</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>boost</entry> 406 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
406 407 <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry>
407 <entry>1.63.0</entry> 408 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry>
408 409</row>
409 <entry>Free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.</entry> 410<row>
410 411 <entry>gdbm</entry>
411 <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> 412 <entry>1.12</entry>
412 </row> 413 <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry>
413 414 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
414 <row> 415</row>
415 <entry>bridge-utils</entry> 416<row>
416 417 <entry>gettext-minimal</entry>
417 <entry>1.5</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>Tools for ethernet bridging.</entry> 420 <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry>
420 421</row>
421 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 422<row>
422 </row> 423 <entry>gettext</entry>
423 424 <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 <entry>bsf</entry> 426 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
426 427</row>
427 <entry>2.4.0</entry> 428<row>
428 429 <entry>git</entry>
429 <entry>Bean Scripting Framework package</entry> 430 <entry>2.11.1</entry>
430 431 <entry>Distributed version control system.</entry>
431 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 432 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
432 </row> 433</row>
433 434<row>
434 <row> 435 <entry>glib-2.0</entry>
435 <entry>btrfs-tools</entry> 436 <entry>2.50.3</entry>
436 437 <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>4.9.1</entry> 438 <entry> LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry>
438 439</row>
439 <entry>Btrfs is a new copy on write filesystem for Linux aimed at 440<row>
440 implementing advanced features while focusing on fault tolerance 441 <entry>glibc-locale</entry>
441 repair and easy administration. This package contains utilities 442 <entry>2.25</entry>
442 (mkfs fsck btrfsctl) used to work with btrfs and an utility 443 <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry>
443 (btrfs-convert) to make a btrfs filesystem from an ext3.</entry> 444 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
444 445</row>
445 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 446<row>
446 </row> 447 <entry>glibc</entry>
447 448 <entry>2.25</entry>
448 <row> 449 <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most systems with the Linux kernel.</entry>
449 <entry>busybox</entry> 450 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
450 451</row>
451 <entry>1.24.1</entry> 452<row>
452 453 <entry>gmp</entry>
453 <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX 454 <entry>6.1.2</entry>
454 utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist 455 <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point numbers</entry>
455 replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU 456 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
456 fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have 457</row>
457 fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the 458<row>
458 options that are included provide the expected functionality and 459 <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry>
459 behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a 460 <entry>2014.1</entry>
460 fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded 461 <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry>
461 system.</entry> 462 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
462 463</row>
463 <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> 464<row>
464 </row> 465 <entry>gnu-config</entry>
465 466 <entry>20150728</entry>
466 <row> 467 <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a directory tree</entry>
467 <entry>bzip2</entry> 468 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-autoconf-exception</entry>
468 469</row>
469 <entry>1.0.6</entry> 470<row>
470 471 <entry>gnutls</entry>
471 <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler 472 <entry>3.5.9</entry>
472 block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. 473 <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry>
473 Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by 474 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
474 more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the 475</row>
475 performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> 476<row>
476 477 <entry>go-bootstrap</entry>
477 <entry>BSD-4-Clause</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>ca-certificates</entry> 482<row>
482 483 <entry>go-capability</entry>
483 <entry>20161130</entry> 484 <entry>0.0</entry>
484 485 <entry>Utilities for manipulating POSIX capabilities in Go.</entry>
485 <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow 486 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
486 SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL 487</row>
487 connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> 488<row>
488 489 <entry>go-cli</entry>
489 <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> 490 <entry>1.1.0</entry>
490 </row> 491 <entry>A small package for building command line apps in Go</entry>
491 492 <entry>MIT</entry>
492 <row> 493</row>
493 <entry>cacao-initial</entry> 494<row>
494 495 <entry>go-connections</entry>
495 <entry>0.98</entry> 496 <entry>0.2.1</entry>
496 497 <entry>Utility package to work with network connections</entry>
497 <entry>CacaoVM for use as OpenEmbedded's Java VM</entry> 498 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
498 499</row>
499 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 500<row>
500 </row> 501 <entry>go-context</entry>
501 502 <entry>git</entry>
502 <row> 503 <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry>
503 <entry>cairo</entry> 504 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
504 505</row>
505 <entry>1.14.8</entry> 506<row>
506 507 <entry>go-cross-aarch64</entry>
507 <entry>Cairo is a multi-platform library providing anti-aliased 508 <entry>1.8</entry>
508 vector-based rendering for multiple target backends. Paths consist 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 of line segments and cubic splines and can be rendered at any 510 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
510 width with various join and cap styles. All colors may be 511</row>
511 specified with optional translucence (opacity/alpha) and combined 512<row>
512 using the extended Porter/Duff compositing algebra as found in the 513 <entry>go-dbus</entry>
513 X Render Extension.</entry> 514 <entry>4.0.0</entry>
514 515 <entry>Native Go bindings for D-Bus</entry>
515 <entry>MPL-1.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry> 516 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
516 </row> 517</row>
517 518<row>
518 <row> 519 <entry>go-distribution</entry>
519 <entry>cantarell-fonts</entry> 520 <entry>2.6.0</entry>
520 521 <entry>The Docker toolset to pack ship store and deliver content</entry>
521 <entry>0.0.24</entry> 522 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
522 523</row>
523 <entry>The Cantarell font typeface is designed as a contemporary 524<row>
524 Humanist sans serif and was developed for on-screen reading; in 525 <entry>go-fsnotify</entry>
525 particular reading web pages on an HTC Dream mobile phone.</entry> 526 <entry>1.2.11</entry>
526 527 <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry>
527 <entry>OFL-1.1</entry> 528 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
528 </row> 529</row>
529 530<row>
530 <row> 531 <entry>go-libtrust</entry>
531 <entry>cdrkit</entry> 532 <entry>0.0</entry>
532 533 <entry>Primitives for identity and authorization</entry>
533 <entry>1.1.11</entry> 534 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
534 535</row>
535 <entry>CD/DVD command line tools.</entry> 536<row>
536 537 <entry>go-logrus</entry>
537 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 538 <entry>0.11.0</entry>
538 </row> 539 <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry>
539 540 <entry>MIT</entry>
540 <row> 541</row>
541 <entry>cdrtools</entry> 542<row>
542 543 <entry>go-mux</entry>
543 <entry>3.01a31</entry> 544 <entry>git</entry>
544 545 <entry>A powerful URL router and dispatcher for golang.</entry>
545 <entry>A set of tools for CD recording including cdrecord.</entry> 546 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
546 547</row>
547 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 548<row>
548 </row> 549 <entry>go-patricia</entry>
549 550 <entry>2.2.6</entry>
550 <row> 551 <entry>A generic patricia trie (also called radix tree) implemented in Go (Golang)</entry>
551 <entry>chrpath</entry> 552 <entry>MIT</entry>
552 553</row>
553 <entry>0.16</entry> 554<row>
554 555 <entry>go-pty</entry>
555 <entry>chrpath allows you to change the rpath (where the 556 <entry>git</entry>
556 application looks for libraries) in an application. It does not 557 <entry>PTY interface for Go</entry>
557 (yet) allow you to add an rpath if there isn't one 558 <entry>MIT</entry>
558 already.</entry> 559</row>
559 560<row>
560 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 561 <entry>go-systemd</entry>
561 </row> 562 <entry>4</entry>
562 563 <entry>Go bindings to systemd socket activation journal D-Bus and unit files</entry>
563 <row> 564 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
564 <entry>classpath-initial</entry> 565</row>
565 566<row>
566 <entry>0.93</entry> 567 <entry>gobject-introspection</entry>
567 568 <entry>1.50.0</entry>
568 <entry>Java1.4-compatible GNU Classpath variant that is used as 569 <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and language bindings.</entry>
569 bootclasspath for jikes-native.</entry> 570 <entry> LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
570 571</row>
571 <entry>GPL-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>classpath</entry> 576 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
576 577</row>
577 <entry>0.99</entry> 578<row>
578 579 <entry>grep</entry>
579 <entry>GNU Classpath standard Java libraries - For native 580 <entry>3.0</entry>
580 Java-dependent programs</entry> 581 <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry>
581 582 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
582 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 583</row>
583 </row> 584<row>
584 585 <entry>grpc-go</entry>
585 <row> 586 <entry>1.4.0</entry>
586 <entry>cmake</entry> 587 <entry>The Go language implementation of gRPC. HTTP/2 based RPC</entry>
587 588 <entry>BSD</entry>
588 <entry>3.7.2</entry> 589</row>
589 590<row>
590 <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> 591 <entry>gtk-doc</entry>
591 592 <entry>1.25</entry>
592 <entry>BSD</entry> 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 </row> 594 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
594 595</row>
595 <row> 596<row>
596 <entry>commons-logging</entry> 597 <entry>gzip</entry>
597 598 <entry>1.8</entry>
598 <entry>1.1.1</entry> 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>
599 600 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
600 <entry>Java Internet protocol suite library</entry> 601</row>
601 602<row>
602 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 603 <entry>htop</entry>
603 </row> 604 <entry>1.0.3</entry>
604 605 <entry>htop process monitor.</entry>
605 <row> 606 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
606 <entry>commons-net</entry> 607</row>
607 608<row>
608 <entry>1.4.1</entry> 609 <entry>icu</entry>
609 610 <entry>58.2</entry>
610 <entry>Java Internet protocol suite library</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>Apache-2.0</entry> 613</row>
613 </row> 614<row>
614 615 <entry>initscripts</entry>
615 <row> 616 <entry>1.0</entry>
616 <entry>compose-file</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>3.0</entry> 619</row>
619 620<row>
620 <entry>Parser for the Compose file format (version 3)</entry> 621 <entry>inputproto</entry>
621 622 <entry>2.3.2</entry>
622 <entry>Apache-2.0</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 </row> 624 <entry> MIT</entry>
624 625</row>
625 <row> 626<row>
626 <entry>compositeproto</entry> 627 <entry>intltool</entry>
627 628 <entry>0.51.0</entry>
628 <entry>0.4.2</entry> 629 <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry>
629 630 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
630 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X composite 631</row>
631 extension. The X composite extension provides three related 632<row>
632 mechanisms for compositing and off-screen storage.</entry> 633 <entry>iproute2</entry>
633 634 <entry>4.10.0</entry>
634 <entry>MIT</entry> 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 </row> 636 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
636 637</row>
637 <row> 638<row>
638 <entry>containerd-docker</entry> 639 <entry>iptables</entry>
639 640 <entry>1.6.1</entry>
640 <entry>0.2.3</entry> 641 <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to configure and control network packet filtering code in Linux.</entry>
641 642 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
642 <entry>containerd is a daemon to control runC built for 643</row>
643 performance and density. containerd leverages runC's advanced 644<row>
644 features such as seccomp and user namespace support as well as 645 <entry>jansson</entry>
645 checkpoint and restore for cloning and live migration of 646 <entry>2.9</entry>
646 containers.</entry> 647 <entry>Jansson is a C library for encoding decoding and manipulating JSON data.</entry>
647 648 <entry>MIT</entry>
648 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 649</row>
649 </row> 650<row>
650 651 <entry>kbd</entry>
651 <row> 652 <entry>2.0.4</entry>
652 <entry>coreutils</entry> 653 <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry>
653 654 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
654 <entry>8.26</entry> 655</row>
655 656<row>
656 <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and 657 <entry>kbproto</entry>
657 text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which 658 <entry>1.0.7</entry>
658 are expected to exist on every system.</entry> 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 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 661</row>
661 </row> 662<row>
662 663 <entry>kern-tools</entry>
663 <row> 664 <entry>0.2</entry>
664 <entry>cross-localedef</entry> 665 <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched kernels.</entry>
665 666 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
666 <entry>2.25</entry> 667</row>
667 668<row>
668 <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> 669 <entry>kmod</entry>
669 670 <entry>23</entry>
670 <entry>LGPL-2.1</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>cryptodev-linux</entry> 675 <entry>ldconfig</entry>
675 676 <entry>2.12.1</entry>
676 <entry>1.8</entry> 677 <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry>
677 678 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
678 <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> 679</row>
679 680<row>
680 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 681 <entry>libaio</entry>
681 </row> 682 <entry>0.3.110</entry>
682 683 <entry>Asynchronous input/output library that uses the kernels native interface</entry>
683 <row> 684 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
684 <entry>cup</entry> 685</row>
685 686<row>
686 <entry>0.10k</entry> 687 <entry>libarchive</entry>
687 688 <entry>3.2.2</entry>
688 <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry> 689 <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry>
689 690 <entry>BSD</entry>
690 <entry>CUP</entry> 691</row>
691 </row> 692<row>
692 693 <entry>libbsd</entry>
693 <row> 694 <entry>0.8.3</entry>
694 <entry>cups</entry> 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>
695 696 <entry> BSD-4-Clause, ISC, PD</entry>
696 <entry>2.2.2</entry> 697</row>
697 698<row>
698 <entry>An Internet printing system for Unix.</entry> 699 <entry>libcap</entry>
699 700 <entry>2.25</entry>
700 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 701 <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry>
701 </row> 702 <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0</entry>
702 703</row>
703 <row> 704<row>
704 <entry>curl</entry> 705 <entry>libcgroup</entry>
705 706 <entry>0.41</entry>
706 <entry>7.53.1</entry> 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>
707 708 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
708 <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL 709</row>
709 transfers.</entry> 710<row>
710 711 <entry>libcheck</entry>
711 <entry>MIT</entry> 712 <entry>0.10.0</entry>
712 </row> 713 <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry>
713 714 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
714 <row> 715</row>
715 <entry>damageproto</entry> 716<row>
716 717 <entry>libdaemon</entry>
717 <entry>1.2.1</entry> 718 <entry>0.14</entry>
718 719 <entry>Lightweight C library which eases the writing of UNIX daemons.</entry>
719 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the DAMAGE 720 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
720 extension. The DAMAGE extension allows applications to receive 721</row>
721 information about changes made to pixel contents of windows and 722<row>
722 pixmaps.</entry> 723 <entry>libdevmapper</entry>
723 724 <entry>2.02.166</entry>
724 <entry>MIT</entry> 725 <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in Linux.</entry>
725 </row> 726 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
726 727</row>
727 <row> 728<row>
728 <entry>db</entry> 729 <entry>libevent</entry>
729 730 <entry>2.0.22</entry>
730 <entry>5.3.28</entry> 731 <entry>An asynchronous event notification library.</entry>
731 732 <entry>BSD</entry>
732 <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> 733</row>
733 734<row>
734 <entry>Sleepycat</entry> 735 <entry>libffi</entry>
735 </row> 736 <entry>3.2.1</entry>
736 737 <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 <row> 738 <entry>MIT</entry>
738 <entry>dbus-glib</entry> 739</row>
739 740<row>
740 <entry>0.108</entry> 741 <entry>libgcc</entry>
741 742 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
742 <entry>GLib bindings for the D-Bus message bus that integrate the 743 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
743 D-Bus library with the GLib thread abstraction and main 744 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
744 loop.</entry> 745</row>
745 746<row>
746 <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 747 <entry>libgudev</entry>
747 </row> 748 <entry>231</entry>
748 749 <entry>GObject wrapper for libudev.</entry>
749 <row> 750 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
750 <entry>dbus-test</entry> 751</row>
751 752<row>
752 <entry>1.10.14</entry> 753 <entry>libice</entry>
753 754 <entry>1.0.9</entry>
754 <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing 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 only).</entry> 756 <entry>MIT</entry>
756 757</row>
757 <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 758<row>
758 </row> 759 <entry>libidn</entry>
759 760 <entry>1.33</entry>
760 <row> 761 <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) working group.</entry>
761 <entry>dbus</entry> 762 <entry> LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
762 763</row>
763 <entry>1.10.14</entry> 764<row>
764 765 <entry>libmpc</entry>
765 <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for 766 <entry>1.0.3</entry>
766 applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess 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 communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes 768 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
768 it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application 769</row>
769 or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when 770<row>
770 their services are needed."</entry> 771 <entry>libndp</entry>
771 772 <entry>1.6</entry>
772 <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 773 <entry>Library for IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol.</entry>
773 </row> 774 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
774 775</row>
775 <row> 776<row>
776 <entry>debianutils</entry> 777 <entry>libnewt</entry>
777 778 <entry>0.52.19</entry>
778 <entry>4.8.1</entry> 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>
779 780 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
780 <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> 781</row>
781 782<row>
782 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 783 <entry>libnl</entry>
783 </row> 784 <entry>3.2.29</entry>
784 785 <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink sockets.</entry>
785 <row> 786 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
786 <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> 787</row>
787 788<row>
788 <entry>1.0</entry> 789 <entry>libnss-mdns</entry>
789 790 <entry>0.10</entry>
790 <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency 791 <entry>Name Service Switch module for Multicast DNS (zeroconf) name resolution.</entry>
791 indexer.</entry> 792 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
792 793</row>
793 <entry>MIT</entry> 794<row>
794 </row> 795 <entry>libpcap</entry>
795 796 <entry>1.8.1</entry>
796 <row> 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 <entry>dhcp</entry> 798 <entry>BSD</entry>
798 799</row>
799 <entry>4.3.5</entry> 800<row>
800 801 <entry>libpciaccess</entry>
801 <entry>DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) is a protocol 802 <entry>0.13.4</entry>
802 which allows individual devices on an IP network to get their own 803 <entry>libpciaccess provides functionality for X to access the PCI bus and devices in a platform-independent way.</entry>
803 network configuration information from a server. DHCP helps make 804 <entry> MIT</entry>
804 it easier to administer devices.</entry> 805</row>
805 806<row>
806 <entry>ISC</entry> 807 <entry>libpcre</entry>
807 </row> 808 <entry>8.40</entry>
808 809 <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 <row> 810 <entry>BSD</entry>
810 <entry>diffutils</entry> 811</row>
811 812<row>
812 <entry>3.5</entry> 813 <entry>libpng</entry>
813 814 <entry>1.6.28</entry>
814 <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp 815 <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry>
815 utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch 816 <entry>Libpng</entry>
816 files.</entry> 817</row>
817 818<row>
818 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 819 <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry>
819 </row> 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 <row> 822 <entry>MIT</entry>
822 <entry>dmidecode</entry> 823</row>
823 824<row>
824 <entry>3.0</entry> 825 <entry>libsdl</entry>
825 826 <entry>1.2.15</entry>
826 <entry>DMI (Desktop Management Interface) table related 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 utilities.</entry> 828 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
828 829</row>
829 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 830<row>
830 </row> 831 <entry>libsm</entry>
831 832 <entry>1.2.2</entry>
832 <row> 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 <entry>dnsmasq</entry> 834 <entry>MIT</entry>
834 835</row>
835 <entry>2.76</entry> 836<row>
836 837 <entry>libtasn1</entry>
837 <entry>Lightweight easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP 838 <entry>4.10</entry>
838 server.</entry> 839 <entry>Library for ASN.1 and DER manipulation.</entry>
839 840 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
840 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> 841</row>
841 </row> 842<row>
842 843 <entry>libtool</entry>
843 <row> 844 <entry>2.4.6</entry>
844 <entry>docbook-xml-dtd4</entry> 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>
845 846 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
846 <entry>4.5</entry> 847</row>
847 848<row>
848 <entry>Document type definitions for verification of XML data 849 <entry>libunistring</entry>
849 files against the DocBook rule set it ships with the latest 850 <entry>0.9.7</entry>
850 DocBook 4.5 XML DTD as well as a selected set of legacy DTDs for 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 use with older documents including 4.0 4.1.2 4.2 4.3 and 852 <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
852 4.4</entry> 853</row>
853 854<row>
854 <entry>OASIS</entry> 855 <entry>libvirt</entry>
855 </row> 856 <entry>1.3.5</entry>
856 857 <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 <entry>docbook-xsl-stylesheets</entry> 859</row>
859 860<row>
860 <entry>1.79.1</entry> 861 <entry>libx11</entry>
861 862 <entry>1.6.4</entry>
862 <entry>XSL stylesheets for processing DocBook XML to various 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 output formats.</entry> 864 <entry> MIT, BSD</entry>
864 865</row>
865 <entry>XSL</entry> 866<row>
866 </row> 867 <entry>libxau</entry>
867 868 <entry>1.0.8</entry>
868 <row> 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 <entry>docker</entry> 870 <entry>MIT</entry>
870 871</row>
871 <entry>1.13.0</entry> 872<row>
872 873 <entry>libxcb</entry>
873 <entry>Linux container runtime Docker complements kernel 874 <entry>1.12</entry>
874 namespacing with a high-level API which operates at the process 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 level. It runs unix processes with strong guarantees of isolation 876 <entry>MIT</entry>
876 and repeatability across servers. . Docker is a great building 877</row>
877 block for automating distributed systems: large-scale web 878<row>
878 deployments database clusters continuous deployment systems 879 <entry>libxdmcp</entry>
879 private PaaS service-oriented architectures etc. . This package 880 <entry>1.1.2</entry>
880 contains the daemon and client. Using docker.io is officially 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 supported on x86_64 and arm (32-bit) hosts. Other architectures 882 <entry>MIT</entry>
882 are considered experimental. . Also note that kernel version 3.10 883</row>
883 or above is required for proper operation of the daemon process 884<row>
884 and that any lower versions may have subtle and/or glaring 885 <entry>libxext</entry>
885 issues.</entry> 886 <entry>1.3.3</entry>
886 887 <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 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 888 <entry>MIT</entry>
888 </row> 889</row>
889 890<row>
890 <row> 891 <entry>libxkbcommon</entry>
891 <entry>dosfstools</entry> 892 <entry>0.7.1</entry>
892 893 <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>4.1</entry> 894 <entry> MIT</entry>
894 895</row>
895 <entry>DOS FAT Filesystem Utilities.</entry> 896<row>
896 897 <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry>
897 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 898 <entry>2.44</entry>
898 </row> 899 <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML documents.</entry>
899 900 <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
900 <row> 901</row>
901 <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> 902<row>
902 903 <entry>libxml2</entry>
903 <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</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>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> 906 <entry>MIT</entry>
906 907</row>
907 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 908<row>
908 </row> 909 <entry>libxrandr</entry>
909 910 <entry>1.5.1</entry>
910 <row> 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 <entry>dpdk</entry> 912 <entry>MIT</entry>
912 913</row>
913 <entry>17.08</entry> 914<row>
914 915 <entry>libxrender</entry>
915 <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</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, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 918 <entry>MIT</entry>
918 </row> 919</row>
919 920<row>
920 <row> 921 <entry>libxslt</entry>
921 <entry>dpkg</entry> 922 <entry>1.1.29</entry>
922 923 <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry>
923 <entry>1.18.10</entry> 924 <entry>MIT</entry>
924 925</row>
925 <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> 926<row>
926 927 <entry>linux-cavium</entry>
927 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 928 <entry>4.9-octeontx.sdk.6.1.0.p3.build.22</entry>
928 </row> 929 <entry>Linux kernel.</entry>
929 930 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
930 <row> 931</row>
931 <entry>dtc</entry> 932<row>
932 933 <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry>
933 <entry>1.4.2</entry> 934 <entry>4.10</entry>
934 935 <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's use.</entry>
935 <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the 936 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
936 Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> 937</row>
937 938<row>
938 <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> 939 <entry>lsb</entry>
939 </row> 940 <entry>4.1</entry>
940 941 <entry>LSB support for OpenEmbedded.</entry>
941 <row> 942 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
942 <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> 943</row>
943 944<row>
944 <entry>1.43.4</entry> 945 <entry>lsbinitscripts</entry>
945 946 <entry>9.68</entry>
946 <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of 947 <entry>SysV init scripts which are only used in an LSB image.</entry>
947 the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and 948 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
948 debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> 949</row>
949 950<row>
950 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> 951 <entry>lvm2</entry>
951 </row> 952 <entry>2.02.166</entry>
952 953 <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in Linux.</entry>
953 <row> 954 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
954 <entry>ebtables</entry> 955</row>
955 956<row>
956 <entry>2.0.10-4</entry> 957 <entry>lxc</entry>
957 958 <entry>2.0.0</entry>
958 <entry>Utility for basic Ethernet frame filtering on a Linux 959 <entry>lxc aims to use these new functionnalities to provide an userspace container object</entry>
959 bridge advanced logging MAC DNAT/SNAT and brouting.</entry> 960 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
960 961</row>
961 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 962<row>
962 </row> 963 <entry>lxd</entry>
963 964 <entry>git</entry>
964 <row> 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>ecj-bootstrap</entry> 966 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
966 967</row>
967 <entry>1.0</entry> 968<row>
968 969 <entry>lz4</entry>
969 <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Bootstrap variant</entry> 970 <entry>131</entry>
970 971 <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 <entry>MIT</entry> 972 <entry>BSD</entry>
972 </row> 973</row>
973 974<row>
974 <row> 975 <entry>lzo</entry>
975 <entry>ecj-initial</entry> 976 <entry>2.09</entry>
976 977 <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry>
977 <entry>1.0</entry> 978 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
978 979</row>
979 <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Bootstrap variant</entry> 980<row>
980 981 <entry>lzop</entry>
981 <entry>MIT</entry> 982 <entry>1.03</entry>
982 </row> 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>
983 984 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
984 <row> 985</row>
985 <entry>elfutils</entry> 986<row>
986 987 <entry>m4</entry>
987 <entry>0.168</entry> 988 <entry>1.4.18</entry>
988 989 <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 <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object 990 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
990 files.</entry> 991</row>
991 992<row>
992 <entry>GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> 993 <entry>make</entry>
993 </row> 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 <row> 996 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
996 <entry>enea-nfv-access-dev</entry> 997</row>
997 998<row>
998 <entry>1.0</entry> 999 <entry>makedepend</entry>
999 1000 <entry>1.0.5</entry>
1000 <entry>Image for the host side of Enea NFV Access.</entry> 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 1002 <entry>MIT</entry>
1002 <entry>MIT</entry> 1003</row>
1003 </row> 1004<row>
1004 1005 <entry>makedevs</entry>
1005 <row> 1006 <entry>1.0.1</entry>
1006 <entry>expat</entry> 1007 <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry>
1007 1008 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1008 <entry>2.2.0</entry> 1009</row>
1009 1010<row>
1010 <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a 1011 <entry>mklibs</entry>
1011 stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers 1012 <entry>0.1.43</entry>
1012 for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start 1013 <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry>
1013 tags)</entry> 1014 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1014 1015</row>
1015 <entry>MIT</entry> 1016<row>
1016 </row> 1017 <entry>mozjs</entry>
1017 1018 <entry>17.0.0</entry>
1018 <row> 1019 <entry>SpiderMonkey is Mozilla's JavaScript engine written in C/C++.</entry>
1019 <entry>fastjar</entry> 1020 <entry>MPL-2.0</entry>
1020 1021</row>
1021 <entry>0.98</entry> 1022<row>
1022 1023 <entry>mpfr</entry>
1023 <entry>jar replacement written in C.</entry> 1024 <entry>3.1.5</entry>
1024 1025 <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point computations with exact rounding.</entry>
1025 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1026 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
1026 </row> 1027</row>
1027 1028<row>
1028 <row> 1029 <entry>ncurses</entry>
1029 <entry>file</entry> 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 <entry>5.30</entry> 1032 <entry>MIT</entry>
1032 1033</row>
1033 <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents 1034<row>
1034 and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> 1035 <entry>net-snmp</entry>
1035 1036 <entry>5.7.3</entry>
1036 <entry>BSD</entry> 1037 <entry>Various tools relating to the Simple Network Management Protocol.</entry>
1037 </row> 1038 <entry>BSD</entry>
1038 1039</row>
1039 <row> 1040<row>
1040 <entry>findutils</entry> 1041 <entry>netbase</entry>
1041 1042 <entry>5.4</entry>
1042 <entry>4.6.0</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>The GNU Find Utilities are the basic directory searching 1045</row>
1045 utilities of the GNU operating system. These programs are 1046<row>
1046 typically used in conjunction with other programs to provide 1047 <entry>netcat-openbsd</entry>
1047 modular and powerful directory search and file locating 1048 <entry>1.105</entry>
1048 capabilities to other commands.</entry> 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 1050 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1050 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1051</row>
1051 </row> 1052<row>
1052 1053 <entry>nettle</entry>
1053 <row> 1054 <entry>3.3</entry>
1054 <entry>fixesproto</entry> 1055 <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry>
1055 1056 <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
1056 <entry>5.0</entry> 1057</row>
1057 1058<row>
1058 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Fixes 1059 <entry>networkmanager</entry>
1059 extension. This extension is designed to provide server-side 1060 <entry>1.4.4</entry>
1060 support for application work arounds to shortcomings in the core X 1061 <entry>NetworkManager.</entry>
1061 window system.</entry> 1062 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1062 1063</row>
1063 <entry>MIT</entry> 1064<row>
1064 </row> 1065 <entry>notary</entry>
1065 1066 <entry>0.4.2</entry>
1066 <row> 1067 <entry>Notary is a Docker project that allows anyone to have trust over arbitrary collections of data</entry>
1067 <entry>flex</entry> 1068 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1068 1069</row>
1069 <entry>2.6.0</entry> 1070<row>
1070 1071 <entry>nspr</entry>
1071 <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool 1072 <entry>4.13.1</entry>
1072 for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in 1073 <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry>
1073 text.</entry> 1074 <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1074 1075</row>
1075 <entry>BSD</entry> 1076<row>
1076 </row> 1077 <entry>nss</entry>
1077 1078 <entry>3.28.1</entry>
1078 <row> 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 <entry>fontconfig</entry> 1080 <entry> MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1080 1081</row>
1081 <entry>2.12.1</entry> 1082<row>
1082 1083 <entry>ntp</entry>
1083 <entry>Fontconfig is a font configuration and customization 1084 <entry>4.2.8p10</entry>
1084 library which does not depend on the X Window System. It is 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 designed to locate fonts within the system and select them 1086 <entry>NTP</entry>
1086 according to requirements specified by applications. Fontconfig is 1087</row>
1087 not a rasterization library nor does it impose a particular 1088<row>
1088 rasterization library on the application. The X-specific library 1089 <entry>numactl</entry>
1089 'Xft' uses fontconfig along with freetype to specify and rasterize 1090 <entry>2.0.11</entry>
1090 fonts.</entry> 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 1092 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1092 <entry>MIT, PD</entry> 1093</row>
1093 </row> 1094<row>
1094 1095 <entry>openssh</entry>
1095 <row> 1096 <entry>7.4p1</entry>
1096 <entry>freetype</entry> 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 1098 <entry>BSD</entry>
1098 <entry>2.7.1</entry> 1099</row>
1099 1100<row>
1100 <entry>FreeType is a software font engine that is designed to be 1101 <entry>openssl</entry>
1101 small efficient highly customizable and portable while capable of 1102 <entry>1.0.2k</entry>
1102 producing high-quality output (glyph images). It can be used in 1103 <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic tools.</entry>
1103 graphics libraries display servers font conversion tools text 1104 <entry>OpenSSL</entry>
1104 image generation tools and many other products as well.</entry> 1105</row>
1105 1106<row>
1106 <entry>FreeType, GPL-2.0</entry> 1107 <entry>openvswitch</entry>
1107 </row> 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 <row> 1110 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1110 <entry>fuse</entry> 1111</row>
1111 1112<row>
1112 <entry>2.9.4</entry> 1113 <entry>opkg-utils</entry>
1113 1114 <entry>0.3.4</entry>
1114 <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for 1115 <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry>
1115 userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux 1116 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1116 kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non 1117</row>
1117 privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem 1118<row>
1118 implementations.</entry> 1119 <entry>os-release</entry>
1119 1120 <entry>1.0</entry>
1120 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> 1121 <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system identification data.</entry>
1121 </row> 1122 <entry>MIT</entry>
1122 1123</row>
1123 <row> 1124<row>
1124 <entry>gawk</entry> 1125 <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry>
1125 1126 <entry>1.0</entry>
1126 <entry>4.1.4</entry> 1127 <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the system</entry>
1127 1128 <entry>MIT</entry>
1128 <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk 1129</row>
1129 interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and 1130<row>
1130 easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> 1131 <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry>
1131 1132 <entry>1.0</entry>
1132 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1133 <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry>
1133 </row> 1134 <entry>MIT</entry>
1134 1135</row>
1135 <row> 1136<row>
1136 <entry>gcc-cross-initial-x86_64</entry> 1137 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-docker</entry>
1137 1138 <entry>1.0</entry>
1138 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 1139 <entry>Packagegroup for Docker.</entry>
1139 1140 <entry>MIT</entry>
1140 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 1141</row>
1141 1142<row>
1142 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 1143 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry>
1143 </row> 1144 <entry>1.0</entry>
1144 1145 <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry>
1145 <row> 1146 <entry>MIT</entry>
1146 <entry>gcc-cross-x86_64</entry> 1147</row>
1147 1148<row>
1148 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 1149 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-element-odm</entry>
1149 1150 <entry>1.0</entry>
1150 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 1151 <entry>Packagegroup for Element ODM.</entry>
1151 1152 <entry>MIT</entry>
1152 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 1153</row>
1153 </row> 1154<row>
1154 1155 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-host</entry>
1155 <row> 1156 <entry>1.0</entry>
1156 <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> 1157 <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups specific to the host side of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry>
1157 1158 <entry>MIT</entry>
1158 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 1159</row>
1159 1160<row>
1160 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 1161 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-libvirt</entry>
1161 1162 <entry>1.0</entry>
1162 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 1163 <entry>Package group for libvirt.</entry>
1163 </row> 1164 <entry>MIT</entry>
1164 1165</row>
1165 <row> 1166<row>
1166 <entry>gcc</entry> 1167 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxc</entry>
1167 1168 <entry>1.0</entry>
1168 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 1169 <entry>Packagegroup for LXC.</entry>
1169 1170 <entry>MIT</entry>
1170 <entry>Runtime libraries from GCC.</entry> 1171</row>
1171 1172<row>
1172 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> 1173 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxd</entry>
1173 </row> 1174 <entry>1.0</entry>
1174 1175 <entry>Packagegroup for LXD.</entry>
1175 <row> 1176 <entry>MIT</entry>
1176 <entry>gdb</entry> 1177</row>
1177 1178<row>
1178 <entry>7.12.1</entry> 1179 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-ovs</entry>
1179 1180 <entry>1.0</entry>
1180 <entry>GNU debugger.</entry> 1181 <entry>Packagegroup for Open vSwitch.</entry>
1181 1182 <entry>MIT</entry>
1182 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> 1183</row>
1183 </row> 1184<row>
1184 1185 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-qemu</entry>
1185 <row> 1186 <entry>1.0</entry>
1186 <entry>gdbm</entry> 1187 <entry>Packagegroup for QEMU.</entry>
1187 1188 <entry>MIT</entry>
1188 <entry>1.12</entry> 1189</row>
1189 1190<row>
1190 <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> 1191 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry>
1191 1192 <entry>1.0</entry>
1192 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1193 <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux Virtualization Profile.</entry>
1193 </row> 1194 <entry>MIT</entry>
1194 1195</row>
1195 <row> 1196<row>
1196 <entry>gdk-pixbuf</entry> 1197 <entry>parted</entry>
1197 1198 <entry>3.2</entry>
1198 <entry>2.36.5</entry> 1199 <entry>Disk partition editing/resizing utility.</entry>
1199 1200 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1200 <entry>Image loading library for GTK+.</entry> 1201</row>
1201 1202<row>
1202 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> 1203 <entry>partrt</entry>
1203 </row> 1204 <entry>1.1</entry>
1204 1205 <entry>partrt is a tool for dividing a SMP Linux system into a real time domain and a non-real time domain.</entry>
1205 <row> 1206 <entry>BSD</entry>
1206 <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> 1207</row>
1207 1208<row>
1208 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> 1209 <entry>pciutils</entry>
1209 1210 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
1210 <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building 1211 <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based on this library.</entry>
1211 autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup 1212 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1212 by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now 1213</row>
1213 only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> 1214<row>
1214 1215 <entry>perl</entry>
1215 <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> 1216 <entry>5.24.1</entry>
1216 </row> 1217 <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry>
1217 1218 <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
1218 <row> 1219</row>
1219 <entry>gettext</entry> 1220<row>
1220 1221 <entry>pigz</entry>
1221 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> 1222 <entry>2.3.4</entry>
1222 1223 <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>
1223 <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to 1224 <entry> Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry>
1224 help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools 1225</row>
1225 include a set of conventions about how programs should be written 1226<row>
1226 to support message catalogs a directory and file naming 1227 <entry>pixman</entry>
1227 organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library 1228 <entry>0.34.0</entry>
1228 supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few 1229 <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>
1229 stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of 1230 <entry> MIT, PD</entry>
1230 translatable and already translated strings.</entry> 1231</row>
1231 1232<row>
1232 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1233 <entry>pkgconfig</entry>
1233 </row> 1234 <entry>0.29.1</entry>
1234 1235 <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>
1235 <row> 1236 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1236 <entry>giflib</entry> 1237</row>
1237 1238<row>
1238 <entry>5.1.4</entry> 1239 <entry>pm-utils</entry>
1239 1240 <entry>1.4.1</entry>
1240 <entry>shared library for GIF images.</entry> 1241 <entry>Simple shell command line tools to suspend and hibernate.</entry>
1241 1242 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1242 <entry>MIT</entry> 1243</row>
1243 </row> 1244<row>
1244 1245 <entry>polkit</entry>
1245 <row> 1246 <entry>0.113</entry>
1246 <entry>git</entry> 1247 <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>
1247 1248 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
1248 <entry>2.11.1</entry> 1249</row>
1249 1250<row>
1250 <entry>Distributed version control system.</entry> 1251 <entry>popt</entry>
1251 1252 <entry>1.16</entry>
1252 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1253 <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry>
1253 </row> 1254 <entry>MIT</entry>
1254 1255</row>
1255 <row> 1256<row>
1256 <entry>glib-2.0</entry> 1257 <entry>pps-tools</entry>
1257 1258 <entry>0.0.0</entry>
1258 <entry>2.50.3</entry> 1259 <entry>User-space tools for LinuxPPS.</entry>
1259 1260 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1260 <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides 1261</row>
1261 many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities 1262<row>
1262 file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> 1263 <entry>prelink</entry>
1263 1264 <entry>1.0</entry>
1264 <entry>LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> 1265 <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>
1265 </row> 1266 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1266 1267</row>
1267 <row> 1268<row>
1268 <entry>glibc-locale</entry> 1269 <entry>procps</entry>
1269 1270 <entry>3.3.12</entry>
1270 <entry>2.25</entry> 1271 <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>
1271 1272 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
1272 <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> 1273</row>
1273 1274<row>
1274 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1275 <entry>pseudo</entry>
1275 </row> 1276 <entry>1.8.2</entry>
1276 1277 <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal user.</entry>
1277 <row> 1278 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
1278 <entry>glibc</entry> 1279</row>
1279 1280<row>
1280 <entry>2.25</entry> 1281 <entry>ptest-runner</entry>
1281 1282 <entry>2.0.2</entry>
1282 <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most 1283 <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them in sequence.</entry>
1283 systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> 1284 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1284 1285</row>
1285 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1286<row>
1286 </row> 1287 <entry>python-futures</entry>
1287 1288 <entry>3.0.5</entry>
1288 <row> 1289 <entry>The concurrent.futures module provides a high-level interface for asynchronously executing callables.</entry>
1289 <entry>gmp</entry> 1290 <entry>BSD</entry>
1290 1291</row>
1291 <entry>6.1.2</entry> 1292<row>
1292 1293 <entry>python-netaddr</entry>
1293 <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic 1294 <entry>0.7.19</entry>
1294 operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point 1295 <entry>A network address manipulation library for Python..</entry>
1295 numbers</entry> 1296 <entry>BSD</entry>
1296 1297</row>
1297 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> 1298<row>
1298 </row> 1299 <entry>python-netifaces</entry>
1299 1300 <entry>0.10.6</entry>
1300 <row> 1301 <entry>Portable network interface information..</entry>
1301 <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> 1302 <entry>MIT</entry>
1302 1303</row>
1303 <entry>2014.1</entry> 1304<row>
1304 1305 <entry>python-pip</entry>
1305 <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> 1306 <entry>9.0.1</entry>
1306 1307 <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python packages.</entry>
1307 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> 1308 <entry> MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1308 </row> 1309</row>
1309 1310<row>
1310 <row> 1311 <entry>python-psutil</entry>
1311 <entry>gnome-themes-standard</entry> 1312 <entry>5.2.0</entry>
1312 1313 <entry>A cross-platform process and system utilities module for Python.</entry>
1313 <entry>3.22.2</entry> 1314 <entry>BSD</entry>
1314 1315</row>
1315 <entry>GTK+2 standard themes.</entry> 1316<row>
1316 1317 <entry>python-setuptools</entry>
1317 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1318 <entry>32.1.1</entry>
1318 </row> 1319 <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python packages.</entry>
1319 1320 <entry>MIT</entry>
1320 <row> 1321</row>
1321 <entry>gnu-config</entry> 1322<row>
1322 1323 <entry>python-six</entry>
1323 <entry>20150728</entry> 1324 <entry>1.10.0</entry>
1324 1325 <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities</entry>
1325 <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a 1326 <entry>MIT</entry>
1326 directory tree</entry> 1327</row>
1327 1328<row>
1328 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-autoconf-exception</entry> 1329 <entry>python-twisted</entry>
1329 </row> 1330 <entry>13.2.0</entry>
1330 1331 <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>
1331 <row> 1332 <entry>MIT</entry>
1332 <entry>gnujaf</entry> 1333</row>
1333 1334<row>
1334 <entry>1.1.1</entry> 1335 <entry>python-zopeinterface</entry>
1335 1336 <entry>4.3.3</entry>
1336 <entry>Provides a mean to type data and locate components suitable 1337 <entry>Interface definitions for Zope products.</entry>
1337 for performing various kinds of action on it.</entry> 1338 <entry>ZPL-2.1</entry>
1338 1339</row>
1339 <entry>GPL-2.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> 1340<row>
1340 </row> 1341 <entry>python</entry>
1341 1342 <entry>2.7.13</entry>
1342 <row> 1343 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
1343 <entry>gnumail</entry> 1344 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
1344 1345</row>
1345 <entry>1.1.2</entry> 1346<row>
1346 1347 <entry>python3</entry>
1347 <entry>GNU's free implementation of the JavaMail API 1348 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
1348 specification</entry> 1349 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
1349 1350 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
1350 <entry>GPL-2.0-with-GCC-exception</entry> 1351</row>
1351 </row> 1352<row>
1352 1353 <entry>qemu</entry>
1353 <row> 1354 <entry>2.8.0</entry>
1354 <entry>gnutls</entry> 1355 <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry>
1355 1356 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1356 <entry>3.5.9</entry> 1357</row>
1357 1358<row>
1358 <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> 1359 <entry>qemuwrapper</entry>
1359 1360 <entry>1.0</entry>
1360 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1361 <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry>
1361 </row> 1362 <entry>MIT</entry>
1362 1363</row>
1363 <row> 1364<row>
1364 <entry>go-bootstrap</entry> 1365 <entry>quilt</entry>
1365 1366 <entry>0.65</entry>
1366 <entry>1.4.3</entry> 1367 <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry>
1367 1368 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1368 <entry>The Go programming language is an open source project to 1369</row>
1369 make programmers more productive. Go is expressive concise clean 1370<row>
1370 and efficient. Its concurrency mechanisms make it easy to write 1371 <entry>randrproto</entry>
1371 programs that get the most out of multicore and networked machines 1372 <entry>1.5.0</entry>
1372 while its novel type system enables flexible and modular program 1373 <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>
1373 construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code yet has the 1374 <entry>MIT</entry>
1374 convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time 1375</row>
1375 reflection. It's a fast statically typed compiled language that 1376<row>
1376 feels like a dynamically typed interpreted language.</entry> 1377 <entry>readline</entry>
1377 1378 <entry>7.0</entry>
1378 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> 1379 <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>
1379 </row> 1380 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1380 1381</row>
1381 <row> 1382<row>
1382 <entry>go-capability</entry> 1383 <entry>renderproto</entry>
1383 1384 <entry>0.11.1</entry>
1384 <entry>0.0</entry> 1385 <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>
1385 1386 <entry>MIT</entry>
1386 <entry>Utilities for manipulating POSIX capabilities in 1387</row>
1387 Go.</entry> 1388<row>
1388 1389 <entry>rpm</entry>
1389 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> 1390 <entry>4.13.90</entry>
1390 </row> 1391 <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>
1391 1392 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1392 <row> 1393</row>
1393 <entry>go-cli</entry> 1394<row>
1394 1395 <entry>rsync</entry>
1395 <entry>1.1.0</entry> 1396 <entry>3.1.2</entry>
1396 1397 <entry>File synchronization tool.</entry>
1397 <entry>A small package for building command line apps in 1398 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1398 Go</entry> 1399</row>
1399 1400<row>
1400 <entry>MIT</entry> 1401 <entry>run-postinsts</entry>
1401 </row> 1402 <entry>1.0</entry>
1402 1403 <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target device.</entry>
1403 <row> 1404 <entry>MIT</entry>
1404 <entry>go-connections</entry> 1405</row>
1405 1406<row>
1406 <entry>0.2.1</entry> 1407 <entry>runc-docker</entry>
1407 1408 <entry>1.0.0-rc2</entry>
1408 <entry>Utility package to work with network connections</entry> 1409 <entry>runc is a CLI tool for spawning and running containers according to the OCI specification.</entry>
1409 1410 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1410 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 1411</row>
1411 </row> 1412<row>
1412 1413 <entry>sed</entry>
1413 <row> 1414 <entry>4.2.2</entry>
1414 <entry>go-context</entry> 1415 <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry>
1415 1416 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1416 <entry>git</entry> 1417</row>
1417 1418<row>
1418 <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> 1419 <entry>shadow-securetty</entry>
1419 1420 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
1420 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> 1421 <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry>
1421 </row> 1422 <entry>MIT</entry>
1422 1423</row>
1423 <row> 1424<row>
1424 <entry>go-cross-x86_64</entry> 1425 <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry>
1425 1426 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
1426 <entry>1.8</entry> 1427 <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry>
1427 1428 <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
1428 <entry>The Go programming language is an open source project to 1429</row>
1429 make programmers more productive. Go is expressive concise clean 1430<row>
1430 and efficient. Its concurrency mechanisms make it easy to write 1431 <entry>shadow</entry>
1431 programs that get the most out of multicore and networked machines 1432 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
1432 while its novel type system enables flexible and modular program 1433 <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group data.</entry>
1433 construction. Go compiles quickly to machine code yet has the 1434 <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
1434 convenience of garbage collection and the power of run-time 1435</row>
1435 reflection. It's a fast statically typed compiled language that 1436<row>
1436 feels like a dynamically typed interpreted language.</entry> 1437 <entry>shared-mime-info</entry>
1437 1438 <entry>1.8</entry>
1438 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> 1439 <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry>
1439 </row> 1440 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
1440 1441</row>
1441 <row> 1442<row>
1442 <entry>go-dbus</entry> 1443 <entry>simpleproxy</entry>
1443 1444 <entry>1.0</entry>
1444 <entry>4.0.0</entry> 1445 <entry>Simpleproxy.</entry>
1445 1446 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1446 <entry>Native Go bindings for D-Bus</entry> 1447</row>
1447 1448<row>
1448 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> 1449 <entry>slang</entry>
1449 </row> 1450 <entry>2.3.1a</entry>
1450 1451 <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>
1451 <row> 1452 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1452 <entry>go-distribution</entry> 1453</row>
1453 1454<row>
1454 <entry>2.6.0</entry> 1455 <entry>sqlite3</entry>
1455 1456 <entry>3.17.0</entry>
1456 <entry>The Docker toolset to pack ship store and deliver 1457 <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry>
1457 content</entry> 1458 <entry>PD</entry>
1458 1459</row>
1459 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 1460<row>
1460 </row> 1461 <entry>squashfs-tools</entry>
1461 1462 <entry>4.3</entry>
1462 <row> 1463 <entry>Tools for manipulating SquashFS filesystems.</entry>
1463 <entry>go-fsnotify</entry> 1464 <entry> GPL-2.0, PD</entry>
1464 1465</row>
1465 <entry>1.2.11</entry> 1466<row>
1466 1467 <entry>sysfsutils</entry>
1467 <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> 1468 <entry>2.1.0</entry>
1468 1469 <entry>Tools for working with the sysfs virtual filesystem. The tool 'systool' can query devices by bus class and topology.</entry>
1469 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> 1470 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1470 </row> 1471</row>
1471 1472<row>
1472 <row> 1473 <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry>
1473 <entry>go-libtrust</entry> 1474 <entry>1.0</entry>
1474 1475 <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit scripts.</entry>
1475 <entry>0.0</entry> 1476 <entry>MIT</entry>
1476 1477</row>
1477 <entry>Primitives for identity and authorization</entry> 1478<row>
1478 1479 <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry>
1479 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 1480 <entry>1.0</entry>
1480 </row> 1481 <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry>
1481 1482 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1482 <row> 1483</row>
1483 <entry>go-logrus</entry> 1484<row>
1484 1485 <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry>
1485 <entry>0.11.0</entry> 1486 <entry>1.0</entry>
1486 1487 <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry>
1487 <entry>A golang registry for global request variables.</entry> 1488 <entry>MIT</entry>
1488 1489</row>
1489 <entry>MIT</entry> 1490<row>
1490 </row> 1491 <entry>systemd</entry>
1491 1492 <entry>232</entry>
1492 <row> 1493 <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>
1493 <entry>go-mux</entry> 1494 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1494 1495</row>
1495 <entry>git</entry> 1496<row>
1496 1497 <entry>tar</entry>
1497 <entry>A powerful URL router and dispatcher for golang.</entry> 1498 <entry>1.29</entry>
1498 1499 <entry>GNU tar saves many files together into a single tape or disk archive and can restore individual files from the archive.</entry>
1499 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> 1500 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1500 </row> 1501</row>
1501 1502<row>
1502 <row> 1503 <entry>tcpdump</entry>
1503 <entry>go-patricia</entry> 1504 <entry>4.9.0</entry>
1504 1505 <entry>A sophisticated network protocol analyzer.</entry>
1505 <entry>2.2.6</entry> 1506 <entry>BSD</entry>
1506 1507</row>
1507 <entry>A generic patricia trie (also called radix tree) 1508<row>
1508 implemented in Go (Golang)</entry> 1509 <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry>
1509 1510 <entry>1.0</entry>
1510 <entry>MIT</entry> 1511 <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry>
1511 </row> 1512 <entry>MIT</entry>
1512 1513</row>
1513 <row> 1514<row>
1514 <entry>go-pty</entry> 1515 <entry>thin-provisioning-tools</entry>
1515 1516 <entry>0.6.3</entry>
1516 <entry>git</entry> 1517 <entry>A suite of tools for manipulating the metadata of the dm-thin device-mapper target.</entry>
1517 1518 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1518 <entry>PTY interface for Go</entry> 1519</row>
1519 1520<row>
1520 <entry>MIT</entry> 1521 <entry>tunctl</entry>
1521 </row> 1522 <entry>1.5</entry>
1522 1523 <entry>Tool for controlling the Linux TUN/TAP driver.</entry>
1523 <row> 1524 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1524 <entry>go-systemd</entry> 1525</row>
1525 1526<row>
1526 <entry>4</entry> 1527 <entry>tzcode</entry>
1527 1528 <entry>2017b</entry>
1528 <entry>Go bindings to systemd socket activation journal D-Bus and 1529 <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump tzselect.</entry>
1529 unit files</entry> 1530 <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1530 1531</row>
1531 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 1532<row>
1532 </row> 1533 <entry>tzdata</entry>
1533 1534 <entry>2017b</entry>
1534 <row> 1535 <entry>Timezone data.</entry>
1535 <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> 1536 <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1536 1537</row>
1537 <entry>1.50.0</entry> 1538<row>
1538 1539 <entry>u-boot-mkimage</entry>
1539 <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and 1540 <entry>2017.01</entry>
1540 language bindings.</entry> 1541 <entry>U-Boot bootloader image creation tool.</entry>
1541 1542 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1542 <entry>LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 1543</row>
1543 </row> 1544<row>
1544 1545 <entry>unifdef</entry>
1545 <row> 1546 <entry>2.11</entry>
1546 <entry>gperf</entry> 1547 <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry>
1547 1548 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
1548 <entry>3.0.4</entry> 1549</row>
1549 1550<row>
1550 <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> 1551 <entry>unzip</entry>
1551 1552 <entry>6.0</entry>
1552 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1553 <entry>Utilities for extracting and viewing files in .zip archives.</entry>
1553 </row> 1554 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1554 1555</row>
1555 <row> 1556<row>
1556 <entry>grep</entry> 1557 <entry>update-rc.d</entry>
1557 1558 <entry>0.7</entry>
1558 <entry>3.0</entry> 1559 <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory structure.</entry>
1559 1560 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1560 <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> 1561</row>
1561 1562<row>
1562 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1563 <entry>util-linux</entry>
1563 </row> 1564 <entry>2.29.1</entry>
1564 1565 <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>
1565 <row> 1566 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry>
1566 <entry>groff</entry> 1567</row>
1567 1568<row>
1568 <entry>1.22.3</entry> 1569 <entry>util-macros</entry>
1569 1570 <entry>1.19.1</entry>
1570 <entry>The groff (GNU troff) software is a typesetting package 1571 <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry>
1571 which reads plain text mixed with formatting commands and produces 1572 <entry> MIT</entry>
1572 formatted output.</entry> 1573</row>
1573 1574<row>
1574 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1575 <entry>vala</entry>
1575 </row> 1576 <entry>0.34.4</entry>
1576 1577 <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>
1577 <row> 1578 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
1578 <entry>grpc-go</entry> 1579</row>
1579 1580<row>
1580 <entry>1.4.0</entry> 1581 <entry>volatile-binds</entry>
1581 1582 <entry>1.0</entry>
1582 <entry>The Go language implementation of gRPC. HTTP/2 based 1583 <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for read-only-rootfs</entry>
1583 RPC</entry> 1584 <entry>MIT</entry>
1584 1585</row>
1585 <entry>BSD</entry> 1586<row>
1586 </row> 1587 <entry>xcb-proto</entry>
1587 1588 <entry>1.12</entry>
1588 <row> 1589 <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>
1589 <entry>grub-efi</entry> 1590 <entry>MIT</entry>
1590 1591</row>
1591 <entry>2.00</entry> 1592<row>
1592 1593 <entry>xextproto</entry>
1593 <entry>GRUB2 is the next generaion of a GPLed bootloader intended 1594 <entry>7.3.0</entry>
1594 to unify bootloading across x86 operating systems. In addition to 1595 <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>
1595 loading the Linux kernel it implements the Multiboot standard 1596 <entry> MIT</entry>
1596 which allows for flexible loading of multiple boot images.</entry> 1597</row>
1597 1598<row>
1598 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1599 <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry>
1599 </row> 1600 <entry>2.20</entry>
1600 1601 <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>
1601 <row> 1602 <entry> MIT</entry>
1602 <entry>gtk+</entry> 1603</row>
1603 1604<row>
1604 <entry>2.24.31</entry> 1605 <entry>xproto</entry>
1605 1606 <entry>7.0.31</entry>
1606 <entry>GTK+ is a multi-platform toolkit for creating graphical 1607 <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window System.</entry>
1607 user interfaces. Offering a complete set of widgets GTK+ is 1608 <entry> MIT</entry>
1608 suitable for projects ranging from small one-off projects to 1609</row>
1609 complete application suites.</entry> 1610<row>
1610 1611 <entry>xtrans</entry>
1611 <entry>LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1612 <entry>1.3.5</entry>
1612 </row> 1613 <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>
1613 1614 <entry> MIT</entry>
1614 <row> 1615</row>
1615 <entry>gtk-doc</entry> 1616<row>
1616 1617 <entry>xz</entry>
1617 <entry>1.25</entry> 1618 <entry>5.2.3</entry>
1618 1619 <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry>
1619 <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially 1620 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry>
1620 formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of 1621</row>
1621 html documentation files from them</entry> 1622<row>
1622 1623 <entry>yajl</entry>
1623 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1624 <entry>2.1.0</entry>
1624 </row> 1625 <entry>YAJL is a small event-driven (SAX-style) JSON parser written in ANSI C and a small validating JSON generator.</entry>
1625 1626 <entry>ISC</entry>
1626 <row> 1627</row>
1627 <entry>gtk-icon-utils</entry> 1628<row>
1628 1629 <entry>zlib</entry>
1629 <entry>3.22.8</entry> 1630 <entry>1.2.11</entry>
1630 1631 <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data compression library which is used by many different programs.</entry>
1631 <entry>gtk-update-icon-cache and gtk-encode-symbolic-svg built 1632 <entry>Zlib</entry>
1632 from GTK+ natively for build time and on-host postinst script 1633</row>
1633 execution.</entry> 1634 </tbody>
1634 1635 </tgroup>
1635 <entry>LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1636 </informaltable>
1636 </row>
1637
1638 <row>
1639 <entry>guile</entry>
1640
1641 <entry>2.0.14</entry>
1642
1643 <entry>Guile is the GNU Ubiquitous Intelligent Language for
1644 Extensions the official extension language for the GNU operating
1645 system. Guile is a library designed to help programmers create
1646 flexible applications. Using Guile in an application allows the
1647 application's functionality to be extended by users or other
1648 programmers with plug-ins modules or scripts. Guile provides what
1649 might be described as 'practical software freedom' making it
1650 possible for users to customize an application to meet their needs
1651 without digging into the application's internals.</entry>
1652
1653 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1654 </row>
1655
1656 <row>
1657 <entry>gzip</entry>
1658
1659 <entry>1.8</entry>
1660
1661 <entry>GNU Gzip is a popular data compression program originally
1662 written by Jean-loup Gailly for the GNU project. Mark Adler wrote
1663 the decompression part</entry>
1664
1665 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1666 </row>
1667
1668 <row>
1669 <entry>harfbuzz</entry>
1670
1671 <entry>1.4.1</entry>
1672
1673 <entry>HarfBuzz is an OpenType text shaping engine.</entry>
1674
1675 <entry>MIT</entry>
1676 </row>
1677
1678 <row>
1679 <entry>hicolor-icon-theme</entry>
1680
1681 <entry>0.15</entry>
1682
1683 <entry>Default icon theme that all icon themes automatically
1684 inherit from.</entry>
1685
1686 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1687 </row>
1688
1689 <row>
1690 <entry>htop</entry>
1691
1692 <entry>1.0.3</entry>
1693
1694 <entry>htop process monitor.</entry>
1695
1696 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1697 </row>
1698
1699 <row>
1700 <entry>icedtea7</entry>
1701
1702 <entry>2.1.3</entry>
1703
1704 <entry>Harness to build the source code from OpenJDK using Free
1705 Software build tools</entry>
1706
1707 <entry>GPL-2.0-with-classpath-exception</entry>
1708 </row>
1709
1710 <row>
1711 <entry>icu</entry>
1712
1713 <entry>58.2</entry>
1714
1715 <entry>The International Component for Unicode (ICU) is a mature
1716 portable set of C/C++ and Java libraries for Unicode support
1717 software internationalization (I18N) and globalization (G11N)
1718 giving applications the same results on all platforms.</entry>
1719
1720 <entry>ICU</entry>
1721 </row>
1722
1723 <row>
1724 <entry>inetlib</entry>
1725
1726 <entry>1.1.1</entry>
1727
1728 <entry>GNU Classpath inetlib is an extension library to provide
1729 extra network protocol support for GNU Classpath and ClasspathX
1730 project but it can also used standalone to add http imap pop3 and
1731 smtp client support applications.</entry>
1732
1733 <entry>GPL-2.0-with-GCC-exception</entry>
1734 </row>
1735
1736 <row>
1737 <entry>initscripts</entry>
1738
1739 <entry>1.0</entry>
1740
1741 <entry>Initscripts provide the basic system startup initialization
1742 scripts for the system. These scripts include actions such as
1743 filesystem mounting fsck RTC manipulation and other actions
1744 routinely performed at system startup. In addition the scripts are
1745 also used during system shutdown to reverse the actions performed
1746 at startup.</entry>
1747
1748 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1749 </row>
1750
1751 <row>
1752 <entry>inputproto</entry>
1753
1754 <entry>2.3.2</entry>
1755
1756 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input
1757 extension. The extension supports input devices other then the
1758 core X keyboard and pointer.</entry>
1759
1760 <entry>MIT</entry>
1761 </row>
1762
1763 <row>
1764 <entry>intltool</entry>
1765
1766 <entry>0.51.0</entry>
1767
1768 <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry>
1769
1770 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1771 </row>
1772
1773 <row>
1774 <entry>iproute2</entry>
1775
1776 <entry>4.10.0</entry>
1777
1778 <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP /
1779 IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip
1780 and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6
1781 configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry>
1782
1783 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1784 </row>
1785
1786 <row>
1787 <entry>iptables</entry>
1788
1789 <entry>1.6.1</entry>
1790
1791 <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to
1792 configure and control network packet filtering code in
1793 Linux.</entry>
1794
1795 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1796 </row>
1797
1798 <row>
1799 <entry>iucode-tool</entry>
1800
1801 <entry>2.1.1</entry>
1802
1803 <entry>iucode_tool is a program to manipulate Intel i686 and
1804 X86-64 processor microcode update collections and to use the
1805 kernel facilities to update the microcode on Intel system
1806 processors. It can load microcode data files in text and binary
1807 format sort list and filter the microcode updates contained in
1808 these files write selected microcode updates to a new file in
1809 binary format or upload them to the kernel. It operates on
1810 microcode data downloaded directly from Intel:
1811 http://feeds.downloadcenter.intel.com/rss/?p=2371</entry>
1812
1813 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1814 </row>
1815
1816 <row>
1817 <entry>jacl</entry>
1818
1819 <entry>1.4.1</entry>
1820
1821 <entry>Tcl interpreter for Java</entry>
1822
1823 <entry>UCB, SUN, AMD and CDS</entry>
1824 </row>
1825
1826 <row>
1827 <entry>jamvm</entry>
1828
1829 <entry>2.0.0-devel</entry>
1830
1831 <entry>A compact Java Virtual Machine which conforms to the JVM
1832 specification version 2.</entry>
1833
1834 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1835 </row>
1836
1837 <row>
1838 <entry>jansson</entry>
1839
1840 <entry>2.9</entry>
1841
1842 <entry>Jansson is a C library for encoding decoding and
1843 manipulating JSON data.</entry>
1844
1845 <entry>MIT</entry>
1846 </row>
1847
1848 <row>
1849 <entry>jaxp1.3</entry>
1850
1851 <entry>1.4.01</entry>
1852
1853 <entry>Java XML parser and transformer APIs (DOM SAX JAXP
1854 TrAX)</entry>
1855
1856 <entry>Apache-2.0, PD</entry>
1857 </row>
1858
1859 <row>
1860 <entry>jdepend</entry>
1861
1862 <entry>2.9.1</entry>
1863
1864 <entry>Design quality metrics generator for each Java</entry>
1865
1866 <entry>BSD</entry>
1867 </row>
1868
1869 <row>
1870 <entry>jikes-initial</entry>
1871
1872 <entry>1.0</entry>
1873
1874 <entry>Initial Java 1.4-compatible (and not higher)
1875 compiler.</entry>
1876
1877 <entry>MIT</entry>
1878 </row>
1879
1880 <row>
1881 <entry>jikes</entry>
1882
1883 <entry>1.22</entry>
1884
1885 <entry>Java compiler adhering to language and VM
1886 specifications</entry>
1887
1888 <entry>IPL-1.0</entry>
1889 </row>
1890
1891 <row>
1892 <entry>jlex</entry>
1893
1894 <entry>1.2.6</entry>
1895
1896 <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry>
1897
1898 <entry>JLEX</entry>
1899 </row>
1900
1901 <row>
1902 <entry>jsch</entry>
1903
1904 <entry>0.1.40</entry>
1905
1906 <entry>SSH implementation in Java</entry>
1907
1908 <entry>BSD</entry>
1909 </row>
1910
1911 <row>
1912 <entry>json-c</entry>
1913
1914 <entry>0.12</entry>
1915
1916 <entry>JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that
1917 allows you to easily construct JSON objects in C.</entry>
1918
1919 <entry>MIT</entry>
1920 </row>
1921
1922 <row>
1923 <entry>junit</entry>
1924
1925 <entry>3.8.2</entry>
1926
1927 <entry>JUnit is a testing framework for Java</entry>
1928
1929 <entry>CPL-1.0</entry>
1930 </row>
1931
1932 <row>
1933 <entry>jzlib</entry>
1934
1935 <entry>1.0.7</entry>
1936
1937 <entry>zlib implementation in Java</entry>
1938
1939 <entry>BSD</entry>
1940 </row>
1941
1942 <row>
1943 <entry>kbd</entry>
1944
1945 <entry>2.0.4</entry>
1946
1947 <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry>
1948
1949 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1950 </row>
1951
1952 <row>
1953 <entry>kbproto</entry>
1954
1955 <entry>1.0.7</entry>
1956
1957 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard
1958 extension. This extension is used to control options related to
1959 keyboard handling and layout.</entry>
1960
1961 <entry>MIT</entry>
1962 </row>
1963
1964 <row>
1965 <entry>kern-tools</entry>
1966
1967 <entry>0.2</entry>
1968
1969 <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched
1970 kernels.</entry>
1971
1972 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1973 </row>
1974
1975 <row>
1976 <entry>kernel-devsrc</entry>
1977
1978 <entry>1.0</entry>
1979
1980 <entry>Development source linux kernel. When built this recipe
1981 packages the source of the preferred virtual/kernel provider and
1982 makes it available for full kernel development or external module
1983 builds</entry>
1984
1985 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1986 </row>
1987
1988 <row>
1989 <entry>keymaps</entry>
1990
1991 <entry>1.0</entry>
1992
1993 <entry>Keymaps and initscript to set the keymap on bootup.</entry>
1994
1995 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1996 </row>
1997
1998 <row>
1999 <entry>kmod</entry>
2000
2001 <entry>23</entry>
2002
2003 <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux
2004 kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve
2005 dependencies and aliases.</entry>
2006
2007 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2008 </row>
2009
2010 <row>
2011 <entry>krb5</entry>
2012
2013 <entry>1.15.1</entry>
2014
2015 <entry>"Kerberos is a system for authenticating users and services
2016 on a network. Kerberos is a trusted third-party service. That
2017 means that there is a third party (the Kerberos server) that is
2018 trusted by all the entities on the network (users and services
2019 usually called ""principals""). . This is the MIT reference
2020 implementation of Kerberos V5. . This package contains the
2021 Kerberos key server (KDC). The KDC manages all authentication
2022 credentials for a Kerberos realm holds the master keys for the
2023 realm and responds to authentication requests. This package should
2024 be installed on both master and slave KDCs."</entry>
2025
2026 <entry>MIT</entry>
2027 </row>
2028
2029 <row>
2030 <entry>latencytop</entry>
2031
2032 <entry>0.5</entry>
2033
2034 <entry>Linux tool for measuring and fixing latency.</entry>
2035
2036 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2037 </row>
2038
2039 <row>
2040 <entry>ldconfig</entry>
2041
2042 <entry>2.12.1</entry>
2043
2044 <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry>
2045
2046 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2047 </row>
2048
2049 <row>
2050 <entry>less</entry>
2051
2052 <entry>487</entry>
2053
2054 <entry>Less is a program similar to more i.e. a terminal based
2055 program for viewing text files and the output from other programs.
