Dr. Werner Fink's avatar

Dr. Werner Fink

WernerFink

Involved Projects and Packages
Bugowner

As soon as a text application needs to directly control its output to
the screen (if it wants to place the cursor at location (x,y) then
write text), ncurses is used. The panel and the forms libraries are
included in this package. These new libraries support color, special
characters, and panels.

Bugowner

A nice program that changes your cursor into a cat playing with your
mouse cursor. The manual page shows more possibilities to change your
cursor.

Bugowner

A driver for Lexmark printers 7000, 7200, and 5700. This driver
translates PBM (Portable Bitmap) into the printer protocol for the
Lexmark printers 7000, 7200, and 5700.

Bugowner

A public domain Korn Shell clone.

The GNU plotting utilities consist of seven command line programs: the
graphics programs `graph', `plot', `tek2plot', and `plotfont', and the
mathematical programs `spline', `ode', and `double'. GNU `libplot' is
distributed with these programs; it is the library on which the
graphics programs are based. `Libplot' is a function library for
device-independent two-dimensional vector graphics, including vector
graphics animations under the X Window System.

Bugowner

The "procinfo" command gathers some system data from the /proc
directory and prints it nicely formatted on the standard output device.

Bugowner

Sendmail calls procmail to deliver email into a local folder. Procmail
can be configured to store e-mail in different folders.

Bugowner

The procps package contains a set of system utilities that provide
system information. Procps includes ps, free, skill, snice, tload, top,
uptime, vmstat, w, and watch. The ps command displays a snapshot of
running processes. The top command provides a repetitive update of the
statuses of running processes. The free command displays the amounts of
free and used memory on your system. The skill command sends a
terminate command (or another specified signal) to a specified set of
processes. The snice command is used to change the scheduling priority
of specified processes. The tload command prints a graph of the current
system load average to a specified tty. The uptime command displays the
current time, how long the system has been running, how many users are
logged on, and system load averages for the past one, five, and fifteen
minutes. The w command displays a list of the users who are currently
logged on and what they are running. The watch program watches a
running program. The vmstat command displays virtual memory statistics
about processes, memory, paging, block I/O, traps, and CPU activity.

Bugowner

The psmisc package contains utilities for managing processes on your
system: pstree, killall and fuser. The pstree command displays a tree
structure of all of the running processes on your system. The killall
command sends a specified signal (SIGTERM if nothing is specified) to
processes identified by name. The fuser command identifies the PIDs of
processes that are using specified files or filesystems.

Bugowner

This archive contains utilities for manipulating PostScript documents.
Page selection and rearrangement are supported, including arrangement
into signatures for booklet printing, and page merging for n-up
printing.

psbook rearranges pages into signatures

psselect selects pages and page ranges

pstops performs general page rearrangement and selection

psnup put multiple pages per physical sheet of paper

psresize alter document paper size

epsffit fits an EPSF file to a given bounding box

You will find a README in /usr/share/doc/packages/psutils/ which also
describes several Perl scripts for importing PostScript files. A manual
page for each ps utility is also included.

This package contains the python binding that require the magic "file"
interface.

Bugowner

The "Unix System Administration Handbook" calls sendmail "The most
complex and complete mail delivery system in common use..." .

Ready-made configuration files are included for systems connected by
TCP/IP (with or without a name server) and for systems using UUCP.

'procmail' is used as a local mail agent.

"sendmail" is a trademark of Sendmail, Inc.

su-wrapper is a little utility that allows special users to execute
processes under another uid and gid.

It uses a table (/etc/su-wrapper.conf) to decide whatto do in certain
situation. Therefore it walks through the table and tries to match the
current situation (the later entries have precedence).

For more information, read /usr/share/doc/packages/su-wrapper/README.

Bugowner

The syslogd daemon is the general system logging daemon, which is
responsible for handling requests for syslog services.

This version of syslogd is similar to the standard Berkeley product,
but with a number of compatible extensions.

