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Christian Boltz

cboltz

Involved Projects and Packages

deal with RFC 2047 encoded words (improved)

Maintainer

Diffuse is a graphical tool for merging and comparing text files. Diffuse is able to compare an arbitrary number of files side-by-side and gives users the ability to manually adjust line-matching and directly edit files. Diffuse can also retrieve revisions of files from CVS, subversion, git, and mercurial repositories for comparison and merging.

Likwid stands for Like I knew what I am doing. This project contributes easy to
use command line tools for Linux to support programmers in developing high
performance multi threaded programs.

Maintainer Bugowner

Several packages built by Christian Boltz

(Beware: I'm rather new to packaging ;-)

Maintainer

Searches for font files, sorts them into folders by name and look
and with human readable names, stores gathered font information in
a database, can generate previews and posters, can find and remove
duplicates and can reunite PostScript font families.

Also, Fontlinge have a web interface to browse through your fonts. It
shows detail previews and font infos, provides font download as tarball
and has the possibility to sort fonts.

Maintainer
Maintainer

This package is based on the package 'maildrop' from project 'server:mail'.

maildrop is a replacement for your local mail delivery agent. maildrop reads a
mail message from standard input, then delivers the message to your mailbox.
maildrop knows how to deliver mail to mbox-style mailboxes, and maildirs.
"maildir" is a mailbox format used by Courier and Qmail.

maildrop optionally reads instructions from a file, which describe how to
filter incoming mail. These instructions can direct maildrop to deliver the
message to an alternate mailbox, or forward it somewhere else. Unlike procmail,
maildrop uses a structured filtering language.

maildrop is written in C++, and is significantly larger than procmail. However,

Authors:
----------
Sam Varshavchik

Maintainer

This package is based on the package 'modlogan' from project 'home:darix'.

Modlogan is a modular logfile analyzer which is currently able to parse ftp-,
webserver and squid logs. The generated output can be viewed by a webbrowser
(->moglogan, webalizer) or your favorite text editor (->text). The template
engine allows you to create the output with your prefered look and feel.

The different input and output modes are provided by some surrounding plugins.
For example the modlogan output plugin provides three different menu structures
for the same colourfull output while the output which is generated by the
webalizer output plugin looks similar to the output generated by the original
Webalizer known from webalizer.

The input is handled the same way. One plugin is for the web server logs, the
next is for xferlog from FTP-servers like WuFTP and some others are for
mail-servers, streaming-server and so on.

QA package for https://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=266892

Maintainer
Maintainer

dropwatch is an interactive utility for monitoring and recording packets that are dropped by the kernel

patch2mail checks for available updates and sends a mail to root
if any patches are available

Bugowner

The AppArmor Parser is a userlevel program that is used to load in
program profiles to the AppArmor Security kernel module.

This package is part of a suite of tools that used to be named
SubDomain.

patch2mail checks for available updates and sends a mail to root
if any patches or updated packages (configureable) are available.

'Mail::Sender' provides an object oriented interface to sending mails. It
doesn't need any outer program. It connects to a mail server directly from
Perl, using Socket.

Sends mails directly from Perl through a socket connection.

Fellow Americans, you probably won't know what the hell this module is for.
Europeans, Russians, et al, you probably do. ':-)'.

For example, here's a valid MIME header you might get:

From: =?US-ASCII?Q?Keith_Moore?=
To: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Keld_J=F8rn_Simonsen?=
CC: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Andr=E9_?= Pirard
Subject: =?ISO-8859-1?B?SWYgeW91IGNhbiByZWFkIHRoaXMgeW8=?=
=?ISO-8859-2?B?dSB1bmRlcnN0YW5kIHRoZSBleGFtcGxlLg==?=
=?US-ASCII?Q?.._cool!?=

The fields basically decode to (sorry, I can only approximate the Latin
characters with 7 bit sequences /o and 'e):

From: Keith Moore
To: Keld J/orn Simonsen
CC: Andr'e Pirard
Subject: If you can read this you understand the example... cool!

*Supplement*: Fellow Americans, Europeans, you probably won't know what the
hell this module is for. East Asians, et al, you probably do. '(^_^)'.

For example, here's a valid MIME header you might get:

Subject: =?EUC-KR?B?sNTAuLinKGxhemluZXNzKSwgwvzB9ri7seIoaW1w?=
=?EUC-KR?B?YXRpZW5jZSksILGzuLgoaHVicmlzKQ==?=

The fields basically decode to (sorry, I cannot approximate the non-Latin
multibyte characters with any 7 bit sequences):

Subject: ???(laziness), ????(impatience), ??(hubris)

FilterIterator implementation that filters files based on a list of suffixes.

PostfixAdmin is a PHP based application that handles Postfix Style Virtual Domains and
Users that are stored in MySQL or PostgreSQL.

Postfix Admin supports:
- Virtual Mailboxes / Virtual Aliases / Forwarders
- Alias domains (Domain to Domain forwarding with recipient validation)
- Vacation (auto-response) for Virtual Mailboxes.
- Quota / Alias & Mailbox limits per domain.
- Fetchmail integration
- Packaged with over 25 languages.

Bugowner

The AppArmor Parser is a userlevel program that is used to load in
program profiles to the AppArmor Security kernel module.

This package is part of a suite of tools that used to be named
SubDomain.

patch2mail checks for available updates and sends a mail to root
if any patches or updated packages (configureable) are available.

'Mail::Sender' provides an object oriented interface to sending mails. It
doesn't need any outer program. It connects to a mail server directly from
Perl, using Socket.

Sends mails directly from Perl through a socket connection.

Fellow Americans, you probably won't know what the hell this module is for.
Europeans, Russians, et al, you probably do. ':-)'.

For example, here's a valid MIME header you might get:

From: =?US-ASCII?Q?Keith_Moore?=
To: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Keld_J=F8rn_Simonsen?=
CC: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Andr=E9_?= Pirard
Subject: =?ISO-8859-1?B?SWYgeW91IGNhbiByZWFkIHRoaXMgeW8=?=
=?ISO-8859-2?B?dSB1bmRlcnN0YW5kIHRoZSBleGFtcGxlLg==?=
=?US-ASCII?Q?.._cool!?=

The fields basically decode to (sorry, I can only approximate the Latin
characters with 7 bit sequences /o and 'e):

From: Keith Moore
To: Keld J/orn Simonsen
CC: Andr'e Pirard
Subject: If you can read this you understand the example... cool!

*Supplement*: Fellow Americans, Europeans, you probably won't know what the
hell this module is for. East Asians, et al, you probably do. '(^_^)'.

For example, here's a valid MIME header you might get:

Subject: =?EUC-KR?B?sNTAuLinKGxhemluZXNzKSwgwvzB9ri7seIoaW1w?=
=?EUC-KR?B?YXRpZW5jZSksILGzuLgoaHVicmlzKQ==?=

The fields basically decode to (sorry, I cannot approximate the non-Latin
multibyte characters with any 7 bit sequences):

Subject: ???(laziness), ????(impatience), ??(hubris)

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Contributions on 2024-10-02
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