2056 Less offers many features beyond those that more does.</entry>
2057
2058 <entry>GPL-3.0, BSD-2-Clause</entry>
2059 </row>
2060
2061 <row>
2062 <entry>libaio</entry>
2063
2064 <entry>0.3.110</entry>
2065
2066 <entry>Asynchronous input/output library that uses the kernels
2067 native interface</entry>
2068
2069 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2070 </row>
2071
2072 <row>
2073 <entry>libarchive</entry>
2074
2075 <entry>3.2.2</entry>
2076
2077 <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing
2078 tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry>
2079
2080 <entry>BSD</entry>
2081 </row>
2082
2083 <row>
2084 <entry>libatomic-ops</entry>
2085
2086 <entry>7.4.4</entry>
2087
2088 <entry>A library for atomic integer operations.</entry>
2089
2090 <entry>GPL-2.0, MIT</entry>
2091 </row>
2092
2093 <row>
2094 <entry>libbsd</entry>
2095
2096 <entry>0.8.3</entry>
2097
2098 <entry>This library provides useful functions commonly found on
2099 BSD systems and lacking on others like GNU systems thus making it
2100 easier to port projects with strong BSD origins without needing to
2101 embed the same code over and over again on each project.</entry>
2102
2103 <entry>BSD-4-Clause, ISC, PD</entry>
2104 </row>
2105
2106 <row>
2107 <entry>libcap</entry>
2108
2109 <entry>2.25</entry>
2110
2111 <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry>
2112
2113 <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0</entry>
2114 </row>
2115
2116 <row>
2117 <entry>libcgroup</entry>
2118
2119 <entry>0.41</entry>
2120
2121 <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group
2122 file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account
2123 and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of
2124 processes.</entry>
2125
2126 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2127 </row>
2128
2129 <row>
2130 <entry>libcheck</entry>
2131
2132 <entry>0.10.0</entry>
2133
2134 <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry>
2135
2136 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2137 </row>
2138
2139 <row>
2140 <entry>libcroco</entry>
2141
2142 <entry>0.6.11</entry>
2143
2144 <entry>Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) parsing and manipulation
2145 toolkit.</entry>
2146
2147 <entry>LGPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2148 </row>
2149
2150 <row>
2151 <entry>libdaemon</entry>
2152
2153 <entry>0.14</entry>
2154
2155 <entry>Lightweight C library which eases the writing of UNIX
2156 daemons.</entry>
2157
2158 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2159 </row>
2160
2161 <row>
2162 <entry>libdevmapper</entry>
2163
2164 <entry>2.02.166</entry>
2165
2166 <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in
2167 Linux.</entry>
2168
2169 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
2170 </row>
2171
2172 <row>
2173 <entry>libecj-bootstrap</entry>
2174
2175 <entry>3.6.2</entry>
2176
2177 <entry>JDT Core Batch Compiler - Jar only</entry>
2178
2179 <entry>EPL-1.0</entry>
2180 </row>
2181
2182 <row>
2183 <entry>liberation-fonts</entry>
2184
2185 <entry>1.04</entry>
2186
2187 <entry>The Liberation(tm) Fonts is a font family originally
2188 created by Ascender(c) which aims at metric compatibility with
2189 Arial Times New Roman Courier New.</entry>
2190
2191 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2192 </row>
2193
2194 <row>
2195 <entry>libevent</entry>
2196
2197 <entry>2.0.22</entry>
2198
2199 <entry>An asynchronous event notification library.</entry>
2200
2201 <entry>BSD</entry>
2202 </row>
2203
2204 <row>
2205 <entry>libffi</entry>
2206
2207 <entry>3.2.1</entry>
2208
2209 <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level
2210 programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows
2211 a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface
2212 description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function
2213 Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for
2214 the interface that allows code written in one language to call
2215 code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only
2216 provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured
2217 foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that
2218 handles type conversions for values passed between the two
2219 languages.</entry>
2220
2221 <entry>MIT</entry>
2222 </row>
2223
2224 <row>
2225 <entry>libgcc</entry>
2226
2227 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
2228
2229 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
2230
2231 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
2232 </row>
2233
2234 <row>
2235 <entry>libgudev</entry>
2236
2237 <entry>231</entry>
2238
2239 <entry>GObject wrapper for libudev.</entry>
2240
2241 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2242 </row>
2243
2244 <row>
2245 <entry>libice</entry>
2246
2247 <entry>1.0.9</entry>
2248
2249 <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic
2250 framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream
2251 transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up
2252 and shutting down connections for performing authentication for
2253 negotiating versions and for reporting errors.</entry>
2254
2255 <entry>MIT</entry>
2256 </row>
2257
2258 <row>
2259 <entry>libidn</entry>
2260
2261 <entry>1.33</entry>
2262
2263 <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA
2264 specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names
2265 (IDN) working group.</entry>
2266
2267 <entry>LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
2268 </row>
2269
2270 <row>
2271 <entry>libjpeg-turbo</entry>
2272
2273 <entry>1.5.1</entry>
2274
2275 <entry>libjpeg-turbo is a derivative of libjpeg that uses SIMD
2276 instructions (MMX SSE2 NEON) to accelerate baseline JPEG
2277 compression and decompression</entry>
2278
2279 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
2280 </row>
2281
2282 <row>
2283 <entry>libmpc</entry>
2284
2285 <entry>1.0.3</entry>
2286
2287 <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers
2288 with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the
2289 result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as
2290 Mpfr</entry>
2291
2292 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
2293 </row>
2294
2295 <row>
2296 <entry>libndp</entry>
2297
2298 <entry>1.6</entry>
2299
2300 <entry>Library for IPv6 Neighbor Discovery Protocol.</entry>
2301
2302 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2303 </row>
2304
2305 <row>
2306 <entry>libnewt</entry>
2307
2308 <entry>0.52.19</entry>
2309
2310 <entry>Newt is a programming library for color text mode widget
2311 based user interfaces. Newt can be used to add stacked windows
2312 entry widgets checkboxes radio buttons labels plain text fields
2313 scrollbars etc. to text mode user interfaces. This package also
2314 contains the shared library needed by programs built with newt as
2315 well as a /usr/bin/dialog replacement called whiptail. Newt is
2316 based on the slang library.</entry>
2317
2318 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
2319 </row>
2320
2321 <row>
2322 <entry>libnl</entry>
2323
2324 <entry>3.2.29</entry>
2325
2326 <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink
2327 sockets.</entry>
2328
2329 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2330 </row>
2331
2332 <row>
2333 <entry>libnss-mdns</entry>
2334
2335 <entry>0.10</entry>
2336
2337 <entry>Name Service Switch module for Multicast DNS (zeroconf)
2338 name resolution.</entry>
2339
2340 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2341 </row>
2342
2343 <row>
2344 <entry>libpcap</entry>
2345
2346 <entry>1.8.1</entry>
2347
2348 <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network
2349 monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection
2350 security monitoring and network debugging.</entry>
2351
2352 <entry>BSD</entry>
2353 </row>
2354
2355 <row>
2356 <entry>libpciaccess</entry>
2357
2358 <entry>0.13.4</entry>
2359
2360 <entry>libpciaccess provides functionality for X to access the PCI
2361 bus and devices in a platform-independent way.</entry>
2362
2363 <entry>MIT</entry>
2364 </row>
2365
2366 <row>
2367 <entry>libpcre</entry>
2368
2369 <entry>8.40</entry>
2370
2371 <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement
2372 regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and
2373 semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set
2374 of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular
2375 expression API.</entry>
2376
2377 <entry>BSD</entry>
2378 </row>
2379
2380 <row>
2381 <entry>libpng</entry>
2382
2383 <entry>1.6.28</entry>
2384
2385 <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry>
2386
2387 <entry>Libpng</entry>
2388 </row>
2389
2390 <row>
2391 <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry>
2392
2393 <entry>0.3</entry>
2394
2395 <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions
2396 not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry>
2397
2398 <entry>MIT</entry>
2399 </row>
2400
2401 <row>
2402 <entry>librsvg</entry>
2403
2404 <entry>2.40.16</entry>
2405
2406 <entry>Library for rendering SVG files.</entry>
2407
2408 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
2409 </row>
2410
2411 <row>
2412 <entry>libsdl</entry>
2413
2414 <entry>1.2.15</entry>
2415
2416 <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia
2417 library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard
2418 mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video
2419 framebuffer.</entry>
2420
2421 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2422 </row>
2423
2424 <row>
2425 <entry>libsm</entry>
2426
2427 <entry>1.2.2</entry>
2428
2429 <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level
2430 \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session
2431 Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for
2432 users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of
2433 clients each of which has a particular state."</entry>
2434
2435 <entry>MIT</entry>
2436 </row>
2437
2438 <row>
2439 <entry>libtasn1</entry>
2440
2441 <entry>4.10</entry>
2442
2443 <entry>Library for ASN.1 and DER manipulation.</entry>
2444
2445 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2446 </row>
2447
2448 <row>
2449 <entry>libtool</entry>
2450
2451 <entry>2.4.6</entry>
2452
2453 <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script.
2454 Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types
2455 (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry>
2456
2457 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2458 </row>
2459
2460 <row>
2461 <entry>libunistring</entry>
2462
2463 <entry>0.9.7</entry>
2464
2465 <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may
2466 consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese
2467 Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left
2468 writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX
2469 platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for
2470 dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In
2471 fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their
2472 base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides
2473 functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C
2474 strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains
2475 documentation.</entry>
2476
2477 <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
2478 </row>
2479
2480 <row>
2481 <entry>liburcu</entry>
2482
2483 <entry>0.9.3</entry>
2484
2485 <entry>Userspace RCU (read-copy-update) library.</entry>
2486
2487 <entry>LGPL-2.1, MIT</entry>
2488 </row>
2489
2490 <row>
2491 <entry>libusb-compat</entry>
2492
2493 <entry>0.1.5</entry>
2494
2495 <entry>libusb-0.1 compatible layer for libusb1 a drop-in
2496 replacement that aims to look feel and behave exactly like
2497 libusb-0.1</entry>
2498
2499 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2500 </row>
2501
2502 <row>
2503 <entry>libusb1</entry>
2504
2505 <entry>1.0.21</entry>
2506
2507 <entry>Userspace library to access USB (version 1.0).</entry>
2508
2509 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2510 </row>
2511
2512 <row>
2513 <entry>libvirt</entry>
2514
2515 <entry>1.3.5</entry>
2516
2517 <entry>A toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities
2518 of recent versions of Linux.</entry>
2519
2520 <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry>
2521 </row>
2522
2523 <row>
2524 <entry>libx11</entry>
2525
2526 <entry>1.6.4</entry>
2527
2528 <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window
2529 System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for
2530 the basic functions of the window system.</entry>
2531
2532 <entry>MIT, BSD</entry>
2533 </row>
2534
2535 <row>
2536 <entry>libxau</entry>
2537
2538 <entry>1.0.8</entry>
2539
2540 <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11
2541 authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X
2542 connections both client-side and server-side.</entry>
2543
2544 <entry>MIT</entry>
2545 </row>
2546
2547 <row>
2548 <entry>libxcb</entry>
2549
2550 <entry>1.12</entry>
2551
2552 <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement
2553 for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access
2554 to the protocol improved threading support and
2555 extensibility.</entry>
2556
2557 <entry>MIT</entry>
2558 </row>
2559
2560 <row>
2561 <entry>libxcomposite</entry>
2562
2563 <entry>0.4.4</entry>
2564
2565 <entry>The composite extension provides three related mechanisms:
2566 per-hierarchy storage automatic shadow update and external parent.
2567 In per-hierarchy storage the rendering of an entire hierarchy of
2568 windows is redirected to off-screen storage. In automatic shadow
2569 update when a hierarchy is rendered off-screen the X server
2570 provides an automatic mechanism for presenting those contents
2571 within the parent window. In external parent a mechanism for
2572 providing redirection of compositing transformations through a
2573 client.</entry>
2574
2575 <entry>MIT</entry>
2576 </row>
2577
2578 <row>
2579 <entry>libxcursor</entry>
2580
2581 <entry>1.1.14</entry>
2582
2583 <entry>Xcursor is a simple library designed to help locate and
2584 load cursors. Cursors can be loaded from files or memory. A
2585 library of common cursors exists which map to the standard X
2586 cursor names. Cursors can exist in several sizes and the library
2587 automatically picks the best size.</entry>
2588
2589 <entry>MIT</entry>
2590 </row>
2591
2592 <row>
2593 <entry>libxdamage</entry>
2594
2595 <entry>1.1.4</entry>
2596
2597 <entry>'Damage' is a term that describes changes make to pixel
2598 contents of windows and pixmaps. Damage accumulates as drawing
2599 occurs in the drawable. Each drawing operation 'damages' one or
2600 more rectangular areas within the drawable. The rectangles are
2601 guaranteed to include the set of pixels modified by each operation
2602 but may include significantly more than just those pixels. The
2603 DAMAGE extension allows applications to either receive the raw
2604 rectangles as a stream of events or to have them partially
2605 processed within the X server to reduce the amount of data
2606 transmitted as well as reduce the processing latency once the
2607 repaint operation has started.</entry>
2608
2609 <entry>MIT</entry>
2610 </row>
2611
2612 <row>
2613 <entry>libxdmcp</entry>
2614
2615 <entry>1.1.2</entry>
2616
2617 <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol
2618 (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous
2619 display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal
2620 (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime
2621 example of an autonomous display.</entry>
2622
2623 <entry>MIT</entry>
2624 </row>
2625
2626 <row>
2627 <entry>libxext</entry>
2628
2629 <entry>1.3.3</entry>
2630
2631 <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to
2632 several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol
2633 extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX
2634 MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC
2635 TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small
2636 set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X
2637 protocol extensions.</entry>
2638
2639 <entry>MIT</entry>
2640 </row>
2641
2642 <row>
2643 <entry>libxfixes</entry>
2644
2645 <entry>5.0.3</entry>
2646
2647 <entry>X applications have often needed to work around various
2648 shortcomings in the core X window system. This extension is
2649 designed to provide the minimal server-side support necessary to
2650 eliminate problems caused by these workarounds.</entry>
2651
2652 <entry>MIT</entry>
2653 </row>
2654
2655 <row>
2656 <entry>libxft</entry>
2657
2658 <entry>2.3.2</entry>
2659
2660 <entry>Xft was designed to provide good support for scalable fonts
2661 and to do so efficiently. Unlike the core fonts system it supports
2662 features such as anti-aliasing and sub-pixel rasterisation.
2663 Perhaps more importantly it gives applications full control over
2664 the way glyphs are rendered making fine typesetting and WYSIWIG
2665 display possible. Finally it allows applications to use fonts that
2666 are not installed system-wide for displaying documents with
2667 embedded fonts. Xft is not compatible with the core fonts system:
2668 usage of Xft requires fairly extensive changes to toolkits
2669 (user-interface libraries).</entry>
2670
2671 <entry>MIT</entry>
2672 </row>
2673
2674 <row>
2675 <entry>libxi</entry>
2676
2677 <entry>1.7.9</entry>
2678
2679 <entry>libxi is an extension to the X11 protocol to support input
2680 devices other than the core X keyboard and pointer. It allows
2681 client programs to select input from these devices independently
2682 from each other and independently from the core devices.</entry>
2683
2684 <entry>MIT</entry>
2685 </row>
2686
2687 <row>
2688 <entry>libxkbcommon</entry>
2689
2690 <entry>0.7.1</entry>
2691
2692 <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which
2693 processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB
2694 specification.</entry>
2695
2696 <entry>MIT</entry>
2697 </row>
2698
2699 <row>
2700 <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry>
2701
2702 <entry>2.44</entry>
2703
2704 <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML
2705 documents.</entry>
2706
2707 <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
2708 </row>
2709
2710 <row>
2711 <entry>libxml2</entry>
2712
2713 <entry>2.9.4</entry>
2714
2715 <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML
2716 files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for
2717 both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a
2718 parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2
2719 includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It
2720 also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible
2721 with Expat.</entry>
2722
2723 <entry>MIT</entry>
2724 </row>
2725
2726 <row>
2727 <entry>libxrandr</entry>
2728
2729 <entry>1.5.1</entry>
2730
2731 <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for
2732 short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root
2733 window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate
2734 Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix
2735 Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry>
2736
2737 <entry>MIT</entry>
2738 </row>
2739
2740 <row>
2741 <entry>libxrender</entry>
2742
2743 <entry>0.9.10</entry>
2744
2745 <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image
2746 composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the
2747 X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by
2748 client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text
2749 is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of
2750 them.</entry>
2751
2752 <entry>MIT</entry>
2753 </row>
2754
2755 <row>
2756 <entry>libxslt</entry>
2757
2758 <entry>1.1.29</entry>
2759
2760 <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry>
2761
2762 <entry>MIT</entry>
2763 </row>
2764
2765 <row>
2766 <entry>libxt</entry>
2767
2768 <entry>1.1.5</entry>
2769
2770 <entry>The Intrinsics are a programming library tailored to the
2771 special requirements of user interface construction within a
2772 network window system specifically the X Window System. The
2773 Intrinsics and a widget set make up an X Toolkit. The Intrinsics
2774 provide the base mechanism necessary to build a wide variety of
2775 interoperating widget sets and application environments. The
2776 Intrinsics are a layer on top of Xlib the C Library X Interface.
2777 They extend the fundamental abstractions provided by the X Window
2778 System while still remaining independent of any particular user
2779 interface policy or style.</entry>
2780
2781 <entry>MIT</entry>
2782 </row>
2783
2784 <row>
2785 <entry>libxtst</entry>
2786
2787 <entry>1.2.3</entry>
2788
2789 <entry>This extension is a minimal set of client and server
2790 extensions required to completely test the X11 server with no user
2791 intervention.</entry>
2792
2793 <entry>MIT</entry>
2794 </row>
2795
2796 <row>
2797 <entry>linux-intel-dev</entry>
2798
2799 <entry>4.9.47</entry>
2800
2801 <entry>Linux kernel.</entry>
2802
2803 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2804 </row>
2805
2806 <row>
2807 <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry>
2808
2809 <entry>4.10</entry>
2810
2811 <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's
2812 use.</entry>
2813
2814 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2815 </row>
2816
2817 <row>
2818 <entry>log4j1.2</entry>
2819
2820 <entry>1.2.17</entry>
2821
2822 <entry>Java library to help the programmer output log statements
2823 to a variety of output targets</entry>
2824
2825 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2826 </row>
2827
2828 <row>
2829 <entry>logkit</entry>
2830
2831 <entry>1.2.2</entry>
2832
2833 <entry>Logging toolkit designed for secure performance orientated
2834 logging in Java applications</entry>
2835
2836 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2837 </row>
2838
2839 <row>
2840 <entry>lsb</entry>
2841
2842 <entry>4.1</entry>
2843
2844 <entry>LSB support for OpenEmbedded.</entry>
2845
2846 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2847 </row>
2848
2849 <row>
2850 <entry>lsbinitscripts</entry>
2851
2852 <entry>9.68</entry>
2853
2854 <entry>SysV init scripts which are only used in an LSB
2855 image.</entry>
2856
2857 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2858 </row>
2859
2860 <row>
2861 <entry>lttng-modules</entry>
2862
2863 <entry>2.9.1</entry>
2864
2865 <entry>The lttng-modules 2.0 package contains the kernel tracer
2866 modules</entry>
2867
2868 <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0, MIT</entry>
2869 </row>
2870
2871 <row>
2872 <entry>lttng-tools</entry>
2873
2874 <entry>2.9.4</entry>
2875
2876 <entry>The Linux trace toolkit is a suite of tools designed to
2877 extract program execution details from the Linux operating system
2878 and interpret them.</entry>
2879
2880 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2881 </row>
2882
2883 <row>
2884 <entry>lttng-ust</entry>
2885
2886 <entry>2.9.0</entry>
2887
2888 <entry>The LTTng UST 2.x package contains the userspace tracer
2889 library to trace userspace codes.</entry>
2890
2891 <entry>LGPL-2.1, MIT, GPL-2.0</entry>
2892 </row>
2893
2894 <row>
2895 <entry>lvm2</entry>
2896
2897 <entry>2.02.166</entry>
2898
2899 <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in
2900 Linux.</entry>
2901
2902 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
2903 </row>
2904
2905 <row>
2906 <entry>lxc</entry>
2907
2908 <entry>2.0.0</entry>
2909
2910 <entry>lxc aims to use these new functionnalities to provide an
2911 userspace container object</entry>
2912
2913 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2914 </row>
2915
2916 <row>
2917 <entry>lxd</entry>
2918
2919 <entry>git</entry>
2920
2921 <entry>"LXD is a container ""hypervisor"" and a new user
2922 experience for LXC Specifically it's made of three components: - A
2923 system-wide daemon (lxd) - A command line client (lxc) - An
2924 OpenStack Nova plugin (nova-compute-lxd)"</entry>
2925
2926 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2927 </row>
2928
2929 <row>
2930 <entry>lz4</entry>
2931
2932 <entry>131</entry>
2933
2934 <entry>LZ4 is a very fast lossless compression algorithm providing
2935 compression speed at 400 MB/s per core scalable with multi-cores
2936 CPU. It also features an extremely fast decoder with speed in
2937 multiple GB/s per core typically reaching RAM speed limits on
2938 multi-core systems.</entry>
2939
2940 <entry>BSD</entry>
2941 </row>
2942
2943 <row>
2944 <entry>lzo</entry>
2945
2946 <entry>2.09</entry>
2947
2948 <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry>
2949
2950 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2951 </row>
2952
2953 <row>
2954 <entry>lzop</entry>
2955
2956 <entry>1.03</entry>
2957
2958 <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a
2959 companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression
2960 library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher
2961 compression and decompression speed at the cost of some
2962 \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed
2963 with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with
2964 reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry>
2965
2966 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2967 </row>
2968
2969 <row>
2970 <entry>m4</entry>
2971
2972 <entry>1.4.18</entry>
2973
2974 <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro
2975 processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some
2976 extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters
2977 to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files
2978 running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry>
2979
2980 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2981 </row>
2982
2983 <row>
2984 <entry>make</entry>
2985
2986 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
2987
2988 <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables
2989 and other non-source files of a program from the program's source
2990 files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a
2991 file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files
2992 and how to compute it from other files.</entry>
2993
2994 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
2995 </row>
2996
2997 <row>
2998 <entry>makedepend</entry>
2999
3000 <entry>1.0.5</entry>
3001
3002 <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence
3003 and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include
3004 #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else
3005 directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives
3006 would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can
3007 reference files having other #include directives and parsing will
3008 occur in these files as well.</entry>
3009
3010 <entry>MIT</entry>
3011 </row>
3012
3013 <row>
3014 <entry>makedevs</entry>
3015
3016 <entry>1.0.1</entry>
3017
3018 <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry>
3019
3020 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3021 </row>
3022
3023 <row>
3024 <entry>man</entry>
3025
3026 <entry>1.6g</entry>
3027
3028 <entry>A set of documentation tools: man apropos and
3029 whatis</entry>
3030
3031 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3032 </row>
3033
3034 <row>
3035 <entry>mklibs</entry>
3036
3037 <entry>0.1.43</entry>
3038
3039 <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only
3040 the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry>
3041
3042 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3043 </row>
3044
3045 <row>
3046 <entry>mozjs</entry>
3047
3048 <entry>17.0.0</entry>
3049
3050 <entry>SpiderMonkey is Mozilla's JavaScript engine written in
3051 C/C++.</entry>
3052
3053 <entry>MPL-2.0</entry>
3054 </row>
3055
3056 <row>
3057 <entry>mpfr</entry>
3058
3059 <entry>3.1.5</entry>
3060
3061 <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point
3062 computations with exact rounding.</entry>
3063
3064 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
3065 </row>
3066
3067 <row>
3068 <entry>mtools</entry>
3069
3070 <entry>4.0.18</entry>
3071
3072 <entry>Mtools is a collection of utilities to access MS-DOS disks
3073 from GNU and Unix without mounting them.</entry>
3074
3075 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
3076 </row>
3077
3078 <row>
3079 <entry>nasm</entry>
3080
3081 <entry>2.12.02</entry>
3082
3083 <entry>General-purpose x86 assembler.</entry>
3084
3085 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
3086 </row>
3087
3088 <row>
3089 <entry>ncurses</entry>
3090
3091 <entry>6.0</entry>
3092
3093 <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo
3094 tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple
3095 highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of
3096 keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable
3097 windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using
3098 the gpm library.</entry>
3099
3100 <entry>MIT</entry>
3101 </row>
3102
3103 <row>
3104 <entry>net-snmp</entry>
3105
3106 <entry>5.7.3</entry>
3107
3108 <entry>Various tools relating to the Simple Network Management
3109 Protocol.</entry>
3110
3111 <entry>BSD</entry>
3112 </row>
3113
3114 <row>
3115 <entry>netbase</entry>
3116
3117 <entry>5.4</entry>
3118
3119 <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for
3120 basic TCP/IP based networking</entry>
3121
3122 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3123 </row>
3124
3125 <row>
3126 <entry>netcat-openbsd</entry>
3127
3128 <entry>1.105</entry>
3129
3130 <entry>A simple Unix utility which reads and writes data across
3131 network connections using TCP or UDP protocol. It is designed to
3132 be a reliable 'back-end' tool that can be used directly or easily
3133 driven by other programs and scripts. At the same time it is a
3134 feature-rich network debugging and exploration tool since it can
3135 create almost any kind of connection you would need and has
3136 several interesting built-in capabilities.</entry>
3137
3138 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
3139 </row>
3140
3141 <row>
3142 <entry>nettle</entry>
3143
3144 <entry>3.3</entry>
3145
3146 <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry>
3147
3148 <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
3149 </row>
3150
3151 <row>
3152 <entry>networkmanager</entry>
3153
3154 <entry>1.4.4</entry>
3155
3156 <entry>NetworkManager.</entry>
3157
3158 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3159 </row>
3160
3161 <row>
3162 <entry>notary</entry>
3163
3164 <entry>0.4.2</entry>
3165
3166 <entry>Notary is a Docker project that allows anyone to have trust
3167 over arbitrary collections of data</entry>
3168
3169 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3170 </row>
3171
3172 <row>
3173 <entry>nspr</entry>
3174
3175 <entry>4.13.1</entry>
3176
3177 <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry>
3178
3179 <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
3180 </row>
3181
3182 <row>
3183 <entry>nss</entry>
3184
3185 <entry>3.28.1</entry>
3186
3187 <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries
3188 designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled
3189 client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can
3190 support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME
3191 X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry>
3192
3193 <entry>MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
3194 </row>
3195
3196 <row>
3197 <entry>ntp</entry>
3198
3199 <entry>4.2.8p10</entry>
3200
3201 <entry>The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is used to synchronize the
3202 time of a computer client or server to another server or reference
3203 time source such as a radio or satellite receiver or
3204 modem.</entry>
3205
3206 <entry>NTP</entry>
3207 </row>
3208
3209 <row>
3210 <entry>numactl</entry>
3211
3212 <entry>2.0.11</entry>
3213
3214 <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl
3215 program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a
3216 libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in
3217 applications.</entry>
3218
3219 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
3220 </row>
3221
3222 <row>
3223 <entry>openjdk-8</entry>
3224
3225 <entry>102b14</entry>
3226
3227 <entry>Java runtime based upon the OpenJDK Project</entry>
3228
3229 <entry>GPL-2.0-with-classpath-exception</entry>
3230 </row>
3231
3232 <row>
3233 <entry>openjre-8</entry>
3234
3235 <entry>102b14</entry>
3236
3237 <entry>Java runtime based upon the OpenJDK Project</entry>
3238
3239 <entry>GPL-2.0-with-classpath-exception</entry>
3240 </row>
3241
3242 <row>
3243 <entry>openssh</entry>
3244
3245 <entry>7.4p1</entry>
3246
3247 <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh
3248 (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and
3249 for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry>
3250
3251 <entry>BSD</entry>
3252 </row>
3253
3254 <row>
3255 <entry>openssl</entry>
3256
3257 <entry>1.0.2k</entry>
3258
3259 <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic
3260 tools.</entry>
3261
3262 <entry>OpenSSL</entry>
3263 </row>
3264
3265 <row>
3266 <entry>openvswitch</entry>
3267
3268 <entry>2.8.1</entry>
3269
3270 <entry>Open vSwitch is a production quality multilayer virtual
3271 switch licensed under the open source Apache 2.0 license. It is
3272 designed to enable massive network automation through programmatic
3273 extension while still supporting standard management interfaces
3274 and protocols (e.g. NetFlow sFlow SPAN RSPAN CLI LACP
3275 802.1ag)</entry>
3276
3277 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3278 </row>
3279
3280 <row>
3281 <entry>opkg-utils</entry>
3282
3283 <entry>0.3.4</entry>
3284
3285 <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry>
3286
3287 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3288 </row>
3289
3290 <row>
3291 <entry>oprofile</entry>
3292
3293 <entry>1.1.0</entry>
3294
3295 <entry>OProfile is a system-wide profiler for Linux systems
3296 capable of profiling all running code at low overhead.</entry>
3297
3298 <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry>
3299 </row>
3300
3301 <row>
3302 <entry>oro</entry>
3303
3304 <entry>2.0.8</entry>
3305
3306 <entry>Perl5-compatible regular expressions library for
3307 Java</entry>
3308
3309 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3310 </row>
3311
3312 <row>
3313 <entry>os-release</entry>
3314
3315 <entry>1.0</entry>
3316
3317 <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system
3318 identification data.</entry>
3319
3320 <entry>MIT</entry>
3321 </row>
3322
3323 <row>
3324 <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry>
3325
3326 <entry>1.0</entry>
3327
3328 <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the
3329 system</entry>
3330
3331 <entry>MIT</entry>
3332 </row>
3333
3334 <row>
3335 <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry>
3336
3337 <entry>1.0</entry>
3338
3339 <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry>
3340
3341 <entry>MIT</entry>
3342 </row>
3343
3344 <row>
3345 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-docker</entry>
3346
3347 <entry>1.0</entry>
3348
3349 <entry>Packagegroup for Docker.</entry>
3350
3351 <entry>MIT</entry>
3352 </row>
3353
3354 <row>
3355 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-dpdk</entry>
3356
3357 <entry>1.0</entry>
3358
3359 <entry>Packagegroup for DPDK.</entry>
3360
3361 <entry>MIT</entry>
3362 </row>
3363
3364 <row>
3365 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-element-odm</entry>
3366
3367 <entry>1.0</entry>
3368
3369 <entry>Packagegroup for Element ODM.</entry>
3370
3371 <entry>MIT</entry>
3372 </row>
3373
3374 <row>
3375 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-host</entry>
3376
3377 <entry>1.0</entry>
3378
3379 <entry>This package group includes packages and packagegroups
3380 specific to the host side of the Enea Linux Virtualization
3381 Profile.</entry>
3382
3383 <entry>MIT</entry>
3384 </row>
3385
3386 <row>
3387 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-libvirt</entry>
3388
3389 <entry>1.0</entry>
3390
3391 <entry>Package group for libvirt.</entry>
3392
3393 <entry>MIT</entry>
3394 </row>
3395
3396 <row>
3397 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxc</entry>
3398
3399 <entry>1.0</entry>
3400
3401 <entry>Packagegroup for LXC.</entry>
3402
3403 <entry>MIT</entry>
3404 </row>
3405
3406 <row>
3407 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-lxd</entry>
3408
3409 <entry>1.0</entry>
3410
3411 <entry>Packagegroup for LXD.</entry>
3412
3413 <entry>MIT</entry>
3414 </row>
3415
3416 <row>
3417 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-ovs</entry>
3418
3419 <entry>1.0</entry>
3420
3421 <entry>Packagegroup for Open vSwitch.</entry>
3422
3423 <entry>MIT</entry>
3424 </row>
3425
3426 <row>
3427 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-qemu</entry>
3428
3429 <entry>1.0</entry>
3430
3431 <entry>Packagegroup for QEMU.</entry>
3432
3433 <entry>MIT</entry>
3434 </row>
3435
3436 <row>
3437 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization-tools</entry>
3438
3439 <entry>1.0</entry>
3440
3441 <entry>Enea Linux debugging tools.</entry>
3442
3443 <entry>MIT</entry>
3444 </row>
3445
3446 <row>
3447 <entry>packagegroup-enea-virtualization</entry>
3448
3449 <entry>1.0</entry>
3450
3451 <entry>This packagegroup includes packages and packagegroups
3452 required for both host and guest images of the Enea Linux
3453 Virtualization Profile.</entry>
3454
3455 <entry>MIT</entry>
3456 </row>
3457
3458 <row>
3459 <entry>pango</entry>
3460
3461 <entry>1.40.3</entry>
3462
3463 <entry>Pango is a library for laying out and rendering of text
3464 with an emphasis on internationalization. Pango can be used
3465 anywhere that text layout is needed though most of the work on
3466 Pango so far has been done in the context of the GTK+ widget
3467 toolkit. Pango forms the core of text and font handling for
3468 GTK+-2.x.</entry>
3469
3470 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
3471 </row>
3472
3473 <row>
3474 <entry>parted</entry>
3475
3476 <entry>3.2</entry>
3477
3478 <entry>Disk partition editing/resizing utility.</entry>
3479
3480 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
3481 </row>
3482
3483 <row>
3484 <entry>partrt</entry>
3485
3486 <entry>1.1</entry>
3487
3488 <entry>partrt is a tool for dividing a SMP Linux system into a
3489 real time domain and a non-real time domain.</entry>
3490
3491 <entry>BSD</entry>
3492 </row>
3493
3494 <row>
3495 <entry>pciutils</entry>
3496
3497 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
3498
3499 <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable
3500 access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based
3501 on this library.</entry>
3502
3503 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3504 </row>
3505
3506 <row>
3507 <entry>perf</entry>
3508
3509 <entry>1.0</entry>
3510
3511 <entry>Performance counters for Linux are a new kernel-based
3512 subsystem that provide a framework for all things performance
3513 analysis. It covers hardware level (CPU/PMU Performance Monitoring
3514 Unit) features and software features (software counters
3515 tracepoints) as well.</entry>
3516
3517 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3518 </row>
3519
3520 <row>
3521 <entry>perl</entry>
3522
3523 <entry>5.24.1</entry>
3524
3525 <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry>
3526
3527 <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
3528 </row>
3529
3530 <row>
3531 <entry>pigz</entry>
3532
3533 <entry>2.3.4</entry>
3534
3535 <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a
3536 fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple
3537 processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data.
3538 pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread
3539 libraries.</entry>
3540
3541 <entry>Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry>
3542 </row>
3543
3544 <row>
3545 <entry>pixman</entry>
3546
3547 <entry>0.34.0</entry>
3548
3549 <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions --
3550 a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the
3551 Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric
3552 primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry>
3553
3554 <entry>MIT, PD</entry>
3555 </row>
3556
3557 <row>
3558 <entry>pkgconfig</entry>
3559
3560 <entry>0.29.1</entry>
3561
3562 <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling
3563 applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct
3564 compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry>
3565
3566 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3567 </row>
3568
3569 <row>
3570 <entry>pm-utils</entry>
3571
3572 <entry>1.4.1</entry>
3573
3574 <entry>Simple shell command line tools to suspend and
3575 hibernate.</entry>
3576
3577 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3578 </row>
3579
3580 <row>
3581 <entry>polkit</entry>
3582
3583 <entry>0.113</entry>
3584
3585 <entry>The polkit package is an application-level toolkit for
3586 defining and handling the policy that allows unprivileged
3587 processes to speak to privileged processes.</entry>
3588
3589 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
3590 </row>
3591
3592 <row>
3593 <entry>popt</entry>
3594
3595 <entry>1.16</entry>
3596
3597 <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry>
3598
3599 <entry>MIT</entry>
3600 </row>
3601
3602 <row>
3603 <entry>pps-tools</entry>
3604
3605 <entry>0.0.0</entry>
3606
3607 <entry>User-space tools for LinuxPPS.</entry>
3608
3609 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3610 </row>
3611
3612 <row>
3613 <entry>prelink</entry>
3614
3615 <entry>1.0</entry>
3616
3617 <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF
3618 shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations
3619 need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up
3620 faster.</entry>
3621
3622 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3623 </row>
3624
3625 <row>
3626 <entry>procps</entry>
3627
3628 <entry>3.3.12</entry>
3629
3630 <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide
3631 system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The
3632 package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and
3633 skill.</entry>
3634
3635 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
3636 </row>
3637
3638 <row>
3639 <entry>pseudo</entry>
3640
3641 <entry>1.8.2</entry>
3642
3643 <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal
3644 user.</entry>
3645
3646 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
3647 </row>
3648
3649 <row>
3650 <entry>ptest-runner</entry>
3651
3652 <entry>2.0.2</entry>
3653
3654 <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program
3655 which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them
3656 in sequence.</entry>
3657
3658 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3659 </row>
3660
3661 <row>
3662 <entry>python-futures</entry>
3663
3664 <entry>3.0.5</entry>
3665
3666 <entry>The concurrent.futures module provides a high-level
3667 interface for asynchronously executing callables.</entry>
3668
3669 <entry>BSD</entry>
3670 </row>
3671
3672 <row>
3673 <entry>python-netaddr</entry>
3674
3675 <entry>0.7.19</entry>
3676
3677 <entry>A network address manipulation library for Python..</entry>
3678
3679 <entry>BSD</entry>
3680 </row>
3681
3682 <row>
3683 <entry>python-netifaces</entry>
3684
3685 <entry>0.10.6</entry>
3686
3687 <entry>Portable network interface information..</entry>
3688
3689 <entry>MIT</entry>
3690 </row>
3691
3692 <row>
3693 <entry>python-pip</entry>
3694
3695 <entry>9.0.1</entry>
3696
3697 <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python
3698 packages.</entry>
3699
3700 <entry>MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry>
3701 </row>
3702
3703 <row>
3704 <entry>python-psutil</entry>
3705
3706 <entry>5.2.0</entry>
3707
3708 <entry>A cross-platform process and system utilities module for
3709 Python.</entry>
3710
3711 <entry>BSD</entry>
3712 </row>
3713
3714 <row>
3715 <entry>python-setuptools</entry>
3716
3717 <entry>32.1.1</entry>
3718
3719 <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python
3720 packages.</entry>
3721
3722 <entry>MIT</entry>
3723 </row>
3724
3725 <row>
3726 <entry>python-six</entry>
3727
3728 <entry>1.10.0</entry>
3729
3730 <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities</entry>
3731
3732 <entry>MIT</entry>
3733 </row>
3734
3735 <row>
3736 <entry>python-twisted</entry>
3737
3738 <entry>13.2.0</entry>
3739
3740 <entry>Twisted is an event-driven networking framework written in
3741 Python and licensed under the LGPL. Twisted supports TCP UDP
3742 SSL/TLS multicast Unix sockets a large number of protocols
3743 (including HTTP NNTP IMAP SSH IRC FTP and others) and much
3744 more.</entry>
3745
3746 <entry>MIT</entry>
3747 </row>
3748
3749 <row>
3750 <entry>python-zopeinterface</entry>
3751
3752 <entry>4.3.3</entry>
3753
3754 <entry>Interface definitions for Zope products.</entry>
3755
3756 <entry>ZPL-2.1</entry>
3757 </row>
3758
3759 <row>
3760 <entry>python</entry>
3761
3762 <entry>2.7.13</entry>
3763
3764 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
3765
3766 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
3767 </row>
3768
3769 <row>
3770 <entry>python3-setuptools</entry>
3771
3772 <entry>32.1.1</entry>
3773
3774 <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python
3775 packages.</entry>
3776
3777 <entry>MIT</entry>
3778 </row>
3779
3780 <row>
3781 <entry>python3</entry>
3782
3783 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
3784
3785 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
3786
3787 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
3788 </row>
3789
3790 <row>
3791 <entry>qemu</entry>
3792
3793 <entry>2.8.0</entry>
3794
3795 <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry>
3796
3797 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
3798 </row>
3799
3800 <row>
3801 <entry>qemuwrapper</entry>
3802
3803 <entry>1.0</entry>
3804
3805 <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry>
3806
3807 <entry>MIT</entry>
3808 </row>
3809
3810 <row>
3811 <entry>quilt</entry>
3812
3813 <entry>0.65</entry>
3814
3815 <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry>
3816
3817 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3818 </row>
3819
3820 <row>
3821 <entry>randrproto</entry>
3822
3823 <entry>1.5.0</entry>
3824
3825 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize
3826 Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability
3827 to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry>
3828
3829 <entry>MIT</entry>
3830 </row>
3831
3832 <row>
3833 <entry>readline</entry>
3834
3835 <entry>7.0</entry>
3836
3837 <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for
3838 use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they
3839 are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The
3840 Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list
3841 of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit
3842 those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous
3843 commands.</entry>
3844
3845 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
3846 </row>
3847
3848 <row>
3849 <entry>recordproto</entry>
3850
3851 <entry>1.14.2</entry>
3852
3853 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Record
3854 extension. This extension is used to record and play back event
3855 sequences.</entry>
3856
3857 <entry>MIT</entry>
3858 </row>
3859
3860 <row>
3861 <entry>regexp</entry>
3862
3863 <entry>1.5</entry>
3864
3865 <entry>Java Regular Expression package</entry>
3866
3867 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3868 </row>
3869
3870 <row>
3871 <entry>renderproto</entry>
3872
3873 <entry>0.11.1</entry>
3874
3875 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering
3876 extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X
3877 window system.</entry>
3878
3879 <entry>MIT</entry>
3880 </row>
3881
3882 <row>
3883 <entry>rhino</entry>
3884
3885 <entry>1.7r4</entry>
3886
3887 <entry>Lexical analyzer generator for Java</entry>
3888
3889 <entry>MPL-2.0</entry>
3890 </row>
3891
3892 <row>
3893 <entry>rpm</entry>
3894
3895 <entry>4.13.90</entry>
3896
3897 <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line
3898 driven package management system capable of installing
3899 uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages.