Bugowner

System V style init programs by Miquel van Smoorenburg that control the
booting and shutdown of your system. These support a number of system
runlevels, each one associated with a specific set of utilities. For
example, the normal system runlevel is 3, which starts a getty on
virtual consoles tty1-tty6. Runlevel 5 starts xdm. Runlevel 0 shuts
down the system. See the individual man pages for inittab, initscript,
halt, init, powerd, reboot, runlevel, shutdown, and telinit for
more information.

Bugowner

Tcsh is an enhanced, but completely compatible, version of the Berkeley
UNIX C shell, csh(1). It is a command language interpreter usable as an
interactive login shell and a shell script command processor. It
includes a command-line editor, programmable word completion, spelling
correction, a history mechanism, job control, and a C-like syntax.

Bugowner

The termcap library.

Bugowner

Texinfo is a documentation system that uses a single source file to
produce both online information and printed output. Using Texinfo, you
can create a printed document with the normal features of a book,
including chapters, sections, cross-references, and indices. From the
same Texinfo source file, you can create a menu-driven, online info
file with nodes, menus, cross-references, and indices using the included
makeinfo tool.

Aggregated with texinfo in this package is texi2html and texi2roff.

Bugowner

After installing texlive and the package texlive-latex, find a large selection of documentation for TeX, LaTeX, and various layout styles in /usr/share/texmf/doc.

TeX (pronounced tech) is an interpreter for text formatting and was developed by Donald E. Knuth. It works with control and macro commands on a text file. Working with TeX is similar to typesetting methods. LaTeX is a complex macro package that removes the cryptical TeX interface and does most of the work for the user.

TeX uses special fonts produced by the MetaFont program. Various printer drivers and an X11 viewer are also included in this package. The teTeX package is based on the standard TeX package of Karl Berry, which makes configuration much easier. It is also possible to use PostScript fonts. A real PostScript printer is required, however. If the ghostscript (gs) package is installed, all drivers for printing and viewing can use these fonts. Note, however, that the fonts included in the ghostscript package are not identical to Adobe's PostScript fonts. The copyright prohibids us to include them on the CD.

Besides these features, the programs MakeIndex (for producing indexes) and BibTeX (for literature data processing) exist.

The texlive package includes a full texmf tree, many programs like tex, dvips, etc., shell script configuration, and a big collection of documentations. This package is easily configured by the script texconfig and has multilanguage options.

The basic file system layout for TeX Live installation.

Here one rpm spec file `texlive-specs.spec' is used for repackaging the several texmf/texmf-dist tarballs of TeX Live into their own rpms. This is done with the help of more than 2200 spec files generate by the
`generate' perl script of the package `Meta' in the same project and packed in the tarball `texlive-specs.tar.xz'.

Here one rpm spec file `texlive-specs.spec' is used for repackaging the several texmf/texmf-dist tarballs of TeX Live into their own rpms. This is done with the help of more than 2200 spec files generate by the
`generate' perl script of the package `Meta' in the same project and packed in the tarball `texlive-specs.tar.xz'.

Here one rpm spec file `texlive-specs.spec' is used for repackaging the several texmf/texmf-dist tarballs of TeX Live into their own rpms. This is done with the help of more than 2200 spec files generate by the
`generate' perl script of the package `Meta' in the same project and packed in the tarball `texlive-specs.tar.xz'.

Here one rpm spec file `texlive-specs.spec' is used for repackaging the several texmf/texmf-dist tarballs of TeX Live into their own rpms. This is done with the help of more than 2200 spec files generate by the
`generate' perl script of the package `Meta' in the same project and packed in the tarball `texlive-specs.tar.xz'.

1027 contributions in the last year
Mon                                                                                                          
Tue                                                                                                          
Wed                                                                                                          
Thu                                                                                                          
Fri                                                                                                        
Sat                                                                                                        
Sun                                                                                                        
Contributions on 2024-08-21
1 comment written
openSUSE Build Service is sponsored by