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  • A historic program that was used to set up the proper permissions of the accesslog files at Lysator.

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  • The main LysKOM repository.

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  • A Nagios plugin to check that NIS servers can perform matching. Unlike other similar plugins, this one provides performance data on how fast the lookup is. Written in C, it does not rely on any tools, and can check several servers—even if the host where the plugin runs does not itself use NIS.

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  • This is cmod, which provides modularized initialization of environment variables such as PATH. Once cmod is installed and configured typing “module add tex” might add /sw/tex/teTeX/bin/sparc-solaris2.5.1 to PATH, /sw/tex/teTeX/man to MANPATH, etc. Cmod provides a way for the system administrator to define module files (such as “tex”) that modify the environment in well-defined ways. It allows the user to select the modules that should be active; the user can also override the modules provided by the administrator.

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  • Guile Bindings for Gumbo

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  • Experimental instruction set, 16-bit opcodes, 16 registers

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  • The main kom++ repository.

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  • Liboop is a low-level event loop management library for POSIX-based operating systems. It supports the development of modular, multiplexed applications which may respond to events from several sources. It replaces the “select() loop” and allows the registration of event handlers for file and network I/O, timers and signals. Since processes use these mechanisms for almost all external communication, liboop can be used as the basis for almost any application.

    Initially developed by Dan Egnor, liboop is now maintained by Niels Möller and Per Cederqvist.

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  • Liboop is a low-level event loop management library for POSIX-based operating systems. It supports the development of modular, multiplexed applications which may respond to events from several sources. It replaces the “select() loop” and allows the registration of event handlers for file and network I/O, timers and signals. Since processes use these mechanisms for almost all external communication, liboop can be used as the basis for almost any application.

    Initially developed by Dan Egnor, liboop is now maintained by Niels Möller and Per Cederqvist.

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  • Liboop is a low-level event loop management library for POSIX-based operating systems. It supports the development of modular, multiplexed applications which may respond to events from several sources. It replaces the “select() loop” and allows the registration of event handlers for file and network I/O, timers and signals. Since processes use these mechanisms for almost all external communication, liboop can be used as the basis for almost any application.

    Initially developed by Dan Egnor, liboop is now maintained by Niels Möller and Per Cederqvist.

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  • Liu logchecker sources.

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  • A GNU implementation of the Secure Shell protocols.

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  • The main LysKOM repository.

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  • The main LysKOM repository.

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  • An attempt to solve bug 1616 of the lyskom-server, storing the code using TopGit.

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