3900 Each software package consists of an archive of files along with
3901 information about the package like its version a description
3902 etc.</entry>
3903
3904 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
3905 </row>
3906
3907 <row>
3908 <entry>rsync</entry>
3909
3910 <entry>3.1.2</entry>
3911
3912 <entry>File synchronization tool.</entry>
3913
3914 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
3915 </row>
3916
3917 <row>
3918 <entry>run-postinsts</entry>
3919
3920 <entry>1.0</entry>
3921
3922 <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target
3923 device.</entry>
3924
3925 <entry>MIT</entry>
3926 </row>
3927
3928 <row>
3929 <entry>runc-docker</entry>
3930
3931 <entry>1.0.0-rc2</entry>
3932
3933 <entry>runc is a CLI tool for spawning and running containers
3934 according to the OCI specification.</entry>
3935
3936 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3937 </row>
3938
3939 <row>
3940 <entry>sed</entry>
3941
3942 <entry>4.2.2</entry>
3943
3944 <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry>
3945
3946 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
3947 </row>
3948
3949 <row>
3950 <entry>servlet2.3</entry>
3951
3952 <entry>4.1.37</entry>
3953
3954 <entry>Servlet API 2.3 (from Tomcat 4.1)</entry>
3955
3956 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3957 </row>
3958
3959 <row>
3960 <entry>shadow-securetty</entry>
3961
3962 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
3963
3964 <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry>
3965
3966 <entry>MIT</entry>
3967 </row>
3968
3969 <row>
3970 <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry>
3971
3972 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
3973
3974 <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry>
3975
3976 <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
3977 </row>
3978
3979 <row>
3980 <entry>shadow</entry>
3981
3982 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
3983
3984 <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group
3985 data.</entry>
3986
3987 <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
3988 </row>
3989
3990 <row>
3991 <entry>shared-mime-info</entry>
3992
3993 <entry>1.8</entry>
3994
3995 <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry>
3996
3997 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
3998 </row>
3999
4000 <row>
4001 <entry>simpleproxy</entry>
4002
4003 <entry>1.0</entry>
4004
4005 <entry>Simpleproxy.</entry>
4006
4007 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
4008 </row>
4009
4010 <row>
4011 <entry>slang</entry>
4012
4013 <entry>2.3.1a</entry>
4014
4015 <entry>S-Lang is an interpreted language and a programming
4016 library. The S-Lang language was designed so that it can be easily
4017 embedded into a program to provide the program with a powerful
4018 extension language. The S-Lang library provided in this package
4019 provides the S-Lang extension language. S-Lang's syntax resembles
4020 C which makes it easy to recode S-Lang procedures in C if you need
4021 to.</entry>
4022
4023 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
4024 </row>
4025
4026 <row>
4027 <entry>sqlite3</entry>
4028
4029 <entry>3.17.0</entry>
4030
4031 <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry>
4032
4033 <entry>PD</entry>
4034 </row>
4035
4036 <row>
4037 <entry>squashfs-tools</entry>
4038
4039 <entry>4.3</entry>
4040
4041 <entry>Tools for manipulating SquashFS filesystems.</entry>
4042
4043 <entry>GPL-2.0, PD</entry>
4044 </row>
4045
4046 <row>
4047 <entry>sysfsutils</entry>
4048
4049 <entry>2.1.0</entry>
4050
4051 <entry>Tools for working with the sysfs virtual filesystem. The
4052 tool 'systool' can query devices by bus class and
4053 topology.</entry>
4054
4055 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
4056 </row>
4057
4058 <row>
4059 <entry>syslinux</entry>
4060
4061 <entry>6.03</entry>
4062
4063 <entry>Multi-purpose linux bootloader.</entry>
4064
4065 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
4066 </row>
4067
4068 <row>
4069 <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry>
4070
4071 <entry>1.0</entry>
4072
4073 <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit
4074 scripts.</entry>
4075
4076 <entry>MIT</entry>
4077 </row>
4078
4079 <row>
4080 <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry>
4081
4082 <entry>1.0</entry>
4083
4084 <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry>
4085
4086 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
4087 </row>
4088
4089 <row>
4090 <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry>
4091
4092 <entry>1.0</entry>
4093
4094 <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry>
4095
4096 <entry>MIT</entry>
4097 </row>
4098
4099 <row>
4100 <entry>systemd</entry>
4101
4102 <entry>232</entry>
4103
4104 <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux
4105 compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides
4106 aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus
4107 activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of
4108 daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports
4109 snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and
4110 automount points and implements an elaborate transactional
4111 dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in
4112 replacement for sysvinit.</entry>
4113
4114 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
4115 </row>
4116
4117 <row>
4118 <entry>systemtap</entry>
4119
4120 <entry>3.1</entry>
4121
4122 <entry>Script-directed dynamic tracing and performance analysis
4123 tool for Linux.</entry>
4124
4125 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
4126 </row>
4127
4128 <row>
4129 <entry>tar</entry>
4130
4131 <entry>1.29</entry>
4132
4133 <entry>GNU tar saves many files together into a single tape or
4134 disk archive and can restore individual files from the
4135 archive.</entry>
4136
4137 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
4138 </row>
4139
4140 <row>
4141 <entry>tcpdump</entry>
4142
4143 <entry>4.9.0</entry>
4144
4145 <entry>A sophisticated network protocol analyzer.</entry>
4146
4147 <entry>BSD</entry>
4148 </row>
4149
4150 <row>
4151 <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry>
4152
4153 <entry>1.0</entry>
4154
4155 <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry>
4156
4157 <entry>MIT</entry>
4158 </row>
4159
4160 <row>
4161 <entry>thin-provisioning-tools</entry>
4162
4163 <entry>0.6.3</entry>
4164
4165 <entry>A suite of tools for manipulating the metadata of the
4166 dm-thin device-mapper target.</entry>
4167
4168 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
4169 </row>
4170
4171 <row>
4172 <entry>tunctl</entry>
4173
4174 <entry>1.5</entry>
4175
4176 <entry>Tool for controlling the Linux TUN/TAP driver.</entry>
4177
4178 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
4179 </row>
4180
4181 <row>
4182 <entry>tzcode</entry>
4183
4184 <entry>2017b</entry>
4185
4186 <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump
4187 tzselect.</entry>
4188
4189 <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
4190 </row>
4191
4192 <row>
4193 <entry>tzdata</entry>
4194
4195 <entry>2017b</entry>
4196
4197 <entry>Timezone data.</entry>
4198
4199 <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
4200 </row>
4201
4202 <row>
4203 <entry>unifdef</entry>
4204
4205 <entry>2.11</entry>
4206
4207 <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry>
4208
4209 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
4210 </row>
4211
4212 <row>
4213 <entry>unzip</entry>
4214
4215 <entry>6.0</entry>
4216
4217 <entry>Utilities for extracting and viewing files in .zip
4218 archives.</entry>
4219
4220 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
4221 </row>
4222
4223 <row>
4224 <entry>update-rc.d</entry>
4225
4226 <entry>0.7</entry>
4227
4228 <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of
4229 symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory
4230 structure.</entry>
4231
4232 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
4233 </row>
4234
4235 <row>
4236 <entry>util-linux</entry>
4237
4238 <entry>2.29.1</entry>
4239
4240 <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration
4241 utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more
4242 important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message
4243 management filesystem creation and system login.</entry>
4244
4245 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry>
4246 </row>
4247
4248 <row>
4249 <entry>util-macros</entry>
4250
4251 <entry>1.19.1</entry>
4252
4253 <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry>
4254
4255 <entry>MIT</entry>
4256 </row>
4257
4258 <row>
4259 <entry>vala</entry>
4260
4261 <entry>0.34.4</entry>
4262
4263 <entry>Vala is a C#-like language dedicated to ease GObject
4264 programming. Vala compiles to plain C and has no runtime
4265 environment nor penalities whatsoever.</entry>
4266
4267 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
4268 </row>
4269
4270 <row>
4271 <entry>volatile-binds</entry>
4272
4273 <entry>1.0</entry>
4274
4275 <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for
4276 read-only-rootfs</entry>
4277
4278 <entry>MIT</entry>
4279 </row>
4280
4281 <row>
4282 <entry>xalan-j</entry>
4283
4284 <entry>2.7.1</entry>
4285
4286 <entry>Java XSLT processor</entry>
4287
4288 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4289 </row>
4290
4291 <row>
4292 <entry>xcb-proto</entry>
4293
4294 <entry>1.12</entry>
4295
4296 <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding
4297 (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint
4298 latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading
4299 support and extensibility.</entry>
4300
4301 <entry>MIT</entry>
4302 </row>
4303
4304 <row>
4305 <entry>xerces-j</entry>
4306
4307 <entry>2.11.0</entry>
4308
4309 <entry>Reference implementation of XNI the Xerces Native Interface
4310 and also a fully conforming XML Schema processor.</entry>
4311
4312 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4313 </row>
4314
4315 <row>
4316 <entry>xextproto</entry>
4317
4318 <entry>7.3.0</entry>
4319
4320 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X
4321 extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS
4322 Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD
4323 Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC
4324 XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also
4325 available.</entry>
4326
4327 <entry>MIT</entry>
4328 </row>
4329
4330 <row>
4331 <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry>
4332
4333 <entry>2.20</entry>
4334
4335 <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window.
4336 The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently
4337 released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window
4338 System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based
4339 systems.</entry>
4340
4341 <entry>MIT</entry>
4342 </row>
4343
4344 <row>
4345 <entry>xml-commons-resolver1.1</entry>
4346
4347 <entry>1.2</entry>
4348
4349 <entry>Library to resolve various public or system identifiers
4350 into accessible URLs (Java)</entry>
4351
4352 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4353 </row>
4354
4355 <row>
4356 <entry>xmlto</entry>
4357
4358 <entry>0.0.28</entry>
4359
4360 <entry>A shell-script tool for converting XML files to various
4361 formats.</entry>
4362
4363 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
4364 </row>
4365
4366 <row>
4367 <entry>xproto</entry>
4368
4369 <entry>7.0.31</entry>
4370
4371 <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window
4372 System.</entry>
4373
4374 <entry>MIT</entry>
4375 </row>
4376
4377 <row>
4378 <entry>xtrans</entry>
4379
4380 <entry>1.3.5</entry>
4381
4382 <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system
4383 and transport specific code into a single place. This API should
4384 be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window
4385 System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of
4386 transports and support for new platforms without making any
4387 changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface
4388 code.</entry>
4389
4390 <entry>MIT</entry>
4391 </row>
4392
4393 <row>
4394 <entry>xz</entry>
4395
4396 <entry>5.2.3</entry>
4397
4398 <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry>
4399
4400 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry>
4401 </row>
4402
4403 <row>
4404 <entry>yajl</entry>
4405
4406 <entry>2.1.0</entry>
4407
4408 <entry>YAJL is a small event-driven (SAX-style) JSON parser
4409 written in ANSI C and a small validating JSON generator.</entry>
4410
4411 <entry>ISC</entry>
4412 </row>
4413
4414 <row>
4415 <entry>zip</entry>
4416
4417 <entry>3.0</entry>
4418
4419 <entry>Compressor/archiver for creating and modifying .zip
4420 files.</entry>
4421
4422 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
4423 </row>
4424
4425 <row>
4426 <entry>zisofs-tools</entry>
4427
4428 <entry>1.0.8</entry>
4429
4430 <entry>Utilities for creating compressed CD-ROM
4431 filesystems.</entry>
4432
4433 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
4434 </row>
4435
4436 <row>
4437 <entry>zlib</entry>
4438
4439 <entry>1.2.11</entry>
4440
4441 <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data
4442 compression library which is used by many different
4443 programs.</entry>
4444
4445 <entry>Zlib</entry>
4446 </row>
4447 </tbody>
4448 </tgroup>
4449 </informaltable>
4450 </section> 1637 </section>
4451 1638 <section id="open_source_license">
4452 <section id="open_source_license"> 1639 <title>Open Source Licenses</title>
4453 <title>Open Source Licenses</title> 1640<section id="lic_0">
4454 1641<title>AFL-2.0</title>
4455 <section id="lic_0"> 1642<para><programlisting>
4456 <title>AFL-2.0</title>
4457
4458 <para><programlisting>
4459 1643
4460The Academic Free License 1644The Academic Free License
4461 v. 2.0 1645 v. 2.0
@@ -4596,76 +1780,11 @@ Permission is hereby granted to copy and distribute this license without modific
4596This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its 1780This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its
4597copyright owner. 1781copyright owner.
4598 1782
4599</programlisting></para> 1783</programlisting></para></section>
4600 </section>
4601
4602 <section id="lic_1">
4603 <title>AMD</title>
4604
4605 <para><programlisting>
4606 1784
4607The following license terms apply to the TJC compiler source 1785<section id="lic_1">
4608and test files located in the src/tjc, src/tests/tjc, and 1786<title>Apache-2.0</title>
4609tests/tjc directories. 1787<para><programlisting>
4610
4611Copyright (c) 2005 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.
4612
4613Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
4614modification, are permitted provided that existing copyright notices
4615are retained in all copies, this notice is included verbatim in any
4616distributions, and the terms and conditions hererin are met.
4617
4618Use of the this software manifests acceptance of the terms of this
4619license by performance.
4620
4621The name of Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. may not be used to endorse or
4622promote products derived from this software without specific prior
4623written permission.
4624
4625THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY ADVANCED MICRO DEVICES, INC. "AS IS" AND ANY
4626EXPRESS, IMPLIED OR STATUTORY WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
4627THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
4628PURPOSE AND NON-INFRINGEMENT, OR THOSE ARISING FROM CUSTOM OF TRADE OR
4629COURSE OF USAGE ARE DISCLAIMED.
4630
4631IN NO EVENT SHALL ADVANCED MICRO DEVICES, INC. BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT,
4632INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
4633(INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR
4634SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER
4635CAUSED, AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
4636LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
4637OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE ITS DOCUMENTATION OR ANY DERIVATIVES
4638THEREOF, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. BY USING THIS
4639SOFTWARE WITHOUT CHARGE, YOU ACCEPT THIS ALLOCATION OF RISK. THIS
4640DISCLAIMER OF LIABILITY CONSTITUTES AN ESSENTIAL PART OF THIS LICENSE.
4641ADVANCED MICRO DEVICES, INC. HAS NO OBLIGATION TO PROVIDE MAINTENANCE,
4642SUPPORT, UPDATES, ENHANCEMENTS, OR MODIFICATIONS OF THIS SOFTWARE.
4643
4644In the redistribution and use of this software, each party shall at all
4645times comply with all applicable governmental laws, statutes, ordinances,
4646rules, regulations, orders, and other requirements, including without
4647limitation such governmental requirements applicable to environmental
4648protection, health, safety, wages, hours, equal employment opportunity,
4649nondiscrimination, working conditions, import or export control, and
4650transportation. Without limiting the foregoing, each party shall adhere
4651to the U.S. Export Administration Regulations (EAR), currently found at
465215 C.F.R. Sections 730 through 744, and, unless properly authorized by
4653the U.S. Government, shall not (1) export, re-export or release restricted
4654technology, software, or source code to a national of a country in Country
4655Groups D:1 or E:1, or (2) export to Country Groups D:1 or E:1 the direct
4656product of such technology or software, if such foreign produced direct
4657product is subject to national security controls as identified on the
4658Commerce Control List (currently found in Supplement 1 to Section 774 of EAR).
4659These export requirements shall survive any expiration or termination
4660of this agreement.
4661
4662</programlisting></para>
4663 </section>
4664
4665 <section id="lic_2">
4666 <title>Apache-2.0</title>
4667
4668 <para><programlisting>
4669 1788
4670 1789
4671 Apache License 1790 Apache License
@@ -4870,13 +1989,11 @@ of this agreement.
4870 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 1989 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
4871 limitations under the License. 1990 limitations under the License.
4872 1991
4873</programlisting></para> 1992</programlisting></para></section>
4874 </section>
4875
4876 <section id="lic_3">
4877 <title>Artistic-1.0</title>
4878 1993
4879 <para><programlisting> 1994<section id="lic_2">
1995<title>Artistic-1.0</title>
1996<para><programlisting>
4880 1997
4881The Artistic License 1998The Artistic License
4882Preamble 1999Preamble
@@ -4969,13 +2086,11 @@ FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
4969 2086
4970The End 2087The End
4971 2088
4972</programlisting></para> 2089</programlisting></para></section>
4973 </section>
4974
4975 <section id="lic_4">
4976 <title>BSD</title>
4977 2090
4978 <para><programlisting> 2091<section id="lic_3">
2092<title>BSD</title>
2093<para><programlisting>
4979Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. 2094Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California.
4980All rights reserved. 2095All rights reserved.
4981 2096
@@ -5002,13 +2117,11 @@ HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
5002LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 2117LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
5003OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 2118OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
5004SUCH DAMAGE. 2119SUCH DAMAGE.
5005</programlisting></para> 2120</programlisting></para></section>
5006 </section>
5007 2121
5008 <section id="lic_5"> 2122<section id="lic_4">
5009 <title>BSD-2-Clause</title> 2123<title>BSD-2-Clause</title>
5010 2124<para><programlisting>
5011 <para><programlisting>
5012 2125
5013The FreeBSD Copyright 2126The FreeBSD Copyright
5014 2127
@@ -5036,13 +2149,11 @@ The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation are those
5036authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either 2149authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either
5037expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. 2150expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project.
5038 2151
5039</programlisting></para> 2152</programlisting></para></section>
5040 </section>
5041
5042 <section id="lic_6">
5043 <title>BSD-3-Clause</title>
5044 2153
5045 <para><programlisting> 2154<section id="lic_5">
2155<title>BSD-3-Clause</title>
2156<para><programlisting>
5046 2157
5047Copyright (c) &lt;YEAR&gt;, &lt;OWNER&gt; 2158Copyright (c) &lt;YEAR&gt;, &lt;OWNER&gt;
5048All rights reserved. 2159All rights reserved.
@@ -5069,13 +2180,11 @@ CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
5069WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH 2180WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
5070DAMAGE. 2181DAMAGE.
5071 2182
5072</programlisting></para> 2183</programlisting></para></section>
5073 </section>
5074
5075 <section id="lic_7">
5076 <title>BSD-4-Clause</title>
5077 2184
5078 <para><programlisting> 2185<section id="lic_6">
2186<title>BSD-4-Clause</title>
2187<para><programlisting>
5079 2188
5080Copyright (c) &lt;year&gt;, &lt;copyright holder&gt; 2189Copyright (c) &lt;year&gt;, &lt;copyright holder&gt;
5081All rights reserved. 2190All rights reserved.
@@ -5105,13 +2214,11 @@ ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
5105(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS 2214(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
5106SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 2215SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
5107 2216
5108</programlisting></para> 2217</programlisting></para></section>
5109 </section>
5110 2218
5111 <section id="lic_8"> 2219<section id="lic_7">
5112 <title>BSL-1.0</title> 2220<title>BSL-1.0</title>
5113 2221<para><programlisting>
5114 <para><programlisting>
5115 2222
5116Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003 2223Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003
5117 2224
@@ -5137,299 +2244,11 @@ FOR ANY DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE,
5137ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER 2244ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
5138DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. 2245DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
5139 2246
5140</programlisting></para> 2247</programlisting></para></section>
5141 </section>
5142
5143 <section id="lic_9">
5144 <title>CDS</title>
5145
5146 <para><programlisting>
5147
5148The following license terms apply to the Itcl source and
5149test files located in the src/itcl and tests/itcl directories.
5150
5151
5152This software is copyrighted by Cadence Design Systems, Inc., and other
5153parties. The following terms apply to all files associated with the
5154software unless explicitly disclaimed in individual files.
5155
5156The authors hereby grant permission to use, copy, modify, distribute,
5157and license this software and its documentation for any purpose, provided
5158that existing copyright notices are retained in all copies and that this
5159notice is included verbatim in any distributions. No written agreement,
5160license, or royalty fee is required for any of the authorized uses.
5161Modifications to this software may be copyrighted by their authors
5162and need not follow the licensing terms described here, provided that
5163the new terms are clearly indicated on the first page of each file where
5164they apply.
5165
5166IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR DISTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE TO ANY PARTY
5167FOR DIRECT, INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
5168ARISING OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, ITS DOCUMENTATION, OR ANY
5169DERIVATIVES THEREOF, EVEN IF THE AUTHORS HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE
5170POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
5171
5172THE AUTHORS AND DISTRIBUTORS SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY WARRANTIES,
5173INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
5174FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. THIS SOFTWARE
5175IS PROVIDED ON AN "AS IS" BASIS, AND THE AUTHORS AND DISTRIBUTORS HAVE
5176NO OBLIGATION TO PROVIDE MAINTENANCE, SUPPORT, UPDATES, ENHANCEMENTS, OR
5177MODIFICATIONS.
5178
5179GOVERNMENT USE: If you are acquiring this software on behalf of the
5180U.S. government, the Government shall have only "Restricted Rights"
5181in the software and related documentation as defined in the Federal
5182Acquisition Regulations (FARs) in Clause 52.227.19 (c) (2). If you
5183are acquiring the software on behalf of the Department of Defense, the
5184software shall be classified as "Commercial Computer Software" and the
5185Government shall have only "Restricted Rights" as defined in Clause
5186252.227-7013 (c) (1) of DFARs. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the
5187authors grant the U.S. Government and others acting in its behalf
5188permission to use and distribute the software in accordance with the
5189terms specified in this license.
5190
5191-----------------------------------------------------------------------
5192This software is copyrighted by the Regents of the University of
5193California, Sun Microsystems, Inc., and other parties. The following
5194terms apply to all files associated with the software unless explicitly
5195disclaimed in individual files.
5196
5197The authors hereby grant permission to use, copy, modify, distribute,
5198and license this software and its documentation for any purpose, provided
5199that existing copyright notices are retained in all copies and that this
5200notice is included verbatim in any distributions. No written agreement,
5201license, or royalty fee is required for any of the authorized uses.
5202Modifications to this software may be copyrighted by their authors
5203and need not follow the licensing terms described here, provided that
5204the new terms are clearly indicated on the first page of each file where
5205they apply.
5206
5207IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR DISTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE TO ANY PARTY
5208FOR DIRECT, INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
5209ARISING OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, ITS DOCUMENTATION, OR ANY
5210DERIVATIVES THEREOF, EVEN IF THE AUTHORS HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE
5211POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
5212
5213THE AUTHORS AND DISTRIBUTORS SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIM ANY WARRANTIES,
5214INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
5215FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. THIS SOFTWARE
5216IS PROVIDED ON AN "AS IS" BASIS, AND THE AUTHORS AND DISTRIBUTORS HAVE
5217NO OBLIGATION TO PROVIDE MAINTENANCE, SUPPORT, UPDATES, ENHANCEMENTS, OR
5218MODIFICATIONS.
5219
5220GOVERNMENT USE: If you are acquiring this software on behalf of the
5221U.S. government, the Government shall have only "Restricted Rights"
5222in the software and related documentation as defined in the Federal
5223Acquisition Regulations (FARs) in Clause 52.227.19 (c) (2). If you
5224are acquiring the software on behalf of the Department of Defense, the
5225software shall be classified as "Commercial Computer Software" and the
5226Government shall have only "Restricted Rights" as defined in Clause
5227252.227-7013 (c) (1) of DFARs. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the
5228authors grant the U.S. Government and others acting in its behalf
5229permission to use and distribute the software in accordance with the
5230terms specified in this license.
5231
5232</programlisting></para>
5233 </section>
5234
5235 <section id="lic_10">
5236 <title>EPL-1.0</title>
5237
5238 <para><programlisting>
5239
5240Eclipse Public License - v 1.0
5241
5242THE ACCOMPANYING PROGRAM IS PROVIDED UNDER THE TERMS OF THIS ECLIPSE PUBLIC LICENSE
5243("AGREEMENT"). ANY USE, REPRODUCTION OR DISTRIBUTION OF THE PROGRAM CONSTITUTES
5244RECIPIENT`S ACCEPTANCE OF THIS AGREEMENT.
5245
52461. DEFINITIONS
5247
5248"Contribution" means:
5249
5250a) in the case of the initial Contributor, the initial code and documentation
5251distributed under this Agreement, and
5252b) in the case of each subsequent Contributor:
5253i) changes to the Program, and
5254ii) additions to the Program;
5255where such changes and/or additions to the Program originate from and are distributed
5256by that particular Contributor. A Contribution `originates` from a Contributor if it
5257was added to the Program by such Contributor itself or anyone acting on such
5258Contributor`s behalf. Contributions do not include additions to the Program which: (i)
5259are separate modules of software distributed in conjunction with the Program under
5260their own license agreement, and (ii) are not derivative works of the Program.
5261"Contributor" means any person or entity that distributes the Program.
5262
5263"Licensed Patents" mean patent claims licensable by a Contributor which are
5264necessarily infringed by the use or sale of its Contribution alone or when combined
5265with the Program.
5266
5267"Program" means the Contributions distributed in accordance with this Agreement.
5268
5269"Recipient" means anyone who receives the Program under this Agreement, including all
5270Contributors.
5271
52722. GRANT OF RIGHTS
5273
5274a) Subject to the terms of this Agreement, each Contributor hereby grants Recipient a
5275non-exclusive, worldwide, royalty-free copyright license to reproduce, prepare
5276derivative works of, publicly display, publicly perform, distribute and sublicense the
5277Contribution of such Contributor, if any, and such derivative works, in source code
5278and object code form.
5279b) Subject to the terms of this Agreement, each Contributor hereby grants Recipient a
5280non-exclusive, worldwide, royalty-free patent license under Licensed Patents to make,
5281use, sell, offer to sell, import and otherwise transfer the Contribution of such
5282Contributor, if any, in source code and object code form. This patent license shall
5283apply to the combination of the Contribution and the Program if, at the time the
5284Contribution is added by the Contributor, such addition of the Contribution causes
5285such combination to be covered by the Licensed Patents. The patent license shall not
5286apply to any other combinations which include the Contribution. No hardware per se is
5287licensed hereunder.
5288c) Recipient understands that although each Contributor grants the licenses to its
5289Contributions set forth herein, no assurances are provided by any Contributor that the
5290Program does not infringe the patent or other intellectual property rights of any
5291other entity. Each Contributor disclaims any liability to Recipient for claims brought
5292by any other entity based on infringement of intellectual property rights or
5293otherwise. As a condition to exercising the rights and licenses granted hereunder,
5294each Recipient hereby assumes sole responsibility to secure any other intellectual
5295property rights needed, if any. For example, if a third party patent license is
5296required to allow Recipient to distribute the Program, it is Recipient`s
5297responsibility to acquire that license before distributing the Program.
5298d) Each Contributor represents that to its knowledge it has sufficient copyright
5299rights in its Contribution, if any, to grant the copyright license set forth in this
5300Agreement.
53013. REQUIREMENTS
5302
5303A Contributor may choose to distribute the Program in object code form under its own
5304license agreement, provided that:
5305
5306a) it complies with the terms and conditions of this Agreement; and
5307b) its license agreement:
5308i) effectively disclaims on behalf of all Contributors all warranties and conditions,
5309express and implied, including warranties or conditions of title and non-infringement,
5310and implied warranties or conditions of merchantability and fitness for a particular
5311purpose;
5312ii) effectively excludes on behalf of all Contributors all liability for damages,
5313including direct, indirect, special, incidental and consequential damages, such as
5314lost profits;
5315iii) states that any provisions which differ from this Agreement are offered by that
5316Contributor alone and not by any other party; and
5317iv) states that source code for the Program is available from such Contributor, and
5318informs licensees how to obtain it in a reasonable manner on or through a medium
5319customarily used for software exchange.
5320When the Program is made available in source code form:
5321
5322a) it must be made available under this Agreement; and
5323b) a copy of this Agreement must be included with each copy of the Program.
5324Contributors may not remove or alter any copyright notices contained within the
5325Program.
5326 2248
5327Each Contributor must identify itself as the originator of its Contribution, if any, 2249<section id="lic_8">
5328in a manner that reasonably allows subsequent Recipients to identify the originator of 2250<title>Elfutils-Exception</title>
5329the Contribution. 2251<para><programlisting>
5330
53314. COMMERCIAL DISTRIBUTION
5332
5333Commercial distributors of software may accept certain responsibilities with respect
5334to end users, business partners and the like. While this license is intended to
5335facilitate the commercial use of the Program, the Contributor who includes the Program
5336in a commercial product offering should do so in a manner which does not create
5337potential liability for other Contributors. Therefore, if a Contributor includes the
5338Program in a commercial product offering, such Contributor ("Commercial Contributor")
5339hereby agrees to defend and indemnify every other Contributor ("Indemnified
5340Contributor") against any losses, damages and costs (collectively "Losses") arising
5341from claims, lawsuits and other legal actions brought by a third party against the
5342Indemnified Contributor to the extent caused by the acts or omissions of such
5343Commercial Contributor in connection with its distribution of the Program in a
5344commercial product offering. The obligations in this section do not apply to any
5345claims or Losses relating to any actual or alleged intellectual property infringement.
5346In order to qualify, an Indemnified Contributor must: a) promptly notify the
5347Commercial Contributor in writing of such claim, and b) allow the Commercial
5348Contributor to control, and cooperate with the Commercial Contributor in, the defense
5349and any related settlement negotiations. The Indemnified Contributor may participate
5350in any such claim at its own expense.
5351
5352For example, a Contributor might include the Program in a commercial product offering,
5353Product X. That Contributor is then a Commercial Contributor. If that Commercial
5354Contributor then makes performance claims, or offers warranties related to Product X,
5355those performance claims and warranties are such Commercial Contributor`s
5356responsibility alone. Under this section, the Commercial Contributor would have to
5357defend claims against the other Contributors related to those performance claims and
5358warranties, and if a court requires any other Contributor to pay any damages as a
5359result, the Commercial Contributor must pay those damages.
5360
53615. NO WARRANTY
5362
5363EXCEPT AS EXPRESSLY SET FORTH IN THIS AGREEMENT, THE PROGRAM IS PROVIDED ON AN "AS IS"
5364BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
5365INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF TITLE,
5366NON-INFRINGEMENT, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Each Recipient
5367is solely responsible for determining the appropriateness of using and distributing
5368the Program and assumes all risks associated with its exercise of rights under this
5369Agreement , including but not limited to the risks and costs of program errors,
5370compliance with applicable laws, damage to or loss of data, programs or equipment, and
5371unavailability or interruption of operations.
5372
53736. DISCLAIMER OF LIABILITY
5374
5375EXCEPT AS EXPRESSLY SET FORTH IN THIS AGREEMENT, NEITHER RECIPIENT NOR ANY
5376CONTRIBUTORS SHALL HAVE ANY LIABILITY FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL,
5377EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION LOST PROFITS),
5378HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY,
5379OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OR
5380DISTRIBUTION OF THE PROGRAM OR THE EXERCISE OF ANY RIGHTS GRANTED HEREUNDER, EVEN IF
5381ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
5382
53837. GENERAL
5384
5385If any provision of this Agreement is invalid or unenforceable under applicable law,
5386it shall not affect the validity or enforceability of the remainder of the terms of
5387this Agreement, and without further action by the parties hereto, such provision shall
5388be reformed to the minimum extent necessary to make such provision valid and
5389enforceable.
5390
5391If Recipient institutes patent litigation against any entity (including a cross-claim
5392or counterclaim in a lawsuit) alleging that the Program itself (excluding combinations
5393of the Program with other software or hardware) infringes such Recipient`s patent(s),
5394then such Recipient`s rights granted under Section 2(b) shall terminate as of the date
5395such litigation is filed.
5396
5397All Recipient`s rights under this Agreement shall terminate if it fails to comply with
5398any of the material terms or conditions of this Agreement and does not cure such
5399failure in a reasonable period of time after becoming aware of such noncompliance. If
5400all Recipient`s rights under this Agreement terminate, Recipient agrees to cease use
5401and distribution of the Program as soon as reasonably practicable. However,
5402Recipient`s obligations under this Agreement and any licenses granted by Recipient
5403relating to the Program shall continue and survive.
5404
5405Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute copies of this Agreement, but in order to
5406avoid inconsistency the Agreement is copyrighted and may only be modified in the
5407following manner. The Agreement Steward reserves the right to publish new versions
5408(including revisions) of this Agreement from time to time. No one other than the
5409Agreement Steward has the right to modify this Agreement. The Eclipse Foundation is
5410the initial Agreement Steward. The Eclipse Foundation may assign the responsibility to
5411serve as the Agreement Steward to a suitable separate entity. Each new version of the
5412Agreement will be given a distinguishing version number. The Program (including
5413Contributions) may always be distributed subject to the version of the Agreement under
5414which it was received. In addition, after a new version of the Agreement is published,
5415Contributor may elect to distribute the Program (including its Contributions) under
5416the new version. Except as expressly stated in Sections 2(a) and 2(b) above, Recipient
5417receives no rights or licenses to the intellectual property of any Contributor under
5418this Agreement, whether expressly, by implication, estoppel or otherwise. All rights
5419in the Program not expressly granted under this Agreement are reserved.
5420
5421This Agreement is governed by the laws of the State of New York and the intellectual
5422property laws of the United States of America. No party to this Agreement will bring a
5423legal action under this Agreement more than one year after the cause of action arose.
5424Each party waives its rights to a jury trial in any resulting litigation.
5425
5426</programlisting></para>
5427 </section>
5428
5429 <section id="lic_11">
5430 <title>Elfutils-Exception</title>
5431
5432 <para><programlisting>
5433 This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed 2252 This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed
5434 to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. 2253 to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils.
5435 For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files 2254 For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files
@@ -5442,201 +2261,20 @@ Each party waives its rights to a jury trial in any resulting litigation.
5442 libdw.h 2261 libdw.h
5443 libdwfl.h 2262 libdwfl.h
5444 2263
5445</programlisting></para> 2264</programlisting></para></section>
5446 </section>
5447
5448 <section id="lic_12">
5449 <title>FSF-Unlimited</title>
5450 2265
5451 <para><programlisting> 2266<section id="lic_9">
2267<title>FSF-Unlimited</title>
2268<para><programlisting>
5452Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 2269Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
5453This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation 2270This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
5454gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, 2271gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
5455with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. 2272with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
5456</programlisting></para> 2273</programlisting></para></section>
5457 </section>
5458
5459 <section id="lic_13">
5460 <title>FreeType</title>
5461
5462 <para><programlisting>
5463 The FreeType Project LICENSE
5464 ----------------------------
5465
5466 2006-Jan-27
5467
5468 Copyright 1996-2002, 2006 by
5469 David Turner, Robert Wilhelm, and Werner Lemberg
5470
5471
5472
5473Introduction
5474============
5475
5476 The FreeType Project is distributed in several archive packages;
5477 some of them may contain, in addition to the FreeType font engine,
5478 various tools and contributions which rely on, or relate to, the
5479 FreeType Project.
5480
5481 This license applies to all files found in such packages, and
5482 which do not fall under their own explicit license. The license
5483 affects thus the FreeType font engine, the test programs,
5484 documentation and makefiles, at the very least.
5485
5486 This license was inspired by the BSD, Artistic, and IJG
5487 (Independent JPEG Group) licenses, which all encourage inclusion
5488 and use of free software in commercial and freeware products
5489 alike. As a consequence, its main points are that:
5490
5491 o We don't promise that this software works. However, we will be
5492 interested in any kind of bug reports. (`as is' distribution)
5493
5494 o You can use this software for whatever you want, in parts or
5495 full form, without having to pay us. (`royalty-free' usage)
5496
5497 o You may not pretend that you wrote this software. If you use
5498 it, or only parts of it, in a program, you must acknowledge
5499 somewhere in your documentation that you have used the
5500 FreeType code. (`credits')
5501
5502 We specifically permit and encourage the inclusion of this
5503 software, with or without modifications, in commercial products.
5504 We disclaim all warranties covering The FreeType Project and
5505 assume no liability related to The FreeType Project.
5506
5507
5508 Finally, many people asked us for a preferred form for a
5509 credit/disclaimer to use in compliance with this license. We thus
5510 encourage you to use the following text:
5511
5512 """
5513 Portions of this software are copyright � &lt;year&gt; The FreeType
5514 Project (www.freetype.org). All rights reserved.
5515 """
5516
5517 Please replace &lt;year&gt; with the value from the FreeType version you
5518 actually use.
5519
5520
5521Legal Terms
5522===========
5523
55240. Definitions
5525--------------
5526
5527 Throughout this license, the terms `package', `FreeType Project',
5528 and `FreeType archive' refer to the set of files originally
5529 distributed by the authors (David Turner, Robert Wilhelm, and
5530 Werner Lemberg) as the `FreeType Project', be they named as alpha,
5531 beta or final release.
5532
5533 `You' refers to the licensee, or person using the project, where
5534 `using' is a generic term including compiling the project's source
5535 code as well as linking it to form a `program' or `executable'.
5536 This program is referred to as `a program using the FreeType
5537 engine'.
5538
5539 This license applies to all files distributed in the original
5540 FreeType Project, including all source code, binaries and
5541 documentation, unless otherwise stated in the file in its
5542 original, unmodified form as distributed in the original archive.
5543 If you are unsure whether or not a particular file is covered by
5544 this license, you must contact us to verify this.
5545
5546 The FreeType Project is copyright (C) 1996-2000 by David Turner,
5547 Robert Wilhelm, and Werner Lemberg. All rights reserved except as
5548 specified below.
5549
55501. No Warranty
5551--------------
5552
5553 THE FREETYPE PROJECT IS PROVIDED `AS IS' WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY
5554 KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
5555 WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
5556 PURPOSE. IN NO EVENT WILL ANY OF THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS
5557 BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES CAUSED BY THE USE OR THE INABILITY TO
5558 USE, OF THE FREETYPE PROJECT.
5559
55602. Redistribution
5561-----------------
5562
5563 This license grants a worldwide, royalty-free, perpetual and
5564 irrevocable right and license to use, execute, perform, compile,
5565 display, copy, create derivative works of, distribute and
5566 sublicense the FreeType Project (in both source and object code
5567 forms) and derivative works thereof for any purpose; and to
5568 authorize others to exercise some or all of the rights granted
5569 herein, subject to the following conditions:
5570
5571 o Redistribution of source code must retain this license file
5572 (`FTL.TXT') unaltered; any additions, deletions or changes to
5573 the original files must be clearly indicated in accompanying
5574 documentation. The copyright notices of the unaltered,
5575 original files must be preserved in all copies of source
5576 files.
5577
5578 o Redistribution in binary form must provide a disclaimer that
5579 states that the software is based in part of the work of the
5580 FreeType Team, in the distribution documentation. We also
5581 encourage you to put an URL to the FreeType web page in your
5582 documentation, though this isn't mandatory.
5583
5584 These conditions apply to any software derived from or based on
5585 the FreeType Project, not just the unmodified files. If you use
5586 our work, you must acknowledge us. However, no fee need be paid
5587 to us.
5588
55893. Advertising
5590--------------
5591
5592 Neither the FreeType authors and contributors nor you shall use
5593 the name of the other for commercial, advertising, or promotional
5594 purposes without specific prior written permission.
5595
5596 We suggest, but do not require, that you use one or more of the
5597 following phrases to refer to this software in your documentation
5598 or advertising materials: `FreeType Project', `FreeType Engine',
5599 `FreeType library', or `FreeType Distribution'.
5600
5601 As you have not signed this license, you are not required to
5602 accept it. However, as the FreeType Project is copyrighted
5603 material, only this license, or another one contracted with the
5604 authors, grants you the right to use, distribute, and modify it.
5605 Therefore, by using, distributing, or modifying the FreeType
5606 Project, you indicate that you understand and accept all the terms
5607 of this license.
5608
56094. Contacts
5610-----------
5611
5612 There are two mailing lists related to FreeType:
5613
5614 o freetype@nongnu.org
5615
5616 Discusses general use and applications of FreeType, as well as
5617 future and wanted additions to the library and distribution.
5618 If you are looking for support, start in this list if you
5619 haven't found anything to help you in the documentation.
5620
5621 o freetype-devel@nongnu.org
5622
5623 Discusses bugs, as well as engine internals, design issues,
5624 specific licenses, porting, etc.
5625
5626 Our home page can be found at
5627 2274
5628 http://www.freetype.org 2275<section id="lic_10">
5629 2276<title>GPL-1.0</title>
5630 2277<para><programlisting>
5631--- end of FTL.TXT ---
5632
5633</programlisting></para>
5634 </section>
5635
5636 <section id="lic_14">
5637 <title>GPL-1.0</title>
5638
5639 <para><programlisting>
5640 2278
5641GNU General Public License, version 1 2279GNU General Public License, version 1
5642 2280
@@ -5889,13 +2527,11 @@ necessary. Here a sample; alter the names:
5889 2527
5890That`s all there is to it! 2528That`s all there is to it!
5891 2529
5892</programlisting></para> 2530</programlisting></para></section>
5893 </section>
5894
5895 <section id="lic_15">
5896 <title>GPL-2.0</title>
5897 2531
5898 <para><programlisting> 2532<section id="lic_11">
2533<title>GPL-2.0</title>
2534<para><programlisting>
5899 2535
5900GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 2536GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
5901 2537
@@ -6194,18 +2830,16 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this
6194what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this 2830what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this
6195License. 2831License.
6196 2832
6197</programlisting></para> 2833</programlisting></para></section>
6198 </section>
6199
6200 <section id="lic_16">
6201 <title>GPL-3.0</title>
6202 2834
6203 <para><programlisting> 2835<section id="lic_12">
2836<title>GPL-3.0</title>
2837<para><programlisting>
6204GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 2838GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
6205 2839
6206Version 3, 29 June 2007 2840Version 3, 29 June 2007
6207 2841
6208Copyright Â&copy; 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt; 2842Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt;
6209 2843
6210Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, 2844Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document,
6211but changing it is not allowed. 2845but changing it is not allowed.
@@ -6774,13 +3408,11 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this
6774what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this 3408what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this
6775License. But first, please read 3409License. But first, please read
6776&lt;http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html&gt;. 3410&lt;http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html&gt;.
6777</programlisting></para> 3411</programlisting></para></section>
6778 </section>
6779 3412
6780 <section id="lic_17"> 3413<section id="lic_13">
6781 <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title> 3414<title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title>
6782 3415<para><programlisting>
6783 <para><programlisting>
6784 3416
6785insert GPL v3 text here 3417insert GPL v3 text here
6786 3418
@@ -6836,13 +3468,11 @@ consistent with the licensing of the Independent Modules.
6836The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that 3468The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that
6837third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. 3469third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC.
6838 3470
6839</programlisting></para> 3471</programlisting></para></section>
6840 </section>
6841
6842 <section id="lic_18">
6843 <title>ICU</title>
6844 3472
6845 <para><programlisting> 3473<section id="lic_14">
3474<title>ICU</title>
3475<para><programlisting>
6846COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE 3476COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE
6847 3477
6848Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others 3478Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others
@@ -6873,19 +3503,16 @@ Software without prior written authorization of the copyright holder.
6873 3503
6874All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their 3504All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their
6875respective owners. 3505respective owners.
3506</programlisting></para></section>
6876 3507
6877</programlisting></para> 3508<section id="lic_15">
6878 </section> 3509<title>ISC</title>
6879 3510<para><programlisting>
6880 <section id="lic_19">
6881 <title>ISC</title>
6882
6883 <para><programlisting>
6884 3511
6885ISC License: 3512ISC License:
6886 3513
6887Copyright &copy; 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") 3514Copyright &#169; 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC")
6888Copyright &copy; 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium 3515Copyright &#169; 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium
6889 3516
6890Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with 3517Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with
6891or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this 3518or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this
@@ -6898,13 +3525,11 @@ DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN AC
6898OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH 3525OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH
6899THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. 3526THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
6900 3527
6901</programlisting></para> 3528</programlisting></para></section>
6902 </section>
6903
6904 <section id="lic_20">
6905 <title>LGPL-2.0</title>
6906 3529
6907 <para><programlisting> 3530<section id="lic_16">
3531<title>LGPL-2.0</title>
3532<para><programlisting>
6908GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 3533GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
6909 3534
6910 3535
@@ -7488,13 +4113,11 @@ Ty Coon, President of Vice
7488 4113
7489That's all there is to it! 4114That's all there is to it!
7490 4115
7491</programlisting></para> 4116</programlisting></para></section>
7492 </section>
7493
7494 <section id="lic_21">
7495 <title>LGPL-2.1</title>
7496 4117
7497 <para><programlisting> 4118<section id="lic_17">
4119<title>LGPL-2.1</title>
4120<para><programlisting>
7498 4121
7499GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 4122GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
7500 4123
@@ -7922,18 +4545,16 @@ signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1990
7922Ty Coon, President of Vice 4545Ty Coon, President of Vice
7923That`s all there is to it! 4546That`s all there is to it!
7924 4547
7925</programlisting></para> 4548</programlisting></para></section>
7926 </section>
7927 4549
7928 <section id="lic_22"> 4550<section id="lic_18">
7929 <title>LGPL-3.0</title> 4551<title>LGPL-3.0</title>
7930 4552<para><programlisting>
7931 <para><programlisting>
7932GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 4553GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
7933 4554
7934Version 3, 29 June 2007 4555Version 3, 29 June 2007
7935 4556
7936Copyright Â&copy; 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt; 4557Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt;
7937 4558
7938Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, 4559Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document,
7939but changing it is not allowed. 4560but changing it is not allowed.
@@ -8064,13 +4685,11 @@ If the Library as you received it specifies that a proxy can decide whether futu
8064versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public 4685versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public
8065statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose 4686statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose
8066that version for the Library. 4687that version for the Library.
8067</programlisting></para> 4688</programlisting></para></section>
8068 </section>
8069
8070 <section id="lic_23">
8071 <title>Libpng</title>
8072 4689
8073 <para><programlisting> 4690<section id="lic_19">
4691<title>Libpng</title>
4692<para><programlisting>
8074 4693
8075This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of 4694This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of
8076any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is 4695any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is
@@ -8183,13 +4802,11 @@ Glenn Randers-Pehrson
8183glennrp at users.sourceforge.net 4802glennrp at users.sourceforge.net
8184December 9, 2010 4803December 9, 2010
8185 4804
8186</programlisting></para> 4805</programlisting></para></section>
8187 </section>
8188
8189 <section id="lic_24">
8190 <title>MIT</title>
8191 4806
8192 <para><programlisting> 4807<section id="lic_20">
4808<title>MIT</title>
4809<para><programlisting>
8193 4810
8194MIT License 4811MIT License
8195 4812
@@ -8213,312 +4830,11 @@ LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
8213OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN 4830OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
8214THE SOFTWARE. 4831THE SOFTWARE.
8215 4832
8216</programlisting></para> 4833</programlisting></para></section>
8217 </section>
8218
8219 <section id="lic_25">
8220 <title>MPL-1.0</title>
8221
8222 <para><programlisting>
8223
8224MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE
8225Version 1.0
8226
82271. Definitions.
8228
82291.1. ``Contributor`` means each entity that creates or contributes to the creation of
8230Modifications.
82311.2. ``Contributor Version`` means the combination of the Original Code, prior
8232Modifications used by a Contributor, and the Modifications made by that particular
8233Contributor.
8234
82351.3. ``Covered Code`` means the Original Code or Modifications or the combination of
8236the Original Code and Modifications, in each case including portions thereof.
8237
82381.4. ``Electronic Distribution Mechanism`` means a mechanism generally accepted in the
8239software development community for the electronic transfer of data.
8240
82411.5. ``Executable`` means Covered Code in any form other than Source Code.
8242
82431.6. ``Initial Developer`` means the individual or entity identified as the Initial
8244Developer in the Source Code notice required by Exhibit A.
8245 4834
82461.7. ``Larger Work`` means a work which combines Covered Code or portions thereof with 4835<section id="lic_21">
8247code not governed by the terms of this License. 4836<title>MPL-2.0</title>
8248 4837<para><programlisting>
82491.8. ``License`` means this document.
8250
82511.9. ``Modifications`` means any addition to or deletion from the substance or
8252structure of either the Original Code or any previous Modifications. When Covered Code
8253is released as a series of files, a Modification is:
8254
8255A. Any addition to or deletion from the contents of a file containing Original Code or
8256previous Modifications.
8257
8258B. Any new file that contains any part of the Original Code or previous Modifications.
8259
82601.10. ``Original Code`` means Source Code of computer software code which is described
8261in the Source Code notice required by Exhibit A as Original Code, and which, at the
8262time of its release under this License is not already Covered Code governed by this
8263License.
8264
82651.11. ``Source Code`` means the preferred form of the Covered Code for making
8266modifications to it, including all modules it contains, plus any associated interface
8267definition files, scripts used to control compilation and installation of an
8268Executable, or a list of source code differential comparisons against either the
8269Original Code or another well known, available Covered Code of the Contributor`s
8270choice. The Source Code can be in a compressed or archival form, provided the
8271appropriate decompression or de-archiving software is widely available for no charge.
8272
82731.12. ``You`` means an individual or a legal entity exercising rights under, and
8274complying with all of the terms of, this License or a future version of this License
8275issued under Section 6.1. For legal entities, ``You`` includes any entity which
8276controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with You. For purposes of this
8277definition, ``control`` means (a) the power, direct or indirect, to cause the
8278direction or management of such entity, whether by contract or otherwise, or (b)
8279ownership of fifty percent (50%) or more of the outstanding shares or beneficial
8280ownership of such entity.
8281
82822. Source Code License.
82832.1. The Initial Developer Grant.
8284The Initial Developer hereby grants You a world-wide, royalty-free, non-exclusive
8285license, subject to third party intellectual property claims:
8286(a) to use, reproduce, modify, display, perform, sublicense and distribute the
8287Original Code (or portions thereof) with or without Modifications, or as part of a
8288Larger Work; and
8289
8290(b) under patents now or hereafter owned or controlled by Initial Developer, to make,
8291have made, use and sell (``Utilize``) the Original Code (or portions thereof), but
8292solely to the extent that any such patent is reasonably necessary to enable You to
8293Utilize the Original Code (or portions thereof) and not to any greater extent that may
8294be necessary to Utilize further Modifications or combinations.
8295
82962.2. Contributor Grant.
8297Each Contributor hereby grants You a world-wide, royalty-free, non-exclusive license,
8298subject to third party intellectual property claims:
8299
8300(a) to use, reproduce, modify, display, perform, sublicense and distribute the
8301Modifications created by such Contributor (or portions thereof) either on an
8302unmodified basis, with other Modifications, as Covered Code or as part of a Larger
8303Work; and
8304
8305(b) under patents now or hereafter owned or controlled by Contributor, to Utilize the
8306Contributor Version (or portions thereof), but solely to the extent that any such
8307patent is reasonably necessary to enable You to Utilize the Contributor Version (or
8308portions thereof), and not to any greater extent that may be necessary to Utilize
8309further Modifications or combinations.
8310
83113. Distribution Obligations.
83123.1. Application of License.
8313The Modifications which You create or to which You contribute are governed by the
8314terms of this License, including without limitation Section 2.2. The Source Code
8315version of Covered Code may be distributed only under the terms of this License or a
8316future version of this License released under Section 6.1, and You must include a copy
8317of this License with every copy of the Source Code You distribute. You may not offer
8318or impose any terms on any Source Code version that alters or restricts the applicable
8319version of this License or the recipients` rights hereunder. However, You may include
8320an additional document offering the additional rights described in Section 3.5.
83213.2. Availability of Source Code.
8322Any Modification which You create or to which You contribute must be made available in
8323Source Code form under the terms of this License either on the same media as an
8324Executable version or via an accepted Electronic Distribution Mechanism to anyone to
8325whom you made an Executable version available; and if made available via Electronic
8326Distribution Mechanism, must remain available for at least twelve (12) months after
8327the date it initially became available, or at least six (6) months after a subsequent
8328version of that particular Modification has been made available to such recipients.
8329You are responsible for ensuring that the Source Code version remains available even
8330if the Electronic Distribution Mechanism is maintained by a third party.
8331
83323.3. Description of Modifications.
8333You must cause all Covered Code to which you contribute to contain a file documenting
8334the changes You made to create that Covered Code and the date of any change. You must
8335include a prominent statement that the Modification is derived, directly or
8336indirectly, from Original Code provided by the Initial Developer and including the
8337name of the Initial Developer in (a) the Source Code, and (b) in any notice in an
8338Executable version or related documentation in which You describe the origin or
8339ownership of the Covered Code.
8340
83413.4. Intellectual Property Matters
8342
8343(a) Third Party Claims.
8344If You have knowledge that a party claims an intellectual property right in particular
8345functionality or code (or its utilization under this License), you must include a text
8346file with the source code distribution titled ``LEGAL`` which describes the claim and
8347the party making the claim in sufficient detail that a recipient will know whom to
8348contact. If you obtain such knowledge after You make Your Modification available as
8349described in Section 3.2, You shall promptly modify the LEGAL file in all copies You
8350make available thereafter and shall take other steps (such as notifying appropriate
8351mailing lists or newsgroups) reasonably calculated to inform those who received the
8352Covered Code that new knowledge has been obtained.
8353
8354(b) Contributor APIs.
8355If Your Modification is an application programming interface and You own or control
8356patents which are reasonably necessary to implement that API, you must also include
8357this information in the LEGAL file.
8358
83593.5. Required Notices.
8360You must duplicate the notice in Exhibit A in each file of the Source Code, and this
8361License in any documentation for the Source Code, where You describe recipients`
8362rights relating to Covered Code. If You created one or more Modification(s), You may
8363add your name as a Contributor to the notice described in Exhibit A. If it is not
8364possible to put such notice in a particular Source Code file due to its structure,
8365then you must include such notice in a location (such as a relevant directory file)
8366where a user would be likely to look for such a notice. You may choose to offer, and
8367to charge a fee for, warranty, support, indemnity or liability obligations to one or
8368more recipients of Covered Code. However, You may do so only on Your own behalf, and
8369not on behalf of the Initial Developer or any Contributor. You must make it absolutely
8370clear than any such warranty, support, indemnity or liability obligation is offered by
8371You alone, and You hereby agree to indemnify the Initial Developer and every
8372Contributor for any liability incurred by the Initial Developer or such Contributor as
8373a result of warranty, support, indemnity or liability terms You offer.
8374
83753.6. Distribution of Executable Versions.
8376You may distribute Covered Code in Executable form only if the requirements of Section
83773.1-3.5 have been met for that Covered Code, and if You include a notice stating that
8378the Source Code version of the Covered Code is available under the terms of this
8379License, including a description of how and where You have fulfilled the obligations
8380of Section 3.2. The notice must be conspicuously included in any notice in an
8381Executable version, related documentation or collateral in which You describe
8382recipients` rights relating to the Covered Code. You may distribute the Executable
8383version of Covered Code under a license of Your choice, which may contain terms
8384different from this License, provided that You are in compliance with the terms of
8385this License and that the license for the Executable version does not attempt to limit
8386or alter the recipient`s rights in the Source Code version from the rights set forth
8387in this License. If You distribute the Executable version under a different license
8388You must make it absolutely clear that any terms which differ from this License are
8389offered by You alone, not by the Initial Developer or any Contributor. You hereby
8390agree to indemnify the Initial Developer and every Contributor for any liability
8391incurred by the Initial Developer or such Contributor as a result of any such terms
8392You offer.
8393
83943.7. Larger Works.
8395You may create a Larger Work by combining Covered Code with other code not governed by
8396the terms of this License and distribute the Larger Work as a single product. In such
8397a case, You must make sure the requirements of this License are fulfilled for the
8398Covered Code.
8399
84004. Inability to Comply Due to Statute or Regulation.
8401If it is impossible for You to comply with any of the terms of this License with
8402respect to some or all of the Covered Code due to statute or regulation then You must:
8403(a) comply with the terms of this License to the maximum extent possible; and (b)
8404describe the limitations and the code they affect. Such description must be included
8405in the LEGAL file described in Section 3.4 and must be included with all distributions
8406of the Source Code. Except to the extent prohibited by statute or regulation, such
8407description must be sufficiently detailed for a recipient of ordinary skill to be able
8408to understand it.
8409
84105. Application of this License.
8411This License applies to code to which the Initial Developer has attached the notice in
8412Exhibit A, and to related Covered Code.
84136. Versions of the License.
84146.1. New Versions.
8415Netscape Communications Corporation (``Netscape``) may publish revised and/or new
8416versions of the License from time to time. Each version will be given a distinguishing
8417version number.
84186.2. Effect of New Versions.
8419Once Covered Code has been published under a particular version of the License, You
8420may always continue to use it under the terms of that version. You may also choose to
8421use such Covered Code under the terms of any subsequent version of the License
8422published by Netscape. No one other than Netscape has the right to modify the terms
8423applicable to Covered Code created under this License.
8424
84256.3. Derivative Works.
8426If you create or use a modified version of this License (which you may only do in
8427order to apply it to code which is not already Covered Code governed by this License),
8428you must (a) rename Your license so that the phrases ``Mozilla``, ``MOZILLAPL``,
8429``MOZPL``, ``Netscape``, ``NPL`` or any confusingly similar phrase do not appear
8430anywhere in your license and (b) otherwise make it clear that your version of the
8431license contains terms which differ from the Mozilla Public License and Netscape
8432Public License. (Filling in the name of the Initial Developer, Original Code or
8433Contributor in the notice described in Exhibit A shall not of themselves be deemed to
8434be modifications of this License.)
8435
84367. DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY.
8437COVERED CODE IS PROVIDED UNDER THIS LICENSE ON AN ``AS IS`` BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF
8438ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, WARRANTIES THAT
8439THE COVERED CODE IS FREE OF DEFECTS, MERCHANTABLE, FIT FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR
8440NON-INFRINGING. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE COVERED CODE
8441IS WITH YOU. SHOULD ANY COVERED CODE PROVE DEFECTIVE IN ANY RESPECT, YOU (NOT THE
8442INITIAL DEVELOPER OR ANY OTHER CONTRIBUTOR) ASSUME THE COST OF ANY NECESSARY
8443SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION. THIS DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY CONSTITUTES AN ESSENTIAL
8444PART OF THIS LICENSE. NO USE OF ANY COVERED CODE IS AUTHORIZED HEREUNDER EXCEPT UNDER
8445THIS DISCLAIMER.
84468. TERMINATION.
8447This License and the rights granted hereunder will terminate automatically if You fail
8448to comply with terms herein and fail to cure such breach within 30 days of becoming
8449aware of the breach. All sublicenses to the Covered Code which are properly granted
8450shall survive any termination of this License. Provisions which, by their nature, must
8451remain in effect beyond the termination of this License shall survive.
84529. LIMITATION OF LIABILITY.
8453UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES AND UNDER NO LEGAL THEORY, WHETHER TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE),
8454CONTRACT, OR OTHERWISE, SHALL THE INITIAL DEVELOPER, ANY OTHER CONTRIBUTOR, OR ANY
8455DISTRIBUTOR OF COVERED CODE, OR ANY SUPPLIER OF ANY OF SUCH PARTIES, BE LIABLE TO YOU
8456OR ANY OTHER PERSON FOR ANY INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OF
8457ANY CHARACTER INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, DAMAGES FOR LOSS OF GOODWILL, WORK
8458STOPPAGE, COMPUTER FAILURE OR MALFUNCTION, OR ANY AND ALL OTHER COMMERCIAL DAMAGES OR
8459LOSSES, EVEN IF SUCH PARTY SHALL HAVE BEEN INFORMED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
8460DAMAGES. THIS LIMITATION OF LIABILITY SHALL NOT APPLY TO LIABILITY FOR DEATH OR
8461PERSONAL INJURY RESULTING FROM SUCH PARTY`S NEGLIGENCE TO THE EXTENT APPLICABLE LAW
8462PROHIBITS SUCH LIMITATION. SOME JURISDICTIONS DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION
8463OF INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, SO THAT EXCLUSION AND LIMITATION MAY NOT APPLY
8464TO YOU.
846510. U.S. GOVERNMENT END USERS.
8466The Covered Code is a ``commercial item,`` as that term is defined in 48 C.F.R. 2.101
8467(Oct. 1995), consisting of ``commercial computer software`` and ``commercial computer
8468software documentation,`` as such terms are used in 48 C.F.R. 12.212 (Sept. 1995).
8469Consistent with 48 C.F.R. 12.212 and 48 C.F.R. 227.7202-1 through 227.7202-4 (June
84701995), all U.S. Government End Users acquire Covered Code with only those rights set
8471forth herein.
847211. MISCELLANEOUS.
8473This License represents the complete agreement concerning subject matter hereof. If
8474any provision of this License is held to be unenforceable, such provision shall be
8475reformed only to the extent necessary to make it enforceable. This License shall be
8476governed by California law provisions (except to the extent applicable law, if any,
8477provides otherwise), excluding its conflict-of-law provisions. With respect to
8478disputes in which at least one party is a citizen of, or an entity chartered or
8479registered to do business in, the United States of America: (a) unless otherwise
8480agreed in writing, all disputes relating to this License (excepting any dispute
8481relating to intellectual property rights) shall be subject to final and binding
8482arbitration, with the losing party paying all costs of arbitration; (b) any
8483arbitration relating to this Agreement shall be held in Santa Clara County,
8484California, under the auspices of JAMS/EndDispute; and (c) any litigation relating to
8485this Agreement shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal Courts of the
8486Northern District of California, with venue lying in Santa Clara County, California,
8487with the losing party responsible for costs, including without limitation, court costs
8488and reasonable attorneys fees and expenses. The application of the United Nations
8489Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods is expressly excluded. Any
8490law or regulation which provides that the language of a contract shall be construed
8491against the drafter shall not apply to this License.
849212. RESPONSIBILITY FOR CLAIMS.
8493Except in cases where another Contributor has failed to comply with Section 3.4, You
8494are responsible for damages arising, directly or indirectly, out of Your utilization
8495of rights under this License, based on the number of copies of Covered Code you made
8496available, the revenues you received from utilizing such rights, and other relevant
8497factors. You agree to work with affected parties to distribute responsibility on an
8498equitable basis.
8499EXHIBIT A.
8500``The contents of this file are subject to the Mozilla Public License Version 1.0 (the
8501"License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may
8502obtain a copy of the License at http://www.mozilla.org/MPL/
8503Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT
8504WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific
8505language governing rights and limitations under the License.
8506
8507The Original Code is ______________________________________.
8508
8509The Initial Developer of the Original Code is ________________________. Portions
8510created by ______________________ are Copyright (C) ______ _______________________.
8511All Rights Reserved.
8512
8513Contributor(s): ______________________________________.``
8514
8515</programlisting></para>
8516 </section>
8517
8518 <section id="lic_26">
8519 <title>MPL-2.0</title>
8520
8521 <para><programlisting>
8522Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 4838Mozilla Public License Version 2.0
8523================================== 4839==================================
8524 4840
@@ -8892,13 +5208,11 @@ Exhibit B - "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses" Notice
8892 5208
8893 This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as 5209 This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as
8894 defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. 5210 defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0.
8895</programlisting></para> 5211</programlisting></para></section>
8896 </section>
8897 5212
8898 <section id="lic_27"> 5213<section id="lic_22">
8899 <title>NTP</title> 5214<title>NTP</title>
8900 5215<para><programlisting>
8901 <para><programlisting>
8902 5216
8903NTP License (NTP) 5217NTP License (NTP)
8904 5218
@@ -8913,33 +5227,11 @@ of the software without specific, written prior permission. (TrademarkedName) ma
8913representations about the suitability this software for any purpose. It is provided 5227representations about the suitability this software for any purpose. It is provided
8914"as is" without express or implied warranty. 5228"as is" without express or implied warranty.
8915 5229
8916</programlisting></para> 5230</programlisting></para></section>
8917 </section>
8918
8919 <section id="lic_28">
8920 <title>OASIS</title>
8921
8922 <para><programlisting>
8923 Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute the DocBook DTD and
8924 its accompanying documentation for any purpose and without fee is
8925 hereby granted in perpetuity, provided that the above copyright
8926 notice and this paragraph appear in all copies. The copyright
8927 holders make no representation about the suitability of the DTD for
8928 any purpose. It is provided "as is" without expressed or implied
8929 warranty.
8930
8931 If you modify the DocBook DTD in any way, except for declaring and
8932 referencing additional sets of general entities and declaring
8933 additional notations, label your DTD as a variant of DocBook. See
8934 the maintenance documentation for more information.
8935
8936</programlisting></para>
8937 </section>
8938
8939 <section id="lic_29">
8940 <title>OpenSSL</title>
8941 5231
8942 <para><programlisting> 5232<section id="lic_23">
5233<title>OpenSSL</title>
5234<para><programlisting>
8943 5235
8944OpenSSL License 5236OpenSSL License
8945 5237
@@ -9056,21 +5348,17 @@ put under another distribution licence
9056 5348
9057 5349
9058 5350
9059</programlisting></para> 5351</programlisting></para></section>
9060 </section>
9061 5352
9062 <section id="lic_30"> 5353<section id="lic_24">
9063 <title>PD</title> 5354<title>PD</title>
9064 5355<para><programlisting>
9065 <para><programlisting>
9066This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License 5356This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License
9067</programlisting></para> 5357</programlisting></para></section>
9068 </section>
9069
9070 <section id="lic_31">
9071 <title>Python-2.0</title>
9072 5358
9073 <para><programlisting> 5359<section id="lic_25">
5360<title>Python-2.0</title>
5361<para><programlisting>
9074 5362
9075PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 5363PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2
9076-------------------------------------------- 5364--------------------------------------------
@@ -9263,13 +5551,11 @@ WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
9263ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT 5551ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT
9264OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. 5552OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
9265 5553
9266</programlisting></para> 5554</programlisting></para></section>
9267 </section>
9268
9269 <section id="lic_32">
9270 <title>Sleepycat</title>
9271 5555
9272 <para><programlisting> 5556<section id="lic_26">
5557<title>Sleepycat</title>
5558<para><programlisting>
9273 5559
9274The Sleepycat License 5560The Sleepycat License
9275Copyright (c) 1990-1999 5561Copyright (c) 1990-1999
@@ -9360,84 +5646,11 @@ LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
9360OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 5646OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
9361SUCH DAMAGE. 5647SUCH DAMAGE.
9362 5648
9363</programlisting></para> 5649</programlisting></para></section>
9364 </section>
9365
9366 <section id="lic_33">
9367 <title>SUN</title>
9368
9369 <para><programlisting>
9370
9371SUN MICROSYSTEMS, INC. THROUGH ITS SUN MICROSYSTEMS LABORATORIES
9372DIVISION ("SUN") WILL LICENSE THIS SOFTWARE AND THE ACCOMPANYING
9373DOCUMENTATION TO YOU (a "Licensee") ONLY ON YOUR ACCEPTANCE OF ALL
9374THE TERMS SET FORTH BELOW.
9375
9376Sun grants Licensee a non-exclusive, royalty-free right to download,
9377install, compile, use, copy and distribute the Software, modify or
9378otherwise create derivative works from the Software (each, a
9379"Modification") and distribute any Modification in source code and/or
9380binary code form to its customers with a license agreement containing
9381these terms and noting that the Software has been modified. The
9382Software is copyrighted by Sun and other third parties and Licensee
9383shall retain and reproduce all copyright and other notices presently
9384on the Software. As between Sun and Licensee, Sun is the sole owner of
9385all rights in and to the Software other than the limited rights
9386granted to Licensee herein; Licensee will own its Modifications,
9387expressly subject to Sun's continuing ownership of the
9388Software. Licensee will, at its expense, defend and indemnify Sun and
9389its licensors from and against any third party claims, including costs
9390and reasonable attorneys' fees, and be wholly responsible for any
9391liabilities arising out of or related to Licensee's development, use
9392or distribution of the Software or Modifications. Any distribution of
9393the Software and Modifications must comply with all applicable United
9394States export control laws.
9395
9396THE SOFTWARE IS BEING PROVIDED TO LICENSEE "AS IS" AND ALL EXPRESS OR
9397IMPLIED CONDITIONS AND WARRANTIES, INCLUDING ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF
9398MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR NON-INFRINGEMENT,
9399ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT WILL SUN BE LIABLE HEREUNDER FOR ANY
9400DIRECT DAMAGES OR ANY INDIRECT, PUNITIVE, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR
9401CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OF ANY KIND.
9402
9403</programlisting></para>
9404 </section>
9405
9406 <section id="lic_34">
9407 <title>UCB</title>
9408
9409 <para><programlisting>
9410
9411Portions of Jacl and Tcl Blend are
9412Copyright (c) 1997-1999 The Regents of the University of California.
9413All rights reserved.
9414
9415Permission is hereby granted, without written agreement and without
9416license or royalty fees, to use, copy, modify, and distribute this
9417software and its documentation for any purpose, provided that the above
9418copyright notice and the following two paragraphs appear in all copies
9419of this software.
9420
9421IN NO EVENT SHALL THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA BE LIABLE TO ANY PARTY
9422FOR DIRECT, INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES
9423ARISING OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE AND ITS DOCUMENTATION, EVEN IF
9424THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
9425SUCH DAMAGE.
9426
9427THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SPECIFICALLY DISCLAIMS ANY WARRANTIES,
9428INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
9429MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE SOFTWARE
9430PROVIDED HEREUNDER IS ON AN "AS IS" BASIS, AND THE UNIVERSITY OF
9431CALIFORNIA HAS NO OBLIGATION TO PROVIDE MAINTENANCE, SUPPORT, UPDATES,
9432ENHANCEMENTS, OR MODIFICATIONS.
9433
9434</programlisting></para>
9435 </section>
9436 5650
9437 <section id="lic_35"> 5651<section id="lic_27">
9438 <title>Zlib</title> 5652<title>Zlib</title>
9439 5653<para><programlisting>
9440 <para><programlisting>
9441 5654
9442zlib License 5655zlib License
9443 5656
@@ -9459,11 +5672,10 @@ zlib License
9459 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. 5672 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution.
9460 5673
9461 5674
9462</programlisting></para> 5675</programlisting></para></section>
9463 </section>
9464 </section>
9465 5676
9466 <section id="proprietary_license">
9467 <title>Proprietary Licenses</title>
9468 </section> 5677 </section>
9469</chapter> \ No newline at end of file 5678 <section id="proprietary_license">
5679 <title>Proprietary Licenses</title>
5680 </section>
5681</chapter>
diff --git a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-openstack-open-source/doc/licenses.xml b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-openstack-open-source/doc/licenses.xml
index 9ba85fe..ec19fb4 100644
--- a/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-openstack-open-source/doc/licenses.xml
+++ b/doc/book-enea-nfv-access-openstack-open-source/doc/licenses.xml
@@ -3,5727 +3,2777 @@
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="5*" /> 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>autoconf-archive</entry>
69 <entry>apr</entry> 70 <entry>2016.09.16</entry>
70 71 <entry>autoconf-archive-native version 2016.09.16-r0.</entry>
71 <entry>1.5.2</entry> 72 <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
72 73</row>
73 <entry>Apache Portable Runtime (APR) library.</entry> 74<row>
74 75 <entry>autoconf</entry>
75 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 76 <entry>2.69</entry>
76 </row> 77 <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce shell scripts to automatically configure software source code packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package from a template file that lists the operating system features that the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry>
77 78 <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
78 <row> 79</row>
79 <entry>apt</entry> 80<row>
80 81 <entry>automake</entry>
81 <entry>1.2.12</entry> 82 <entry>1.15</entry>
82 83 <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry>
83 <entry>Advanced front-end for dpkg.</entry> 84 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
84 85</row>
85 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 86<row>
86 </row> 87 <entry>avahi</entry>
87 88 <entry>0.6.32</entry>
88 <row> 89 <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>
89 <entry>attr</entry> 90 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
90 91</row>
91 <entry>2.4.47</entry> 92<row>
92 93 <entry>base-files</entry>
93 <entry>Utilities for manipulating filesystem extended 94 <entry>3.0.14</entry>
94 attributes.</entry> 95 <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for the system.</entry>
95 96 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
96 <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> 97</row>
97 </row> 98<row>
98 99 <entry>base-passwd</entry>
99 <row> 100 <entry>3.5.29</entry>
100 <entry>autoconf-archive</entry> 101 <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>
101 102 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
102 <entry>2016.09.16</entry> 103</row>
103 104<row>
104 <entry>autoconf-archive-native version 2016.09.16-r0.</entry> 105 <entry>bash-completion</entry>
105 106 <entry>2.5</entry>
106 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> 107 <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry>
107 </row> 108 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
108 109</row>
109 <row> 110<row>
110 <entry>autoconf</entry> 111 <entry>bash</entry>
111 112 <entry>4.3.30</entry>
112 <entry>2.69</entry> 113 <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry>
113 114 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
114 <entry>Autoconf is an extensible package of M4 macros that produce 115</row>
115 shell scripts to automatically configure software source code 116<row>
116 packages. Autoconf creates a configuration script for a package 117 <entry>bc</entry>
117 from a template file that lists the operating system features that 118 <entry>1.06</entry>
118 the package can use in the form of M4 macro calls.</entry> 119 <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry>
119 120 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
120 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> 121</row>
121 </row> 122<row>
122 123 <entry>bind</entry>
123 <row> 124 <entry>9.10.3-P3</entry>
124 <entry>autogen</entry> 125 <entry>ISC Internet Domain Name Server.</entry>
125 126 <entry> ISC, BSD</entry>
126 <entry>5.18.12</entry> 127</row>
127 128<row>
128 <entry>AutoGen is a tool designed to simplify the creation and 129 <entry>binutils-cross-aarch64</entry>
129 maintenance of programs that contain large amounts of repetitious 130 <entry>2.28</entry>
130 text. It is especially valuable in programs that have several 131 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry>
131 blocks of text that must be kept synchronized.</entry> 132 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
132 133</row>
133 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 134<row>
134 </row> 135 <entry>binutils</entry>
135 136 <entry>2.28</entry>
136 <row> 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 <entry>automake</entry> 138 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
138 139</row>
139 <entry>1.15</entry> 140<row>
140 141 <entry>bison</entry>
141 <entry>Automake is a tool for automatically generating 142 <entry>3.0.4</entry>
142 `Makefile.in' files compliant with the GNU Coding Standards. 143 <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>
143 Automake requires the use of Autoconf.</entry> 144 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
144 145</row>
145 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 146<row>
146 </row> 147 <entry>bjam</entry>
147 148 <entry>1.63.0</entry>
148 <row> 149 <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry>
149 <entry>avahi</entry> 150 <entry> BSL-1.0, MIT</entry>
150 151</row>
151 <entry>0.6.32</entry> 152<row>
152 153 <entry>bluez5</entry>
153 <entry>"Avahi is a fully LGPL framework for Multicast DNS Service 154 <entry>5.43</entry>
154 Discovery. It allows programs to publish and discover services and 155 <entry>Linux Bluetooth stack V5 userland components. These include a system configurations daemons tools and system libraries.</entry>
155 hosts running on a local network with no specific configuration. 156 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
156 This tool implements IPv4LL ""Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 157</row>
157 Link-Local Addresses"" (IETF RFC3927) a protocol for automatic IP 158<row>
158 address configuration from the link-local 169.254.0.0/16 range 159 <entry>boost</entry>
159 without the need for a central server."</entry> 160 <entry>1.63.0</entry>
160 161 <entry>Free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.</entry>
161 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 162 <entry> BSL-1.0, MIT</entry>
162 </row> 163</row>
163 164<row>
164 <row> 165 <entry>bridge-utils</entry>
165 <entry>base-files</entry> 166 <entry>1.5</entry>
166 167 <entry>Tools for ethernet bridging.</entry>
167 <entry>3.0.14</entry> 168 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
168 169</row>
169 <entry>The base-files package creates the basic system directory 170<row>
170 structure and provides a small set of key configuration files for 171 <entry>busybox</entry>
171 the system.</entry> 172 <entry>1.24.1</entry>
172 173 <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>
173 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 174 <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry>
174 </row> 175</row>
175 176<row>
176 <row> 177 <entry>bzip2</entry>
177 <entry>base-passwd</entry> 178 <entry>1.0.6</entry>
178 179 <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>
179 <entry>3.5.29</entry> 180 <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry>
180 181</row>
181 <entry>The master copies of the user database files (/etc/passwd 182<row>
182 and /etc/group). The update-passwd tool is also provided to keep 183 <entry>ca-certificates</entry>
183 the system databases synchronized with these master files.</entry> 184 <entry>20161130</entry>
184 185 <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>
185 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 186 <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry>
186 </row> 187</row>
187 188<row>
188 <row> 189 <entry>cairo</entry>
189 <entry>bash-completion</entry> 190 <entry>1.14.8</entry>
190 191 <entry>Cairo is a multi-platform library providing anti-aliased vector-based rendering for multiple target backends. Paths consist of line segments and cubic splines and can be rendered at any width with various join and cap styles. All colors may be specified with optional translucence (opacity/alpha) and combined using the extended Porter/Duff compositing algebra as found in the X Render Extension.</entry>
191 <entry>2.5</entry> 192 <entry> MPL-1.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry>
192 193</row>
193 <entry>Programmable Completion for Bash 4.</entry> 194<row>
194 195 <entry>cloud-init</entry>
195 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 196 <entry>0.7.6</entry>
196 </row> 197 <entry>Init scripts for use on cloud images</entry>
197 198 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
198 <row> 199</row>
199 <entry>bash</entry> 200<row>
200 201 <entry>cmake</entry>
201 <entry>4.3.30</entry> 202 <entry>3.7.2</entry>
202 203 <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry>
203 <entry>An sh-compatible command language interpreter.</entry> 204 <entry>BSD</entry>
204 205</row>
205 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 206<row>
206 </row> 207 <entry>coreutils</entry>
207 208 <entry>8.26</entry>
208 <row> 209 <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>
209 <entry>bc</entry> 210 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
210 211</row>
211 <entry>1.06</entry> 212<row>
212 213 <entry>cracklib</entry>
213 <entry>Arbitrary precision calculator language.</entry> 214 <entry>2.9.5</entry>
214 215 <entry>Password strength checker library.</entry>
215 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 216 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
216 </row> 217</row>
217 218<row>
218 <row> 219 <entry>cronie</entry>
219 <entry>bdwgc</entry> 220 <entry>1.5.1</entry>
220 221 <entry>Cronie contains the standard UNIX daemon crond that runs specified programs at scheduled times and related tools. It is based on the original cron and has security and configuration enhancements like the ability to use pam and SELinux.</entry>
221 <entry>7.6.0</entry> 222 <entry> ISC, BSD-3-Clause, BSD-2-Clause, GPL-2.0</entry>
222 223</row>
223 <entry>The Boehm-Demers-Weiser conservative garbage collector can 224<row>
224 be used as a garbage collecting replacement for C malloc or C++ 225 <entry>cross-localedef</entry>
225 new. It allows you to allocate memory basically as you normally 226 <entry>2.25</entry>
226 would without explicitly deallocating memory that is no longer 227 <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry>
227 useful. The collector automatically recycles memory when it 228 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
228 determines that it can no longer be otherwise accessed. The 229</row>
229 collector is also used by a number of programming language 230<row>
230 implementations that either use C as intermediate code want to 231 <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry>
231 facilitate easier interoperation with C libraries or just prefer 232 <entry>1.8</entry>
232 the simple collector interface. Alternatively the garbage 233 <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry>
233 collector may be used as a leak detector for C or C++ programs 234 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
234 though that is not its primary goal. Empirically this collector 235</row>
235 works with most unmodified C programs simply by replacing malloc 236<row>
236 with GC_malloc calls replacing realloc with GC_realloc calls and 237 <entry>curl</entry>
237 removing free calls.</entry> 238 <entry>7.53.1</entry>
238 239 <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL transfers.</entry>
239 <entry>MIT</entry> 240 <entry>MIT</entry>
240 </row> 241</row>
241 242<row>
242 <row> 243 <entry>db</entry>
243 <entry>bind</entry> 244 <entry>5.3.28</entry>
244 245 <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry>
245 <entry>9.10.3-P3</entry> 246 <entry>Sleepycat</entry>
246 247</row>
247 <entry>ISC Internet Domain Name Server.</entry> 248<row>
248 249 <entry>dbus-glib</entry>
249 <entry>ISC, BSD</entry> 250 <entry>0.108</entry>
250 </row> 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>
251 252 <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
252 <row> 253</row>
253 <entry>binutils-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> 254<row>
254 255 <entry>dbus-test</entry>
255 <entry>2.28</entry> 256 <entry>1.10.14</entry>
256 257 <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing only).</entry>
257 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main 258 <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
258 ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also 259</row>
259 includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into 260<row>
260 filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and 261 <entry>dbus</entry>
261 extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy 262 <entry>1.10.14</entry>
262 (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object 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 information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> 264 <entry> AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
264 265</row>
265 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 266<row>
266 </row> 267 <entry>debianutils</entry>
267 268 <entry>4.8.1</entry>
268 <row> 269 <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry>
269 <entry>binutils-cross-x86_64</entry> 270 <entry> GPL-2.0</entry>
270 271</row>
271 <entry>2.28</entry> 272<row>
272 273 <entry>depmodwrapper</entry>
273 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main 274 <entry>1.0</entry>
274 ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also 275 <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency indexer.</entry>
275 includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into 276 <entry>MIT</entry>
276 filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and 277</row>
277 extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy 278<row>
278 (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object 279 <entry>dhcp</entry>
279 information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> 280 <entry>4.3.5</entry>
280 281 <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 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 282 <entry>ISC</entry>
282 </row> 283</row>
283 284<row>
284 <row> 285 <entry>diffutils</entry>
285 <entry>binutils-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</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>2.28</entry> 288 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
288 289</row>
289 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main 290<row>
290 ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also 291 <entry>dnsmasq</entry>
291 includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into 292 <entry>2.76</entry>
292 filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and 293 <entry>Lightweight easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP server.</entry>
293 extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy 294 <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
294 (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object 295</row>
295 information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> 296<row>
296 297 <entry>docbook-xml-dtd4</entry>
297 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 298 <entry>4.5</entry>
298 </row> 299 <entry>Document type definitions for verification of XML data files against the DocBook rule set it ships with the latest DocBook 4.5 XML DTD as well as a selected set of legacy DTDs for use with older documents including 4.0 4.1.2 4.2 4.3 and 4.4</entry>
299 300 <entry>OASIS</entry>
300 <row> 301</row>
301 <entry>binutils</entry> 302<row>
302 303 <entry>docbook-xsl-stylesheets</entry>
303 <entry>2.28</entry> 304 <entry>1.79.1</entry>
304 305 <entry>XSL stylesheets for processing DocBook XML to various output formats.</entry>
305 <entry>The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main 306 <entry>XSL</entry>
306 ones are ld (GNU Linker) and as (GNU Assembler). This package also 307</row>
307 includes addition tools such as addr2line (Converts addresses into 308<row>
308 filenames and line numbers) ar (utility for creating modifying and 309 <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry>
309 extracting archives) nm (list symbols in object files) objcopy 310 <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry>
310 (copy and translate object files) objdump (Display object 311 <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry>
311 information) and other tools and related libraries.</entry> 312 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
312 313</row>
313 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 314<row>
314 </row> 315 <entry>dpdk</entry>
315 316 <entry>17.08</entry>
316 <row> 317 <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry>
317 <entry>bison</entry> 318 <entry> BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
318 319</row>
319 <entry>3.0.4</entry> 320<row>
320 321 <entry>dpkg</entry>
321 <entry>Bison is a general-purpose parser generator that converts 322 <entry>1.18.10</entry>
322 an annotated context-free grammar into an LALR(1) or GLR parser 323 <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry>
323 for that grammar. Bison is upward compatible with Yacc: all 324 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
324 properly-written Yacc grammars ought to work with Bison with no 325</row>
325 change. Anyone familiar with Yacc should be able to use Bison with 326<row>
326 little trouble.</entry> 327 <entry>dtc</entry>
327 328 <entry>1.4.2</entry>
328 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 329 <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry>
329 </row> 330 <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry>
330 331</row>
331 <row> 332<row>
332 <entry>bjam</entry> 333 <entry>e2fsprogs</entry>
333 334 <entry>1.43.4</entry>
334 <entry>1.63.0</entry> 335 <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry>
335 336 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry>
336 <entry>Portable Boost.Jam build tool for boost.</entry> 337</row>
337 338<row>
338 <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> 339 <entry>ebtables</entry>
339 </row> 340 <entry>2.0.10-4</entry>
340 341 <entry>Utility for basic Ethernet frame filtering on a Linux bridge advanced logging MAC DNAT/SNAT and brouting.</entry>
341 <row> 342 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
342 <entry>bluez5</entry> 343</row>
343 344<row>
344 <entry>5.43</entry> 345 <entry>elfutils</entry>
345 346 <entry>0.168</entry>
346 <entry>Linux Bluetooth stack V5 userland components. These include 347 <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object files.</entry>
347 a system configurations daemons tools and system 348 <entry> GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry>
348 libraries.</entry> 349</row>
349 350<row>
350 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 351 <entry>enea-nfv-access-openstack</entry>
351 </row> 352 <entry>1.0</entry>
352 353 <entry>Image for the host side of the Enea NFV Access Platform that provides Oopenstack support</entry>
353 <row> 354 <entry>MIT</entry>
354 <entry>boost</entry> 355</row>
355 356<row>
356 <entry>1.63.0</entry> 357 <entry>expat</entry>
357 358 <entry>2.2.0</entry>
358 <entry>Free peer-reviewed portable C++ source libraries.</entry> 359 <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>
359 360 <entry>MIT</entry>
360 <entry>BSL-1.0, MIT</entry> 361</row>
361 </row> 362<row>
362 363 <entry>file</entry>
363 <row> 364 <entry>5.30</entry>
364 <entry>bridge-utils</entry> 365 <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents and prints a description if a match is found.</entry>
365 366 <entry>BSD</entry>
366 <entry>1.5</entry> 367</row>
367 368<row>
368 <entry>Tools for ethernet bridging.</entry> 369 <entry>flex</entry>
369 370 <entry>2.6.0</entry>
370 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 371 <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in text.</entry>
371 </row> 372 <entry>BSD</entry>
372 373</row>
373 <row> 374<row>
374 <entry>busybox</entry> 375 <entry>fontconfig</entry>
375 376 <entry>2.12.1</entry>
376 <entry>1.24.1</entry> 377 <entry>Fontconfig is a font configuration and customization library which does not depend on the X Window System. It is designed to locate fonts within the system and select them according to requirements specified by applications. Fontconfig is not a rasterization library nor does it impose a particular rasterization library on the application. The X-specific library 'Xft' uses fontconfig along with freetype to specify and rasterize fonts.</entry>
377 378 <entry> MIT, PD</entry>
378 <entry>BusyBox combines tiny versions of many common UNIX 379</row>
379 utilities into a single small executable. It provides minimalist 380<row>
380 replacements for most of the utilities you usually find in GNU 381 <entry>freetype</entry>
381 fileutils shellutils etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally have 382 <entry>2.7.1</entry>
382 fewer options than their full-featured GNU cousins; however the 383 <entry>FreeType is a software font engine that is designed to be small efficient highly customizable and portable while capable of producing high-quality output (glyph images). It can be used in graphics libraries display servers font conversion tools text image generation tools and many other products as well.</entry>
383 options that are included provide the expected functionality and 384 <entry> FreeType, GPL-2.0</entry>
384 behave very much like their GNU counterparts. BusyBox provides a 385</row>
385 fairly complete POSIX environment for any small or embedded 386<row>
386 system.</entry> 387 <entry>fuse</entry>
387 388 <entry>2.9.4</entry>
388 <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD-4-Clause</entry> 389 <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>
389 </row> 390 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
390 391</row>
391 <row> 392<row>
392 <entry>bzip2</entry> 393 <entry>gawk</entry>
393 394 <entry>4.1.4</entry>
394 <entry>1.0.6</entry> 395 <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>
395 396 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
396 <entry>bzip2 compresses files using the Burrows-Wheeler 397</row>
397 block-sorting text compression algorithm and Huffman coding. 398<row>
398 Compression is generally considerably better than that achieved by 399 <entry>gcc-cross-aarch64</entry>
399 more conventional LZ77/LZ78-based compressors and approaches the 400 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
400 performance of the PPM family of statistical compressors.</entry> 401 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
401 402 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
402 <entry>BSD-4-Clause</entry> 403</row>
403 </row> 404<row>
404 405 <entry>gcc-cross-initial-aarch64</entry>
405 <row> 406 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
406 <entry>ca-certificates</entry> 407 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
407 408 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
408 <entry>20161130</entry> 409</row>
409 410<row>
410 <entry>This package includes PEM files of CA certificates to allow 411 <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry>
411 SSL-based applications to check for the authenticity of SSL 412 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
412 connections. This derived from Debian's CA Certificates.</entry> 413 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
413 414 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
414 <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0</entry> 415</row>
415 </row> 416<row>
416 417 <entry>gcc</entry>
417 <row> 418 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
418 <entry>cairo</entry> 419 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
419 420 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
420 <entry>1.14.8</entry> 421</row>
421 422<row>
422 <entry>Cairo is a multi-platform library providing anti-aliased 423 <entry>gdb</entry>
423 vector-based rendering for multiple target backends. Paths consist 424 <entry>7.12.1</entry>
424 of line segments and cubic splines and can be rendered at any 425 <entry>GNU debugger.</entry>
425 width with various join and cap styles. All colors may be 426 <entry> GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
426 specified with optional translucence (opacity/alpha) and combined 427</row>
427 using the extended Porter/Duff compositing algebra as found in the 428<row>
428 X Render Extension.</entry> 429 <entry>gdbm</entry>
429 430 <entry>1.12</entry>
430 <entry>MPL-1.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry> 431 <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry>
431 </row> 432 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
432 433</row>
433 <row> 434<row>
434 <entry>cdrtools</entry> 435 <entry>gettext-minimal</entry>
435 436 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry>
436 <entry>3.01a31</entry> 437 <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>
437 438 <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry>
438 <entry>A set of tools for CD recording including cdrecord.</entry> 439</row>
439 440<row>
440 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 441 <entry>gettext</entry>
441 </row> 442 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry>
442 443 <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>
443 <row> 444 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
444 <entry>chrpath</entry> 445</row>
445 446<row>
446 <entry>0.16</entry> 447 <entry>glib-2.0</entry>
447 448 <entry>2.50.3</entry>
448 <entry>chrpath allows you to change the rpath (where the 449 <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>
449 application looks for libraries) in an application. It does not 450 <entry> LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry>
450 (yet) allow you to add an rpath if there isn't one 451</row>
451 already.</entry> 452<row>
452 453 <entry>glibc-locale</entry>
453 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 454 <entry>2.25</entry>
454 </row> 455 <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry>
455 456 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
456 <row> 457</row>
457 <entry>cloud-init</entry> 458<row>
458 459 <entry>glibc-mtrace</entry>
459 <entry>0.7.6</entry> 460 <entry>2.25</entry>
460 461 <entry>mtrace utility provided by glibc</entry>
461 <entry>Init scripts for use on cloud images</entry> 462 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
462 463</row>
463 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 464<row>
464 </row> 465 <entry>glibc</entry>
465 466 <entry>2.25</entry>
466 <row> 467 <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most systems with the Linux kernel.</entry>
467 <entry>cmake</entry> 468 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
468 469</row>
469 <entry>3.7.2</entry> 470<row>
470 471 <entry>gmp</entry>
471 <entry>Cross-platform open-source make system.</entry> 472 <entry>6.1.2</entry>
472 473 <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point numbers</entry>
473 <entry>BSD</entry> 474 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
474 </row> 475</row>
475 476<row>
476 <row> 477 <entry>gnome-common</entry>
477 <entry>coreutils</entry> 478 <entry>3.18.0</entry>
478 479 <entry>Common macros for building GNOME applications.</entry>
479 <entry>8.26</entry> 480 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
480 481</row>
481 <entry>The GNU Core Utilities provide the basic file shell and 482<row>
482 text manipulation utilities. These are the core utilities which 483 <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry>
483 are expected to exist on every system.</entry> 484 <entry>2014.1</entry>
484 485 <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry>
485 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 486 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
486 </row> 487</row>
487 488<row>
488 <row> 489 <entry>gnu-config</entry>
489 <entry>cracklib</entry> 490 <entry>20150728</entry>
490 491 <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a directory tree</entry>
491 <entry>2.9.5</entry> 492 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-autoconf-exception</entry>
492 493</row>
493 <entry>Password strength checker library.</entry> 494<row>
494 495 <entry>gnutls</entry>
495 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 496 <entry>3.5.9</entry>
496 </row> 497 <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry>
497 498 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
498 <row> 499</row>
499 <entry>cronie</entry> 500<row>
500 501 <entry>gobject-introspection</entry>
501 <entry>1.5.1</entry> 502 <entry>1.50.0</entry>
502 503 <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and language bindings.</entry>
503 <entry>Cronie contains the standard UNIX daemon crond that runs 504 <entry> LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
504 specified programs at scheduled times and related tools. It is 505</row>
505 based on the original cron and has security and configuration 506<row>
506 enhancements like the ability to use pam and SELinux.</entry> 507 <entry>gperf</entry>
507 508 <entry>3.0.4</entry>
508 <entry>ISC, BSD-3-Clause, BSD-2-Clause, GPL-2.0</entry> 509 <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry>
509 </row> 510 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
510 511</row>
511 <row> 512<row>
512 <entry>cross-localedef</entry> 513 <entry>grep</entry>
513 514 <entry>3.0</entry>
514 <entry>2.25</entry> 515 <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry>
515 516 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
516 <entry>Cross locale generation tool for glibc.</entry> 517</row>
517 518<row>
518 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 519 <entry>gtk-doc</entry>
519 </row> 520 <entry>1.25</entry>
520 521 <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>
521 <row> 522 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
522 <entry>cryptodev-linux</entry> 523</row>
523 524<row>
524 <entry>1.8</entry> 525 <entry>gzip</entry>
525 526 <entry>1.8</entry>
526 <entry>A /dev/crypto device driver header file.</entry> 527 <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>
527 528 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
528 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 529</row>
529 </row> 530<row>
530 531 <entry>icu</entry>
531 <row> 532 <entry>58.2</entry>
532 <entry>curl</entry> 533 <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>
533 534 <entry>ICU</entry>
534 <entry>7.53.1</entry> 535</row>
535 536<row>
536 <entry>Command line tool and library for client-side URL 537 <entry>initscripts</entry>
537 transfers.</entry> 538 <entry>1.0</entry>
538 539 <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>
539 <entry>MIT</entry> 540 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
540 </row> 541</row>
541 542<row>
542 <row> 543 <entry>inputproto</entry>
543 <entry>db</entry> 544 <entry>2.3.2</entry>
544 545 <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>
545 <entry>5.3.28</entry> 546 <entry> MIT</entry>
546 547</row>
547 <entry>Berkeley Database v5.</entry> 548<row>
548 549 <entry>intltool</entry>
549 <entry>Sleepycat</entry> 550 <entry>0.51.0</entry>
550 </row> 551 <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry>
551 552 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
552 <row> 553</row>
553 <entry>dbus-glib</entry> 554<row>
554 555 <entry>iproute2</entry>
555 <entry>0.108</entry> 556 <entry>4.10.0</entry>
556 557 <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>
557 <entry>GLib bindings for the D-Bus message bus that integrate the 558 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
558 D-Bus library with the GLib thread abstraction and main 559</row>
559 loop.</entry> 560<row>
560 561 <entry>iptables</entry>
561 <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 562 <entry>1.6.1</entry>
562 </row> 563 <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to configure and control network packet filtering code in Linux.</entry>
563 564 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
564 <row> 565</row>
565 <entry>dbus-test</entry> 566<row>
566 567 <entry>iputils</entry>
567 <entry>1.10.14</entry> 568 <entry>s20151218</entry>
568 569 <entry>Utilities for the IP protocol including traceroute6 tracepath tracepath6 ping ping6 and arping.</entry>
569 <entry>D-Bus test package (for D-bus functionality testing 570 <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0</entry>
570 only).</entry> 571</row>
571 572<row>
572 <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 573 <entry>json-c</entry>
573 </row> 574 <entry>0.12</entry>
574 575 <entry>JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that allows you to easily construct JSON objects in C.</entry>
575 <row> 576 <entry>MIT</entry>
576 <entry>dbus</entry> 577</row>
577 578<row>
578 <entry>1.10.14</entry> 579 <entry>kbd</entry>
579 580 <entry>2.0.4</entry>
580 <entry>"D-Bus is a message bus system a simple way for 581 <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry>
581 applications to talk to one another. In addition to interprocess 582 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
582 communication D-Bus helps coordinate process lifecycle; it makes 583</row>
583 it simple and reliable to code a \""single instance\"" application 584<row>
584 or daemon and to launch applications and daemons on demand when 585 <entry>kbproto</entry>
585 their services are needed."</entry> 586 <entry>1.0.7</entry>
586 587 <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>
587 <entry>AFL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 588 <entry>MIT</entry>
588 </row> 589</row>
589 590<row>
590 <row> 591 <entry>kern-tools</entry>
591 <entry>debianutils</entry> 592 <entry>0.2</entry>
592 593 <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched kernels.</entry>
593 <entry>4.8.1</entry> 594 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
594 595</row>
595 <entry>Miscellaneous utilities specific to Debian.</entry> 596<row>
596 597 <entry>kmod</entry>
597 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 598 <entry>23</entry>
598 </row> 599 <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>
599 600 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
600 <row> 601</row>
601 <entry>depmodwrapper</entry> 602<row>
602 603 <entry>ldconfig</entry>
603 <entry>1.0</entry> 604 <entry>2.12.1</entry>
604 605 <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry>
605 <entry>Wrapper script for the Linux kernel module dependency 606 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
606 indexer.</entry> 607</row>
607 608<row>
608 <entry>MIT</entry> 609 <entry>libaio</entry>
609 </row> 610 <entry>0.3.110</entry>
610 611 <entry>Asynchronous input/output library that uses the kernels native interface</entry>
611 <row> 612 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
612 <entry>dhcp</entry> 613</row>
613 614<row>
614 <entry>4.3.5</entry> 615 <entry>libarchive</entry>
615 616 <entry>3.2.2</entry>
616 <entry>DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) is a protocol 617 <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry>
617 which allows individual devices on an IP network to get their own 618 <entry>BSD</entry>
618 network configuration information from a server. DHCP helps make 619</row>
619 it easier to administer devices.</entry> 620<row>
620 621 <entry>libbsd</entry>
621 <entry>ISC</entry> 622 <entry>0.8.3</entry>
622 </row> 623 <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>
623 624 <entry> BSD-4-Clause, ISC, PD</entry>
624 <row> 625</row>
625 <entry>diffutils</entry> 626<row>
626 627 <entry>libcap</entry>
627 <entry>3.5</entry> 628 <entry>2.25</entry>
628 629 <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry>
629 <entry>Diffutils contains the GNU diff diff3 sdiff and cmp 630 <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0</entry>
630 utilities. These programs are usually used for creating patch 631</row>
631 files.</entry> 632<row>
632 633 <entry>libcgroup</entry>
633 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 634 <entry>0.41</entry>
634 </row> 635 <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>
635 636 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
636 <row> 637</row>
637 <entry>dmidecode</entry> 638<row>
638 639 <entry>libcheck</entry>
639 <entry>3.0</entry> 640 <entry>0.10.0</entry>
640 641 <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry>
641 <entry>DMI (Desktop Management Interface) table related 642 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
642 utilities.</entry> 643</row>
643 644<row>
644 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 645 <entry>libconfig-general-perl</entry>
645 </row> 646 <entry>2.63</entry>
646 647 <entry>Config file parser module</entry>
647 <row> 648 <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
648 <entry>dnf</entry> 649</row>
649 650<row>
650 <entry>2.0.0</entry> 651 <entry>libdaemon</entry>
651 652 <entry>0.14</entry>
652 <entry>Package manager forked from Yum using libsolv as a 653 <entry>Lightweight C library which eases the writing of UNIX daemons.</entry>
653 dependency resolver.</entry> 654 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
654 655</row>
655 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 656<row>
656 </row> 657 <entry>libdevmapper</entry>
657 658 <entry>2.02.166</entry>
658 <row> 659 <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in Linux.</entry>
659 <entry>dnsmasq</entry> 660 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
660 661</row>
661 <entry>2.76</entry> 662<row>
662 663 <entry>libevent</entry>
663 <entry>Lightweight easy to configure DNS forwarder and DHCP 664 <entry>2.0.22</entry>
664 server.</entry> 665 <entry>An asynchronous event notification library.</entry>
665 666 <entry>BSD</entry>
666 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0</entry> 667</row>
667 </row> 668<row>
668 669 <entry>libffi</entry>
669 <row> 670 <entry>3.2.1</entry>
670 <entry>docbook-xml-dtd4</entry> 671 <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>
671 672 <entry>MIT</entry>
672 <entry>4.5</entry> 673</row>
673 674<row>
674 <entry>Document type definitions for verification of XML data 675 <entry>libgcc</entry>
675 files against the DocBook rule set it ships with the latest 676 <entry>6.3.0</entry>
676 DocBook 4.5 XML DTD as well as a selected set of legacy DTDs for 677 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry>
677 use with older documents including 4.0 4.1.2 4.2 4.3 and 678 <entry> GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry>
678 4.4</entry> 679</row>
679 680<row>
680 <entry>OASIS</entry> 681 <entry>libgcrypt</entry>
681 </row> 682 <entry>1.7.6</entry>
682 683 <entry>General purpose cryptographic library based on the code from GnuPG.</entry>
683 <row> 684 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry>
684 <entry>docbook-xsl-stylesheets</entry> 685</row>
685 686<row>
686 <entry>1.79.1</entry> 687 <entry>libgpg-error</entry>
687 688 <entry>1.26</entry>
688 <entry>XSL stylesheets for processing DocBook XML to various 689 <entry>Small library that defines common error values for all GnuPG components.</entry>
689 output formats.</entry> 690 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
690 691</row>
691 <entry>XSL</entry> 692<row>
692 </row> 693 <entry>libical</entry>
693 694 <entry>2.0.0</entry>
694 <row> 695 <entry>iCal and scheduling (RFC 2445 2446 2447) library.</entry>
695 <entry>dosfstools</entry> 696 <entry> LGPL-2.1, MPL-1.0</entry>
696 697</row>
697 <entry>4.1</entry> 698<row>
698 699 <entry>libice</entry>
699 <entry>DOS FAT Filesystem Utilities.</entry> 700 <entry>1.0.9</entry>
700 701 <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>
701 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 702 <entry>MIT</entry>
702 </row> 703</row>
703 704<row>
704 <row> 705 <entry>libidn</entry>
705 <entry>dpdk-dev-libibverbs</entry> 706 <entry>1.33</entry>
706 707 <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) working group.</entry>
707 <entry>1.2.1-3.4-2.0.0.0</entry> 708 <entry> LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry>
708 709</row>
709 <entry>libibverbs library to support Mellanox config</entry> 710<row>
710 711 <entry>libmpc</entry>
711 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 712 <entry>1.0.3</entry>
712 </row> 713 <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>
713 714 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
714 <row> 715</row>
715 <entry>dpdk</entry> 716<row>
716 717 <entry>libnfsidmap</entry>
717 <entry>17.08</entry> 718 <entry>0.25</entry>
718 719 <entry>NFS id mapping library.</entry>
719 <entry>Intel(r) Data Plane Development Kit</entry> 720 <entry>BSD</entry>
720 721</row>
721 <entry>BSD, LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 722<row>
722 </row> 723 <entry>libnl</entry>
723 724 <entry>3.2.29</entry>
724 <row> 725 <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink sockets.</entry>
725 <entry>dpkg</entry> 726 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
726 727</row>
727 <entry>1.18.10</entry> 728<row>
728 729 <entry>libnss-mdns</entry>
729 <entry>Package maintenance system from Debian.</entry> 730 <entry>0.10</entry>
730 731 <entry>Name Service Switch module for Multicast DNS (zeroconf) name resolution.</entry>
731 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 732 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
732 </row> 733</row>
733 734<row>
734 <row> 735 <entry>libpam</entry>
735 <entry>dtc</entry> 736 <entry>1.3.0</entry>
736 737 <entry>Linux-PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules for Linux) a flexible mechanism for authenticating users</entry>
737 <entry>1.4.2</entry> 738 <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry>
738 739</row>
739 <entry>The Device Tree Compiler is a tool used to manipulate the 740<row>
740 Open-Firmware-like device tree used by PowerPC kernels.</entry> 741 <entry>libpcap</entry>
741 742 <entry>1.8.1</entry>
742 <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> 743 <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection security monitoring and network debugging.</entry>
743 </row> 744 <entry>BSD</entry>
744 745</row>
745 <row> 746<row>
746 <entry>e2fsprogs</entry> 747 <entry>libpciaccess</entry>
747 748 <entry>0.13.4</entry>
748 <entry>1.43.4</entry> 749 <entry>libpciaccess provides functionality for X to access the PCI bus and devices in a platform-independent way.</entry>
749 750 <entry> MIT</entry>
750 <entry>The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain all of 751</row>
751 the standard utilities for creating fixing configuring and 752<row>
752 debugging ext2 filesystems.</entry> 753 <entry>libpcre</entry>
753 754 <entry>8.40</entry>
754 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0, BSD, MIT</entry> 755 <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>
755 </row> 756 <entry>BSD</entry>
756 757</row>
757 <row> 758<row>
758 <entry>ebtables</entry> 759 <entry>libpng</entry>
759 760 <entry>1.6.28</entry>
760 <entry>2.0.10-4</entry> 761 <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry>
761 762 <entry>Libpng</entry>
762 <entry>Utility for basic Ethernet frame filtering on a Linux 763</row>
763 bridge advanced logging MAC DNAT/SNAT and brouting.</entry> 764<row>
764 765 <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry>
765 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 766 <entry>0.3</entry>
766 </row> 767 <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry>
767 768 <entry>MIT</entry>
768 <row> 769</row>
769 <entry>elfutils</entry> 770<row>
770 771 <entry>libsdl</entry>
771 <entry>0.168</entry> 772 <entry>1.2.15</entry>
772 773 <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>
773 <entry>Utilities and libraries for handling compiled object 774 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
774 files.</entry> 775</row>
775 776<row>
776 <entry>GPL-3.0, Elfutils-Exception</entry> 777 <entry>libsm</entry>
777 </row> 778 <entry>1.2.2</entry>
778 779 <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>
779 <row> 780 <entry>MIT</entry>
780 <entry>enea-nfv-access-openstack</entry> 781</row>
781 782<row>
782 <entry>1.0</entry> 783 <entry>libtasn1</entry>
783 784 <entry>4.10</entry>
784 <entry>Image for the host side of Enea NFV Access that provides 785 <entry>Library for ASN.1 and DER manipulation.</entry>
785 Openstack support</entry> 786 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
786 787</row>
787 <entry>MIT</entry> 788<row>
788 </row> 789 <entry>libtirpc</entry>
789 790 <entry>1.0.1</entry>
790 <row> 791 <entry>Libtirpc is a port of Suns Transport-Independent RPC library to Linux</entry>
791 <entry>expat</entry> 792 <entry>BSD</entry>
792 793</row>
793 <entry>2.2.0</entry> 794<row>
794 795 <entry>libtool</entry>
795 <entry>Expat is an XML parser library written in C. It is a 796 <entry>2.4.6</entry>
796 stream-oriented parser in which an application registers handlers 797 <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>
797 for things the parser might find in the XML document (like start 798 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
798 tags)</entry> 799</row>
799 800<row>
800 <entry>MIT</entry> 801 <entry>libunistring</entry>
801 </row> 802 <entry>0.9.7</entry>
802 803 <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>
803 <row> 804 <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
804 <entry>file</entry> 805</row>
805 806<row>
806 <entry>5.30</entry> 807 <entry>libusb-compat</entry>
807 808 <entry>0.1.5</entry>
808 <entry>File attempts to classify files depending on their contents 809 <entry>libusb-0.1 compatible layer for libusb1 a drop-in replacement that aims to look feel and behave exactly like libusb-0.1</entry>
809 and prints a description if a match is found.</entry> 810 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
810 811</row>
811 <entry>BSD</entry> 812<row>
812 </row> 813 <entry>libusb1</entry>
813 814 <entry>1.0.21</entry>
814 <row> 815 <entry>Userspace library to access USB (version 1.0).</entry>
815 <entry>flex</entry> 816 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
816 817</row>
817 <entry>2.6.0</entry> 818<row>
818 819 <entry>libvirt</entry>
819 <entry>Flex is a fast lexical analyser generator. Flex is a tool 820 <entry>1.3.5</entry>
820 for generating programs that recognize lexical patterns in 821 <entry>A toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities of recent versions of Linux.</entry>
821 text.</entry> 822 <entry> LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry>
822 823</row>
823 <entry>BSD</entry> 824<row>
824 </row> 825 <entry>libx11</entry>
825 826 <entry>1.6.4</entry>
826 <row> 827 <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>
827 <entry>fontconfig</entry> 828 <entry> MIT, BSD</entry>
828 829</row>
829 <entry>2.12.1</entry> 830<row>
830 831 <entry>libxau</entry>
831 <entry>Fontconfig is a font configuration and customization 832 <entry>1.0.8</entry>
832 library which does not depend on the X Window System. It is 833 <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X connections both client-side and server-side.</entry>
833 designed to locate fonts within the system and select them 834 <entry>MIT</entry>
834 according to requirements specified by applications. Fontconfig is 835</row>
835 not a rasterization library nor does it impose a particular 836<row>
836 rasterization library on the application. The X-specific library 837 <entry>libxaw</entry>
837 'Xft' uses fontconfig along with freetype to specify and rasterize 838 <entry>1.0.13</entry>
838 fonts.</entry> 839 <entry>X Athena Widget Set.</entry>
839 840 <entry>MIT</entry>
840 <entry>MIT, PD</entry> 841</row>
841 </row> 842<row>
842 843 <entry>libxcb</entry>
843 <row> 844 <entry>1.12</entry>
844 <entry>freetype</entry> 845 <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading support and extensibility.</entry>
845 846 <entry>MIT</entry>
846 <entry>2.7.1</entry> 847</row>
847 848<row>
848 <entry>FreeType is a software font engine that is designed to be 849 <entry>libxdmcp</entry>
849 small efficient highly customizable and portable while capable of 850 <entry>1.1.2</entry>
850 producing high-quality output (glyph images). It can be used in 851 <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>
851 graphics libraries display servers font conversion tools text 852 <entry>MIT</entry>
852 image generation tools and many other products as well.</entry> 853</row>
853 854<row>
854 <entry>FreeType, GPL-2.0</entry> 855 <entry>libxext</entry>
855 </row> 856 <entry>1.3.3</entry>
856 857 <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>
857 <row> 858 <entry>MIT</entry>
858 <entry>fuse</entry> 859</row>
859 860<row>
860 <entry>2.9.4</entry> 861 <entry>libxinerama</entry>
861 862 <entry>1.1.3</entry>
862 <entry>FUSE (Filesystem in Userspace) is a simple interface for 863 <entry>Xinerama is a simple library designed to interface the Xinerama Extension for retrieving information about physical output devices which may be combined into a single logical X screen.</entry>
863 userspace programs to export a virtual filesystem to the Linux 864 <entry>MIT</entry>
864 kernel. FUSE also aims to provide a secure method for non 865</row>
865 privileged users to create and mount their own filesystem 866<row>
866 implementations.</entry> 867 <entry>libxkbcommon</entry>
867 868 <entry>0.7.1</entry>
868 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> 869 <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB specification.</entry>
869 </row> 870 <entry> MIT</entry>
870 871</row>
871 <row> 872<row>
872 <entry>gawk</entry> 873 <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry>
873 874 <entry>2.44</entry>
874 <entry>4.1.4</entry> 875 <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML documents.</entry>
875 876 <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
876 <entry>The GNU version of awk a text processing utility. Awk 877</row>
877 interprets a special-purpose programming language to do quick and 878<row>
878 easy text pattern matching and reformatting jobs.</entry> 879 <entry>libxml2</entry>
879 880 <entry>2.9.4</entry>
880 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 881 <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>
881 </row> 882 <entry>MIT</entry>
882 883</row>
883 <row> 884<row>
884 <entry>gcc-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> 885 <entry>libxmu</entry>
885 886 <entry>1.1.2</entry>
886 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 887 <entry>The Xmu Library is a collection of miscellaneous (some might say random) utility functions that have been useful in building various applications and widgets. This library is required by the Athena Widgets. A subset of the functions that do not rely on the Athena Widgets (libXaw) or X Toolkit Instrinsics (libXt) are provided in a second library libXmuu.</entry>
887 888 <entry> MIT</entry>
888 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers (cross-canadian for x86_64 889</row>
889 target).</entry> 890<row>
890 891 <entry>libxpm</entry>
891 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 892 <entry>3.5.12</entry>
892 </row> 893 <entry>libXpm provides support and common operation for the XPM pixmap format which is commonly used in legacy X applications. XPM is an extension of the monochrome XBM bitmap specificied in the X protocol.</entry>
893 894 <entry>BSD</entry>
894 <row> 895</row>
895 <entry>gcc-cross-initial-x86_64</entry> 896<row>
896 897 <entry>libxrandr</entry>
897 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 898 <entry>1.5.1</entry>
898 899 <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>
899 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 900 <entry>MIT</entry>
900 901</row>
901 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 902<row>
902 </row> 903 <entry>libxrender</entry>
903 904 <entry>0.9.10</entry>
904 <row> 905 <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>
905 <entry>gcc-cross-x86_64</entry> 906 <entry>MIT</entry>
906 907</row>
907 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 908<row>
908 909 <entry>libxslt</entry>
909 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 910 <entry>1.1.29</entry>
910 911 <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry>
911 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 912 <entry>MIT</entry>
912 </row> 913</row>
913 914<row>
914 <row> 915 <entry>libxt</entry>
915 <entry>gcc-crosssdk-initial-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> 916 <entry>1.1.5</entry>
916 917 <entry>The Intrinsics are a programming library tailored to the special requirements of user interface construction within a network window system specifically the X Window System. The Intrinsics and a widget set make up an X Toolkit. The Intrinsics provide the base mechanism necessary to build a wide variety of interoperating widget sets and application environments. The Intrinsics are a layer on top of Xlib the C Library X Interface. They extend the fundamental abstractions provided by the X Window System while still remaining independent of any particular user interface policy or style.</entry>
917 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 918 <entry> MIT</entry>
918 919</row>
919 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 920<row>
920 921 <entry>libyaml</entry>
921 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 922 <entry>0.1.7</entry>
922 </row> 923 <entry>LibYAML is a C library for parsing and emitting data in YAML 1.1 a human-readable data serialization format. </entry>
923 924 <entry>MIT</entry>
924 <row> 925</row>
925 <entry>gcc-crosssdk-x86_64-eneasdk-linux</entry> 926<row>
926 927 <entry>linux-cavium</entry>
927 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 928 <entry>4.9-octeontx.sdk.6.1.0.p3.build.22</entry>
928 929 <entry>Linux kernel.</entry>
929 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 930 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
930 931</row>
931 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 932<row>
932 </row> 933 <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry>
933 934 <entry>4.10</entry>
934 <row> 935 <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's use.</entry>
935 <entry>gcc-source-6.3.0</entry> 936 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
936 937</row>
937 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 938<row>
938 939 <entry>lsb</entry>
939 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 940 <entry>4.1</entry>
940 941 <entry>LSB support for OpenEmbedded.</entry>
941 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 942 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
942 </row> 943</row>
943 944<row>
944 <row> 945 <entry>lsbinitscripts</entry>
945 <entry>gcc</entry> 946 <entry>9.68</entry>
946 947 <entry>SysV init scripts which are only used in an LSB image.</entry>
947 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 948 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
948 949</row>
949 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 950<row>
950 951 <entry>lvm2</entry>
951 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 952 <entry>2.02.166</entry>
952 </row> 953 <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in Linux.</entry>
953 954 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
954 <row> 955</row>
955 <entry>gdb-cross-canadian-x86-64</entry> 956<row>
956 957 <entry>lxc</entry>
957 <entry>7.12.1</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>GNU debugger (cross-canadian gdb for x86_64 960 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
960 target).</entry> 961</row>
961 962<row>
962 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> 963 <entry>lzo</entry>
963 </row> 964 <entry>2.09</entry>
964 965 <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry>
965 <row> 966 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
966 <entry>gdb</entry> 967</row>
967 968<row>
968 <entry>7.12.1</entry> 969 <entry>lzop</entry>
969 970 <entry>1.03</entry>
970 <entry>GNU debugger.</entry> 971 <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>
971 972 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
972 <entry>GPL-2.0, GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> 973</row>
973 </row> 974<row>
974 975 <entry>m4</entry>
975 <row> 976 <entry>1.4.18</entry>
976 <entry>gdbm</entry> 977 <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>
977 978 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
978 <entry>1.12</entry> 979</row>
979 980<row>
980 <entry>Key/value database library with extensible hashing.</entry> 981 <entry>make</entry>
981 982 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
982 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 983 <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>
983 </row> 984 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
984 985</row>
985 <row> 986<row>
986 <entry>gettext-minimal</entry> 987 <entry>makedepend</entry>
987 988 <entry>1.0.5</entry>
988 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> 989 <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>
989 990 <entry>MIT</entry>
990 <entry>Contains the m4 macros sufficient to support building 991</row>
991 autoconf/automake. This provides a significant build time speedup 992<row>
992 by the removal of gettext-native from most dependency chains (now 993 <entry>makedevs</entry>
993 only needed for gettext for the target).</entry> 994 <entry>1.0.1</entry>
994 995 <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry>
995 <entry>FSF-Unlimited</entry> 996 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
996 </row> 997</row>
997 998<row>
998 <row> 999 <entry>mklibs</entry>
999 <entry>gettext</entry> 1000 <entry>0.1.43</entry>
1000 1001 <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry>
1001 <entry>0.19.8.1</entry> 1002 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1002 1003</row>
1003 <entry>GNU gettext is a set of tools that provides a framework to 1004<row>
1004 help other programs produce multi-lingual messages. These tools 1005 <entry>mpfr</entry>
1005 include a set of conventions about how programs should be written 1006 <entry>3.1.5</entry>
1006 to support message catalogs a directory and file naming 1007 <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point computations with exact rounding.</entry>
1007 organization for the message catalogs themselves a runtime library 1008 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
1008 supporting the retrieval of translated messages and a few 1009</row>
1009 stand-alone programs to massage in various ways the sets of 1010<row>
1010 translatable and already translated strings.</entry> 1011 <entry>ncurses</entry>
1011 1012 <entry>6.0</entry>
1012 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1013 <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>
1013 </row> 1014 <entry>MIT</entry>
1014 1015</row>
1015 <row> 1016<row>
1016 <entry>glib-2.0</entry> 1017 <entry>netbase</entry>
1017 1018 <entry>5.4</entry>
1018 <entry>2.50.3</entry> 1019 <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for basic TCP/IP based networking</entry>
1019 1020 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1020 <entry>GLib is a general-purpose utility library which provides 1021</row>
1021 many useful data types macros type conversions string utilities 1022<row>
1022 file utilities a main loop abstraction and so on.</entry> 1023 <entry>netcat-openbsd</entry>
1023 1024 <entry>1.105</entry>
1024 <entry>LGPL-2.0, BSD, PD</entry> 1025 <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>
1025 </row> 1026 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1026 1027</row>
1027 <row> 1028<row>
1028 <entry>glibc-locale</entry> 1029 <entry>nettle</entry>
1029 1030 <entry>3.3</entry>
1030 <entry>2.25</entry> 1031 <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry>
1031 1032 <entry> LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry>
1032 <entry>Locale data from glibc.</entry> 1033</row>
1033 1034<row>
1034 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1035 <entry>nfs-utils</entry>
1035 </row> 1036 <entry>1.3.4</entry>
1036 1037 <entry>The nfs-utils package provides a daemon for the kernel NFS server and related tools.</entry>
1037 <row> 1038 <entry> MIT, GPL-2.0, BSD</entry>
1038 <entry>glibc-mtrace</entry> 1039</row>
1039 1040<row>
1040 <entry>2.25</entry> 1041 <entry>nspr</entry>
1041 1042 <entry>4.13.1</entry>
1042 <entry>mtrace utility provided by glibc</entry> 1043 <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry>
1043 1044 <entry> GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1044 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1045</row>
1045 </row> 1046<row>
1046 1047 <entry>nss</entry>
1047 <row> 1048 <entry>3.28.1</entry>
1048 <entry>glibc</entry> 1049 <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>
1049 1050 <entry> MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1050 <entry>2.25</entry> 1051</row>
1051 1052<row>
1052 <entry>The GNU C Library is used as the system C library in most 1053 <entry>numactl</entry>
1053 systems with the Linux kernel.</entry> 1054 <entry>2.0.11</entry>
1054 1055 <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>
1055 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1056 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1056 </row> 1057</row>
1057 1058<row>
1058 <row> 1059 <entry>openssh</entry>
1059 <entry>gmp</entry> 1060 <entry>7.4p1</entry>
1060 1061 <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>
1061 <entry>6.1.2</entry> 1062 <entry>BSD</entry>
1062 1063</row>
1063 <entry>GMP is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic 1064<row>
1064 operating on signed integers rational numbers and floating point 1065 <entry>openssl</entry>
1065 numbers</entry> 1066 <entry>1.0.2k</entry>
1066 1067 <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic tools.</entry>
1067 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> 1068 <entry>OpenSSL</entry>
1068 </row> 1069</row>
1069 1070<row>
1070 <row> 1071 <entry>openvswitch</entry>
1071 <entry>gnome-common</entry> 1072 <entry>2.8.1</entry>
1072 1073 <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>
1073 <entry>3.18.0</entry> 1074 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1074 1075</row>
1075 <entry>Common macros for building GNOME applications.</entry> 1076<row>
1076 1077 <entry>opkg-utils</entry>
1077 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1078 <entry>0.3.4</entry>
1078 </row> 1079 <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry>
1079 1080 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1080 <row> 1081</row>
1081 <entry>gnome-desktop-testing</entry> 1082<row>
1082 1083 <entry>os-release</entry>
1083 <entry>2014.1</entry> 1084 <entry>1.0</entry>
1084 1085 <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system identification data.</entry>
1085 <entry>Test runner for GNOME-style installed tests.</entry> 1086 <entry>MIT</entry>
1086 1087</row>
1087 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry> 1088<row>
1088 </row> 1089 <entry>ossp-uuid</entry>
1089 1090 <entry>1.6.2</entry>
1090 <row> 1091 <entry>OSSP uuid is a ISO-C:1999 application programming interface (API) and corresponding command line interface (CLI) for the generation of DCE 1.1 ISO/IEC 11578:1996 and RFC 4122 compliant Universally Unique Identifier (UUID). It supports DCE 1.1 variant UUIDs of version 1 (time and node based) version 3 (name based MD5) version 4 (random number based) and version 5 (name based SHA-1).</entry>
1091 <entry>gnu-config</entry> 1092 <entry>MIT</entry>
1092 1093</row>
1093 <entry>20150728</entry> 1094<row>
1094 1095 <entry>packagegroup-cloud-compute</entry>
1095 <entry>Tool that installs the GNU config.guess / config.sub into a 1096 <entry>1.0</entry>
1096 directory tree</entry> 1097 <entry>Configuration for OpenStack Compute node.</entry>
1097 1098 <entry>MIT</entry>
1098 <entry>GPLv2</entry> 1099</row>
1099 </row> 1100<row>
1100 1101 <entry>packagegroup-cloud-debug</entry>
1101 <row> 1102 <entry>1.0</entry>
1102 <entry>gnutls</entry> 1103 <entry>Add debugging capabilities to cloud images.</entry>
1103 1104 <entry>MIT</entry>
1104 <entry>3.5.9</entry> 1105</row>
1105 1106<row>
1106 <entry>GNU Transport Layer Security Library.</entry> 1107 <entry>packagegroup-cloud-extras</entry>
1107 1108 <entry>1.0</entry>
1108 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1109 <entry>Extra packages that improve the usability of compute/control nodes.</entry>
1109 </row> 1110 <entry>MIT</entry>
1110 1111</row>
1111 <row> 1112<row>
1112 <entry>gobject-introspection</entry> 1113 <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry>
1113 1114 <entry>1.0</entry>
1114 <entry>1.50.0</entry> 1115 <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the system</entry>
1115 1116 <entry>MIT</entry>
1116 <entry>Middleware layer between GObject-using C libraries and 1117</row>
1117 language bindings.</entry> 1118<row>
1118 1119 <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry>
1119 <entry>LGPL-2.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 1120 <entry>1.0</entry>
1120 </row> 1121 <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry>
1121 1122 <entry>MIT</entry>
1122 <row> 1123</row>
1123 <entry>gperf</entry> 1124<row>
1124 1125 <entry>packagegroup-core-tools-debug</entry>
1125 <entry>3.0.4</entry> 1126 <entry>1.0</entry>
1126 1127 <entry>Debugging tools.</entry>
1127 <entry>GNU gperf is a perfect hash function generator</entry> 1128 <entry>MIT</entry>
1128 1129</row>
1129 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1130<row>
1130 </row> 1131 <entry>parted</entry>
1131 1132 <entry>3.2</entry>
1132 <row> 1133 <entry>Disk partition editing/resizing utility.</entry>
1133 <entry>gpgme</entry> 1134 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1134 1135</row>
1135 <entry>1.8.0</entry> 1136<row>
1136 1137 <entry>pciutils</entry>
1137 <entry>GnuPG Made Easy (GPGME) is a library designed to make 1138 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
1138 access to GnuPG easier for applications. It provides a High-Level 1139 <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based on this library.</entry>
1139 Crypto API for encryption decryption signing signature 1140 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1140 verification and key management</entry> 1141</row>
1141 1142<row>
1142 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1143 <entry>perl</entry>
1143 </row> 1144 <entry>5.24.1</entry>
1144 1145 <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry>
1145 <row> 1146 <entry> Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry>
1146 <entry>grep</entry> 1147</row>
1147 1148<row>
1148 <entry>3.0</entry> 1149 <entry>pigz</entry>
1149 1150 <entry>2.3.4</entry>
1150 <entry>GNU grep utility.</entry> 1151 <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>
1151 1152 <entry> Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry>
1152 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1153</row>
1153 </row> 1154<row>
1154 1155 <entry>pixman</entry>
1155 <row> 1156 <entry>0.34.0</entry>
1156 <entry>groff</entry> 1157 <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>
1157 1158 <entry> MIT, PD</entry>
1158 <entry>1.22.3</entry> 1159</row>
1159 1160<row>
1160 <entry>The groff (GNU troff) software is a typesetting package 1161 <entry>pkgconfig</entry>
1161 which reads plain text mixed with formatting commands and produces 1162 <entry>0.29.1</entry>
1162 formatted output.</entry> 1163 <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>
1163 1164 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1164 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1165</row>
1165 </row> 1166<row>
1166 1167 <entry>pm-utils</entry>
1167 <row> 1168 <entry>1.4.1</entry>
1168 <entry>grub-efi</entry> 1169 <entry>Simple shell command line tools to suspend and hibernate.</entry>
1169 1170 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1170 <entry>2.00</entry> 1171</row>
1171 1172<row>
1172 <entry>GRUB2 is the next generaion of a GPLed bootloader intended 1173 <entry>popt</entry>
1173 to unify bootloading across x86 operating systems. In addition to 1174 <entry>1.16</entry>
1174 loading the Linux kernel it implements the Multiboot standard 1175 <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry>
1175 which allows for flexible loading of multiple boot images.</entry> 1176 <entry>MIT</entry>
1176 1177</row>
1177 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1178<row>
1178 </row> 1179 <entry>postgresql</entry>
1179 1180 <entry>9.4.11</entry>
1180 <row> 1181 <entry> PostgreSQL is an advanced Object-Relational database management system (DBMS) that supports almost all SQL constructs (including transactions subselects and user-defined types and functions). The postgresql package includes the client programs and libraries that you'll need to access a PostgreSQL DBMS server. These PostgreSQL client programs are programs that directly manipulate the internal structure of PostgreSQL databases on a PostgreSQL server. These client programs can be located on the same machine with the PostgreSQL server or may be on a remote machine which accesses a PostgreSQL server over a network connection. This package contains the docs in HTML for the whole package as well as command-line utilities for managing PostgreSQL databases on a PostgreSQL server. If you want to manipulate a PostgreSQL database on a local or remote PostgreSQL server you need this package. You also need to install this package if you're installing the postgresql-server package. </entry>
1181 <entry>gtk-doc</entry> 1182 <entry>BSD</entry>
1182 1183</row>
1183 <entry>1.25</entry> 1184<row>
1184 1185 <entry>prelink</entry>
1185 <entry>Gtk-doc is a set of scripts that extract specially 1186 <entry>1.0</entry>
1186 formatted comments from glib-based software and produce a set of 1187 <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>
1187 html documentation files from them</entry> 1188 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1188 1189</row>
1189 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1190<row>
1190 </row> 1191 <entry>procps</entry>
1191 1192 <entry>3.3.12</entry>
1192 <row> 1193 <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>
1193 <entry>guile</entry> 1194 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
1194 1195</row>
1195 <entry>2.0.14</entry> 1196<row>
1196 1197 <entry>pseudo</entry>
1197 <entry>Guile is the GNU Ubiquitous Intelligent Language for 1198 <entry>1.8.2</entry>
1198 Extensions the official extension language for the GNU operating 1199 <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal user.</entry>
1199 system. Guile is a library designed to help programmers create 1200 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
1200 flexible applications. Using Guile in an application allows the 1201</row>
1201 application's functionality to be extended by users or other 1202<row>
1202 programmers with plug-ins modules or scripts. Guile provides what 1203 <entry>ptest-runner</entry>
1203 might be described as 'practical software freedom' making it 1204 <entry>2.0.2</entry>
1204 possible for users to customize an application to meet their needs 1205 <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them in sequence.</entry>
1205 without digging into the application's internals.</entry> 1206 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
1206 1207</row>
1207 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1208<row>
1208 </row> 1209 <entry>python-alembic</entry>
1209 1210 <entry>0.8.10</entry>
1210 <row> 1211 <entry>A database migration tool for SQLAlchemy.</entry>
1211 <entry>gzip</entry> 1212 <entry>MIT</entry>
1212 1213</row>
1213 <entry>1.8</entry> 1214<row>
1214 1215 <entry>python-amqp</entry>
1215 <entry>GNU Gzip is a popular data compression program originally 1216 <entry>1.4.9</entry>
1216 written by Jean-loup Gailly for the GNU project. Mark Adler wrote 1217 <entry>Low-level AMQP client for Python</entry>
1217 the decompression part</entry> 1218 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1218 1219</row>
1219 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 1220<row>
1220 </row> 1221 <entry>python-amqplib</entry>
1221 1222 <entry>1.0.2</entry>
1222 <row> 1223 <entry>Python client for the Advanced Message Queuing Procotol (AMQP)</entry>
1223 <entry>icu</entry> 1224 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
1224 1225</row>
1225 <entry>58.2</entry> 1226<row>
1226 1227 <entry>python-anyjson</entry>
1227 <entry>The International Component for Unicode (ICU) is a mature 1228 <entry>0.3.3</entry>
1228 portable set of C/C++ and Java libraries for Unicode support 1229 <entry>Anyjson loads whichever is the fastest JSON module installed and provides a uniform API regardless of which JSON implementation is used.</entry>
1229 software internationalization (I18N) and globalization (G11N) 1230 <entry>MIT</entry>
1230 giving applications the same results on all platforms.</entry> 1231</row>
1231 1232<row>
1232 <entry>ICU</entry> 1233 <entry>python-appdirs</entry>
1233 </row> 1234 <entry>1.4.0</entry>
1234 1235 <entry>A small Python module for determining appropriate platform-specific dirs e.g. a user data dir.</entry>
1235 <row> 1236 <entry>MIT</entry>
1236 <entry>initscripts</entry> 1237</row>
1237 1238<row>
1238 <entry>1.0</entry> 1239 <entry>python-babel</entry>
1239 1240 <entry>2.3.4</entry>
1240 <entry>Initscripts provide the basic system startup initialization 1241 <entry>A collection of tools for internationalizing Python applications</entry>
1241 scripts for the system. These scripts include actions such as 1242 <entry>BSD</entry>
1242 filesystem mounting fsck RTC manipulation and other actions 1243</row>
1243 routinely performed at system startup. In addition the scripts are 1244<row>
1244 also used during system shutdown to reverse the actions performed 1245 <entry>python-beautifulsoup4</entry>
1245 at startup.</entry> 1246 <entry>4.4.1</entry>
1246 1247 <entry>Screen-scraping library</entry>
1247 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1248 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1248 </row> 1249</row>
1249 1250<row>
1250 <row> 1251 <entry>python-boto</entry>
1251 <entry>inputproto</entry> 1252 <entry>2.34.0</entry>
1252 1253 <entry> Boto is a Python package that provides interfaces to Amazon Web Services. Currently all features work with Python 2.6 and 2.7. Work is under way to support Python 3.3+ in the same codebase. Modules are being ported one at a time with the help of the open source community so please check below for compatibility with Python 3.3+. </entry>
1253 <entry>2.3.2</entry> 1254 <entry>MIT</entry>
1254 1255</row>
1255 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Input 1256<row>
1256 extension. The extension supports input devices other then the 1257 <entry>python-cachetools</entry>
1257 core X keyboard and pointer.</entry> 1258 <entry>1.1.5</entry>
1258 1259 <entry>Extensible memoizing collections and decorators</entry>
1259 <entry>MIT</entry> 1260 <entry>MIT</entry>
1260 </row> 1261</row>
1261 1262<row>
1262 <row> 1263 <entry>python-castellan</entry>
1263 <entry>intel-microcode</entry> 1264 <entry>0.4.0</entry>
1264 1265 <entry>Generic Key Manager interface for OpenStack</entry>
1265 <entry>20170511</entry> 1266 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1266 1267</row>
1267 <entry>The microcode data file contains the latest microcode 1268<row>
1268 definitions for all Intel processors. Intel releases microcode 1269 <entry>python-ceilometer</entry>
1269 updates to correct processor behavior as documented in the 1270 <entry>7.1.0</entry>
1270 respective processor specification updates. While the regular 1271 <entry>OpenStack Metering Component</entry>
1271 approach to getting this microcode update is via a BIOS upgrade 1272 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1272 Intel realizes that this can be an administrative hassle. The 1273</row>
1273 Linux operating system and VMware ESX products have a mechanism to 1274<row>
1274 update the microcode after booting. For example this file will be 1275 <entry>python-ceilometerclient</entry>
1275 used by the operating system mechanism if the file is placed in 1276 <entry>2.6.2</entry>
1276 the /etc/firmware directory of the Linux system.</entry> 1277 <entry>CLI and python client library for OpenStack Ceilometer</entry>
1277 1278 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1278 <entry>Intel-Microcode-License</entry> 1279</row>
1279 </row> 1280<row>
1280 1281 <entry>python-certifi</entry>
1281 <row> 1282 <entry>2017.1.23</entry>
1282 <entry>intltool</entry> 1283 <entry>This installable Python package contains a CA Bundle that you can reference in your Python code. This is useful for verifying HTTP requests for example. This is the same CA Bundle which ships with the Requests codebase and is derived from Mozilla Firefox's canonical set.</entry>
1283 1284 <entry>ISC</entry>
1284 <entry>0.51.0</entry> 1285</row>
1285 1286<row>
1286 <entry>Utility scripts for internationalizing XML.</entry> 1287 <entry>python-cffi</entry>
1287 1288 <entry>1.9.1</entry>
1288 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1289 <entry>Foreign Function Interface for Python calling C code.</entry>
1289 </row> 1290 <entry>MIT</entry>
1290 1291</row>
1291 <row> 1292<row>
1292 <entry>iproute2</entry> 1293 <entry>python-cheetah</entry>
1293 1294 <entry>2.4.4</entry>
1294 <entry>4.10.0</entry> 1295 <entry>Python template engine and code generation tool.</entry>
1295 1296 <entry>MIT</entry>
1296 <entry>Iproute2 is a collection of utilities for controlling TCP / 1297</row>
1297 IP networking and traffic control in Linux. Of the utilities ip 1298<row>
1298 and tc are the most important. ip controls IPv4 and IPv6 1299 <entry>python-cinderclient</entry>
1299 configuration and tc stands for traffic control.</entry> 1300 <entry>1.9.0</entry>
1300 1301 <entry>Client library for OpenStack Cinder API.</entry>
1301 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1302 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1302 </row> 1303</row>
1303 1304<row>
1304 <row> 1305 <entry>python-cliff</entry>
1305 <entry>iptables</entry> 1306 <entry>2.2.0</entry>
1306 1307 <entry>Command Line Interface Formulation Framework</entry>
1307 <entry>1.6.1</entry> 1308 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1308 1309</row>
1309 <entry>iptables is the userspace command line program used to 1310<row>
1310 configure and control network packet filtering code in 1311 <entry>python-cmd2</entry>
1311 Linux.</entry> 1312 <entry>0.7.0</entry>
1312 1313 <entry>Extra features for standard library's cmd module.</entry>
1313 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1314 <entry>MIT</entry>
1314 </row> 1315</row>
1315 1316<row>
1316 <row> 1317 <entry>python-colorama</entry>
1317 <entry>iputils</entry> 1318 <entry>0.3.3</entry>
1318 1319 <entry>Simple cross-platform colored terminal text in Python</entry>
1319 <entry>s20151218</entry> 1320 <entry>BSD</entry>
1320 1321</row>
1321 <entry>Utilities for the IP protocol including traceroute6 1322<row>
1322 tracepath tracepath6 ping ping6 and arping.</entry> 1323 <entry>python-contextlib2</entry>
1323 1324 <entry>0.4.0</entry>
1324 <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> 1325 <entry>Backports and enhancements for the contextlib module</entry>
1325 </row> 1326 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
1326 1327</row>
1327 <row> 1328<row>
1328 <entry>iucode-tool</entry> 1329 <entry>python-cotyledon</entry>
1329 1330 <entry>1.6.8</entry>
1330 <entry>2.1.1</entry> 1331 <entry>Cotyledon provides a framework for defining long-running services.</entry>
1331 1332 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1332 <entry>iucode_tool is a program to manipulate Intel i686 and 1333</row>
1333 X86-64 processor microcode update collections and to use the 1334<row>
1334 kernel facilities to update the microcode on Intel system 1335 <entry>python-coverage</entry>
1335 processors. It can load microcode data files in text and binary 1336 <entry>4.0a5</entry>
1336 format sort list and filter the microcode updates contained in 1337 <entry>Code coverage measurement for Python</entry>
1337 these files write selected microcode updates to a new file in 1338 <entry>BSD</entry>
1338 binary format or upload them to the kernel. It operates on 1339</row>
1339 microcode data downloaded directly from Intel: 1340<row>
1340 http://feeds.downloadcenter.intel.com/rss/?p=2371</entry> 1341 <entry>python-croniter</entry>
1341 1342 <entry>0.3.5</entry>
1342 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1343 <entry>croniter provides iteration for datetime object with cron like format</entry>
1343 </row> 1344 <entry>MIT</entry>
1344 1345</row>
1345 <row> 1346<row>
1346 <entry>json-c</entry> 1347 <entry>python-cryptography-vectors</entry>
1347 1348 <entry>1.7.2</entry>
1348 <entry>0.12</entry> 1349 <entry>Test vectors for the cryptography package..</entry>
1349 1350 <entry> Apache-2.0, BSD</entry>
1350 <entry>JSON-C implements a reference counting object model that 1351</row>
1351 allows you to easily construct JSON objects in C.</entry> 1352<row>
1352 1353 <entry>python-cryptography</entry>
1353 <entry>MIT</entry> 1354 <entry>1.7.2</entry>
1354 </row> 1355 <entry>Provides cryptographic recipes and primitives to python developers.</entry>
1355 1356 <entry> Apache-2.0, BSD</entry>
1356 <row> 1357</row>
1357 <entry>kbd</entry> 1358<row>
1358 1359 <entry>python-cython</entry>
1359 <entry>2.0.4</entry> 1360 <entry>0.25.2</entry>
1360 1361 <entry>Cython is a language specially designed for writing Python extension modules. It's designed to bridge the gap between the nice high-level easy-to-use world of Python and the messy low-level world of C.</entry>
1361 <entry>Keytable files and keyboard utilities.</entry> 1362 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1362 1363</row>
1363 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1364<row>
1364 </row> 1365 <entry>python-dateutil</entry>
1365 1366 <entry>2.6.0</entry>
1366 <row> 1367 <entry>The dateutil module provides powerful extensions to the datetime module available in the Python standard library.</entry>
1367 <entry>kbproto</entry> 1368 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1368 1369</row>
1369 <entry>1.0.7</entry> 1370<row>
1370 1371 <entry>python-debtcollector</entry>
1371 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Keyboard 1372 <entry>1.8.0</entry>
1372 extension. This extension is used to control options related to 1373 <entry>A collection of Python deprecation patterns and strategies that help you collect your technical debt in a non-destructive manner.</entry>
1373 keyboard handling and layout.</entry> 1374 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1374 1375</row>
1375 <entry>MIT</entry> 1376<row>
1376 </row> 1377 <entry>python-decorator</entry>
1377 1378 <entry>4.0.11</entry>
1378 <row> 1379 <entry>The aim of the decorator module it to simplify the usage of decorators for the average programmer and to popularize decorators by showing various non-trivial examples. Of course as all techniques decorators can be abused and you should not try to solve every problem with a decorator just because you can.</entry>
1379 <entry>kern-tools</entry> 1380 <entry>BSD</entry>
1380 1381</row>
1381 <entry>0.2</entry> 1382<row>
1382 1383 <entry>python-designateclient</entry>
1383 <entry>Tools for managing Yocto Project style branched 1384 <entry>2.3.0</entry>
1384 kernels.</entry> 1385 <entry>Python bindings to the Designate API</entry>
1385 1386 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1386 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1387</row>
1387 </row> 1388<row>
1388 1389 <entry>python-dogpile.cache</entry>
1389 <row> 1390 <entry>0.6.2</entry>
1390 <entry>keymaps</entry> 1391 <entry>Python Dogpile Cache: A caching front-end based on the Dogpile lock</entry>
1391 1392 <entry>BSD</entry>
1392 <entry>1.0</entry> 1393</row>
1393 1394<row>
1394 <entry>Keymaps and initscript to set the keymap on bootup.</entry> 1395 <entry>python-ecdsa</entry>
1395 1396 <entry>0.13</entry>
1396 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1397 <entry>ECDSA cryptographic signature library</entry>
1397 </row> 1398 <entry>MIT</entry>
1398 1399</row>
1399 <row> 1400<row>
1400 <entry>kmod</entry> 1401 <entry>python-enum34</entry>
1401 1402 <entry>1.1.6</entry>
1402 <entry>23</entry> 1403 <entry>backport of Python 3.4's enum package.</entry>
1403 1404 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1404 <entry>kmod is a set of tools to handle common tasks with Linux 1405</row>
1405 kernel modules like insert remove list check properties resolve 1406<row>
1406 dependencies and aliases.</entry> 1407 <entry>python-eventlet</entry>
1407 1408 <entry>0.18.4</entry>
1408 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1409 <entry>Highly concurrent networking library</entry>
1409 </row> 1410 <entry>MIT</entry>
1410 1411</row>
1411 <row> 1412<row>
1412 <entry>ldconfig</entry> 1413 <entry>python-extras</entry>
1413 1414 <entry>1.0.0</entry>
1414 <entry>2.12.1</entry> 1415 <entry>Useful extra bits for Python - things that should be in the standard library</entry>
1415 1416 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1416 <entry>A standalone native ldconfig build.</entry> 1417</row>
1417 1418<row>
1418 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1419 <entry>python-fasteners</entry>
1419 </row> 1420 <entry>0.13.0</entry>
1420 1421 <entry>A python package that provides useful locks.</entry>
1421 <row> 1422 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1422 <entry>libaio</entry> 1423</row>
1423 1424<row>
1424 <entry>0.3.110</entry> 1425 <entry>python-feedparser</entry>
1425 1426 <entry>5.2.1</entry>
1426 <entry>Asynchronous input/output library that uses the kernels 1427 <entry>Python Atom and RSS feed parser.</entry>
1427 native interface</entry> 1428 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
1428 1429</row>
1429 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1430<row>
1430 </row> 1431 <entry>python-fixtures</entry>
1431 1432 <entry>3.0.0</entry>
1432 <row> 1433 <entry>Fixtures reusable state for writing clean tests and more</entry>
1433 <entry>libarchive</entry> 1434 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1434 1435</row>
1435 <entry>3.2.2</entry> 1436<row>
1436 1437 <entry>python-flask</entry>
1437 <entry>C library and command-line tools for reading and writing 1438 <entry>0.10.1</entry>
1438 tar cpio zip ISO and other archive formats</entry> 1439 <entry>A microframework based on Werkzeug Jinja2 and good intentions</entry>
1439 1440 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1440 <entry>BSD</entry> 1441</row>
1441 </row> 1442<row>
1442 1443 <entry>python-funcsigs</entry>
1443 <row> 1444 <entry>1.0.2</entry>
1444 <entry>libassuan</entry> 1445 <entry>Python function signatures from PEP362 for Python 2.6 2.7 and 3.2+.</entry>
1445 1446 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1446 <entry>2.4.3</entry> 1447</row>
1447 1448<row>
1448 <entry>IPC library used by GnuPG and GPGME.</entry> 1449 <entry>python-functools32</entry>
1449 1450 <entry>3.2.3-2</entry>
1450 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1451 <entry>Backport of the functools module from Python 3.2.3 for use on 2.7 and PyPy..</entry>
1451 </row> 1452 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
1452 1453</row>
1453 <row> 1454<row>
1454 <entry>libatomic-ops</entry> 1455 <entry>python-futures</entry>
1455 1456 <entry>3.0.5</entry>
1456 <entry>7.4.4</entry> 1457 <entry>The concurrent.futures module provides a high-level interface for asynchronously executing callables.</entry>
1457 1458 <entry>BSD</entry>
1458 <entry>A library for atomic integer operations.</entry> 1459</row>
1459 1460<row>
1460 <entry>GPL-2.0, MIT</entry> 1461 <entry>python-futurist</entry>
1461 </row> 1462 <entry>0.21.0</entry>
1462 1463 <entry>Useful additions to futures from the future</entry>
1463 <row> 1464 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1464 <entry>libbsd</entry> 1465</row>
1465 1466<row>
1466 <entry>0.8.3</entry> 1467 <entry>python-glanceclient</entry>
1467 1468 <entry>2.5.0</entry>
1468 <entry>This library provides useful functions commonly found on 1469 <entry>Client library for Glance built on the OpenStack Images API</entry>
1469 BSD systems and lacking on others like GNU systems thus making it 1470 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1470 easier to port projects with strong BSD origins without needing to 1471</row>
1471 embed the same code over and over again on each project.</entry> 1472<row>
1472 1473 <entry>python-greenlet</entry>
1473 <entry>BSD-4-Clause, ISC, PD</entry> 1474 <entry>0.4.12</entry>
1474 </row> 1475 <entry>Python lightweight in-process concurrent programming.</entry>
1475 1476 <entry> MIT, Python-2.0</entry>
1476 <row> 1477</row>
1477 <entry>libcap</entry> 1478<row>
1478 1479 <entry>python-happybase</entry>
1479 <entry>2.25</entry> 1480 <entry>1.0.0</entry>
1480 1481 <entry>Python library to interact with Apache HBase</entry>
1481 <entry>Library for getting/setting POSIX.1e capabilities.</entry> 1482 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1482 1483</row>
1483 <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0</entry> 1484<row>
1484 </row> 1485 <entry>python-httplib2</entry>
1485 1486 <entry>0.9.2</entry>
1486 <row> 1487 <entry>A comprehensive HTTP client library</entry>
1487 <entry>libcgroup</entry> 1488 <entry>MIT</entry>
1488 1489</row>
1489 <entry>0.41</entry> 1490<row>
1490 1491 <entry>python-httpretty</entry>
1491 <entry>libcgroup is a library that abstracts the control group 1492 <entry>0.8.14</entry>
1492 file system in Linux. Control groups allow you to limit account 1493 <entry>HTTP client mock for Python</entry>
1493 and isolate resource usage (CPU memory disk I/O etc.) of groups of 1494 <entry>MIT</entry>
1494 processes.</entry> 1495</row>
1495 1496<row>
1496 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1497 <entry>python-idna</entry>
1497 </row> 1498 <entry>2.5</entry>
1498 1499 <entry>Internationalised Domain Names in Applications.</entry>
1499 <row> 1500 <entry> BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1500 <entry>libcheck</entry> 1501</row>
1501 1502<row>
1502 <entry>0.10.0</entry> 1503 <entry>python-ipaddr</entry>
1503 1504 <entry>2.1.11</entry>
1504 <entry>Check - unit testing framework for C code.</entry> 1505 <entry>Google's IP address manipulation library</entry>
1505 1506 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1506 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1507</row>
1507 </row> 1508<row>
1508 1509 <entry>python-ipaddress</entry>
1509 <row> 1510 <entry>1.0.18</entry>
1510 <entry>libcomps</entry> 1511 <entry>Python 3.3+'s ipaddress for Python 2.6 2.7 3.2..</entry>
1511 1512 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
1512 <entry>0.1.8</entry> 1513</row>
1513 1514<row>
1514 <entry>Libcomps is alternative for yum.comps library (which is for 1515 <entry>python-iso8601</entry>
1515 managing rpm package groups)..</entry> 1516 <entry>0.1.11</entry>
1516 1517 <entry>Simple module to parse ISO 8601 dates.</entry>
1517 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 1518 <entry>MIT</entry>
1518 </row> 1519</row>
1519 1520<row>
1520 <row> 1521 <entry>python-itsdangerous</entry>
1521 <entry>libconfig-general-perl</entry> 1522 <entry>0.24</entry>
1522 1523 <entry>Various helpers to pass trusted data to untrusted environments and back</entry>
1523 <entry>2.63</entry> 1524 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1524 1525</row>
1525 <entry>Config file parser module</entry> 1526<row>
1526 1527 <entry>python-jinja2</entry>
1527 <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> 1528 <entry>2.9.5</entry>
1528 </row> 1529 <entry>Python Jinja2: A small but fast and easy to use stand-alone template engine written in pure python.</entry>
1529 1530 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1530 <row> 1531</row>
1531 <entry>libdaemon</entry> 1532<row>
1532 1533 <entry>python-jsonpatch</entry>
1533 <entry>0.14</entry> 1534 <entry>1.15</entry>
1534 1535 <entry>Appling JSON patches in Python 2.6+ and 3.x.</entry>
1535 <entry>Lightweight C library which eases the writing of UNIX 1536 <entry>BSD</entry>
1536 daemons.</entry> 1537</row>
1537 1538<row>
1538 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1539 <entry>python-jsonpath-rw-ext</entry>
1539 </row> 1540 <entry>0.1.9</entry>
1540 1541 <entry>Extensions for JSONPath RW.</entry>
1541 <row> 1542 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1542 <entry>libdevmapper</entry> 1543</row>
1543 1544<row>
1544 <entry>2.02.166</entry> 1545 <entry>python-jsonpath-rw</entry>
1545 1546 <entry>1.4.0</entry>
1546 <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in 1547 <entry>A robust and significantly extended implementation of JSONPath for Python</entry>
1547 Linux.</entry> 1548 <entry>BSD+</entry>
1548 1549</row>
1549 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> 1550<row>
1550 </row> 1551 <entry>python-jsonpointer</entry>
1551 1552 <entry>1.10</entry>
1552 <row> 1553 <entry>Resolve JSON Pointers in Python.</entry>
1553 <entry>libdnf</entry> 1554 <entry>BSD</entry>
1554 1555</row>
1555 <entry>0.2.3</entry> 1556<row>
1556 1557 <entry>python-jsonschema</entry>
1557 <entry>Library providing simplified C and Python API to 1558 <entry>2.6.0</entry>
1558 libsolv.</entry> 1559 <entry>An implementation of JSON Schema validation for Python.</entry>
1559 1560 <entry>MIT</entry>
1560 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1561</row>
1561 </row> 1562<row>
1562 1563 <entry>python-kafka</entry>
1563 <row> 1564 <entry>0.9.5</entry>
1564 <entry>libevent</entry> 1565 <entry>Python client for Apache Kafka.</entry>
1565 1566 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1566 <entry>2.0.22</entry> 1567</row>
1567 1568<row>
1568 <entry>An asynchronous event notification library.</entry> 1569 <entry>python-kazoo</entry>
1569 1570 <entry>2.4.0</entry>
1570 <entry>BSD</entry> 1571 <entry>Higher Level Zookeeper Client</entry>
1571 </row> 1572 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1572 1573</row>
1573 <row> 1574<row>
1574 <entry>libffi</entry> 1575 <entry>python-keystone</entry>
1575 1576 <entry>10.0.3</entry>
1576 <entry>3.2.1</entry> 1577 <entry>Authentication service for OpenStack</entry>
1577 1578 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1578 <entry>The `libffi' library provides a portable high level 1579</row>
1579 programming interface to various calling conventions. This allows 1580<row>
1580 a programmer to call any function specified by a call interface 1581 <entry>python-keystoneauth1</entry>
1581 description at run time. FFI stands for Foreign Function 1582 <entry>2.12.3</entry>
1582 Interface. A foreign function interface is the popular name for 1583 <entry>Authentication Library for OpenStack Identity</entry>
1583 the interface that allows code written in one language to call 1584 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1584 code written in another language. The `libffi' library really only 1585</row>
1585 provides the lowest machine dependent layer of a fully featured 1586<row>
1586 foreign function interface. A layer must exist above `libffi' that 1587 <entry>python-keystoneclient</entry>
1587 handles type conversions for values passed between the two 1588 <entry>3.5.1</entry>
1588 languages.</entry> 1589 <entry>Client library for OpenStack Identity API</entry>
1589 1590 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1590 <entry>MIT</entry> 1591</row>
1591 </row> 1592<row>
1592 1593 <entry>python-keystonemiddleware</entry>
1593 <row> 1594 <entry>4.9.1</entry>
1594 <entry>libgcc</entry> 1595 <entry>Middleware for OpenStack Identity API</entry>
1595 1596 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1596 <entry>6.3.0</entry> 1597</row>
1597 1598<row>
1598 <entry>GNU cc and gcc C compilers.</entry> 1599 <entry>python-kombu</entry>
1599 1600 <entry>3.0.37</entry>
1600 <entry>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception, GPL-3.0</entry> 1601 <entry>A messaging framework for Python</entry>
1601 </row> 1602 <entry>BSD</entry>
1602 1603</row>
1603 <row> 1604<row>
1604 <entry>libgcrypt</entry> 1605 <entry>python-lockfile</entry>
1605 1606 <entry>0.12.2</entry>
1606 <entry>1.7.6</entry> 1607 <entry>Platform-independent file locking module</entry>
1607 1608 <entry>MIT</entry>
1608 <entry>General purpose cryptographic library based on the code 1609</row>
1609 from GnuPG.</entry> 1610<row>
1610 1611 <entry>python-logutils</entry>
1611 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, GPL-3.0</entry> 1612 <entry>0.3.3</entry>
1612 </row> 1613 <entry>Set of handlers for the Python standard library's logging package</entry>
1613 1614 <entry>BSD</entry>
1614 <row> 1615</row>
1615 <entry>libgpg-error</entry> 1616<row>
1616 1617 <entry>python-lxml</entry>
1617 <entry>1.26</entry> 1618 <entry>3.7.3</entry>
1618 1619 <entry>lxml is a Pythonic mature binding for the libxml2 and libxslt libraries. It provides safe and convenient access to these libraries using the ElementTree API. It extends the ElementTree API significantly to offer support for XPath RelaxNG XML Schema XSLT C14N and much more.</entry>
1619 <entry>Small library that defines common error values for all 1620 <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0, MIT, Python-2.0</entry>
1620 GnuPG components.</entry> 1621</row>
1621 1622<row>
1622 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1623 <entry>python-mako</entry>
1623 </row> 1624 <entry>1.0.6</entry>
1624 1625 <entry>Templating library for Python.</entry>
1625 <row> 1626 <entry>MIT</entry>
1626 <entry>libical</entry> 1627</row>
1627 1628<row>
1628 <entry>2.0.0</entry> 1629 <entry>python-markupsafe</entry>
1629 1630 <entry>0.23</entry>
1630 <entry>iCal and scheduling (RFC 2445 2446 2447) library.</entry> 1631 <entry>Implements a XML/HTML/XHTML Markup safe string for Python</entry>
1631 1632 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1632 <entry>LGPL-2.1, MPL-1.0</entry> 1633</row>
1633 </row> 1634<row>
1634 1635 <entry>python-mccabe</entry>
1635 <row> 1636 <entry>0.4.0</entry>
1636 <entry>libice</entry> 1637 <entry>McCabe checker plugin for flake8.</entry>
1637 1638 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1638 <entry>1.0.9</entry> 1639</row>
1639 1640<row>
1640 <entry>The Inter-Client Exchange (ICE) protocol provides a generic 1641 <entry>python-memcache</entry>
1641 framework for building protocols on top of reliable byte-stream 1642 <entry>1.2.9</entry>
1642 transport connections. It provides basic mechanisms for setting up 1643 <entry>A comprehensive fast pure Python memcached client</entry>
1643 and shutting down connections for performing authentication for 1644 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1644 negotiating versions and for reporting errors.</entry> 1645</row>
1645 1646<row>
1646 <entry>MIT</entry> 1647 <entry>python-microversion-parse</entry>
1647 </row> 1648 <entry>0.1.2</entry>
1648 1649 <entry>OpenStack services use REST APIs which include HTTP headers. This package provides a simple parser for OpenStack microversion headers.</entry>
1649 <row> 1650 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1650 <entry>libidn</entry> 1651</row>
1651 1652<row>
1652 <entry>1.33</entry> 1653 <entry>python-mistralclient</entry>
1653 1654 <entry>2.1.2</entry>
1654 <entry>Implementation of the Stringprep Punycode and IDNA 1655 <entry>Python client for Mistral REST API</entry>
1655 specifications defined by the IETF Internationalized Domain Names 1656 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1656 (IDN) working group.</entry> 1657</row>
1657 1658<row>
1658 <entry>LGPL-2.1, LGPL-3.0, GPL-3.0</entry> 1659 <entry>python-mock</entry>
1659 </row> 1660 <entry>2.0.0</entry>
1660 1661 <entry>A Python Mocking and Patching Library for Testing.</entry>
1661 <row> 1662 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1662 <entry>libmpc</entry> 1663</row>
1663 1664<row>
1664 <entry>1.0.3</entry> 1665 <entry>python-monotonic</entry>
1665 1666 <entry>1.2</entry>
1666 <entry>Mpc is a C library for the arithmetic of complex numbers 1667 <entry>An implementation of time.monotonic() for Python 2.0 through 3.2.</entry>
1667 with arbitrarily high precision and correct rounding of the 1668 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1668 result. It is built upon and follows the same principles as 1669</row>
1669 Mpfr</entry> 1670<row>
1670 1671 <entry>python-mox3</entry>
1671 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry> 1672 <entry>0.20.0</entry>
1672 </row> 1673 <entry>mox3: mock object framework for Python</entry>
1673 1674 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1674 <row> 1675</row>
1675 <entry>libnfsidmap</entry> 1676<row>
1676 1677 <entry>python-msgpack</entry>
1677 <entry>0.25</entry> 1678 <entry>0.4.8</entry>
1678 1679 <entry>MessagePack (de)serializer.</entry>
1679 <entry>NFS id mapping library.</entry> 1680 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1680 1681</row>
1681 <entry>BSD</entry> 1682<row>
1682 </row> 1683 <entry>python-ndg-httpsclient</entry>
1683 1684 <entry>0.4.2</entry>
1684 <row> 1685 <entry>Provides enhanced HTTPS support for httplib and urllib2 using PyOpenSSL</entry>
1685 <entry>libnl</entry> 1686 <entry>BSD</entry>
1686 1687</row>
1687 <entry>3.2.29</entry> 1688<row>
1688 1689 <entry>python-netaddr</entry>
1689 <entry>A library for applications dealing with netlink 1690 <entry>0.7.19</entry>
1690 sockets.</entry> 1691 <entry>A network address manipulation library for Python..</entry>
1691 1692 <entry>BSD</entry>
1692 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1693</row>
1693 </row> 1694<row>
1694 1695 <entry>python-netifaces</entry>
1695 <row> 1696 <entry>0.10.6</entry>
1696 <entry>libnss-mdns</entry> 1697 <entry>Portable network interface information..</entry>
1697 1698 <entry>MIT</entry>
1698 <entry>0.10</entry> 1699</row>
1699 1700<row>
1700 <entry>Name Service Switch module for Multicast DNS (zeroconf) 1701 <entry>python-neutron-lib</entry>
1701 name resolution.</entry> 1702 <entry>0.4.0</entry>
1702 1703 <entry>Neutron shared routines and utilities</entry>
1703 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1704 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1704 </row> 1705</row>
1705 1706<row>
1706 <row> 1707 <entry>python-neutron</entry>
1707 <entry>libpam</entry> 1708 <entry>9.4.0</entry>
1708 1709 <entry>Neutron (virtual network service)</entry>
1709 <entry>1.3.0</entry> 1710 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1710 1711</row>
1711 <entry>Linux-PAM (Pluggable Authentication Modules for Linux) a 1712<row>
1712 flexible mechanism for authenticating users</entry> 1713 <entry>python-neutronclient</entry>
1713 1714 <entry>6.0.0-gitAUTOINC</entry>
1714 <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> 1715 <entry>CLI and python client library for OpenStack Neutron</entry>
1715 </row> 1716 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1716 1717</row>
1717 <row> 1718<row>
1718 <entry>libpcap</entry> 1719 <entry>python-nose</entry>
1719 1720 <entry>1.3.7</entry>
1720 <entry>1.8.1</entry> 1721 <entry>nose extends the test loading and running features of unittest making it easier to write find and run tests.</entry>
1721 1722 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
1722 <entry>Libpcap provides a portable framework for low-level network 1723</row>
1723 monitoring. Libpcap can provide network statistics collection 1724<row>
1724 security monitoring and network debugging.</entry> 1725 <entry>python-nova</entry>
1725 1726 <entry>14.0.7</entry>
1726 <entry>BSD</entry> 1727 <entry>Nova is a cloud computing fabric controller</entry>
1727 </row> 1728 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1728 1729</row>
1729 <row> 1730<row>
1730 <entry>libpciaccess</entry> 1731 <entry>python-novaclient</entry>
1731 1732 <entry>6.0.1</entry>
1732 <entry>0.13.4</entry> 1733 <entry>Client library for OpenStack Compute API</entry>
1733 1734 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1734 <entry>libpciaccess provides functionality for X to access the PCI 1735</row>
1735 bus and devices in a platform-independent way.</entry> 1736<row>
1736 1737 <entry>python-oauthlib</entry>
1737 <entry>MIT</entry> 1738 <entry>0.7.2</entry>
1738 </row> 1739 <entry>A generic spec-compliant thorough implementation of the OAuth request-signing logic</entry>
1739 1740 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1740 <row> 1741</row>
1741 <entry>libpcre</entry> 1742<row>
1742 1743 <entry>python-openstack-nose</entry>
1743 <entry>8.40</entry> 1744 <entry>0.11</entry>
1744 1745 <entry>Openstack style output for nosetests</entry>
1745 <entry>The PCRE library is a set of functions that implement 1746 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1746 regular expression pattern matching using the same syntax and 1747</row>
1747 semantics as Perl 5. PCRE has its own native API as well as a set 1748<row>
1748 of wrapper functions that correspond to the POSIX regular 1749 <entry>python-os-brick</entry>
1749 expression API.</entry> 1750 <entry>1.6.2</entry>
1750 1751 <entry>OpenStack Cinder brick library for managing local volume attaches</entry>
1751 <entry>BSD</entry> 1752 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1752 </row> 1753</row>
1753 1754<row>
1754 <row> 1755 <entry>python-os-client-config</entry>
1755 <entry>libpng</entry> 1756 <entry>1.21.1</entry>
1756 1757 <entry>OpenStack Client Configuation Library</entry>
1757 <entry>1.6.28</entry> 1758 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1758 1759</row>
1759 <entry>PNG image format decoding library.</entry> 1760<row>
1760 1761 <entry>python-os-vif</entry>
1761 <entry>Libpng</entry> 1762 <entry>1.2.1</entry>
1762 </row> 1763 <entry>A library for plugging and unplugging virtual interfaces in OpenStack</entry>
1763 1764 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1764 <row> 1765</row>
1765 <entry>libpthread-stubs</entry> 1766<row>
1766 1767 <entry>python-os-win</entry>
1767 <entry>0.3</entry> 1768 <entry>1.2.2</entry>
1768 1769 <entry>Windows / Hyper-V library for OpenStack projects</entry>
1769 <entry>This library provides weak aliases for pthread functions 1770 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1770 not provided in libc or otherwise available by default.</entry> 1771</row>
1771 1772<row>
1772 <entry>MIT</entry> 1773 <entry>python-osc-lib</entry>
1773 </row> 1774 <entry>1.1.0</entry>
1774 1775 <entry>OpenStackClient Library</entry>
1775 <row> 1776 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1776 <entry>librepo</entry> 1777</row>
1777 1778<row>
1778 <entry>1.7.20</entry> 1779 <entry>python-oslo.cache</entry>
1779 1780 <entry>1.14.1</entry>
1780 <entry>A library providing C and Python (libcURL like) API for 1781 <entry>An oslo.config enabled dogpile.cache</entry>
1781 downloading linux repository metadata and packages..</entry> 1782 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1782 1783</row>
1783 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1784<row>
1784 </row> 1785 <entry>python-oslo.concurrency</entry>
1785 1786 <entry>3.14.1</entry>
1786 <row> 1787 <entry>oslo.concurrency library</entry>
1787 <entry>libsdl</entry> 1788 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1788 1789</row>
1789 <entry>1.2.15</entry> 1790<row>
1790 1791 <entry>python-oslo.config</entry>
1791 <entry>Simple DirectMedia Layer is a cross-platform multimedia 1792 <entry>3.17.1</entry>
1792 library designed to provide low level access to audio keyboard 1793 <entry>API supporting parsing command line arguments and .ini style configuration files.</entry>
1793 mouse joystick 3D hardware via OpenGL and 2D video 1794 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1794 framebuffer.</entry> 1795</row>
1795 1796<row>
1796 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1797 <entry>python-oslo.context</entry>
1797 </row> 1798 <entry>2.9.0</entry>
1798 1799 <entry>Oslo Context Library</entry>
1799 <row> 1800 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1800 <entry>libsm</entry> 1801</row>
1801 1802<row>
1802 <entry>1.2.2</entry> 1803 <entry>python-oslo.db</entry>
1803 1804 <entry>4.13.6</entry>
1804 <entry>"The Session Management Library (SMlib) is a low-level 1805 <entry>oslo.db library</entry>
1805 \""C\"" language interface to XSMP. The purpose of the X Session 1806 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1806 Management Protocol (XSMP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for 1807</row>
1807 users to save and restore their sessions. A session is a group of 1808<row>
1808 clients each of which has a particular state."</entry> 1809 <entry>python-oslo.i18n</entry>
1809 1810 <entry>3.9.0</entry>
1810 <entry>MIT</entry> 1811 <entry>oslo.i18n library</entry>
1811 </row> 1812 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1812 1813</row>
1813 <row> 1814<row>
1814 <entry>libsolv</entry> 1815 <entry>python-oslo.log</entry>
1815 1816 <entry>3.16.1</entry>
1816 <entry>0.6.26</entry> 1817 <entry>Oslo Log Library</entry>
1817 1818 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1818 <entry>Library for solving packages and reading 1819</row>
1819 repositories.</entry> 1820<row>
1820 1821 <entry>python-oslo.messaging</entry>
1821 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> 1822 <entry>5.10.2</entry>
1822 </row> 1823 <entry>Oslo Messaging API</entry>
1823 1824 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1824 <row> 1825</row>
1825 <entry>libtasn1</entry> 1826<row>
1826 1827 <entry>python-oslo.middleware</entry>
1827 <entry>4.10</entry> 1828 <entry>3.19.1</entry>
1828 1829 <entry>Oslo Middleware library</entry>
1829 <entry>Library for ASN.1 and DER manipulation.</entry> 1830 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1830 1831</row>
1831 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1832<row>
1832 </row> 1833 <entry>python-oslo.policy</entry>
1833 1834 <entry>1.14.0</entry>
1834 <row> 1835 <entry>The Oslo Policy library provides support for RBAC policy enforcement across all OpenStack services.</entry>
1835 <entry>libtirpc</entry> 1836 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1836 1837</row>
1837 <entry>1.0.1</entry> 1838<row>
1838 1839 <entry>python-oslo.privsep</entry>
1839 <entry>Libtirpc is a port of Suns Transport-Independent RPC 1840 <entry>1.13.2</entry>
1840 library to Linux</entry> 1841 <entry>This library helps applications perform actions which require more or less privileges than they were started with in a safe easy to code and easy to use manner. For more information on why this is generally a good idea please read over the principle of least privilege and the specification which created this library.</entry>
1841 1842 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1842 <entry>BSD</entry> 1843</row>
1843 </row> 1844<row>
1844 1845 <entry>python-oslo.reports</entry>
1845 <row> 1846 <entry>1.14.0</entry>
1846 <entry>libtool</entry> 1847 <entry>oslo.reports library</entry>
1847 1848 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1848 <entry>2.4.6</entry> 1849</row>
1849 1850<row>
1850 <entry>This is GNU libtool a generic library support script. 1851 <entry>python-oslo.rootwrap</entry>
1851 Libtool hides the complexity of generating special library types 1852 <entry>5.1.2</entry>
1852 (such as shared libraries) behind a consistent interface.</entry> 1853 <entry>Oslo Rootwrap</entry>
1853 1854 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1854 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 1855</row>
1855 </row> 1856<row>
1856 1857 <entry>python-oslo.serialization</entry>
1857 <row> 1858 <entry>2.13.1</entry>
1858 <entry>libunistring</entry> 1859 <entry>Oslo Serialization API</entry>
1859 1860 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1860 <entry>0.9.7</entry> 1861</row>
1861 1862<row>
1862 <entry>Text files are nowadays usually encoded in Unicode and may 1863 <entry>python-oslo.service</entry>
1863 consist of very different scripts from Latin letters to Chinese 1864 <entry>1.16.1</entry>
1864 Hanzi with many kinds of special characters accents right-to-left 1865 <entry>oslo.service library</entry>
1865 writing marks hyphens Roman numbers and much more. But the POSIX 1866 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1866 platform APIs for text do not contain adequate functions for 1867</row>
1867 dealing with particular properties of many Unicode characters. In 1868<row>
1868 fact the POSIX APIs for text have several assumptions at their 1869 <entry>python-oslo.utils</entry>
1869 base which don't hold for Unicode text. This library provides 1870 <entry>3.16.1</entry>
1870 functions for manipulating Unicode strings and for manipulating C 1871 <entry>Oslo utils</entry>
1871 strings according to the Unicode standard. This package contains 1872 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1872 documentation.</entry> 1873</row>
1873 1874<row>
1874 <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 1875 <entry>python-oslo.versionedobjects</entry>
1875 </row> 1876 <entry>1.17.1</entry>
1876 1877 <entry>oslo.versionedobjects library</entry>
1877 <row> 1878 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1878 <entry>liburcu</entry> 1879</row>
1879 1880<row>
1880 <entry>0.9.3</entry> 1881 <entry>python-oslotest</entry>
1881 1882 <entry>2.10.1</entry>
1882 <entry>Userspace RCU (read-copy-update) library.</entry> 1883 <entry>OpenStack test framework and test fixtures. The oslotest package can be cross-tested against its consuming projects to ensure that no changes to the library break the tests in those other projects.</entry>
1883 1884 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1884 <entry>LGPL-2.1, MIT</entry> 1885</row>
1885 </row> 1886<row>
1886 1887 <entry>python-osprofiler</entry>
1887 <row> 1888 <entry>1.4.0</entry>
1888 <entry>libusb-compat</entry> 1889 <entry>OpenStack Profiler Library</entry>
1889 1890 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1890 <entry>0.1.5</entry> 1891</row>
1891 1892<row>
1892 <entry>libusb-0.1 compatible layer for libusb1 a drop-in 1893 <entry>python-pam</entry>
1893 replacement that aims to look feel and behave exactly like 1894 <entry>1.8.2</entry>
1894 libusb-0.1</entry> 1895 <entry>Python PAM module using ctypes py3/py2.</entry>
1895 1896 <entry>MIT</entry>
1896 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1897</row>
1897 </row> 1898<row>
1898 1899 <entry>python-paramiko</entry>
1899 <row> 1900 <entry>2.1.1</entry>
1900 <entry>libusb1</entry> 1901 <entry>SSH2 protocol library</entry>
1901 1902 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
1902 <entry>1.0.21</entry> 1903</row>
1903 1904<row>
1904 <entry>Userspace library to access USB (version 1.0).</entry> 1905 <entry>python-passlib</entry>
1905 1906 <entry>1.7.1</entry>
1906 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry> 1907 <entry>Passlib is a password hashing library for Python 2 &amp; 3 which provides cross-platform implementations of over 30 password hashing algorithms as well as a framework for managing existing password hashes. It’s designed to be useful for a wide range of tasks from verifying a hash found in /etc/shadow to providing full-strength password hashing for multi-user applications.</entry>
1907 </row> 1908 <entry>BSD</entry>
1908 1909</row>
1909 <row> 1910<row>
1910 <entry>libvirt</entry> 1911 <entry>python-paste</entry>
1911 1912 <entry>2.0.3</entry>
1912 <entry>1.3.5</entry> 1913 <entry>Tools for using a Web Server Gateway Interface stack.</entry>
1913 1914 <entry>MIT</entry>
1914 <entry>A toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities 1915</row>
1915 of recent versions of Linux.</entry> 1916<row>
1916 1917 <entry>python-pastedeploy</entry>
1917 <entry>LGPL-2.1, GPL-2.0</entry> 1918 <entry>1.5.2</entry>
1918 </row> 1919 <entry>Load configure and compose WSGI applications and servers</entry>
1919 1920 <entry>MIT</entry>
1920 <row> 1921</row>
1921 <entry>libx11</entry> 1922<row>
1922 1923 <entry>python-pbr</entry>
1923 <entry>1.6.4</entry> 1924 <entry>2.0.0</entry>
1924 1925 <entry>Python Build Reasonableness: PBR is a library that injects some useful and sensible default behaviors into your setuptools run</entry>
1925 <entry>This package provides a client interface to the X Window 1926 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1926 System otherwise known as 'Xlib'. It provides a complete API for 1927</row>
1927 the basic functions of the window system.</entry> 1928<row>
1928 1929 <entry>python-pecan</entry>
1929 <entry>MIT, BSD</entry> 1930 <entry>1.2.1</entry>
1930 </row> 1931 <entry>WSGI object-dispatching web framework</entry>
1931 1932 <entry>BSD</entry>
1932 <row> 1933</row>
1933 <entry>libxau</entry> 1934<row>
1934 1935 <entry>python-pep8</entry>
1935 <entry>1.0.8</entry> 1936 <entry>1.7.0</entry>
1936 1937 <entry>Python style guide checker.</entry>
1937 <entry>libxau provides the main interfaces to the X11 1938 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1938 authorisation handling which controls authorisation for X 1939</row>
1939 connections both client-side and server-side.</entry> 1940<row>
1940 1941 <entry>python-pika-pool</entry>
1941 <entry>MIT</entry> 1942 <entry>0.1.3</entry>
1942 </row> 1943 <entry>pools for your pikas.</entry>
1943 1944 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1944 <row> 1945</row>
1945 <entry>libxaw</entry> 1946<row>
1946 1947 <entry>python-pika</entry>
1947 <entry>1.0.13</entry> 1948 <entry>0.10.0</entry>
1948 1949 <entry>Pure Python RabbitMQ/AMQP 0-9-1 client library.</entry>
1949 <entry>X Athena Widget Set.</entry> 1950 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
1950 1951</row>
1951 <entry>MIT</entry> 1952<row>
1952 </row> 1953 <entry>python-pip</entry>
1953 1954 <entry>9.0.1</entry>
1954 <row> 1955 <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python packages.</entry>
1955 <entry>libxcb</entry> 1956 <entry> MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry>
1956 1957</row>
1957 <entry>1.12</entry> 1958<row>
1958 1959 <entry>python-ply</entry>
1959 <entry>The X protocol C-language Binding (XCB) is a replacement 1960 <entry>3.10</entry>
1960 for Xlib featuring a small footprint latency hiding direct access 1961 <entry>Python ply: PLY is yet another implementation of lex and yacc for Python</entry>
1961 to the protocol improved threading support and 1962 <entry>BSD</entry>
1962 extensibility.</entry> 1963</row>
1963 1964<row>
1964 <entry>MIT</entry> 1965 <entry>python-positional</entry>
1965 </row> 1966 <entry>1.1.1</entry>
1966 1967 <entry>Library to enforce positional or key-word arguments</entry>
1967 <row> 1968 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
1968 <entry>libxdmcp</entry> 1969</row>
1969 1970<row>
1970 <entry>1.1.2</entry> 1971 <entry>python-posix-ipc</entry>
1971 1972 <entry>1.0.0</entry>
1972 <entry>The purpose of the X Display Manager Control Protocol 1973 <entry>POSIX IPC primitives (semaphores shared memory and message queues) for Python</entry>
1973 (XDMCP) is to provide a uniform mechanism for an autonomous 1974 <entry>BSD</entry>
1974 display to request login service from a remote host. An X terminal 1975</row>
1975 (screen keyboard mouse processor network interface) is a prime 1976<row>
1976 example of an autonomous display.</entry> 1977 <entry>python-pretend</entry>
1977 1978 <entry>1.0.8</entry>
1978 <entry>MIT</entry> 1979 <entry>A library for stubbing in Python.</entry>
1979 </row> 1980 <entry>BSD</entry>
1980 1981</row>
1981 <row> 1982<row>
1982 <entry>libxext</entry> 1983 <entry>python-prettytable</entry>
1983 1984 <entry>0.7.2</entry>
1984 <entry>1.3.3</entry> 1985 <entry>Python library for displaying tabular data in a ASCII table format.</entry>
1985 1986 <entry>BSD</entry>
1986 <entry>libXext provides an X Window System client interface to 1987</row>
1987 several extensions to the X protocol. The supported protocol 1988<row>
1988 extensions are DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS Extended-Visual-Information LBX 1989 <entry>python-psutil</entry>
1989 MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC 1990 <entry>5.2.0</entry>
1990 TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC XTEST. libXext also provides a small 1991 <entry>A cross-platform process and system utilities module for Python.</entry>
1991 set of utility functions to aid authors of client APIs for X 1992 <entry>BSD</entry>
1992 protocol extensions.</entry> 1993</row>
1993 1994<row>
1994 <entry>MIT</entry> 1995 <entry>python-psycopg2</entry>
1995 </row> 1996 <entry>2.6.2</entry>
1996 1997 <entry>Python-PostgreSQL Database Adapter</entry>
1997 <row> 1998 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
1998 <entry>libxinerama</entry> 1999</row>
1999 2000<row>
2000 <entry>1.1.3</entry> 2001 <entry>python-py</entry>
2001 2002 <entry>1.4.32</entry>
2002 <entry>Xinerama is a simple library designed to interface the 2003 <entry>Library with cross-python path ini-parsing io code log facilities.</entry>
2003 Xinerama Extension for retrieving information about physical 2004 <entry>MIT</entry>
2004 output devices which may be combined into a single logical X 2005</row>
2005 screen.</entry> 2006<row>
2006 2007 <entry>python-pyasn1</entry>
2007 <entry>MIT</entry> 2008 <entry>0.2.3</entry>
2008 </row> 2009 <entry>Python library implementing ASN.1 types..</entry>
2009 2010 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
2010 <row> 2011</row>
2011 <entry>libxkbcommon</entry> 2012<row>
2012 2013 <entry>python-pycadf</entry>
2013 <entry>0.7.1</entry> 2014 <entry>1.1.0</entry>
2014 2015 <entry>CADF Library</entry>
2015 <entry>libxkbcommon is a keymap compiler and support library which 2016 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2016 processes a reduced subset of keymaps as defined by the XKB 2017</row>
2017 specification.</entry> 2018<row>
2018 2019 <entry>python-pycparser</entry>
2019 <entry>MIT</entry> 2020 <entry>2.17</entry>
2020 </row> 2021 <entry>Parser of the C language written in pure Python.</entry>
2021 2022 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
2022 <row> 2023</row>
2023 <entry>libxml-parser-perl</entry> 2024<row>
2024 2025 <entry>python-pycrypto</entry>
2025 <entry>2.44</entry> 2026 <entry>2.6.1</entry>
2026 2027 <entry>Cryptographic modules for Python.</entry>
2027 <entry>XML::Parser - A perl module for parsing XML 2028 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
2028 documents.</entry> 2029</row>
2029 2030<row>
2030 <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> 2031 <entry>python-pyflakes</entry>
2031 </row> 2032 <entry>1.2.3</entry>
2032 2033 <entry>passive checker of Python programs.</entry>
2033 <row> 2034 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2034 <entry>libxml2</entry> 2035</row>
2035 2036<row>
2036 <entry>2.9.4</entry> 2037 <entry>python-pyinotify</entry>
2037 2038 <entry>0.9.6</entry>
2038 <entry>The XML Parser Library allows for manipulation of XML 2039 <entry>Python pyinotify: Linux filesystem events monitoring</entry>
2039 files. Libxml2 exports Push and Pull type parser interfaces for 2040 <entry>MIT</entry>
2040 both XML and HTML. It can do DTD validation at parse time on a 2041</row>
2041 parsed document instance or with an arbitrary DTD. Libxml2 2042<row>
2042 includes complete XPath XPointer and Xinclude implementations. It 2043 <entry>python-pymongo</entry>
2043 also has a SAX like interface which is designed to be compatible 2044 <entry>3.4.0</entry>
2044 with Expat.</entry> 2045 <entry>The PyMongo distribution contains tools for interacting with MongoDB database from Python. The bson package is an implementation of the BSON format for Python. The pymongo package is a native Python driver for MongoDB. The gridfs package is a gridfs implementation on top of pymongo.</entry>
2045 2046 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2046 <entry>MIT</entry> 2047</row>
2047 </row> 2048<row>
2048 2049 <entry>python-pyopenssl</entry>
2049 <row> 2050 <entry>16.2.0</entry>
2050 <entry>libxmu</entry> 2051 <entry>Simple Python wrapper around the OpenSSL library.</entry>
2051 2052 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2052 <entry>1.1.2</entry> 2053</row>
2053 2054<row>
2054 <entry>The Xmu Library is a collection of miscellaneous (some 2055 <entry>python-pyparsing</entry>
2055 might say random) utility functions that have been useful in 2056 <entry>2.2.0</entry>
2056 building various applications and widgets. This library is 2057 <entry>Python parsing module.</entry>
2057 required by the Athena Widgets. A subset of the functions that do 2058 <entry>MIT</entry>
2058 not rely on the Athena Widgets (libXaw) or X Toolkit Instrinsics 2059</row>
2059 (libXt) are provided in a second library libXmuu.</entry> 2060<row>
2060 2061 <entry>python-pysaml2</entry>
2061 <entry>MIT</entry> 2062 <entry>3.0.2</entry>
2062 </row> 2063 <entry>Python implementation of SAML Version 2 to be used in a WSGI environment</entry>
2063 2064 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2064 <row> 2065</row>
2065 <entry>libxpm</entry> 2066<row>
2066 2067 <entry>python-pysmi</entry>
2067 <entry>3.5.12</entry> 2068 <entry>0.1.2</entry>
2068 2069 <entry>A pure-Python implementation of SNMP/SMI MIB parsing and conversion library. Can produce PySNMP MIB modules. </entry>
2069 <entry>libXpm provides support and common operation for the XPM 2070 <entry>BSD</entry>
2070 pixmap format which is commonly used in legacy X applications. XPM 2071</row>
2071 is an extension of the monochrome XBM bitmap specificied in the X 2072<row>
2072 protocol.</entry> 2073 <entry>python-pysnmp</entry>
2073 2074 <entry>4.3.5</entry>
2074 <entry>BSD</entry> 2075 <entry>SNMP v1/v2c/v3 engine and apps written in pure-Python. Supports Manager/Agent/Proxy roles scriptable MIBs asynchronous operation (asyncio twisted asyncore) and multiple transports.</entry>
2075 </row> 2076 <entry>BSD</entry>
2076 2077</row>
2077 <row> 2078<row>
2078 <entry>libxrandr</entry> 2079 <entry>python-pysocks</entry>
2079 2080 <entry>1.6.6</entry>
2080 <entry>1.5.1</entry> 2081 <entry>A Python SOCKS client module</entry>
2081 2082 <entry>BSD</entry>
2082 <entry>The X Resize Rotate and Reflect Extension called RandR for 2083</row>
2083 short brings the ability to resize rotate and reflect the root 2084<row>
2084 window of a screen. It is based on the X Resize and Rotate 2085 <entry>python-pytest</entry>
2085 Extension as specified in the Proceedings of the 2001 Usenix 2086 <entry>3.0.6</entry>
2086 Technical Conference [RANDR].</entry> 2087 <entry>Simple powerful teting with python.</entry>
2087 2088 <entry>MIT</entry>
2088 <entry>MIT</entry> 2089</row>
2089 </row> 2090<row>
2090 2091 <entry>python-python-editor</entry>
2091 <row> 2092 <entry>0.4</entry>
2092 <entry>libxrender</entry> 2093 <entry>Programmatically open an editor capture the result</entry>
2093 2094 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2094 <entry>0.9.10</entry> 2095</row>
2095 2096<row>
2096 <entry>The X Rendering Extension (Render) introduces digital image 2097 <entry>python-pytz</entry>
2097 composition as the foundation of a new rendering model within the 2098 <entry>2017.2</entry>
2098 X Window System. Rendering geometric figures is accomplished by 2099 <entry>World timezone definitions modern and historical.</entry>
2099 client-side tessellation into either triangles or trapezoids. Text 2100 <entry>MIT</entry>
2100 is drawn by loading glyphs into the server and rendering sets of 2101</row>
2101 them.</entry> 2102<row>
2102 2103 <entry>python-pyyaml</entry>
2103 <entry>MIT</entry> 2104 <entry>3.11</entry>
2104 </row> 2105 <entry> YAML is a data serialization format designed for human readability and interaction with scripting languages. PyYAML is a YAML parser and emitter for Python. . PyYAML features a complete YAML 1.1 parser Unicode support pickle support capable extension API and sensible error messages. PyYAML supports standard YAML tags and provides Python-specific tags that allow to represent an arbitrary Python object. . PyYAML is applicable for a broad range of tasks from complex configuration files to object serialization and persistance. </entry>
2105 2106 <entry>MIT</entry>
2106 <row> 2107</row>
2107 <entry>libxslt</entry> 2108<row>
2108 2109 <entry>python-repoze.lru</entry>
2109 <entry>1.1.29</entry> 2110 <entry>0.6</entry>
2110 2111 <entry>repoze.lru is a LRU (least recently used) cache implementation. Keys and values that are not used frequently will be evicted from the cache faster than keys and values that are used frequently. </entry>
2111 <entry>GNOME XSLT library.</entry> 2112 <entry>BSD-Modification-copyright</entry>
2112 2113</row>
2113 <entry>MIT</entry> 2114<row>
2114 </row> 2115 <entry>python-repoze.who</entry>
2115 2116 <entry>2.2</entry>
2116 <row> 2117 <entry>An identification and authentication framework for WSGI</entry>
2117 <entry>libxt</entry> 2118 <entry>BSD-Modification</entry>
2118 2119</row>
2119 <entry>1.1.5</entry> 2120<row>
2120 2121 <entry>python-requests</entry>
2121 <entry>The Intrinsics are a programming library tailored to the 2122 <entry>2.13.0</entry>
2122 special requirements of user interface construction within a 2123 <entry>Python HTTP for Humans.</entry>
2123 network window system specifically the X Window System. The 2124 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2124 Intrinsics and a widget set make up an X Toolkit. The Intrinsics 2125</row>
2125 provide the base mechanism necessary to build a wide variety of 2126<row>
2126 interoperating widget sets and application environments. The 2127 <entry>python-requestsexceptions</entry>
2127 Intrinsics are a layer on top of Xlib the C Library X Interface. 2128 <entry>1.1.3</entry>
2128 They extend the fundamental abstractions provided by the X Window 2129 <entry>Import exceptions from potentially bundled packages in requests.</entry>
2129 System while still remaining independent of any particular user 2130 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2130 interface policy or style.</entry> 2131</row>
2131 2132<row>
2132 <entry>MIT</entry> 2133 <entry>python-retrying</entry>
2133 </row> 2134 <entry>1.3.3</entry>
2134 2135 <entry>Retrying</entry>
2135 <row> 2136 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2136 <entry>libyaml</entry> 2137</row>
2137 2138<row>
2138 <entry>0.1.7</entry> 2139 <entry>python-rfc3986</entry>
2139 2140 <entry>0.4.1</entry>
2140 <entry>LibYAML is a C library for parsing and emitting data in 2141 <entry>Validating URI References per RFC 3986</entry>
2141 YAML 1.1 a human-readable data serialization format.</entry> 2142 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2142 2143</row>
2143 <entry>MIT</entry> 2144<row>
2144 </row> 2145 <entry>python-rfc3987</entry>
2145 2146 <entry>1.3.7</entry>
2146 <row> 2147 <entry>Parsing and validation of URIs (RFC 3986) and IRIs (RFC 3987).</entry>
2147 <entry>linux-intel-host</entry> 2148 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2148 2149</row>
2149 <entry>4.9.47</entry> 2150<row>
2150 2151 <entry>python-routes</entry>
2151 <entry>Linux kernel.</entry> 2152 <entry>2.4.1</entry>
2152 2153 <entry>A Python re-implementation of the Rails routes system.</entry>
2153 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2154 <entry>MIT</entry>
2154 </row> 2155</row>
2155 2156<row>
2156 <row> 2157 <entry>python-ryu</entry>
2157 <entry>linux-libc-headers</entry> 2158 <entry>4.16</entry>
2158 2159 <entry>Ryu component-based software defined networking framework</entry>
2159 <entry>4.10</entry> 2160 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2160 2161</row>
2161 <entry>Sanitized set of kernel headers for the C library's 2162<row>
2162 use.</entry> 2163 <entry>python-setproctitle</entry>
2163 2164 <entry>1.1.10</entry>
2164 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2165 <entry>A Python module to customize the process title</entry>
2165 </row> 2166 <entry>BSD</entry>
2166 2167</row>
2167 <row> 2168<row>
2168 <entry>lsb</entry> 2169 <entry>python-setuptools-git</entry>
2169 2170 <entry>1.1</entry>
2170 <entry>4.1</entry> 2171 <entry>Plugin for setuptools that enables git integration</entry>
2171 2172 <entry>BSD</entry>
2172 <entry>LSB support for OpenEmbedded.</entry> 2173</row>
2173 2174<row>
2174 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2175 <entry>python-setuptools</entry>
2175 </row> 2176 <entry>32.1.1</entry>
2176 2177 <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python packages.</entry>
2177 <row> 2178 <entry>MIT</entry>
2178 <entry>lsbinitscripts</entry> 2179</row>
2179 2180<row>
2180 <entry>9.68</entry> 2181 <entry>python-simplegeneric</entry>
2181 2182 <entry>0.8.1</entry>
2182 <entry>SysV init scripts which are only used in an LSB 2183 <entry>Simple generic functions</entry>
2183 image.</entry> 2184 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2184 2185</row>
2185 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2186<row>
2186 </row> 2187 <entry>python-simplejson</entry>
2187 2188 <entry>3.7.3</entry>
2188 <row> 2189 <entry> JSON &lt;http://json.org&gt; encoder and decoder for Python 2.5+ and Python 3.3+. It is pure Python code with no dependencies but includes an optional C extension for a serious speed boost </entry>
2189 <entry>lttng-ust</entry> 2190 <entry>MIT</entry>
2190 2191</row>
2191 <entry>2.9.0</entry> 2192<row>
2192 2193 <entry>python-singledispatch</entry>
2193 <entry>The LTTng UST 2.x package contains the userspace tracer 2194 <entry>3.4.0.3</entry>
2194 library to trace userspace codes.</entry> 2195 <entry>PEP 443 proposed to expose a mechanism in the functools standard library module in Python 3.4 that provides a simple form of generic programming known as single-dispatch generic functions. This library is a backport of this functionality to Python 2.6 - 3.3</entry>
2195 2196 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2196 <entry>LGPL-2.1, MIT, GPL-2.0</entry> 2197</row>
2197 </row> 2198<row>
2198 2199 <entry>python-six</entry>
2199 <row> 2200 <entry>1.10.0</entry>
2200 <entry>lvm2</entry> 2201 <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities</entry>
2201 2202 <entry>MIT</entry>
2202 <entry>2.02.166</entry> 2203</row>
2203 2204<row>
2204 <entry>LVM2 is a set of utilities to manage logical volumes in 2205 <entry>python-sphinx</entry>
2205 Linux.</entry> 2206 <entry>1.4.1</entry>
2206 2207 <entry>Python documentation generator</entry>
2207 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> 2208 <entry>BSD</entry>
2208 </row> 2209</row>
2209 2210<row>
2210 <row> 2211 <entry>python-sqlalchemy-migrate</entry>
2211 <entry>lxc</entry> 2212 <entry>0.10.0</entry>
2212 2213 <entry>Database schema migration for SQLAlchemy</entry>
2213 <entry>2.0.0</entry> 2214 <entry>MIT</entry>
2214 2215</row>
2215 <entry>lxc aims to use these new functionnalities to provide an 2216<row>
2216 userspace container object</entry> 2217 <entry>python-sqlalchemy</entry>
2217 2218 <entry>1.0.16</entry>
2218 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2219 <entry>Python SQL toolkit and Object Relational Mapper that gives application developers the full power and flexibility of SQL</entry>
2219 </row> 2220 <entry>MIT</entry>
2220 2221</row>
2221 <row> 2222<row>
2222 <entry>lzo</entry> 2223 <entry>python-sqlparse</entry>
2223 2224 <entry>0.1.16</entry>
2224 <entry>2.09</entry> 2225 <entry>Non-validating SQL parser module</entry>
2225 2226 <entry>BSD</entry>
2226 <entry>Lossless data compression library.</entry> 2227</row>
2227 2228<row>
2228 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2229 <entry>python-stevedore</entry>
2229 </row> 2230 <entry>1.19.1</entry>
2230 2231 <entry>Manage dynamic plugins for Python applications</entry>
2231 <row> 2232 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2232 <entry>lzop</entry> 2233</row>
2233 2234<row>
2234 <entry>1.03</entry> 2235 <entry>python-strict-rfc3339</entry>
2235 2236 <entry>0.7</entry>
2236 <entry>lzop is a compression utility which is designed to be a 2237 <entry>Strict simple lightweight RFC3339 function.s.</entry>
2237 companion to gzip. \nIt is based on the LZO data compression 2238 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2238 library and its main advantages over \ngzip are much higher 2239</row>
2239 compression and decompression speed at the cost of some 2240<row>
2240 \ncompression ratio. The lzop compression utility was designed 2241 <entry>python-subunit</entry>
2241 with the goals \nof reliability speed portability and with 2242 <entry>1.1.0</entry>
2242 reasonable drop-in compatibility \nto gzip.</entry> 2243 <entry>Python implementation of subunit test streaming protocol</entry>
2243 2244 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2244 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2245</row>
2245 </row> 2246<row>
2246 2247 <entry>python-suds-jurko</entry>
2247 <row> 2248 <entry>0.6</entry>
2248 <entry>m4</entry> 2249 <entry>Lightweight SOAP client (Jurko's fork)</entry>
2249 2250 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
2250 <entry>1.4.18</entry> 2251</row>
2251 2252<row>
2252 <entry>GNU m4 is an implementation of the traditional Unix macro 2253 <entry>python-swiftclient</entry>
2253 processor. It is mostly SVR4 compatible although it has some 2254 <entry>3.1.0</entry>
2254 extensions (for example handling more than 9 positional parameters 2255 <entry>Client library for OpenStack Object Storage API</entry>
2255 to macros). GNU M4 also has built-in functions for including files 2256 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2256 running shell commands doing arithmetic etc.</entry> 2257</row>
2257 2258<row>
2258 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 2259 <entry>python-sysv-ipc</entry>
2259 </row> 2260 <entry>0.6.8</entry>
2260 2261 <entry>System V IPC primitives (semaphores shared memory and message queues) for Python</entry>
2261 <row> 2262 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2262 <entry>make</entry> 2263</row>
2263 2264<row>
2264 <entry>4.2.1</entry> 2265 <entry>python-tempita</entry>
2265 2266 <entry>0.5.3dev</entry>
2266 <entry>Make is a tool which controls the generation of executables 2267 <entry>A very small text templating language</entry>
2267 and other non-source files of a program from the program's source 2268 <entry>MIT</entry>
2268 files. Make gets its knowledge of how to build your program from a 2269</row>
2269 file called the makefile which lists each of the non-source files 2270<row>
2270 and how to compute it from other files.</entry> 2271 <entry>python-termcolor</entry>
2271 2272 <entry>1.1.0</entry>
2272 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-2.0</entry> 2273 <entry>ANSII Color formatting for output in terminal</entry>
2273 </row> 2274 <entry>MIT</entry>
2274 2275</row>
2275 <row> 2276<row>
2276 <entry>makedepend</entry> 2277 <entry>python-testrepository</entry>
2277 2278 <entry>0.0.20</entry>
2278 <entry>1.0.5</entry> 2279 <entry>A repository of test results</entry>
2279 2280 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2280 <entry>The makedepend program reads each sourcefile in sequence 2281</row>
2281 and parses it like a C-preprocessor processing all #include 2282<row>
2282 #define #undef #ifdef #ifndef #endif #if #elif and #else 2283 <entry>python-testscenarios</entry>
2283 directives so that it can correctly tell which #include directives 2284 <entry>0.5.0</entry>
2284 would be used in a compilation. Any #include directives can 2285 <entry>testscenarios: a pyunit extension for dependency injection</entry>
2285 reference files having other #include directives and parsing will 2286 <entry>BSD</entry>
2286 occur in these files as well.</entry> 2287</row>
2287 2288<row>
2288 <entry>MIT</entry> 2289 <entry>python-testtools</entry>
2289 </row> 2290 <entry>2.2.0</entry>
2290 2291 <entry>Extensions to the Python standard library unit testing framework</entry>
2291 <row> 2292 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2292 <entry>makedevs</entry> 2293</row>
2293 2294<row>
2294 <entry>1.0.1</entry> 2295 <entry>python-thrift</entry>
2295 2296 <entry>0.10.0</entry>
2296 <entry>Tool for creating device nodes.</entry> 2297 <entry>Python bindings for the Apache Thrift RPC system.</entry>
2297 2298 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2298 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2299</row>
2299 </row> 2300<row>
2300 2301 <entry>python-tinyrpc</entry>
2301 <row> 2302 <entry>0.5</entry>
2302 <entry>meta-environment-inteld1521</entry> 2303 <entry>A small modular transport and protocol neutral RPC library that among other things supports JSON-RPC and zmq.</entry>
2303 2304 <entry>MIT</entry>
2304 <entry>1.0</entry> 2305</row>
2305 2306<row>
2306 <entry>Package of environment files for SDK.</entry> 2307 <entry>python-tooz</entry>
2307 2308 <entry>1.43.1</entry>
2308 <entry>MIT</entry> 2309 <entry>Coordination library for distributed systems.</entry>
2309 </row> 2310 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2310 2311</row>
2311 <row> 2312<row>
2312 <entry>meta-toolchain</entry> 2313 <entry>python-troveclient</entry>
2313 2314 <entry>2.5.0</entry>
2314 <entry>1.0</entry> 2315 <entry>Trove Client Library for OpenStack Datbase service</entry>
2315 2316 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2316 <entry>Meta package for building a installable toolchain.</entry> 2317</row>
2317 2318<row>
2318 <entry>MIT</entry> 2319 <entry>python-twisted</entry>
2319 </row> 2320 <entry>13.2.0</entry>
2320 2321 <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>
2321 <row> 2322 <entry>MIT</entry>
2322 <entry>mklibs</entry> 2323</row>
2323 2324<row>
2324 <entry>0.1.43</entry> 2325 <entry>python-unicodecsv</entry>
2325 2326 <entry>0.14.1</entry>
2326 <entry>mklibs produces cut-down shared libraries that contain only 2327 <entry>Python2's stdlib csv module replacement with unicode support.</entry>
2327 the routines required by a particular set of executables.</entry> 2328 <entry>BSD</entry>
2328 2329</row>
2329 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2330<row>
2330 </row> 2331 <entry>python-urllib3</entry>
2331 2332 <entry>1.2</entry>
2332 <row> 2333 <entry>Python HTTP library with thread-safe connection pooling file post support sanity friendly and more.</entry>
2333 <entry>mpfr</entry> 2334 <entry>MIT</entry>
2334 2335</row>
2335 <entry>3.1.5</entry> 2336<row>
2336 2337 <entry>python-voluptuous</entry>
2337 <entry>C library for multiple-precision floating-point 2338 <entry>0.10.5</entry>
2338 computations with exact rounding.</entry> 2339 <entry>Voluptuous is a Python data validation library</entry>
2339 2340 <entry>BSD</entry>
2340 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry> 2341</row>
2341 </row> 2342<row>
2342 2343 <entry>python-waitress</entry>
2343 <row> 2344 <entry>1.0.1</entry>
2344 <entry>mtools</entry> 2345 <entry>Waitress WSGI server</entry>
2345 2346 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2346 <entry>4.0.18</entry> 2347</row>
2347 2348<row>
2348 <entry>Mtools is a collection of utilities to access MS-DOS disks 2349 <entry>python-warlock</entry>
2349 from GNU and Unix without mounting them.</entry> 2350 <entry>1.2.0</entry>
2350 2351 <entry>Build self-validating python objects using JSON schemas</entry>
2351 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 2352 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2352 </row> 2353</row>
2353 2354<row>
2354 <row> 2355 <entry>python-webob</entry>
2355 <entry>nasm</entry> 2356 <entry>1.6.0</entry>
2356 2357 <entry>WSGI request and response object</entry>
2357 <entry>2.12.02</entry> 2358 <entry>MIT</entry>
2358 2359</row>
2359 <entry>General-purpose x86 assembler.</entry> 2360<row>
2360 2361 <entry>python-websockify</entry>
2361 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> 2362 <entry>0.8.0</entry>
2362 </row> 2363 <entry>WebSockets support for any application/server</entry>
2363 2364 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
2364 <row> 2365</row>
2365 <entry>ncurses</entry> 2366<row>
2366 2367 <entry>python-webtest</entry>
2367 <entry>6.0</entry> 2368 <entry>2.0.21</entry>
2368 2369 <entry>Helper to test WSGI applications</entry>
2369 <entry>SVr4 and XSI-Curses compatible curses library and terminfo 2370 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2370 tools including tic infocmp captoinfo. Supports color multiple 2371</row>
2371 highlights forms-drawing characters and automatic recognition of 2372<row>
2372 keypad and function-key sequences. Extensions include resizable 2373 <entry>python-werkzeug</entry>
2373 windows and mouse support on both xterm and Linux console using 2374 <entry>0.10.4</entry>
2374 the gpm library.</entry> 2375 <entry>The Swiss Army knife of Python web development</entry>
2375 2376 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
2376 <entry>MIT</entry> 2377</row>
2377 </row> 2378<row>
2378 2379 <entry>python-wrapt</entry>
2379 <row> 2380 <entry>1.10.8</entry>
2380 <entry>netbase</entry> 2381 <entry>A Python module for decorators wrappers and monkey patching..</entry>
2381 2382 <entry>BSD</entry>
2382 <entry>5.4</entry> 2383</row>
2383 2384<row>
2384 <entry>This package provides the necessary infrastructure for 2385 <entry>python-wsme</entry>
2385 basic TCP/IP based networking</entry> 2386 <entry>0.9.1</entry>
2386 2387 <entry>Simplify the writing of REST APIs and extend them with additional protocols</entry>
2387 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2388 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2388 </row> 2389</row>
2389 2390<row>
2390 <row> 2391 <entry>python-zake</entry>
2391 <entry>netcat-openbsd</entry> 2392 <entry>0.2.1</entry>
2392 2393 <entry>A python package that works to provide a nice set of testing utilities for the kazoo library.</entry>
2393 <entry>1.105</entry> 2394 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2394 2395</row>
2395 <entry>A simple Unix utility which reads and writes data across 2396<row>
2396 network connections using TCP or UDP protocol. It is designed to 2397 <entry>python-zopeinterface</entry>
2397 be a reliable 'back-end' tool that can be used directly or easily 2398 <entry>4.3.3</entry>
2398 driven by other programs and scripts. At the same time it is a 2399 <entry>Interface definitions for Zope products.</entry>
2399 feature-rich network debugging and exploration tool since it can 2400 <entry>ZPL-2.1</entry>
2400 create almost any kind of connection you would need and has 2401</row>
2401 several interesting built-in capabilities.</entry> 2402<row>
2402 2403 <entry>python</entry>
2403 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry> 2404 <entry>2.7.13</entry>
2404 </row> 2405 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
2405 2406 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
2406 <row> 2407</row>
2407 <entry>nettle</entry> 2408<row>
2408 2409 <entry>python3-dbus</entry>
2409 <entry>3.3</entry> 2410 <entry>1.2.4</entry>
2410 2411 <entry>Python bindings for the DBus inter-process communication system.</entry>
2411 <entry>A low level cryptographic library.</entry> 2412 <entry>MIT</entry>
2412 2413</row>
2413 <entry>LGPL-3.0, GPL-2.0</entry> 2414<row>
2414 </row> 2415 <entry>python3-pycairo</entry>
2415 2416 <entry>1.10.0</entry>
2416 <row> 2417 <entry>Python bindings for the Cairo canvas library.</entry>
2417 <entry>nfs-utils</entry> 2418 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
2418 2419</row>
2419 <entry>1.3.4</entry> 2420<row>
2420 2421 <entry>python3-pygobject</entry>
2421 <entry>The nfs-utils package provides a daemon for the kernel NFS 2422 <entry>3.22.0</entry>
2422 server and related tools.</entry> 2423 <entry>Python GObject bindings.</entry>
2423 2424 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2424 <entry>MIT, GPL-2.0, BSD</entry> 2425</row>
2425 </row> 2426<row>
2426 2427 <entry>python3-setuptools</entry>
2427 <row> 2428 <entry>32.1.1</entry>
2428 <entry>nspr</entry> 2429 <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python packages.</entry>
2429 2430 <entry>MIT</entry>
2430 <entry>4.13.1</entry> 2431</row>
2431 2432<row>
2432 <entry>Netscape Portable Runtime Library.</entry> 2433 <entry>python3</entry>
2433 2434 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
2434 <entry>GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 2435 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
2435 </row> 2436 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
2436 2437</row>
2437 <row> 2438<row>
2438 <entry>nss</entry> 2439 <entry>qemu</entry>
2439 2440 <entry>2.8.0</entry>
2440 <entry>3.28.1</entry> 2441 <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry>
2441 2442 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2442 <entry>Network Security Services (NSS) is a set of libraries 2443</row>
2443 designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled 2444<row>
2444 client and server applications. Applications built with NSS can 2445 <entry>qemuwrapper</entry>
2445 support SSL v2 and v3 TLS PKCS 5 PKCS 7 PKCS 11 PKCS 12 S/MIME 2446 <entry>1.0</entry>
2446 X.509 v3 certificates and other security standards.</entry> 2447 <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry>
2447 2448 <entry>MIT</entry>
2448 <entry>MPL-2.0, GPL-2.0, MPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 2449</row>
2449 </row> 2450<row>
2450 2451 <entry>quilt</entry>
2451 <row> 2452 <entry>0.65</entry>
2452 <entry>numactl</entry> 2453 <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry>
2453 2454 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2454 <entry>2.0.11</entry> 2455</row>
2455 2456<row>
2456 <entry>Simple NUMA policy support. It consists of a numactl 2457 <entry>quota</entry>
2457 program to run other programs with a specific NUMA policy and a 2458 <entry>4.03</entry>
2458 libnuma to do allocations with NUMA policy in 2459 <entry>Tools for monitoring &amp; limiting user disk usage per filesystem.</entry>
2459 applications.</entry> 2460 <entry> BSD, GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2460 2461</row>
2461 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry> 2462<row>
2462 </row> 2463 <entry>randrproto</entry>
2463 2464 <entry>1.5.0</entry>
2464 <row> 2465 <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>
2465 <entry>openssh</entry> 2466 <entry>MIT</entry>
2466 2467</row>
2467 <entry>7.4p1</entry> 2468<row>
2468 2469 <entry>readline</entry>
2469 <entry>Secure rlogin/rsh/rcp/telnet replacement (OpenSSH) Ssh 2470 <entry>7.0</entry>
2470 (Secure Shell) is a program for logging into a remote machine and 2471 <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>
2471 for executing commands on a remote machine.</entry> 2472 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2472 2473</row>
2473 <entry>BSD</entry> 2474<row>
2474 </row> 2475 <entry>renderproto</entry>
2475 2476 <entry>0.11.1</entry>
2476 <row> 2477 <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>
2477 <entry>openssl</entry> 2478 <entry>MIT</entry>
2478 2479</row>
2479 <entry>1.0.2k</entry> 2480<row>
2480 2481 <entry>rpcbind</entry>
2481 <entry>Secure Socket Layer (SSL) binary and related cryptographic 2482 <entry>0.2.4</entry>
2482 tools.</entry> 2483 <entry>The rpcbind utility is a server that converts RPC program numbers into universal addresses.</entry>
2483 2484 <entry>BSD</entry>
2484 <entry>OpenSSL</entry> 2485</row>
2485 </row> 2486<row>
2486 2487 <entry>rpm</entry>
2487 <row> 2488 <entry>4.13.90</entry>
2488 <entry>openvswitch</entry> 2489 <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>
2489 2490 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2490 <entry>2.8.1</entry> 2491</row>
2491 2492<row>
2492 <entry>Open vSwitch is a production quality multilayer virtual 2493 <entry>rsync</entry>
2493 switch licensed under the open source Apache 2.0 license. It is 2494 <entry>3.1.2</entry>
2494 designed to enable massive network automation through programmatic 2495 <entry>File synchronization tool.</entry>
2495 extension while still supporting standard management interfaces 2496 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2496 and protocols (e.g. NetFlow sFlow SPAN RSPAN CLI LACP 2497</row>
2497 802.1ag)</entry> 2498<row>
2498 2499 <entry>run-postinsts</entry>
2499 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry> 2500 <entry>1.0</entry>
2500 </row> 2501 <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target device.</entry>
2501 2502 <entry>MIT</entry>
2502 <row> 2503</row>
2503 <entry>opkg-utils</entry> 2504<row>
2504 2505 <entry>sed</entry>
2505 <entry>0.3.4</entry> 2506 <entry>4.2.2</entry>
2506 2507 <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry>
2507 <entry>Additional utilities for the opkg package manager.</entry> 2508 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2508 2509</row>
2509 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2510<row>
2510 </row> 2511 <entry>sg3-utils</entry>
2511 2512 <entry>1.42</entry>
2512 <row> 2513 <entry>This package contains low level utilities for devices that use the SCSI command set</entry>
2513 <entry>opkg</entry> 2514 <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry>
2514 2515</row>
2515 <entry>0.3.4</entry> 2516<row>
2516 2517 <entry>shadow-securetty</entry>
2517 <entry>Open Package Manager.</entry> 2518 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
2518 2519 <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry>
2519 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2520 <entry>MIT</entry>
2520 </row> 2521</row>
2521 2522<row>
2522 <row> 2523 <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry>
2523 <entry>os-release</entry> 2524 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
2524 2525 <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry>
2525 <entry>1.0</entry> 2526 <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
2526 2527</row>
2527 <entry>The /etc/os-release file contains operating system 2528<row>
2528 identification data.</entry> 2529 <entry>shadow</entry>
2529 2530 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
2530 <entry>MIT</entry> 2531 <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group data.</entry>
2531 </row> 2532 <entry> BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
2532 2533</row>
2533 <row> 2534<row>
2534 <entry>ossp-uuid</entry> 2535 <entry>shared-mime-info</entry>
2535 2536 <entry>1.8</entry>
2536 <entry>1.6.2</entry> 2537 <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry>
2537 2538 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
2538 <entry>OSSP uuid is a ISO-C:1999 application programming interface 2539</row>
2539 (API) and corresponding command line interface (CLI) for the 2540<row>
2540 generation of DCE 1.1 ISO/IEC 11578:1996 and RFC 4122 compliant 2541 <entry>spice-html5</entry>
2541 Universally Unique Identifier (UUID). It supports DCE 1.1 variant 2542 <entry>0.1.4</entry>
2542 UUIDs of version 1 (time and node based) version 3 (name based 2543 <entry> Spice Web client which runs entirely within a modern browser. It is limited in function a bit slow and lacks support for many features of Spice (audio video agents just to name a few). . The Simple Protocol for Independent Computing Environments (SPICE) is a remote display system built for virtual environments which allows you to view a computing 'desktop' environment not only on the machine where it is running but from anywhere on the Internet and from a wide variety of machine architectures. </entry>
2543 MD5) version 4 (random number based) and version 5 (name based 2544 <entry> GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
2544 SHA-1).</entry> 2545</row>
2545 2546<row>
2546 <entry>MIT</entry> 2547 <entry>sqlite3</entry>
2547 </row> 2548 <entry>3.17.0</entry>
2548 2549 <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry>
2549 <row> 2550 <entry>PD</entry>
2550 <entry>packagegroup-cloud-compute</entry> 2551</row>
2551 2552<row>
2552 <entry>1.0</entry> 2553 <entry>strace</entry>
2553 2554 <entry>4.16</entry>
2554 <entry>Configuration for OpenStack Compute node.</entry> 2555 <entry>System call tracing tool.</entry>
2555 2556 <entry>BSD</entry>
2556 <entry>MIT</entry> 2557</row>
2557 </row> 2558<row>
2558 2559 <entry>sudo</entry>
2559 <row> 2560 <entry>1.8.19p2</entry>
2560 <entry>packagegroup-cloud-debug</entry> 2561 <entry>Sudo (superuser do) allows a system administrator to give certain users (or groups of users) the ability to run some (or all) commands as root while logging all commands and arguments.</entry>
2561 2562 <entry> ISC, BSD, Zlib</entry>
2562 <entry>1.0</entry> 2563</row>
2563 2564<row>
2564 <entry>Add debugging capabilities to cloud images.</entry> 2565 <entry>sysfsutils</entry>
2565 2566 <entry>2.1.0</entry>
2566 <entry>MIT</entry> 2567 <entry>Tools for working with the sysfs virtual filesystem. The tool 'systool' can query devices by bus class and topology.</entry>
2567 </row> 2568 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2568 2569</row>
2569 <row> 2570<row>
2570 <entry>packagegroup-cloud-extras</entry> 2571 <entry>sysklogd</entry>
2571 2572 <entry>1.5.1</entry>
2572 <entry>1.0</entry> 2573 <entry>The sysklogd package implements two system log daemons: syslogd klogd</entry>
2573 2574 <entry> GPL-2.0, BSD</entry>
2574 <entry>Extra packages that improve the usability of 2575</row>
2575 compute/control nodes.</entry> 2576<row>
2576 2577 <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry>
2577 <entry>MIT</entry> 2578 <entry>1.0</entry>
2578 </row> 2579 <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit scripts.</entry>
2579 2580 <entry>MIT</entry>
2580 <row> 2581</row>
2581 <entry>packagegroup-core-boot</entry> 2582<row>
2582 2583 <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry>
2583 <entry>1.0</entry> 2584 <entry>1.0</entry>
2584 2585 <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry>
2585 <entry>The minimal set of packages required to boot the 2586 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2586 system</entry> 2587</row>
2587 2588<row>
2588 <entry>MIT</entry> 2589 <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry>
2589 </row> 2590 <entry>1.0</entry>
2590 2591 <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry>
2591 <row> 2592 <entry>MIT</entry>
2592 <entry>packagegroup-core-ssh-openssh</entry> 2593</row>
2593 2594<row>
2594 <entry>1.0</entry> 2595 <entry>systemd</entry>
2595 2596 <entry>232</entry>
2596 <entry>OpenSSH SSH client/server.</entry> 2597 <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>
2597 2598 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
2598 <entry>MIT</entry> 2599</row>
2599 </row> 2600<row>
2600 2601 <entry>systemtap</entry>
2601 <row> 2602 <entry>3.1</entry>
2602 <entry>packagegroup-core-standalone-sdk-target</entry> 2603 <entry>Script-directed dynamic tracing and performance analysis tool for Linux.</entry>
2603 2604 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2604 <entry>1.0</entry> 2605</row>
2605 2606<row>
2606 <entry>Target packages for the standalone SDK.</entry> 2607 <entry>tcl</entry>
2607 2608 <entry>8.6.6</entry>
2608 <entry>MIT</entry> 2609 <entry>Tool Command Language.</entry>
2609 </row> 2610 <entry> tcl, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
2610 2611</row>
2611 <row> 2612<row>
2612 <entry>packagegroup-core-tools-debug</entry> 2613 <entry>tcp-wrappers</entry>
2613 2614 <entry>7.6</entry>
2614 <entry>1.0</entry> 2615 <entry>Tools for monitoring and filtering incoming requests for tcp services.</entry>
2615 2616 <entry>BSD</entry>
2616 <entry>Debugging tools.</entry> 2617</row>
2617 2618<row>
2618 <entry>MIT</entry> 2619 <entry>tcpdump</entry>
2619 </row> 2620 <entry>4.9.0</entry>
2620 2621 <entry>A sophisticated network protocol analyzer.</entry>
2621 <row> 2622 <entry>BSD</entry>
2622 <entry>packagegroup-cross-canadian-inteld1521</entry> 2623</row>
2623 2624<row>
2624 <entry>1.0</entry> 2625 <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry>
2625 2626 <entry>1.0</entry>
2626 <entry>Host SDK package for cross canadian toolchain.</entry> 2627 <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry>
2627 2628 <entry>MIT</entry>
2628 <entry>MIT</entry> 2629</row>
2629 </row> 2630<row>
2630 2631 <entry>tgt</entry>
2631 <row> 2632 <entry>1.0.67</entry>
2632 <entry>packagegroup-sdk-host</entry> 2633 <entry>Linux SCSI target framework (tgt)</entry>
2633 2634 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2634 <entry>1.0</entry> 2635</row>
2635 2636<row>
2636 <entry>Host packages for the standalone SDK or external 2637 <entry>thin-provisioning-tools</entry>
2637 toolchain.</entry> 2638 <entry>0.6.3</entry>
2638 2639 <entry>A suite of tools for manipulating the metadata of the dm-thin device-mapper target.</entry>
2639 <entry>MIT</entry> 2640 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
2640 </row> 2641</row>
2641 2642<row>
2642 <row> 2643 <entry>tzcode</entry>
2643 <entry>parted</entry> 2644 <entry>2017b</entry>
2644 2645 <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump tzselect.</entry>
2645 <entry>3.2</entry> 2646 <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
2646 2647</row>
2647 <entry>Disk partition editing/resizing utility.</entry> 2648<row>
2648 2649 <entry>tzdata</entry>
2649 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry> 2650 <entry>2017b</entry>
2650 </row> 2651 <entry>Timezone data.</entry>
2651 2652 <entry> PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
2652 <row> 2653</row>
2653 <entry>pciutils</entry> 2654<row>
2654 2655 <entry>u-boot-mkimage</entry>
2655 <entry>3.5.2</entry> 2656 <entry>2017.01</entry>
2656 2657 <entry>U-Boot bootloader image creation tool.</entry>
2657 <entry>The PCI Utilities package contains a library for portable 2658 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2658 access to PCI bus configuration space and several utilities based 2659</row>
2659 on this library.</entry> 2660<row>
2660 2661 <entry>unifdef</entry>
2661 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2662 <entry>2.11</entry>
2662 </row> 2663 <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry>
2663 2664 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
2664 <row> 2665</row>
2665 <entry>perl</entry> 2666<row>
2666 2667 <entry>unzip</entry>
2667 <entry>5.24.1</entry> 2668 <entry>6.0</entry>
2668 2669 <entry>Utilities for extracting and viewing files in .zip archives.</entry>
2669 <entry>Perl scripting language.</entry> 2670 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
2670 2671</row>
2671 <entry>Artistic-1.0, GPL-1.0</entry> 2672<row>
2672 </row> 2673 <entry>update-rc.d</entry>
2673 2674 <entry>0.7</entry>
2674 <row> 2675 <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory structure.</entry>
2675 <entry>pigz</entry> 2676 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2676 2677</row>
2677 <entry>2.3.4</entry> 2678<row>
2678 2679 <entry>util-linux</entry>
2679 <entry>pigz which stands for parallel implementation of gzip is a 2680 <entry>2.29.1</entry>
2680 fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple 2681 <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>
2681 processors and multiple cores to the hilt when compressing data. 2682 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry>
2682 pigz was written by Mark Adler and uses the zlib and pthread 2683</row>
2683 libraries.</entry> 2684<row>
2684 2685 <entry>util-macros</entry>
2685 <entry>Zlib, Apache-2.0</entry> 2686 <entry>1.19.1</entry>
2686 </row> 2687 <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry>
2687 2688 <entry> MIT</entry>
2688 <row> 2689</row>
2689 <entry>pixman</entry> 2690<row>
2690 2691 <entry>vim</entry>
2691 <entry>0.34.0</entry> 2692 <entry>8.0.0427</entry>
2692 2693 <entry>Vi IMproved - enhanced vi editor.</entry>
2693 <entry>Pixman provides a library for manipulating pixel regions -- 2694 <entry>vim</entry>
2694 a set of Y-X banded rectangles image compositing using the 2695</row>
2695 Porter/Duff model and implicit mask generation for geometric 2696<row>
2696 primitives including trapezoids triangles and rectangles.</entry> 2697 <entry>volatile-binds</entry>
2697 2698 <entry>1.0</entry>
2698 <entry>MIT, PD</entry> 2699 <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for read-only-rootfs</entry>
2699 </row> 2700 <entry>MIT</entry>
2700 2701</row>
2701 <row> 2702<row>
2702 <entry>pixz</entry> 2703 <entry>xcb-proto</entry>
2703 2704 <entry>1.12</entry>
2704 <entry>1.0.6</entry> 2705 <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>
2705 2706 <entry>MIT</entry>
2706 <entry>Parallel indexed xz compressor.</entry> 2707</row>
2707 2708<row>
2708 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry> 2709 <entry>xextproto</entry>
2709 </row> 2710 <entry>7.3.0</entry>
2710 2711 <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>
2711 <row> 2712 <entry> MIT</entry>
2712 <entry>pkgconfig</entry> 2713</row>
2713 2714<row>
2714 <entry>0.29.1</entry> 2715 <entry>xineramaproto</entry>
2715 2716 <entry>1.2.1</entry>
2716 <entry>pkg-config is a helper tool used when compiling 2717 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the Xinerama extension. This extension is used for retrieving information about physical output devices which may be combined into a single logical X screen.</entry>
2717 applications and libraries. It helps determined the correct 2718 <entry> MIT</entry>
2718 compiler/link options. It is also language-agnostic.</entry> 2719</row>
2719 2720<row>
2720 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2721 <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry>
2721 </row> 2722 <entry>2.20</entry>
2722 2723 <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>
2723 <row> 2724 <entry> MIT</entry>
2724 <entry>pm-utils</entry> 2725</row>
2725 2726<row>
2726 <entry>1.4.1</entry> 2727 <entry>xmlto</entry>
2727 2728 <entry>0.0.28</entry>
2728 <entry>Simple shell command line tools to suspend and 2729 <entry>A shell-script tool for converting XML files to various formats.</entry>
2729 hibernate.</entry> 2730 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2730 2731</row>
2731 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry> 2732<row>
2732 </row> 2733 <entry>xproto</entry>
2733 2734 <entry>7.0.31</entry>
2734 <row> 2735 <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window System.</entry>
2735 <entry>popt</entry> 2736 <entry> MIT</entry>
2736 2737</row>
2737 <entry>1.16</entry> 2738<row>
2738 2739 <entry>xterm</entry>
2739 <entry>Library for parsing command line options.</entry> 2740 <entry>325</entry>
2740 2741 <entry>xterm is the standard terminal emulator for the X Window System.</entry>
2741 <entry>MIT</entry> 2742 <entry>MIT</entry>
2742 </row> 2743</row>
2743 2744<row>
2744 <row> 2745 <entry>xtrans</entry>
2745 <entry>postgresql</entry> 2746 <entry>1.3.5</entry>
2746 2747 <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>
2747 <entry>9.4.11</entry> 2748 <entry> MIT</entry>
2748 2749</row>
2749 <entry>PostgreSQL is an advanced Object-Relational database 2750<row>
2750 management system (DBMS) that supports almost all SQL constructs 2751 <entry>xz</entry>
2751 (including transactions subselects and user-defined types and 2752 <entry>5.2.3</entry>
2752 functions). The postgresql package includes the client programs 2753 <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry>
2753 and libraries that you'll need to access a PostgreSQL DBMS server. 2754 <entry> GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry>
2754 These PostgreSQL client programs are programs that directly 2755</row>
2755 manipulate the internal structure of PostgreSQL databases on a 2756<row>
2756 PostgreSQL server. These client programs can be located on the 2757 <entry>yajl</entry>
2757 same machine with the PostgreSQL server or may be on a remote 2758 <entry>2.1.0</entry>
2758 machine which accesses a PostgreSQL server over a network 2759 <entry>YAJL is a small event-driven (SAX-style) JSON parser written in ANSI C and a small validating JSON generator.</entry>
2759 connection. This package contains the docs in HTML for the whole 2760 <entry>ISC</entry>
2760 package as well as command-line utilities for managing PostgreSQL 2761</row>
2761 databases on a PostgreSQL server. If you want to manipulate a 2762<row>
2762 PostgreSQL database on a local or remote PostgreSQL server you 2763 <entry>zlib</entry>
2763 need this package. You also need to install this package if you're 2764 <entry>1.2.11</entry>
2764 installing the postgresql-server package.</entry> 2765 <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data compression library which is used by many different programs.</entry>
2765 2766 <entry>Zlib</entry>
2766 <entry>BSD</entry> 2767</row>
2767 </row> 2768 </tbody>
2768 2769 </tgroup>
2769 <row> 2770 </informaltable>
2770 <entry>postinst-intercept</entry>
2771
2772 <entry>1.0</entry>
2773
2774 <entry>Postinstall scriptlets.</entry>
2775
2776 <entry>MIT</entry>
2777 </row>
2778
2779 <row>
2780 <entry>prelink</entry>
2781
2782 <entry>1.0</entry>
2783
2784 <entry>The prelink package contains a utility which modifies ELF
2785 shared libraries and executables so that far fewer relocations
2786 need to be resolved at runtime and thus programs come up
2787 faster.</entry>
2788
2789 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2790 </row>
2791
2792 <row>
2793 <entry>procps</entry>
2794
2795 <entry>3.3.12</entry>
2796
2797 <entry>Procps contains a set of system utilities that provide
2798 system information about processes using the /proc filesystem. The
2799 package includes the programs ps top vmstat w kill and
2800 skill.</entry>
2801
2802 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.0</entry>
2803 </row>
2804
2805 <row>
2806 <entry>pseudo</entry>
2807
2808 <entry>1.8.2</entry>
2809
2810 <entry>Pseudo gives fake root capabilities to a normal
2811 user.</entry>
2812
2813 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
2814 </row>
2815
2816 <row>
2817 <entry>ptest-runner</entry>
2818
2819 <entry>2.0.2</entry>
2820
2821 <entry>The ptest-runner2 package installs a ptest-runner program
2822 which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them
2823 in sequence.</entry>
2824
2825 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
2826 </row>
2827
2828 <row>
2829 <entry>python-alembic</entry>
2830
2831 <entry>0.8.10</entry>
2832
2833 <entry>A database migration tool for SQLAlchemy.</entry>
2834
2835 <entry>MIT</entry>
2836 </row>
2837
2838 <row>
2839 <entry>python-amqp</entry>
2840
2841 <entry>1.4.9</entry>
2842
2843 <entry>Low-level AMQP client for Python</entry>
2844
2845 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2846 </row>
2847
2848 <row>
2849 <entry>python-amqplib</entry>
2850
2851 <entry>1.0.2</entry>
2852
2853 <entry>Python client for the Advanced Message Queuing Procotol
2854 (AMQP)</entry>
2855
2856 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
2857 </row>
2858
2859 <row>
2860 <entry>python-anyjson</entry>
2861
2862 <entry>0.3.3</entry>
2863
2864 <entry>Anyjson loads whichever is the fastest JSON module
2865 installed and provides a uniform API regardless of which JSON
2866 implementation is used.</entry>
2867
2868 <entry>MIT</entry>
2869 </row>
2870
2871 <row>
2872 <entry>python-appdirs</entry>
2873
2874 <entry>1.4.0</entry>
2875
2876 <entry>A small Python module for determining appropriate
2877 platform-specific dirs e.g. a user data dir.</entry>
2878
2879 <entry>MIT</entry>
2880 </row>
2881
2882 <row>
2883 <entry>python-babel</entry>
2884
2885 <entry>2.3.4</entry>
2886
2887 <entry>A collection of tools for internationalizing Python
2888 applications</entry>
2889
2890 <entry>BSD</entry>
2891 </row>
2892
2893 <row>
2894 <entry>python-beautifulsoup4</entry>
2895
2896 <entry>4.4.1</entry>
2897
2898 <entry>Screen-scraping library</entry>
2899
2900 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2901 </row>
2902
2903 <row>
2904 <entry>python-boto</entry>
2905
2906 <entry>2.34.0</entry>
2907
2908 <entry>Boto is a Python package that provides interfaces to Amazon
2909 Web Services. Currently all features work with Python 2.6 and 2.7.
2910 Work is under way to support Python 3.3+ in the same codebase.
2911 Modules are being ported one at a time with the help of the open
2912 source community so please check below for compatibility with
2913 Python 3.3+.</entry>
2914
2915 <entry>MIT</entry>
2916 </row>
2917
2918 <row>
2919 <entry>python-cachetools</entry>
2920
2921 <entry>1.1.5</entry>
2922
2923 <entry>Extensible memoizing collections and decorators</entry>
2924
2925 <entry>MIT</entry>
2926 </row>
2927
2928 <row>
2929 <entry>python-castellan</entry>
2930
2931 <entry>0.4.0</entry>
2932
2933 <entry>Generic Key Manager interface for OpenStack</entry>
2934
2935 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2936 </row>
2937
2938 <row>
2939 <entry>python-ceilometer</entry>
2940
2941 <entry>7.1.0</entry>
2942
2943 <entry>OpenStack Metering Component</entry>
2944
2945 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2946 </row>
2947
2948 <row>
2949 <entry>python-ceilometerclient</entry>
2950
2951 <entry>2.6.2</entry>
2952
2953 <entry>CLI and python client library for OpenStack
2954 Ceilometer</entry>
2955
2956 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
2957 </row>
2958
2959 <row>
2960 <entry>python-certifi</entry>
2961
2962 <entry>2017.1.23</entry>
2963
2964 <entry>This installable Python package contains a CA Bundle that
2965 you can reference in your Python code. This is useful for
2966 verifying HTTP requests for example. This is the same CA Bundle
2967 which ships with the Requests codebase and is derived from Mozilla
2968 Firefox's canonical set.</entry>
2969
2970 <entry>ISC</entry>
2971 </row>
2972
2973 <row>
2974 <entry>python-cffi</entry>
2975
2976 <entry>1.9.1</entry>
2977
2978 <entry>Foreign Function Interface for Python calling C
2979 code.</entry>
2980
2981 <entry>MIT</entry>
2982 </row>
2983
2984 <row>
2985 <entry>python-cheetah</entry>
2986
2987 <entry>2.4.4</entry>
2988
2989 <entry>Python template engine and code generation tool.</entry>
2990
2991 <entry>MIT</entry>
2992 </row>
2993
2994 <row>
2995 <entry>python-cinderclient</entry>
2996
2997 <entry>1.9.0</entry>
2998
2999 <entry>Client library for OpenStack Cinder API.</entry>
3000
3001 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3002 </row>
3003
3004 <row>
3005 <entry>python-cliff</entry>
3006
3007 <entry>2.2.0</entry>
3008
3009 <entry>Command Line Interface Formulation Framework</entry>
3010
3011 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3012 </row>
3013
3014 <row>
3015 <entry>python-cmd2</entry>
3016
3017 <entry>0.7.0</entry>
3018
3019 <entry>Extra features for standard library's cmd module.</entry>
3020
3021 <entry>MIT</entry>
3022 </row>
3023
3024 <row>
3025 <entry>python-colorama</entry>
3026
3027 <entry>0.3.3</entry>
3028
3029 <entry>Simple cross-platform colored terminal text in
3030 Python</entry>
3031
3032 <entry>BSD</entry>
3033 </row>
3034
3035 <row>
3036 <entry>python-contextlib2</entry>
3037
3038 <entry>0.4.0</entry>
3039
3040 <entry>Backports and enhancements for the contextlib
3041 module</entry>
3042
3043 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
3044 </row>
3045
3046 <row>
3047 <entry>python-cotyledon</entry>
3048
3049 <entry>1.6.8</entry>
3050
3051 <entry>Cotyledon provides a framework for defining long-running
3052 services.</entry>
3053
3054 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3055 </row>
3056
3057 <row>
3058 <entry>python-coverage</entry>
3059
3060 <entry>4.0a5</entry>
3061
3062 <entry>Code coverage measurement for Python</entry>
3063
3064 <entry>BSD</entry>
3065 </row>
3066
3067 <row>
3068 <entry>python-croniter</entry>
3069
3070 <entry>0.3.5</entry>
3071
3072 <entry>croniter provides iteration for datetime object with cron
3073 like format</entry>
3074
3075 <entry>MIT</entry>
3076 </row>
3077
3078 <row>
3079 <entry>python-cryptography-vectors</entry>
3080
3081 <entry>1.7.2</entry>
3082
3083 <entry>Test vectors for the cryptography package..</entry>
3084
3085 <entry>Apache-2.0, BSD</entry>
3086 </row>
3087
3088 <row>
3089 <entry>python-cryptography</entry>
3090
3091 <entry>1.7.2</entry>
3092
3093 <entry>Provides cryptographic recipes and primitives to python
3094 developers.</entry>
3095
3096 <entry>Apache-2.0, BSD</entry>
3097 </row>
3098
3099 <row>
3100 <entry>python-cython</entry>
3101
3102 <entry>0.25.2</entry>
3103
3104 <entry>Cython is a language specially designed for writing Python
3105 extension modules. It's designed to bridge the gap between the
3106 nice high-level easy-to-use world of Python and the messy
3107 low-level world of C.</entry>
3108
3109 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3110 </row>
3111
3112 <row>
3113 <entry>python-dateutil</entry>
3114
3115 <entry>2.6.0</entry>
3116
3117 <entry>The dateutil module provides powerful extensions to the
3118 datetime module available in the Python standard library.</entry>
3119
3120 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
3121 </row>
3122
3123 <row>
3124 <entry>python-debtcollector</entry>
3125
3126 <entry>1.8.0</entry>
3127
3128 <entry>A collection of Python deprecation patterns and strategies
3129 that help you collect your technical debt in a non-destructive
3130 manner.</entry>
3131
3132 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3133 </row>
3134
3135 <row>
3136 <entry>python-decorator</entry>
3137
3138 <entry>4.0.11</entry>
3139
3140 <entry>The aim of the decorator module it to simplify the usage of
3141 decorators for the average programmer and to popularize decorators
3142 by showing various non-trivial examples. Of course as all
3143 techniques decorators can be abused and you should not try to
3144 solve every problem with a decorator just because you can.</entry>
3145
3146 <entry>BSD</entry>
3147 </row>
3148
3149 <row>
3150 <entry>python-designateclient</entry>
3151
3152 <entry>2.3.0</entry>
3153
3154 <entry>Python bindings to the Designate API</entry>
3155
3156 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3157 </row>
3158
3159 <row>
3160 <entry>python-dogpile.cache</entry>
3161
3162 <entry>0.6.2</entry>
3163
3164 <entry>Python Dogpile Cache: A caching front-end based on the
3165 Dogpile lock</entry>
3166
3167 <entry>BSD</entry>
3168 </row>
3169
3170 <row>
3171 <entry>python-ecdsa</entry>
3172
3173 <entry>0.13</entry>
3174
3175 <entry>ECDSA cryptographic signature library</entry>
3176
3177 <entry>MIT</entry>
3178 </row>
3179
3180 <row>
3181 <entry>python-enum34</entry>
3182
3183 <entry>1.1.6</entry>
3184
3185 <entry>backport of Python 3.4's enum package.</entry>
3186
3187 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
3188 </row>
3189
3190 <row>
3191 <entry>python-eventlet</entry>
3192
3193 <entry>0.18.4</entry>
3194
3195 <entry>Highly concurrent networking library</entry>
3196
3197 <entry>MIT</entry>
3198 </row>
3199
3200 <row>
3201 <entry>python-extras</entry>
3202
3203 <entry>1.0.0</entry>
3204
3205 <entry>Useful extra bits for Python - things that should be in the
3206 standard library</entry>
3207
3208 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3209 </row>
3210
3211 <row>
3212 <entry>python-fasteners</entry>
3213
3214 <entry>0.13.0</entry>
3215
3216 <entry>A python package that provides useful locks.</entry>
3217
3218 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3219 </row>
3220
3221 <row>
3222 <entry>python-feedparser</entry>
3223
3224 <entry>5.2.1</entry>
3225
3226 <entry>Python Atom and RSS feed parser.</entry>
3227
3228 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
3229 </row>
3230
3231 <row>
3232 <entry>python-fixtures</entry>
3233
3234 <entry>3.0.0</entry>
3235
3236 <entry>Fixtures reusable state for writing clean tests and
3237 more</entry>
3238
3239 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3240 </row>
3241
3242 <row>
3243 <entry>python-flask</entry>
3244
3245 <entry>0.10.1</entry>
3246
3247 <entry>A microframework based on Werkzeug Jinja2 and good
3248 intentions</entry>
3249
3250 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
3251 </row>
3252
3253 <row>
3254 <entry>python-funcsigs</entry>
3255
3256 <entry>1.0.2</entry>
3257
3258 <entry>Python function signatures from PEP362 for Python 2.6 2.7
3259 and 3.2+.</entry>
3260
3261 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3262 </row>
3263
3264 <row>
3265 <entry>python-functools32</entry>
3266
3267 <entry>3.2.3-2</entry>
3268
3269 <entry>Backport of the functools module from Python 3.2.3 for use
3270 on 2.7 and PyPy..</entry>
3271
3272 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
3273 </row>
3274
3275 <row>
3276 <entry>python-futures</entry>
3277
3278 <entry>3.0.5</entry>
3279
3280 <entry>The concurrent.futures module provides a high-level
3281 interface for asynchronously executing callables.</entry>
3282
3283 <entry>BSD</entry>
3284 </row>
3285
3286 <row>
3287 <entry>python-futurist</entry>
3288
3289 <entry>0.21.0</entry>
3290
3291 <entry>Useful additions to futures from the future</entry>
3292
3293 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3294 </row>
3295
3296 <row>
3297 <entry>python-glanceclient</entry>
3298
3299 <entry>2.5.0</entry>
3300
3301 <entry>Client library for Glance built on the OpenStack Images
3302 API</entry>
3303
3304 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3305 </row>
3306
3307 <row>
3308 <entry>python-greenlet</entry>
3309
3310 <entry>0.4.12</entry>
3311
3312 <entry>Python lightweight in-process concurrent
3313 programming.</entry>
3314
3315 <entry>MIT, Python-2.0</entry>
3316 </row>
3317
3318 <row>
3319 <entry>python-happybase</entry>
3320
3321 <entry>1.0.0</entry>
3322
3323 <entry>Python library to interact with Apache HBase</entry>
3324
3325 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3326 </row>
3327
3328 <row>
3329 <entry>python-httplib2</entry>
3330
3331 <entry>0.9.2</entry>
3332
3333 <entry>A comprehensive HTTP client library</entry>
3334
3335 <entry>MIT</entry>
3336 </row>
3337
3338 <row>
3339 <entry>python-httpretty</entry>
3340
3341 <entry>0.8.14</entry>
3342
3343 <entry>HTTP client mock for Python</entry>
3344
3345 <entry>MIT</entry>
3346 </row>
3347
3348 <row>
3349 <entry>python-idna</entry>
3350
3351 <entry>2.5</entry>
3352
3353 <entry>Internationalised Domain Names in Applications.</entry>
3354
3355 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
3356 </row>
3357
3358 <row>
3359 <entry>python-ipaddr</entry>
3360
3361 <entry>2.1.11</entry>
3362
3363 <entry>Google's IP address manipulation library</entry>
3364
3365 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3366 </row>
3367
3368 <row>
3369 <entry>python-ipaddress</entry>
3370
3371 <entry>1.0.18</entry>
3372
3373 <entry>Python 3.3+'s ipaddress for Python 2.6 2.7 3.2..</entry>
3374
3375 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
3376 </row>
3377
3378 <row>
3379 <entry>python-iso8601</entry>
3380
3381 <entry>0.1.11</entry>
3382
3383 <entry>Simple module to parse ISO 8601 dates.</entry>
3384
3385 <entry>MIT</entry>
3386 </row>
3387
3388 <row>
3389 <entry>python-itsdangerous</entry>
3390
3391 <entry>0.24</entry>
3392
3393 <entry>Various helpers to pass trusted data to untrusted
3394 environments and back</entry>
3395
3396 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
3397 </row>
3398
3399 <row>
3400 <entry>python-jinja2</entry>
3401
3402 <entry>2.9.5</entry>
3403
3404 <entry>Python Jinja2: A small but fast and easy to use stand-alone
3405 template engine written in pure python.</entry>
3406
3407 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
3408 </row>
3409
3410 <row>
3411 <entry>python-jsonpatch</entry>
3412
3413 <entry>1.15</entry>
3414
3415 <entry>Appling JSON patches in Python 2.6+ and 3.x.</entry>
3416
3417 <entry>BSD</entry>
3418 </row>
3419
3420 <row>
3421 <entry>python-jsonpath-rw-ext</entry>
3422
3423 <entry>0.1.9</entry>
3424
3425 <entry>Extensions for JSONPath RW.</entry>
3426
3427 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3428 </row>
3429
3430 <row>
3431 <entry>python-jsonpath-rw</entry>
3432
3433 <entry>1.4.0</entry>
3434
3435 <entry>A robust and significantly extended implementation of
3436 JSONPath for Python</entry>
3437
3438 <entry>BSD+</entry>
3439 </row>
3440
3441 <row>
3442 <entry>python-jsonpointer</entry>
3443
3444 <entry>1.10</entry>
3445
3446 <entry>Resolve JSON Pointers in Python.</entry>
3447
3448 <entry>BSD</entry>
3449 </row>
3450
3451 <row>
3452 <entry>python-jsonschema</entry>
3453
3454 <entry>2.6.0</entry>
3455
3456 <entry>An implementation of JSON Schema validation for
3457 Python.</entry>
3458
3459 <entry>MIT</entry>
3460 </row>
3461
3462 <row>
3463 <entry>python-kafka</entry>
3464
3465 <entry>0.9.5</entry>
3466
3467 <entry>Python client for Apache Kafka.</entry>
3468
3469 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3470 </row>
3471
3472 <row>
3473 <entry>python-kazoo</entry>
3474
3475 <entry>2.4.0</entry>
3476
3477 <entry>Higher Level Zookeeper Client</entry>
3478
3479 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3480 </row>
3481
3482 <row>
3483 <entry>python-keystone</entry>
3484
3485 <entry>10.0.3</entry>
3486
3487 <entry>Authentication service for OpenStack</entry>
3488
3489 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3490 </row>
3491
3492 <row>
3493 <entry>python-keystoneauth1</entry>
3494
3495 <entry>2.12.3</entry>
3496
3497 <entry>Authentication Library for OpenStack Identity</entry>
3498
3499 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3500 </row>
3501
3502 <row>
3503 <entry>python-keystoneclient</entry>
3504
3505 <entry>3.5.1</entry>
3506
3507 <entry>Client library for OpenStack Identity API</entry>
3508
3509 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3510 </row>
3511
3512 <row>
3513 <entry>python-keystonemiddleware</entry>
3514
3515 <entry>4.9.1</entry>
3516
3517 <entry>Middleware for OpenStack Identity API</entry>
3518
3519 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3520 </row>
3521
3522 <row>
3523 <entry>python-kombu</entry>
3524
3525 <entry>3.0.37</entry>
3526
3527 <entry>A messaging framework for Python</entry>
3528
3529 <entry>BSD</entry>
3530 </row>
3531
3532 <row>
3533 <entry>python-lockfile</entry>
3534
3535 <entry>0.12.2</entry>
3536
3537 <entry>Platform-independent file locking module</entry>
3538
3539 <entry>MIT</entry>
3540 </row>
3541
3542 <row>
3543 <entry>python-logutils</entry>
3544
3545 <entry>0.3.3</entry>
3546
3547 <entry>Set of handlers for the Python standard library's logging
3548 package</entry>
3549
3550 <entry>BSD</entry>
3551 </row>
3552
3553 <row>
3554 <entry>python-lxml</entry>
3555
3556 <entry>3.7.3</entry>
3557
3558 <entry>lxml is a Pythonic mature binding for the libxml2 and
3559 libxslt libraries. It provides safe and convenient access to these
3560 libraries using the ElementTree API. It extends the ElementTree
3561 API significantly to offer support for XPath RelaxNG XML Schema
3562 XSLT C14N and much more.</entry>
3563
3564 <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0, MIT, Python-2.0</entry>
3565 </row>
3566
3567 <row>
3568 <entry>python-mako</entry>
3569
3570 <entry>1.0.6</entry>
3571
3572 <entry>Templating library for Python.</entry>
3573
3574 <entry>MIT</entry>
3575 </row>
3576
3577 <row>
3578 <entry>python-markupsafe</entry>
3579
3580 <entry>0.23</entry>
3581
3582 <entry>Implements a XML/HTML/XHTML Markup safe string for
3583 Python</entry>
3584
3585 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
3586 </row>
3587
3588 <row>
3589 <entry>python-mccabe</entry>
3590
3591 <entry>0.4.0</entry>
3592
3593 <entry>McCabe checker plugin for flake8.</entry>
3594
3595 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3596 </row>
3597
3598 <row>
3599 <entry>python-memcache</entry>
3600
3601 <entry>1.2.9</entry>
3602
3603 <entry>A comprehensive fast pure Python memcached client</entry>
3604
3605 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3606 </row>
3607
3608 <row>
3609 <entry>python-microversion-parse</entry>
3610
3611 <entry>0.1.2</entry>
3612
3613 <entry>OpenStack services use REST APIs which include HTTP
3614 headers. This package provides a simple parser for OpenStack
3615 microversion headers.</entry>
3616
3617 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3618 </row>
3619
3620 <row>
3621 <entry>python-mistralclient</entry>
3622
3623 <entry>2.1.2</entry>
3624
3625 <entry>Python client for Mistral REST API</entry>
3626
3627 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3628 </row>
3629
3630 <row>
3631 <entry>python-mock</entry>
3632
3633 <entry>2.0.0</entry>
3634
3635 <entry>A Python Mocking and Patching Library for Testing.</entry>
3636
3637 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3638 </row>
3639
3640 <row>
3641 <entry>python-monotonic</entry>
3642
3643 <entry>1.2</entry>
3644
3645 <entry>An implementation of time.monotonic() for Python 2.0
3646 through 3.2.</entry>
3647
3648 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3649 </row>
3650
3651 <row>
3652 <entry>python-mox3</entry>
3653
3654 <entry>0.20.0</entry>
3655
3656 <entry>mox3: mock object framework for Python</entry>
3657
3658 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3659 </row>
3660
3661 <row>
3662 <entry>python-msgpack</entry>
3663
3664 <entry>0.4.8</entry>
3665
3666 <entry>MessagePack (de)serializer.</entry>
3667
3668 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3669 </row>
3670
3671 <row>
3672 <entry>python-ndg-httpsclient</entry>
3673
3674 <entry>0.4.2</entry>
3675
3676 <entry>Provides enhanced HTTPS support for httplib and urllib2
3677 using PyOpenSSL</entry>
3678
3679 <entry>BSD</entry>
3680 </row>
3681
3682 <row>
3683 <entry>python-netaddr</entry>
3684
3685 <entry>0.7.19</entry>
3686
3687 <entry>A network address manipulation library for Python..</entry>
3688
3689 <entry>BSD</entry>
3690 </row>
3691
3692 <row>
3693 <entry>python-netifaces</entry>
3694
3695 <entry>0.10.6</entry>
3696
3697 <entry>Portable network interface information..</entry>
3698
3699 <entry>MIT</entry>
3700 </row>
3701
3702 <row>
3703 <entry>python-neutron-lib</entry>
3704
3705 <entry>0.4.0</entry>
3706
3707 <entry>Neutron shared routines and utilities</entry>
3708
3709 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3710 </row>
3711
3712 <row>
3713 <entry>python-neutron</entry>
3714
3715 <entry>9.4.0</entry>
3716
3717 <entry>Neutron (virtual network service)</entry>
3718
3719 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3720 </row>
3721
3722 <row>
3723 <entry>python-neutronclient</entry>
3724
3725 <entry>6.0.0-gitAUTOINC</entry>
3726
3727 <entry>CLI and python client library for OpenStack Neutron</entry>
3728
3729 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3730 </row>
3731
3732 <row>
3733 <entry>python-nose</entry>
3734
3735 <entry>1.3.7</entry>
3736
3737 <entry>nose extends the test loading and running features of
3738 unittest making it easier to write find and run tests.</entry>
3739
3740 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
3741 </row>
3742
3743 <row>
3744 <entry>python-nova</entry>
3745
3746 <entry>14.0.7</entry>
3747
3748 <entry>Nova is a cloud computing fabric controller</entry>
3749
3750 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3751 </row>
3752
3753 <row>
3754 <entry>python-novaclient</entry>
3755
3756 <entry>6.0.1</entry>
3757
3758 <entry>Client library for OpenStack Compute API</entry>
3759
3760 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3761 </row>
3762
3763 <row>
3764 <entry>python-oauthlib</entry>
3765
3766 <entry>0.7.2</entry>
3767
3768 <entry>A generic spec-compliant thorough implementation of the
3769 OAuth request-signing logic</entry>
3770
3771 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3772 </row>
3773
3774 <row>
3775 <entry>python-openstack-nose</entry>
3776
3777 <entry>0.11</entry>
3778
3779 <entry>Openstack style output for nosetests</entry>
3780
3781 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3782 </row>
3783
3784 <row>
3785 <entry>python-os-brick</entry>
3786
3787 <entry>1.6.2</entry>
3788
3789 <entry>OpenStack Cinder brick library for managing local volume
3790 attaches</entry>
3791
3792 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3793 </row>
3794
3795 <row>
3796 <entry>python-os-client-config</entry>
3797
3798 <entry>1.21.1</entry>
3799
3800 <entry>OpenStack Client Configuation Library</entry>
3801
3802 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3803 </row>
3804
3805 <row>
3806 <entry>python-os-vif</entry>
3807
3808 <entry>1.2.1</entry>
3809
3810 <entry>A library for plugging and unplugging virtual interfaces in
3811 OpenStack</entry>
3812
3813 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3814 </row>
3815
3816 <row>
3817 <entry>python-os-win</entry>
3818
3819 <entry>1.2.2</entry>
3820
3821 <entry>Windows / Hyper-V library for OpenStack projects</entry>
3822
3823 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3824 </row>
3825
3826 <row>
3827 <entry>python-osc-lib</entry>
3828
3829 <entry>1.1.0</entry>
3830
3831 <entry>OpenStackClient Library</entry>
3832
3833 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3834 </row>
3835
3836 <row>
3837 <entry>python-oslo.cache</entry>
3838
3839 <entry>1.14.1</entry>
3840
3841 <entry>An oslo.config enabled dogpile.cache</entry>
3842
3843 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3844 </row>
3845
3846 <row>
3847 <entry>python-oslo.concurrency</entry>
3848
3849 <entry>3.14.1</entry>
3850
3851 <entry>oslo.concurrency library</entry>
3852
3853 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3854 </row>
3855
3856 <row>
3857 <entry>python-oslo.config</entry>
3858
3859 <entry>3.17.1</entry>
3860
3861 <entry>API supporting parsing command line arguments and .ini
3862 style configuration files.</entry>
3863
3864 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3865 </row>
3866
3867 <row>
3868 <entry>python-oslo.context</entry>
3869
3870 <entry>2.9.0</entry>
3871
3872 <entry>Oslo Context Library</entry>
3873
3874 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3875 </row>
3876
3877 <row>
3878 <entry>python-oslo.db</entry>
3879
3880 <entry>4.13.6</entry>
3881
3882 <entry>oslo.db library</entry>
3883
3884 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3885 </row>
3886
3887 <row>
3888 <entry>python-oslo.i18n</entry>
3889
3890 <entry>3.9.0</entry>
3891
3892 <entry>oslo.i18n library</entry>
3893
3894 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3895 </row>
3896
3897 <row>
3898 <entry>python-oslo.log</entry>
3899
3900 <entry>3.16.1</entry>
3901
3902 <entry>Oslo Log Library</entry>
3903
3904 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3905 </row>
3906
3907 <row>
3908 <entry>python-oslo.messaging</entry>
3909
3910 <entry>5.10.2</entry>
3911
3912 <entry>Oslo Messaging API</entry>
3913
3914 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3915 </row>
3916
3917 <row>
3918 <entry>python-oslo.middleware</entry>
3919
3920 <entry>3.19.1</entry>
3921
3922 <entry>Oslo Middleware library</entry>
3923
3924 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3925 </row>
3926
3927 <row>
3928 <entry>python-oslo.policy</entry>
3929
3930 <entry>1.14.0</entry>
3931
3932 <entry>The Oslo Policy library provides support for RBAC policy
3933 enforcement across all OpenStack services.</entry>
3934
3935 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3936 </row>
3937
3938 <row>
3939 <entry>python-oslo.privsep</entry>
3940
3941 <entry>1.13.2</entry>
3942
3943 <entry>This library helps applications perform actions which
3944 require more or less privileges than they were started with in a
3945 safe easy to code and easy to use manner. For more information on
3946 why this is generally a good idea please read over the principle
3947 of least privilege and the specification which created this
3948 library.</entry>
3949
3950 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3951 </row>
3952
3953 <row>
3954 <entry>python-oslo.reports</entry>
3955
3956 <entry>1.14.0</entry>
3957
3958 <entry>oslo.reports library</entry>
3959
3960 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3961 </row>
3962
3963 <row>
3964 <entry>python-oslo.rootwrap</entry>
3965
3966 <entry>5.1.2</entry>
3967
3968 <entry>Oslo Rootwrap</entry>
3969
3970 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3971 </row>
3972
3973 <row>
3974 <entry>python-oslo.serialization</entry>
3975
3976 <entry>2.13.1</entry>
3977
3978 <entry>Oslo Serialization API</entry>
3979
3980 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3981 </row>
3982
3983 <row>
3984 <entry>python-oslo.service</entry>
3985
3986 <entry>1.16.1</entry>
3987
3988 <entry>oslo.service library</entry>
3989
3990 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
3991 </row>
3992
3993 <row>
3994 <entry>python-oslo.utils</entry>
3995
3996 <entry>3.16.1</entry>
3997
3998 <entry>Oslo utils</entry>
3999
4000 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4001 </row>
4002
4003 <row>
4004 <entry>python-oslo.versionedobjects</entry>
4005
4006 <entry>1.17.1</entry>
4007
4008 <entry>oslo.versionedobjects library</entry>
4009
4010 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4011 </row>
4012
4013 <row>
4014 <entry>python-oslotest</entry>
4015
4016 <entry>2.10.1</entry>
4017
4018 <entry>OpenStack test framework and test fixtures. The oslotest
4019 package can be cross-tested against its consuming projects to
4020 ensure that no changes to the library break the tests in those
4021 other projects.</entry>
4022
4023 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4024 </row>
4025
4026 <row>
4027 <entry>python-osprofiler</entry>
4028
4029 <entry>1.4.0</entry>
4030
4031 <entry>OpenStack Profiler Library</entry>
4032
4033 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4034 </row>
4035
4036 <row>
4037 <entry>python-pam</entry>
4038
4039 <entry>1.8.2</entry>
4040
4041 <entry>Python PAM module using ctypes py3/py2.</entry>
4042
4043 <entry>MIT</entry>
4044 </row>
4045
4046 <row>
4047 <entry>python-paramiko</entry>
4048
4049 <entry>2.1.1</entry>
4050
4051 <entry>SSH2 protocol library</entry>
4052
4053 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
4054 </row>
4055
4056 <row>
4057 <entry>python-passlib</entry>
4058
4059 <entry>1.7.1</entry>
4060
4061 <entry>Passlib is a password hashing library for Python 2 &amp; 3
4062 which provides cross-platform implementations of over 30 password
4063 hashing algorithms as well as a framework for managing existing
4064 password hashes. It’s designed to be useful for a wide range of
4065 tasks from verifying a hash found in /etc/shadow to providing
4066 full-strength password hashing for multi-user
4067 applications.</entry>
4068
4069 <entry>BSD</entry>
4070 </row>
4071
4072 <row>
4073 <entry>python-paste</entry>
4074
4075 <entry>2.0.3</entry>
4076
4077 <entry>Tools for using a Web Server Gateway Interface
4078 stack.</entry>
4079
4080 <entry>MIT</entry>
4081 </row>
4082
4083 <row>
4084 <entry>python-pastedeploy</entry>
4085
4086 <entry>1.5.2</entry>
4087
4088 <entry>Load configure and compose WSGI applications and
4089 servers</entry>
4090
4091 <entry>MIT</entry>
4092 </row>
4093
4094 <row>
4095 <entry>python-pbr</entry>
4096
4097 <entry>2.0.0</entry>
4098
4099 <entry>Python Build Reasonableness: PBR is a library that injects
4100 some useful and sensible default behaviors into your setuptools
4101 run</entry>
4102
4103 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4104 </row>
4105
4106 <row>
4107 <entry>python-pecan</entry>
4108
4109 <entry>1.2.1</entry>
4110
4111 <entry>WSGI object-dispatching web framework</entry>
4112
4113 <entry>BSD</entry>
4114 </row>
4115
4116 <row>
4117 <entry>python-pep8</entry>
4118
4119 <entry>1.7.0</entry>
4120
4121 <entry>Python style guide checker.</entry>
4122
4123 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4124 </row>
4125
4126 <row>
4127 <entry>python-pika-pool</entry>
4128
4129 <entry>0.1.3</entry>
4130
4131 <entry>pools for your pikas.</entry>
4132
4133 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
4134 </row>
4135
4136 <row>
4137 <entry>python-pika</entry>
4138
4139 <entry>0.10.0</entry>
4140
4141 <entry>Pure Python RabbitMQ/AMQP 0-9-1 client library.</entry>
4142
4143 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
4144 </row>
4145
4146 <row>
4147 <entry>python-pip</entry>
4148
4149 <entry>9.0.1</entry>
4150
4151 <entry>PIP is a tool for installing and managing Python
4152 packages.</entry>
4153
4154 <entry>MIT, LGPL-2.1</entry>
4155 </row>
4156
4157 <row>
4158 <entry>python-ply</entry>
4159
4160 <entry>3.10</entry>
4161
4162 <entry>Python ply: PLY is yet another implementation of lex and
4163 yacc for Python</entry>
4164
4165 <entry>BSD</entry>
4166 </row>
4167
4168 <row>
4169 <entry>python-positional</entry>
4170
4171 <entry>1.1.1</entry>
4172
4173 <entry>Library to enforce positional or key-word arguments</entry>
4174
4175 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4176 </row>
4177
4178 <row>
4179 <entry>python-posix-ipc</entry>
4180
4181 <entry>1.0.0</entry>
4182
4183 <entry>POSIX IPC primitives (semaphores shared memory and message
4184 queues) for Python</entry>
4185
4186 <entry>BSD</entry>
4187 </row>
4188
4189 <row>
4190 <entry>python-pretend</entry>
4191
4192 <entry>1.0.8</entry>
4193
4194 <entry>A library for stubbing in Python.</entry>
4195
4196 <entry>BSD</entry>
4197 </row>
4198
4199 <row>
4200 <entry>python-prettytable</entry>
4201
4202 <entry>0.7.2</entry>
4203
4204 <entry>Python library for displaying tabular data in a ASCII table
4205 format.</entry>
4206
4207 <entry>BSD</entry>
4208 </row>
4209
4210 <row>
4211 <entry>python-psutil</entry>
4212
4213 <entry>5.2.0</entry>
4214
4215 <entry>A cross-platform process and system utilities module for
4216 Python.</entry>
4217
4218 <entry>BSD</entry>
4219 </row>
4220
4221 <row>
4222 <entry>python-psycopg2</entry>
4223
4224 <entry>2.6.2</entry>
4225
4226 <entry>Python-PostgreSQL Database Adapter</entry>
4227
4228 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
4229 </row>
4230
4231 <row>
4232 <entry>python-py</entry>
4233
4234 <entry>1.4.32</entry>
4235
4236 <entry>Library with cross-python path ini-parsing io code log
4237 facilities.</entry>
4238
4239 <entry>MIT</entry>
4240 </row>
4241
4242 <row>
4243 <entry>python-pyasn1</entry>
4244
4245 <entry>0.2.3</entry>
4246
4247 <entry>Python library implementing ASN.1 types..</entry>
4248
4249 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
4250 </row>
4251
4252 <row>
4253 <entry>python-pycadf</entry>
4254
4255 <entry>1.1.0</entry>
4256
4257 <entry>CADF Library</entry>
4258
4259 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4260 </row>
4261
4262 <row>
4263 <entry>python-pycparser</entry>
4264
4265 <entry>2.17</entry>
4266
4267 <entry>Parser of the C language written in pure Python.</entry>
4268
4269 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
4270 </row>
4271
4272 <row>
4273 <entry>python-pycrypto</entry>
4274
4275 <entry>2.6.1</entry>
4276
4277 <entry>Cryptographic modules for Python.</entry>
4278
4279 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
4280 </row>
4281
4282 <row>
4283 <entry>python-pyflakes</entry>
4284
4285 <entry>1.2.3</entry>
4286
4287 <entry>passive checker of Python programs.</entry>
4288
4289 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4290 </row>
4291
4292 <row>
4293 <entry>python-pyinotify</entry>
4294
4295 <entry>0.9.6</entry>
4296
4297 <entry>Python pyinotify: Linux filesystem events
4298 monitoring</entry>
4299
4300 <entry>MIT</entry>
4301 </row>
4302
4303 <row>
4304 <entry>python-pymongo</entry>
4305
4306 <entry>3.4.0</entry>
4307
4308 <entry>The PyMongo distribution contains tools for interacting
4309 with MongoDB database from Python. The bson package is an
4310 implementation of the BSON format for Python. The pymongo package
4311 is a native Python driver for MongoDB. The gridfs package is a
4312 gridfs implementation on top of pymongo.</entry>
4313
4314 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4315 </row>
4316
4317 <row>
4318 <entry>python-pyopenssl</entry>
4319
4320 <entry>16.2.0</entry>
4321
4322 <entry>Simple Python wrapper around the OpenSSL library.</entry>
4323
4324 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4325 </row>
4326
4327 <row>
4328 <entry>python-pyparsing</entry>
4329
4330 <entry>2.2.0</entry>
4331
4332 <entry>Python parsing module.</entry>
4333
4334 <entry>MIT</entry>
4335 </row>
4336
4337 <row>
4338 <entry>python-pysaml2</entry>
4339
4340 <entry>3.0.2</entry>
4341
4342 <entry>Python implementation of SAML Version 2 to be used in a
4343 WSGI environment</entry>
4344
4345 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4346 </row>
4347
4348 <row>
4349 <entry>python-pysmi</entry>
4350
4351 <entry>0.1.2</entry>
4352
4353 <entry>A pure-Python implementation of SNMP/SMI MIB parsing and
4354 conversion library. Can produce PySNMP MIB modules.</entry>
4355
4356 <entry>BSD</entry>
4357 </row>
4358
4359 <row>
4360 <entry>python-pysnmp</entry>
4361
4362 <entry>4.3.5</entry>
4363
4364 <entry>SNMP v1/v2c/v3 engine and apps written in pure-Python.
4365 Supports Manager/Agent/Proxy roles scriptable MIBs asynchronous
4366 operation (asyncio twisted asyncore) and multiple
4367 transports.</entry>
4368
4369 <entry>BSD</entry>
4370 </row>
4371
4372 <row>
4373 <entry>python-pysocks</entry>
4374
4375 <entry>1.6.6</entry>
4376
4377 <entry>A Python SOCKS client module</entry>
4378
4379 <entry>BSD</entry>
4380 </row>
4381
4382 <row>
4383 <entry>python-pytest</entry>
4384
4385 <entry>3.0.6</entry>
4386
4387 <entry>Simple powerful teting with python.</entry>
4388
4389 <entry>MIT</entry>
4390 </row>
4391
4392 <row>
4393 <entry>python-python-editor</entry>
4394
4395 <entry>0.4</entry>
4396
4397 <entry>Programmatically open an editor capture the result</entry>
4398
4399 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4400 </row>
4401
4402 <row>
4403 <entry>python-pytz</entry>
4404
4405 <entry>2017.2</entry>
4406
4407 <entry>World timezone definitions modern and historical.</entry>
4408
4409 <entry>MIT</entry>
4410 </row>
4411
4412 <row>
4413 <entry>python-pyyaml</entry>
4414
4415 <entry>3.11</entry>
4416
4417 <entry>YAML is a data serialization format designed for human
4418 readability and interaction with scripting languages. PyYAML is a
4419 YAML parser and emitter for Python. . PyYAML features a complete
4420 YAML 1.1 parser Unicode support pickle support capable extension
4421 API and sensible error messages. PyYAML supports standard YAML
4422 tags and provides Python-specific tags that allow to represent an
4423 arbitrary Python object. . PyYAML is applicable for a broad range
4424 of tasks from complex configuration files to object serialization
4425 and persistance.</entry>
4426
4427 <entry>MIT</entry>
4428 </row>
4429
4430 <row>
4431 <entry>python-repoze.lru</entry>
4432
4433 <entry>0.6</entry>
4434
4435 <entry>repoze.lru is a LRU (least recently used) cache
4436 implementation. Keys and values that are not used frequently will
4437 be evicted from the cache faster than keys and values that are
4438 used frequently.</entry>
4439
4440 <entry>BSD-Modification-copyright</entry>
4441 </row>
4442
4443 <row>
4444 <entry>python-repoze.who</entry>
4445
4446 <entry>2.2</entry>
4447
4448 <entry>An identification and authentication framework for
4449 WSGI</entry>
4450
4451 <entry>BSD-Modification</entry>
4452 </row>
4453
4454 <row>
4455 <entry>python-requests</entry>
4456
4457 <entry>2.13.0</entry>
4458
4459 <entry>Python HTTP for Humans.</entry>
4460
4461 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4462 </row>
4463
4464 <row>
4465 <entry>python-requestsexceptions</entry>
4466
4467 <entry>1.1.3</entry>
4468
4469 <entry>Import exceptions from potentially bundled packages in
4470 requests.</entry>
4471
4472 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4473 </row>
4474
4475 <row>
4476 <entry>python-retrying</entry>
4477
4478 <entry>1.3.3</entry>
4479
4480 <entry>Retrying</entry>
4481
4482 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4483 </row>
4484
4485 <row>
4486 <entry>python-rfc3986</entry>
4487
4488 <entry>0.4.1</entry>
4489
4490 <entry>Validating URI References per RFC 3986</entry>
4491
4492 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4493 </row>
4494
4495 <row>
4496 <entry>python-rfc3987</entry>
4497
4498 <entry>1.3.7</entry>
4499
4500 <entry>Parsing and validation of URIs (RFC 3986) and IRIs (RFC
4501 3987).</entry>
4502
4503 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
4504 </row>
4505
4506 <row>
4507 <entry>python-routes</entry>
4508
4509 <entry>2.4.1</entry>
4510
4511 <entry>A Python re-implementation of the Rails routes
4512 system.</entry>
4513
4514 <entry>MIT</entry>
4515 </row>
4516
4517 <row>
4518 <entry>python-ryu</entry>
4519
4520 <entry>4.16</entry>
4521
4522 <entry>Ryu component-based software defined networking
4523 framework</entry>
4524
4525 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4526 </row>
4527
4528 <row>
4529 <entry>python-setproctitle</entry>
4530
4531 <entry>1.1.10</entry>
4532
4533 <entry>A Python module to customize the process title</entry>
4534
4535 <entry>BSD</entry>
4536 </row>
4537
4538 <row>
4539 <entry>python-setuptools-git</entry>
4540
4541 <entry>1.1</entry>
4542
4543 <entry>Plugin for setuptools that enables git integration</entry>
4544
4545 <entry>BSD</entry>
4546 </row>
4547
4548 <row>
4549 <entry>python-setuptools</entry>
4550
4551 <entry>32.1.1</entry>
4552
4553 <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python
4554 packages.</entry>
4555
4556 <entry>MIT</entry>
4557 </row>
4558
4559 <row>
4560 <entry>python-simplegeneric</entry>
4561
4562 <entry>0.8.1</entry>
4563
4564 <entry>Simple generic functions</entry>
4565
4566 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4567 </row>
4568
4569 <row>
4570 <entry>python-simplejson</entry>
4571
4572 <entry>3.7.3</entry>
4573
4574 <entry>JSON &lt;http://json.org&gt; encoder and decoder for Python
4575 2.5+ and Python 3.3+. It is pure Python code with no dependencies
4576 but includes an optional C extension for a serious speed
4577 boost</entry>
4578
4579 <entry>MIT</entry>
4580 </row>
4581
4582 <row>
4583 <entry>python-singledispatch</entry>
4584
4585 <entry>3.4.0.3</entry>
4586
4587 <entry>PEP 443 proposed to expose a mechanism in the functools
4588 standard library module in Python 3.4 that provides a simple form
4589 of generic programming known as single-dispatch generic functions.
4590 This library is a backport of this functionality to Python 2.6 -
4591 3.3</entry>
4592
4593 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4594 </row>
4595
4596 <row>
4597 <entry>python-six</entry>
4598
4599 <entry>1.10.0</entry>
4600
4601 <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities</entry>
4602
4603 <entry>MIT</entry>
4604 </row>
4605
4606 <row>
4607 <entry>python-sphinx</entry>
4608
4609 <entry>1.4.1</entry>
4610
4611 <entry>Python documentation generator</entry>
4612
4613 <entry>BSD</entry>
4614 </row>
4615
4616 <row>
4617 <entry>python-sqlalchemy-migrate</entry>
4618
4619 <entry>0.10.0</entry>
4620
4621 <entry>Database schema migration for SQLAlchemy</entry>
4622
4623 <entry>MIT</entry>
4624 </row>
4625
4626 <row>
4627 <entry>python-sqlalchemy</entry>
4628
4629 <entry>1.0.16</entry>
4630
4631 <entry>Python SQL toolkit and Object Relational Mapper that gives
4632 application developers the full power and flexibility of
4633 SQL</entry>
4634
4635 <entry>MIT</entry>
4636 </row>
4637
4638 <row>
4639 <entry>python-sqlparse</entry>
4640
4641 <entry>0.1.16</entry>
4642
4643 <entry>Non-validating SQL parser module</entry>
4644
4645 <entry>BSD</entry>
4646 </row>
4647
4648 <row>
4649 <entry>python-stevedore</entry>
4650
4651 <entry>1.19.1</entry>
4652
4653 <entry>Manage dynamic plugins for Python applications</entry>
4654
4655 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4656 </row>
4657
4658 <row>
4659 <entry>python-strict-rfc3339</entry>
4660
4661 <entry>0.7</entry>
4662
4663 <entry>Strict simple lightweight RFC3339 function.s.</entry>
4664
4665 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
4666 </row>
4667
4668 <row>
4669 <entry>python-subunit</entry>
4670
4671 <entry>1.1.0</entry>
4672
4673 <entry>Python implementation of subunit test streaming
4674 protocol</entry>
4675
4676 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4677 </row>
4678
4679 <row>
4680 <entry>python-suds-jurko</entry>
4681
4682 <entry>0.6</entry>
4683
4684 <entry>Lightweight SOAP client (Jurko's fork)</entry>
4685
4686 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
4687 </row>
4688
4689 <row>
4690 <entry>python-swiftclient</entry>
4691
4692 <entry>3.1.0</entry>
4693
4694 <entry>Client library for OpenStack Object Storage API</entry>
4695
4696 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4697 </row>
4698
4699 <row>
4700 <entry>python-sysv-ipc</entry>
4701
4702 <entry>0.6.8</entry>
4703
4704 <entry>System V IPC primitives (semaphores shared memory and
4705 message queues) for Python</entry>
4706
4707 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4708 </row>
4709
4710 <row>
4711 <entry>python-tempita</entry>
4712
4713 <entry>0.5.3dev</entry>
4714
4715 <entry>A very small text templating language</entry>
4716
4717 <entry>MIT</entry>
4718 </row>
4719
4720 <row>
4721 <entry>python-termcolor</entry>
4722
4723 <entry>1.1.0</entry>
4724
4725 <entry>ANSII Color formatting for output in terminal</entry>
4726
4727 <entry>MIT</entry>
4728 </row>
4729
4730 <row>
4731 <entry>python-testrepository</entry>
4732
4733 <entry>0.0.20</entry>
4734
4735 <entry>A repository of test results</entry>
4736
4737 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4738 </row>
4739
4740 <row>
4741 <entry>python-testscenarios</entry>
4742
4743 <entry>0.5.0</entry>
4744
4745 <entry>testscenarios: a pyunit extension for dependency
4746 injection</entry>
4747
4748 <entry>BSD</entry>
4749 </row>
4750
4751 <row>
4752 <entry>python-testtools</entry>
4753
4754 <entry>2.2.0</entry>
4755
4756 <entry>Extensions to the Python standard library unit testing
4757 framework</entry>
4758
4759 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4760 </row>
4761
4762 <row>
4763 <entry>python-thrift</entry>
4764
4765 <entry>0.10.0</entry>
4766
4767 <entry>Python bindings for the Apache Thrift RPC system.</entry>
4768
4769 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4770 </row>
4771
4772 <row>
4773 <entry>python-tinyrpc</entry>
4774
4775 <entry>0.5</entry>
4776
4777 <entry>A small modular transport and protocol neutral RPC library
4778 that among other things supports JSON-RPC and zmq.</entry>
4779
4780 <entry>MIT</entry>
4781 </row>
4782
4783 <row>
4784 <entry>python-tooz</entry>
4785
4786 <entry>1.43.1</entry>
4787
4788 <entry>Coordination library for distributed systems.</entry>
4789
4790 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4791 </row>
4792
4793 <row>
4794 <entry>python-troveclient</entry>
4795
4796 <entry>2.5.0</entry>
4797
4798 <entry>Trove Client Library for OpenStack Datbase service</entry>
4799
4800 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4801 </row>
4802
4803 <row>
4804 <entry>python-twisted</entry>
4805
4806 <entry>13.2.0</entry>
4807
4808 <entry>Twisted is an event-driven networking framework written in
4809 Python and licensed under the LGPL. Twisted supports TCP UDP
4810 SSL/TLS multicast Unix sockets a large number of protocols
4811 (including HTTP NNTP IMAP SSH IRC FTP and others) and much
4812 more.</entry>
4813
4814 <entry>MIT</entry>
4815 </row>
4816
4817 <row>
4818 <entry>python-unicodecsv</entry>
4819
4820 <entry>0.14.1</entry>
4821
4822 <entry>Python2's stdlib csv module replacement with unicode
4823 support.</entry>
4824
4825 <entry>BSD</entry>
4826 </row>
4827
4828 <row>
4829 <entry>python-urllib3</entry>
4830
4831 <entry>1.2</entry>
4832
4833 <entry>Python HTTP library with thread-safe connection pooling
4834 file post support sanity friendly and more.</entry>
4835
4836 <entry>MIT</entry>
4837 </row>
4838
4839 <row>
4840 <entry>python-voluptuous</entry>
4841
4842 <entry>0.10.5</entry>
4843
4844 <entry>Voluptuous is a Python data validation library</entry>
4845
4846 <entry>BSD</entry>
4847 </row>
4848
4849 <row>
4850 <entry>python-waitress</entry>
4851
4852 <entry>1.0.1</entry>
4853
4854 <entry>Waitress WSGI server</entry>
4855
4856 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4857 </row>
4858
4859 <row>
4860 <entry>python-warlock</entry>
4861
4862 <entry>1.2.0</entry>
4863
4864 <entry>Build self-validating python objects using JSON
4865 schemas</entry>
4866
4867 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4868 </row>
4869
4870 <row>
4871 <entry>python-webob</entry>
4872
4873 <entry>1.6.0</entry>
4874
4875 <entry>WSGI request and response object</entry>
4876
4877 <entry>MIT</entry>
4878 </row>
4879
4880 <row>
4881 <entry>python-websockify</entry>
4882
4883 <entry>0.8.0</entry>
4884
4885 <entry>WebSockets support for any application/server</entry>
4886
4887 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
4888 </row>
4889
4890 <row>
4891 <entry>python-webtest</entry>
4892
4893 <entry>2.0.21</entry>
4894
4895 <entry>Helper to test WSGI applications</entry>
4896
4897 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4898 </row>
4899
4900 <row>
4901 <entry>python-werkzeug</entry>
4902
4903 <entry>0.10.4</entry>
4904
4905 <entry>The Swiss Army knife of Python web development</entry>
4906
4907 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
4908 </row>
4909
4910 <row>
4911 <entry>python-wrapt</entry>
4912
4913 <entry>1.10.8</entry>
4914
4915 <entry>A Python module for decorators wrappers and monkey
4916 patching..</entry>
4917
4918 <entry>BSD</entry>
4919 </row>
4920
4921 <row>
4922 <entry>python-wsme</entry>
4923
4924 <entry>0.9.1</entry>
4925
4926 <entry>Simplify the writing of REST APIs and extend them with
4927 additional protocols</entry>
4928
4929 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4930 </row>
4931
4932 <row>
4933 <entry>python-zake</entry>
4934
4935 <entry>0.2.1</entry>
4936
4937 <entry>A python package that works to provide a nice set of
4938 testing utilities for the kazoo library.</entry>
4939
4940 <entry>Apache-2.0</entry>
4941 </row>
4942
4943 <row>
4944 <entry>python-zopeinterface</entry>
4945
4946 <entry>4.3.3</entry>
4947
4948 <entry>Interface definitions for Zope products.</entry>
4949
4950 <entry>ZPL-2.1</entry>
4951 </row>
4952
4953 <row>
4954 <entry>python</entry>
4955
4956 <entry>2.7.13</entry>
4957
4958 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
4959
4960 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
4961 </row>
4962
4963 <row>
4964 <entry>python3-dbus</entry>
4965
4966 <entry>1.2.4</entry>
4967
4968 <entry>Python bindings for the DBus inter-process communication
4969 system.</entry>
4970
4971 <entry>MIT</entry>
4972 </row>
4973
4974 <row>
4975 <entry>python3-iniparse</entry>
4976
4977 <entry>0.4</entry>
4978
4979 <entry>Accessing and Modifying INI files.</entry>
4980
4981 <entry>MIT, Python-2.0</entry>
4982 </row>
4983
4984 <row>
4985 <entry>python3-pycairo</entry>
4986
4987 <entry>1.10.0</entry>
4988
4989 <entry>Python bindings for the Cairo canvas library.</entry>
4990
4991 <entry>LGPL-3.0</entry>
4992 </row>
4993
4994 <row>
4995 <entry>python3-pygobject</entry>
4996
4997 <entry>3.22.0</entry>
4998
4999 <entry>Python GObject bindings.</entry>
5000
5001 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
5002 </row>
5003
5004 <row>
5005 <entry>python3-pygpgme</entry>
5006
5007 <entry>0.3</entry>
5008
5009 <entry>A Python module for working with OpenPGP messages.</entry>
5010
5011 <entry>LGPL-2.1</entry>
5012 </row>
5013
5014 <row>
5015 <entry>python3-setuptools</entry>
5016
5017 <entry>32.1.1</entry>
5018
5019 <entry>Download build install upgrade and uninstall Python
5020 packages.</entry>
5021
5022 <entry>MIT</entry>
5023 </row>
5024
5025 <row>
5026 <entry>python3-six</entry>
5027
5028 <entry>1.10.0</entry>
5029
5030 <entry>Python 2 and 3 compatibility library.</entry>
5031
5032 <entry>MIT</entry>
5033 </row>
5034
5035 <row>
5036 <entry>python3</entry>
5037
5038 <entry>3.5.2</entry>
5039
5040 <entry>The Python Programming Language.</entry>
5041
5042 <entry>Python-2.0</entry>
5043 </row>
5044
5045 <row>
5046 <entry>qemu-helper</entry>
5047
5048 <entry>1.0</entry>
5049
5050 <entry>Qemu helper scripts.</entry>
5051
5052 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
5053 </row>
5054
5055 <row>
5056 <entry>qemu</entry>
5057
5058 <entry>2.8.0</entry>
5059
5060 <entry>Fast open source processor emulator.</entry>
5061
5062 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
5063 </row>
5064
5065 <row>
5066 <entry>qemuwrapper</entry>
5067
5068 <entry>1.0</entry>
5069
5070 <entry>QEMU wrapper script.</entry>
5071
5072 <entry>MIT</entry>
5073 </row>
5074
5075 <row>
5076 <entry>quilt</entry>
5077
5078 <entry>0.65</entry>
5079
5080 <entry>Tool for working with series of patches.</entry>
5081
5082 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
5083 </row>
5084
5085 <row>
5086 <entry>quota</entry>
5087
5088 <entry>4.03</entry>
5089
5090 <entry>Tools for monitoring &amp; limiting user disk usage per
5091 filesystem.</entry>
5092
5093 <entry>BSD, GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
5094 </row>
5095
5096 <row>
5097 <entry>randrproto</entry>
5098
5099 <entry>1.5.0</entry>
5100
5101 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Resize
5102 Rotate and Reflect extension. This extension provides the ability
5103 to resize rotate and reflect the root window of a screen.</entry>
5104
5105 <entry>MIT</entry>
5106 </row>
5107
5108 <row>
5109 <entry>readline</entry>
5110
5111 <entry>7.0</entry>
5112
5113 <entry>The GNU Readline library provides a set of functions for
5114 use by applications that allow users to edit command lines as they
5115 are typed in. Both Emacs and vi editing modes are available. The
5116 Readline library includes additional functions to maintain a list
5117 of previously-entered command lines to recall and perhaps reedit
5118 those lines and perform csh-like history expansion on previous
5119 commands.</entry>
5120
5121 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
5122 </row>
5123
5124 <row>
5125 <entry>renderproto</entry>
5126
5127 <entry>0.11.1</entry>
5128
5129 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the X Rendering
5130 extension. This is the basis the image composition within the X
5131 window system.</entry>
5132
5133 <entry>MIT</entry>
5134 </row>
5135
5136 <row>
5137 <entry>rpcbind</entry>
5138
5139 <entry>0.2.4</entry>
5140
5141 <entry>The rpcbind utility is a server that converts RPC program
5142 numbers into universal addresses.</entry>
5143
5144 <entry>BSD</entry>
5145 </row>
5146
5147 <row>
5148 <entry>rpm</entry>
5149
5150 <entry>4.13.90</entry>
5151
5152 <entry>The RPM Package Manager (RPM) is a powerful command line
5153 driven package management system capable of installing
5154 uninstalling verifying querying and updating software packages.
5155 Each software package consists of an archive of files along with
5156 information about the package like its version a description
5157 etc.</entry>
5158
5159 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
5160 </row>
5161
5162 <row>
5163 <entry>rsync</entry>
5164
5165 <entry>3.1.2</entry>
5166
5167 <entry>File synchronization tool.</entry>
5168
5169 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
5170 </row>
5171
5172 <row>
5173 <entry>run-postinsts</entry>
5174
5175 <entry>1.0</entry>
5176
5177 <entry>Runs postinstall scripts on first boot of the target
5178 device.</entry>
5179
5180 <entry>MIT</entry>
5181 </row>
5182
5183 <row>
5184 <entry>sed</entry>
5185
5186 <entry>4.2.2</entry>
5187
5188 <entry>Stream EDitor (text filtering utility).</entry>
5189
5190 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
5191 </row>
5192
5193 <row>
5194 <entry>sg3-utils</entry>
5195
5196 <entry>1.42</entry>
5197
5198 <entry>This package contains low level utilities for devices that
5199 use the SCSI command set</entry>
5200
5201 <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry>
5202 </row>
5203
5204 <row>
5205 <entry>shadow-securetty</entry>
5206
5207 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
5208
5209 <entry>Provider of the machine specific securetty file.</entry>
5210
5211 <entry>MIT</entry>
5212 </row>
5213
5214 <row>
5215 <entry>shadow-sysroot</entry>
5216
5217 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
5218
5219 <entry>Shadow utils requirements for useradd.bbclass.</entry>
5220
5221 <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
5222 </row>
5223
5224 <row>
5225 <entry>shadow</entry>
5226
5227 <entry>4.2.1</entry>
5228
5229 <entry>Tools to change and administer password and group
5230 data.</entry>
5231
5232 <entry>BSD, Artistic-1.0</entry>
5233 </row>
5234
5235 <row>
5236 <entry>shared-mime-info</entry>
5237
5238 <entry>1.8</entry>
5239
5240 <entry>Shared MIME type database and specification.</entry>
5241
5242 <entry>LGPL-2.0</entry>
5243 </row>
5244
5245 <row>
5246 <entry>spice-html5</entry>
5247
5248 <entry>0.1.4</entry>
5249
5250 <entry>Spice Web client which runs entirely within a modern
5251 browser. It is limited in function a bit slow and lacks support
5252 for many features of Spice (audio video agents just to name a
5253 few). . The Simple Protocol for Independent Computing Environments
5254 (SPICE) is a remote display system built for virtual environments
5255 which allows you to view a computing 'desktop' environment not
5256 only on the machine where it is running but from anywhere on the
5257 Internet and from a wide variety of machine architectures.</entry>
5258
5259 <entry>GPL-3.0, LGPL-3.0</entry>
5260 </row>
5261
5262 <row>
5263 <entry>sqlite3</entry>
5264
5265 <entry>3.17.0</entry>
5266
5267 <entry>Embeddable SQL database engine.</entry>
5268
5269 <entry>PD</entry>
5270 </row>
5271
5272 <row>
5273 <entry>strace</entry>
5274
5275 <entry>4.16</entry>
5276
5277 <entry>System call tracing tool.</entry>
5278
5279 <entry>BSD</entry>
5280 </row>
5281
5282 <row>
5283 <entry>sudo</entry>
5284
5285 <entry>1.8.19p2</entry>
5286
5287 <entry>Sudo (superuser do) allows a system administrator to give
5288 certain users (or groups of users) the ability to run some (or
5289 all) commands as root while logging all commands and
5290 arguments.</entry>
5291
5292 <entry>ISC, BSD, Zlib</entry>
5293 </row>
5294
5295 <row>
5296 <entry>swig</entry>
5297
5298 <entry>3.0.12</entry>
5299
5300 <entry>SWIG - Simplified Wrapper and Interface Generator.</entry>
5301
5302 <entry>BSD, GPL-3.0</entry>
5303 </row>
5304
5305 <row>
5306 <entry>sysfsutils</entry>
5307
5308 <entry>2.1.0</entry>
5309
5310 <entry>Tools for working with the sysfs virtual filesystem. The
5311 tool 'systool' can query devices by bus class and
5312 topology.</entry>
5313
5314 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
5315 </row>
5316
5317 <row>
5318 <entry>sysklogd</entry>
5319
5320 <entry>1.5.1</entry>
5321
5322 <entry>The sysklogd package implements two system log daemons:
5323 syslogd klogd</entry>
5324
5325 <entry>GPL-2.0, BSD</entry>
5326 </row>
5327
5328 <row>
5329 <entry>syslinux</entry>
5330
5331 <entry>6.03</entry>
5332
5333 <entry>Multi-purpose linux bootloader.</entry>
5334
5335 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
5336 </row>
5337
5338 <row>
5339 <entry>systemd-compat-units</entry>
5340
5341 <entry>1.0</entry>
5342
5343 <entry>Enhances systemd compatilibity with existing SysVinit
5344 scripts.</entry>
5345
5346 <entry>MIT</entry>
5347 </row>
5348
5349 <row>
5350 <entry>systemd-serialgetty</entry>
5351
5352 <entry>1.0</entry>
5353
5354 <entry>Serial terminal support for systemd.</entry>
5355
5356 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
5357 </row>
5358
5359 <row>
5360 <entry>systemd-systemctl</entry>
5361
5362 <entry>1.0</entry>
5363
5364 <entry>Wrapper for enabling systemd services.</entry>
5365
5366 <entry>MIT</entry>
5367 </row>
5368
5369 <row>
5370 <entry>systemd</entry>
5371
5372 <entry>232</entry>
5373
5374 <entry>systemd is a system and service manager for Linux
5375 compatible with SysV and LSB init scripts. systemd provides
5376 aggressive parallelization capabilities uses socket and D-Bus
5377 activation for starting services offers on-demand starting of
5378 daemons keeps track of processes using Linux cgroups supports
5379 snapshotting and restoring of the system state maintains mount and
5380 automount points and implements an elaborate transactional
5381 dependency-based service control logic. It can work as a drop-in
5382 replacement for sysvinit.</entry>
5383
5384 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1</entry>
5385 </row>
5386
5387 <row>
5388 <entry>systemtap</entry>
5389
5390 <entry>3.1</entry>
5391
5392 <entry>Script-directed dynamic tracing and performance analysis
5393 tool for Linux.</entry>
5394
5395 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
5396 </row>
5397
5398 <row>
5399 <entry>tcl</entry>
5400
5401 <entry>8.6.6</entry>
5402
5403 <entry>Tool Command Language.</entry>
5404
5405 <entry>tcl, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
5406 </row>
5407
5408 <row>
5409 <entry>tcp-wrappers</entry>
5410
5411 <entry>7.6</entry>
5412
5413 <entry>Tools for monitoring and filtering incoming requests for
5414 tcp services.</entry>
5415
5416 <entry>BSD</entry>
5417 </row>
5418
5419 <row>
5420 <entry>tcpdump</entry>
5421
5422 <entry>4.9.0</entry>
5423
5424 <entry>A sophisticated network protocol analyzer.</entry>
5425
5426 <entry>BSD</entry>
5427 </row>
5428
5429 <row>
5430 <entry>texinfo-dummy</entry>
5431
5432 <entry>1.0</entry>
5433
5434 <entry>Fake version of the texinfo utility suite.</entry>
5435
5436 <entry>MIT</entry>
5437 </row>
5438
5439 <row>
5440 <entry>tgt</entry>
5441
5442 <entry>1.0.67</entry>
5443
5444 <entry>Linux SCSI target framework (tgt)</entry>
5445
5446 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
5447 </row>
5448
5449 <row>
5450 <entry>thin-provisioning-tools</entry>
5451
5452 <entry>0.6.3</entry>
5453
5454 <entry>A suite of tools for manipulating the metadata of the
5455 dm-thin device-mapper target.</entry>
5456
5457 <entry>GPL-3.0</entry>
5458 </row>
5459
5460 <row>
5461 <entry>tzcode</entry>
5462
5463 <entry>2017b</entry>
5464
5465 <entry>tzcode timezone zoneinfo utils -- zic zdump
5466 tzselect.</entry>
5467
5468 <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
5469 </row>
5470
5471 <row>
5472 <entry>tzdata</entry>
5473
5474 <entry>2017b</entry>
5475
5476 <entry>Timezone data.</entry>
5477
5478 <entry>PD, BSD, BSD-3-Clause</entry>
5479 </row>
5480
5481 <row>
5482 <entry>unfs3</entry>
5483
5484 <entry>0.9.22.r497</entry>
5485
5486 <entry>Userspace NFS server v3 protocol.</entry>
5487
5488 <entry>unfs3</entry>
5489 </row>
5490
5491 <row>
5492 <entry>unifdef</entry>
5493
5494 <entry>2.11</entry>
5495
5496 <entry>Selectively remove #ifdef statements from sources.</entry>
5497
5498 <entry>BSD-2-Clause</entry>
5499 </row>
5500
5501 <row>
5502 <entry>unzip</entry>
5503
5504 <entry>6.0</entry>
5505
5506 <entry>Utilities for extracting and viewing files in .zip
5507 archives.</entry>
5508
5509 <entry>BSD-3-Clause</entry>
5510 </row>
5511
5512 <row>
5513 <entry>update-rc.d</entry>
5514
5515 <entry>0.7</entry>
5516
5517 <entry>update-rc.d is a utility that allows the management of
5518 symlinks to the initscripts in the /etc/rcN.d directory
5519 structure.</entry>
5520
5521 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
5522 </row>
5523
5524 <row>
5525 <entry>util-linux</entry>
5526
5527 <entry>2.29.1</entry>
5528
5529 <entry>Util-linux includes a suite of basic system administration
5530 utilities commonly found on most Linux systems. Some of the more
5531 important utilities include disk partitioning kernel message
5532 management filesystem creation and system login.</entry>
5533
5534 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, BSD</entry>
5535 </row>
5536
5537 <row>
5538 <entry>util-macros</entry>
5539
5540 <entry>1.19.1</entry>
5541
5542 <entry>M4 autotools macros used by various X.org programs.</entry>
5543
5544 <entry>MIT</entry>
5545 </row>
5546
5547 <row>
5548 <entry>vim</entry>
5549
5550 <entry>8.0.0427</entry>
5551
5552 <entry>Vi IMproved - enhanced vi editor.</entry>
5553
5554 <entry>vim</entry>
5555 </row>
5556
5557 <row>
5558 <entry>volatile-binds</entry>
5559
5560 <entry>1.0</entry>
5561
5562 <entry>Volatile bind mount setup and configuration for
5563 read-only-rootfs</entry>
5564
5565 <entry>MIT</entry>
5566 </row>
5567
5568 <row>
5569 <entry>xcb-proto</entry>
5570
5571 <entry>1.12</entry>
5572
5573 <entry>Function prototypes for the X protocol C-language Binding
5574 (XCB). XCB is a replacement for Xlib featuring a small footprint
5575 latency hiding direct access to the protocol improved threading
5576 support and extensibility.</entry>
5577
5578 <entry>MIT</entry>
5579 </row>
5580
5581 <row>
5582 <entry>xextproto</entry>
5583
5584 <entry>7.3.0</entry>
5585
5586 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for several X
5587 extensions. These protocol extensions include DOUBLE-BUFFER DPMS
5588 Extended-Visual-Information LBX MIT_SHM MIT_SUNDRY-NONSTANDARD
5589 Multi-Buffering SECURITY SHAPE SYNC TOG-CUP XC-APPGROUP XC-MISC
5590 XTEST. In addition a small set of utility functions are also
5591 available.</entry>
5592
5593 <entry>MIT</entry>
5594 </row>
5595
5596 <row>
5597 <entry>xineramaproto</entry>
5598
5599 <entry>1.2.1</entry>
5600
5601 <entry>This package provides the wire protocol for the Xinerama
5602 extension. This extension is used for retrieving information about
5603 physical output devices which may be combined into a single
5604 logical X screen.</entry>
5605
5606 <entry>MIT</entry>
5607 </row>
5608
5609 <row>
5610 <entry>xkeyboard-config</entry>
5611
5612 <entry>2.20</entry>
5613
5614 <entry>The non-arch keyboard configuration database for X Window.
5615 The goal is to provide the consistent well-structured frequently
5616 released open source of X keyboard configuration data for X Window
5617 System implementations. The project is targeted to XKB-based
5618 systems.</entry>
5619
5620 <entry>MIT</entry>
5621 </row>
5622
5623 <row>
5624 <entry>xmlto</entry>
5625
5626 <entry>0.0.28</entry>
5627
5628 <entry>A shell-script tool for converting XML files to various
5629 formats.</entry>
5630
5631 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
5632 </row>
5633
5634 <row>
5635 <entry>xproto</entry>
5636
5637 <entry>7.0.31</entry>
5638
5639 <entry>This package provides the basic headers for the X Window
5640 System.</entry>
5641
5642 <entry>MIT</entry>
5643 </row>
5644
5645 <row>
5646 <entry>xterm</entry>
5647
5648 <entry>325</entry>
5649
5650 <entry>xterm is the standard terminal emulator for the X Window
5651 System.</entry>
5652
5653 <entry>MIT</entry>
5654 </row>
5655
5656 <row>
5657 <entry>xtrans</entry>
5658
5659 <entry>1.3.5</entry>
5660
5661 <entry>The X Transport Interface is intended to combine all system
5662 and transport specific code into a single place. This API should
5663 be used by all libraries clients and servers of the X Window
5664 System. Use of this API should allow the addition of new types of
5665 transports and support for new platforms without making any
5666 changes to the source except in the X Transport Interface
5667 code.</entry>
5668
5669 <entry>MIT</entry>
5670 </row>
5671
5672 <row>
5673 <entry>xz</entry>
5674
5675 <entry>5.2.3</entry>
5676
5677 <entry>Utilities for managing LZMA compressed files.</entry>
5678
5679 <entry>GPL-2.0, LGPL-2.1, PD</entry>
5680 </row>
5681
5682 <row>
5683 <entry>yajl</entry>
5684
5685 <entry>2.1.0</entry>
5686
5687 <entry>YAJL is a small event-driven (SAX-style) JSON parser
5688 written in ANSI C and a small validating JSON generator.</entry>
5689
5690 <entry>ISC</entry>
5691 </row>
5692
5693 <row>
5694 <entry>zisofs-tools</entry>
5695
5696 <entry>1.0.8</entry>
5697
5698 <entry>Utilities for creating compressed CD-ROM
5699 filesystems.</entry>
5700
5701 <entry>GPL-2.0</entry>
5702 </row>
5703
5704 <row>
5705 <entry>zlib</entry>
5706
5707 <entry>1.2.11</entry>
5708
5709 <entry>Zlib is a general-purpose patent-free lossless data
5710 compression library which is used by many different
5711 programs.</entry>
5712
5713 <entry>Zlib</entry>
5714 </row>
5715 </tbody>
5716 </tgroup>
5717 </informaltable>
5718 </section> 2771 </section>
5719 2772 <section id="open_source_license">
5720 <section id="open_source_license"> 2773 <title>Open Source Licenses</title>
5721 <title>Open Source Licenses</title> 2774<section id="lic_0">
5722 2775<title>AFL-2.0</title>
5723 <section id="lic_0"> 2776<para><programlisting>
5724 <title>AFL-2.0</title>
5725
5726 <para><programlisting>
5727 2777
5728The Academic Free License 2778The Academic Free License
5729 v. 2.0 2779 v. 2.0
@@ -5864,13 +2914,11 @@ Permission is hereby granted to copy and distribute this license without modific
5864This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its 2914This license may not be modified without the express written permission of its
5865copyright owner. 2915copyright owner.
5866 2916
5867</programlisting></para> 2917</programlisting></para></section>
5868 </section>
5869
5870 <section id="lic_1">
5871 <title>Apache-2.0</title>
5872 2918
5873 <para><programlisting> 2919<section id="lic_1">
2920<title>Apache-2.0</title>
2921<para><programlisting>
5874 2922
5875 2923
5876 Apache License 2924 Apache License
@@ -6075,13 +3123,11 @@ copyright owner.
6075 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 3123 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
6076 limitations under the License. 3124 limitations under the License.
6077 3125
6078</programlisting></para> 3126</programlisting></para></section>
6079 </section>
6080 3127
6081 <section id="lic_2"> 3128<section id="lic_2">
6082 <title>Artistic-1.0</title> 3129<title>Artistic-1.0</title>
6083 3130<para><programlisting>
6084 <para><programlisting>
6085 3131
6086The Artistic License 3132The Artistic License
6087Preamble 3133Preamble
@@ -6174,13 +3220,11 @@ FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
6174 3220
6175The End 3221The End
6176 3222
6177</programlisting></para> 3223</programlisting></para></section>
6178 </section>
6179
6180 <section id="lic_3">
6181 <title>BSD</title>
6182 3224
6183 <para><programlisting> 3225<section id="lic_3">
3226<title>BSD</title>
3227<para><programlisting>
6184Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California. 3228Copyright (c) The Regents of the University of California.
6185All rights reserved. 3229All rights reserved.
6186 3230
@@ -6207,13 +3251,11 @@ HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
6207LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 3251LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
6208OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 3252OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
6209SUCH DAMAGE. 3253SUCH DAMAGE.
6210</programlisting></para> 3254</programlisting></para></section>
6211 </section>
6212 3255
6213 <section id="lic_4"> 3256<section id="lic_4">
6214 <title>BSD-2-Clause</title> 3257<title>BSD-2-Clause</title>
6215 3258<para><programlisting>
6216 <para><programlisting>
6217 3259
6218The FreeBSD Copyright 3260The FreeBSD Copyright
6219 3261
@@ -6241,13 +3283,11 @@ The views and conclusions contained in the software and documentation are those
6241authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either 3283authors and should not be interpreted as representing official policies, either
6242expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project. 3284expressed or implied, of the FreeBSD Project.
6243 3285
6244</programlisting></para> 3286</programlisting></para></section>
6245 </section>
6246
6247 <section id="lic_5">
6248 <title>BSD-3-Clause</title>
6249 3287
6250 <para><programlisting> 3288<section id="lic_5">
3289<title>BSD-3-Clause</title>
3290<para><programlisting>
6251 3291
6252Copyright (c) &lt;YEAR&gt;, &lt;OWNER&gt; 3292Copyright (c) &lt;YEAR&gt;, &lt;OWNER&gt;
6253All rights reserved. 3293All rights reserved.
@@ -6274,13 +3314,11 @@ CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING
6274WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH 3314WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
6275DAMAGE. 3315DAMAGE.
6276 3316
6277</programlisting></para> 3317</programlisting></para></section>
6278 </section>
6279 3318
6280 <section id="lic_6"> 3319<section id="lic_6">
6281 <title>BSD-4-Clause</title> 3320<title>BSD-4-Clause</title>
6282 3321<para><programlisting>
6283 <para><programlisting>
6284 3322
6285Copyright (c) &lt;year&gt;, &lt;copyright holder&gt; 3323Copyright (c) &lt;year&gt;, &lt;copyright holder&gt;
6286All rights reserved. 3324All rights reserved.
@@ -6310,13 +3348,11 @@ ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
6310(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS 3348(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS
6311SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 3349SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
6312 3350
6313</programlisting></para> 3351</programlisting></para></section>
6314 </section>
6315
6316 <section id="lic_7">
6317 <title>BSL-1.0</title>
6318 3352
6319 <para><programlisting> 3353<section id="lic_7">
3354<title>BSL-1.0</title>
3355<para><programlisting>
6320 3356
6321Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003 3357Boost Software License - Version 1.0 - August 17th, 2003
6322 3358
@@ -6342,13 +3378,11 @@ FOR ANY DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE,
6342ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER 3378ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER
6343DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. 3379DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
6344 3380
6345</programlisting></para> 3381</programlisting></para></section>
6346 </section>
6347 3382
6348 <section id="lic_8"> 3383<section id="lic_8">
6349 <title>Elfutils-Exception</title> 3384<title>Elfutils-Exception</title>
6350 3385<para><programlisting>
6351 <para><programlisting>
6352 This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed 3386 This file describes the limits of the Exception under which you are allowed
6353 to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils. 3387 to distribute Non-GPL Code in linked combination with Red Hat elfutils.
6354 For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files 3388 For the full text of the license, please see one of the header files
@@ -6361,24 +3395,20 @@ DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
6361 libdw.h 3395 libdw.h
6362 libdwfl.h 3396 libdwfl.h
6363 3397
6364</programlisting></para> 3398</programlisting></para></section>
6365 </section>
6366
6367 <section id="lic_9">
6368 <title>FSF-Unlimited</title>
6369 3399
6370 <para><programlisting> 3400<section id="lic_9">
3401<title>FSF-Unlimited</title>
3402<para><programlisting>
6371Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 3403Copyright (C) 1997-2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
6372This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation 3404This file is free software; the Free Software Foundation
6373gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it, 3405gives unlimited permission to copy and/or distribute it,
6374with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved. 3406with or without modifications, as long as this notice is preserved.
6375</programlisting></para> 3407</programlisting></para></section>
6376 </section>
6377 3408
6378 <section id="lic_10"> 3409<section id="lic_10">
6379 <title>FreeType</title> 3410<title>FreeType</title>
6380 3411<para><programlisting>
6381 <para><programlisting>
6382 The FreeType Project LICENSE 3412 The FreeType Project LICENSE
6383 ---------------------------- 3413 ----------------------------
6384 3414
@@ -6549,13 +3579,11 @@ Legal Terms
6549 3579
6550--- end of FTL.TXT --- 3580--- end of FTL.TXT ---
6551 3581
6552</programlisting></para> 3582</programlisting></para></section>
6553 </section>
6554
6555 <section id="lic_11">
6556 <title>GPL-1.0</title>
6557 3583
6558 <para><programlisting> 3584<section id="lic_11">
3585<title>GPL-1.0</title>
3586<para><programlisting>
6559 3587
6560GNU General Public License, version 1 3588GNU General Public License, version 1
6561 3589
@@ -6808,13 +3836,11 @@ necessary. Here a sample; alter the names:
6808 3836
6809That`s all there is to it! 3837That`s all there is to it!
6810 3838
6811</programlisting></para> 3839</programlisting></para></section>
6812 </section>
6813 3840
6814 <section id="lic_12"> 3841<section id="lic_12">
6815 <title>GPL-2.0</title> 3842<title>GPL-2.0</title>
6816 3843<para><programlisting>
6817 <para><programlisting>
6818 3844
6819GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 3845GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
6820 3846
@@ -7113,18 +4139,16 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this
7113what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this 4139what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this
7114License. 4140License.
7115 4141
7116</programlisting></para> 4142</programlisting></para></section>
7117 </section>
7118
7119 <section id="lic_13">
7120 <title>GPL-3.0</title>
7121 4143
7122 <para><programlisting> 4144<section id="lic_13">
4145<title>GPL-3.0</title>
4146<para><programlisting>
7123GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 4147GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
7124 4148
7125Version 3, 29 June 2007 4149Version 3, 29 June 2007
7126 4150
7127Copyright Â&copy; 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt; 4151Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt;
7128 4152
7129Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, 4153Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document,
7130but changing it is not allowed. 4154but changing it is not allowed.
@@ -7693,13 +4717,11 @@ more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the library. If this
7693what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this 4717what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public License instead of this
7694License. But first, please read 4718License. But first, please read
7695&lt;http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html&gt;. 4719&lt;http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/why-not-lgpl.html&gt;.
7696</programlisting></para> 4720</programlisting></para></section>
7697 </section>
7698 4721
7699 <section id="lic_14"> 4722<section id="lic_14">
7700 <title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title> 4723<title>GPL-3.0-with-GCC-exception</title>
7701 4724<para><programlisting>
7702 <para><programlisting>
7703 4725
7704insert GPL v3 text here 4726insert GPL v3 text here
7705 4727
@@ -7755,13 +4777,11 @@ consistent with the licensing of the Independent Modules.
7755The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that 4777The availability of this Exception does not imply any general presumption that
7756third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC. 4778third-party software is unaffected by the copyleft requirements of the license of GCC.
7757 4779
7758</programlisting></para> 4780</programlisting></para></section>
7759 </section>
7760
7761 <section id="lic_15">
7762 <title>ICU</title>
7763 4781
7764 <para><programlisting> 4782<section id="lic_15">
4783<title>ICU</title>
4784<para><programlisting>
7765COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE 4785COPYRIGHT AND PERMISSION NOTICE
7766 4786
7767Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others 4787Copyright (c) 1995-2012 International Business Machines Corporation and others
@@ -7792,18 +4812,16 @@ Software without prior written authorization of the copyright holder.
7792 4812
7793All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their 4813All trademarks and registered trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their
7794respective owners. 4814respective owners.
7795</programlisting></para> 4815</programlisting></para></section>
7796 </section>
7797 4816
7798 <section id="lic_16"> 4817<section id="lic_16">
7799 <title>ISC</title> 4818<title>ISC</title>
7800 4819<para><programlisting>
7801 <para><programlisting>
7802 4820
7803ISC License: 4821ISC License:
7804 4822
7805Copyright &copy; 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC") 4823Copyright &#169; 2004-2010 by Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC")
7806Copyright &copy; 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium 4824Copyright &#169; 1995-2003 by Internet Software Consortium
7807 4825
7808Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with 4826Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with
7809or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this 4827or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this
@@ -7816,13 +4834,11 @@ DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN AC
7816OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH 4834OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH
7817THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. 4835THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
7818 4836
7819</programlisting></para> 4837</programlisting></para></section>
7820 </section>
7821
7822 <section id="lic_17">
7823 <title>LGPL-2.0</title>
7824 4838
7825 <para><programlisting> 4839<section id="lic_17">
4840<title>LGPL-2.0</title>
4841<para><programlisting>
7826GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 4842GNU LIBRARY GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
7827 4843
7828 4844
@@ -8406,13 +5422,11 @@ Ty Coon, President of Vice
8406 5422
8407That's all there is to it! 5423That's all there is to it!
8408 5424
8409</programlisting></para> 5425</programlisting></para></section>
8410 </section>
8411 5426
8412 <section id="lic_18"> 5427<section id="lic_18">
8413 <title>LGPL-2.1</title> 5428<title>LGPL-2.1</title>
8414 5429<para><programlisting>
8415 <para><programlisting>
8416 5430
8417GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 5431GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
8418 5432
@@ -8840,18 +5854,16 @@ signature of Ty Coon, 1 April 1990
8840Ty Coon, President of Vice 5854Ty Coon, President of Vice
8841That`s all there is to it! 5855That`s all there is to it!
8842 5856
8843</programlisting></para> 5857</programlisting></para></section>
8844 </section>
8845
8846 <section id="lic_19">
8847 <title>LGPL-3.0</title>
8848 5858
8849 <para><programlisting> 5859<section id="lic_19">
5860<title>LGPL-3.0</title>
5861<para><programlisting>
8850GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE 5862GNU LESSER GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
8851 5863
8852Version 3, 29 June 2007 5864Version 3, 29 June 2007
8853 5865
8854Copyright Â&copy; 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt; 5866Copyright © 2007 Free Software Foundation, Inc. &lt;http://fsf.org/&gt;
8855 5867
8856Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, 5868Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document,
8857but changing it is not allowed. 5869but changing it is not allowed.
@@ -8982,13 +5994,11 @@ If the Library as you received it specifies that a proxy can decide whether futu
8982versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public 5994versions of the GNU Lesser General Public License shall apply, that proxy's public
8983statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose 5995statement of acceptance of any version is permanent authorization for you to choose
8984that version for the Library. 5996that version for the Library.
8985</programlisting></para> 5997</programlisting></para></section>
8986 </section>
8987 5998
8988 <section id="lic_20"> 5999<section id="lic_20">
8989 <title>Libpng</title> 6000<title>Libpng</title>
8990 6001<para><programlisting>
8991 <para><programlisting>
8992 6002
8993This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of 6003This copy of the libpng notices is provided for your convenience. In case of
8994any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is 6004any discrepancy between this copy and the notices in the file png.h that is
@@ -9101,13 +6111,11 @@ Glenn Randers-Pehrson
9101glennrp at users.sourceforge.net 6111glennrp at users.sourceforge.net
9102December 9, 2010 6112December 9, 2010
9103 6113
9104</programlisting></para> 6114</programlisting></para></section>
9105 </section>
9106
9107 <section id="lic_21">
9108 <title>MIT</title>
9109 6115
9110 <para><programlisting> 6116<section id="lic_21">
6117<title>MIT</title>
6118<para><programlisting>
9111 6119
9112MIT License 6120MIT License
9113 6121
@@ -9131,13 +6139,11 @@ LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
9131OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN 6139OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
9132THE SOFTWARE. 6140THE SOFTWARE.
9133 6141
9134</programlisting></para> 6142</programlisting></para></section>
9135 </section>
9136 6143
9137 <section id="lic_22"> 6144<section id="lic_22">
9138 <title>MPL-1.0</title> 6145<title>MPL-1.0</title>
9139 6146<para><programlisting>
9140 <para><programlisting>
9141 6147
9142MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE 6148MOZILLA PUBLIC LICENSE
9143Version 1.0 6149Version 1.0
@@ -9430,13 +6436,11 @@ All Rights Reserved.
9430 6436
9431Contributor(s): ______________________________________.`` 6437Contributor(s): ______________________________________.``
9432 6438
9433</programlisting></para> 6439</programlisting></para></section>
9434 </section>
9435
9436 <section id="lic_23">
9437 <title>MPL-2.0</title>
9438 6440
9439 <para><programlisting> 6441<section id="lic_23">
6442<title>MPL-2.0</title>
6443<para><programlisting>
9440Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 6444Mozilla Public License Version 2.0
9441================================== 6445==================================
9442 6446
@@ -9810,13 +6814,11 @@ Exhibit B - "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses" Notice
9810 6814
9811 This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as 6815 This Source Code Form is "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses", as
9812 defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. 6816 defined by the Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0.
9813</programlisting></para> 6817</programlisting></para></section>
9814 </section>
9815 6818
9816 <section id="lic_24"> 6819<section id="lic_24">
9817 <title>OASIS</title> 6820<title>OASIS</title>
9818 6821<para><programlisting>
9819 <para><programlisting>
9820 Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute the DocBook DTD and 6822 Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute the DocBook DTD and
9821 its accompanying documentation for any purpose and without fee is 6823 its accompanying documentation for any purpose and without fee is
9822 hereby granted in perpetuity, provided that the above copyright 6824 hereby granted in perpetuity, provided that the above copyright
@@ -9830,13 +6832,11 @@ Exhibit B - "Incompatible With Secondary Licenses" Notice
9830 additional notations, label your DTD as a variant of DocBook. See 6832 additional notations, label your DTD as a variant of DocBook. See
9831 the maintenance documentation for more information. 6833 the maintenance documentation for more information.
9832 6834
9833</programlisting></para> 6835</programlisting></para></section>
9834 </section>
9835
9836 <section id="lic_25">
9837 <title>OpenSSL</title>
9838 6836
9839 <para><programlisting> 6837<section id="lic_25">
6838<title>OpenSSL</title>
6839<para><programlisting>
9840 6840
9841OpenSSL License 6841OpenSSL License
9842 6842
@@ -9953,21 +6953,17 @@ put under another distribution licence
9953 6953
9954 6954
9955 6955
9956</programlisting></para> 6956</programlisting></para></section>
9957 </section>
9958 6957
9959 <section id="lic_26"> 6958<section id="lic_26">
9960 <title>PD</title> 6959<title>PD</title>
9961 6960<para><programlisting>
9962 <para><programlisting>
9963This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License 6961This is a placeholder for the Public Domain License
9964</programlisting></para> 6962</programlisting></para></section>
9965 </section>
9966
9967 <section id="lic_27">
9968 <title>Python-2.0</title>
9969 6963
9970 <para><programlisting> 6964<section id="lic_27">
6965<title>Python-2.0</title>
6966<para><programlisting>
9971 6967
9972PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2 6968PYTHON SOFTWARE FOUNDATION LICENSE VERSION 2
9973-------------------------------------------- 6969--------------------------------------------
@@ -10160,13 +7156,11 @@ WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
10160ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT 7156ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT
10161OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. 7157OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
10162 7158
10163</programlisting></para> 7159</programlisting></para></section>
10164 </section>
10165 7160
10166 <section id="lic_28"> 7161<section id="lic_28">
10167 <title>Sleepycat</title> 7162<title>Sleepycat</title>
10168 7163<para><programlisting>
10169 <para><programlisting>
10170 7164
10171The Sleepycat License 7165The Sleepycat License
10172Copyright (c) 1990-1999 7166Copyright (c) 1990-1999
@@ -10257,13 +7251,11 @@ LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
10257OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 7251OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
10258SUCH DAMAGE. 7252SUCH DAMAGE.
10259 7253
10260</programlisting></para> 7254</programlisting></para></section>
10261 </section>
10262
10263 <section id="lic_29">
10264 <title>Zlib</title>
10265 7255
10266 <para><programlisting> 7256<section id="lic_29">
7257<title>Zlib</title>
7258<para><programlisting>
10267 7259
10268zlib License 7260zlib License
10269 7261
@@ -10285,13 +7277,11 @@ zlib License
10285 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. 7277 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution.
10286 7278
10287 7279
10288</programlisting></para> 7280</programlisting></para></section>
10289 </section>
10290 7281
10291 <section id="lic_30"> 7282<section id="lic_30">
10292 <title>tcl</title> 7283<title>tcl</title>
10293 7284<para><programlisting>
10294 <para><programlisting>
10295This software is copyrighted by the Regents of the University of 7285This software is copyrighted by the Regents of the University of
10296California, Sun Microsystems, Inc., Scriptics Corporation, ActiveState 7286California, Sun Microsystems, Inc., Scriptics Corporation, ActiveState
10297Corporation and other parties. The following terms apply to all files 7287Corporation and other parties. The following terms apply to all files
@@ -10332,44 +7322,11 @@ Government shall have only "Restricted Rights" as defined in Clause
10332authors grant the U.S. Government and others acting in its behalf 7322authors grant the U.S. Government and others acting in its behalf
10333permission to use and distribute the software in accordance with the 7323permission to use and distribute the software in accordance with the
10334terms specified in this license. 7324terms specified in this license.
10335</programlisting></para> 7325</programlisting></para></section>
10336 </section>
10337
10338 <section id="lic_31">
10339 <title>unfs3</title>
10340 7326
10341 <para><programlisting> 7327<section id="lic_31">
10342UNFS3 user-space NFSv3 server 7328<title>vim</title>
10343(C) 2003, Pascal Schmidt &lt;unfs3-server@ewetel.net&gt; 7329<para><programlisting>
10344
10345Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
10346modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
10347
103481. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
10349 this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
103502. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
10351 this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
10352 and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
103533. The name of the author may not be used to endorse or promote products
10354 derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
10355
10356THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
10357WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
10358MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO
10359EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
10360SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
10361PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS;
10362OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY,
10363WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR
10364OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF
10365ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
10366</programlisting></para>
10367 </section>
10368
10369 <section id="lic_32">
10370 <title>vim</title>
10371
10372 <para><programlisting>
10373VIM LICENSE 7330VIM LICENSE
10374 7331
10375I) There are no restrictions on distributing unmodified copies of Vim except 7332I) There are no restrictions on distributing unmodified copies of Vim except
@@ -10452,11 +7409,10 @@ IV) It is not allowed to remove this license from the distribution of the Vim
10452=== 7409===
10453Read more about this license at 7410Read more about this license at
10454http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/uganda.html#license 7411http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/uganda.html#license
10455</programlisting></para> 7412</programlisting></para></section>
10456 </section>
10457 </section>
10458 7413
10459 <section id="proprietary_license">
10460 <title>Proprietary Licenses</title>
10461 </section> 7414 </section>
10462</chapter> \ No newline at end of file 7415 <section id="proprietary_license">
7416 <title>Proprietary Licenses</title>
7417 </section>
7418</chapter>