Gus Kenion
gkenion
Involved Projects and Packages
This package provides modules for Apache to invisibly integrate Tomcat
capabilities into an existing Apache installation.
The Berkeley DB Database is a programmatic toolkit that provides
database support for applications.
This package contains the necessary runtime libraries.
This project was created for package bcel via attribute OBS:Maintained
This project was created for package grafana via attribute OBS:Maintained
This project was created for package gnome-boxes via attribute OBS:Maintained
ImPlay is a Cross-Platform Desktop Media Player, built on top of mpv and ImGui.
ImPlay aims to be mpv compatible, which means almost all mpv features from the manual are (or will be) available.
https://tsl0922.github.io/ImPlay/
This is the Java:packages project. Its main purpose is to serve as development
project for packages around the topic of Java in the openSUSE:Factory
distribution.
This project also provides *unofficial* backports of newest packages to
current latest openSUSE release. The packages are *not* tested and might
randomly break
Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
This package contains optional JUnit tasks for Apache Ant.
The Ant-Contrib project is a collection of tasks (and at one point
maybe types and other tools) for Apache Ant.
ANTLR, Another Tool for Language Recognition, (formerly PCCTS) is a
language tool that provides a framework for constructing recognizers,
compilers, and translators from grammatical descriptions containing C++
or Java actions (you can use PCCTS 1.xx to generate C-based parsers).
The scope of this package is to create a package of Java utility
methods for accessing and modifying the properties of arbitrary
JavaBeans. No dependencies outside of the JDK are required, so the use
of this package is very lightweight.
The CLI library provides an API for working with the
command line arguments and options.
Commons Codec is an attempt to provide definitive implementations of
commonly used encoders and decoders.
The introduction of the Collections API by Sun in JDK 1.2
has been a boon to quick and effective Java programming.
Ready access to powerful data structures has accelerated
development by reducing the need for custom container
classes around each core object. Most Java2 APIs are
significantly easier to use because of the Collections API.
However, there are certain holes left unfilled by Sun's
implementations, and the Jakarta-Commons Collections
Component strives to fulfill them. Among the features of
this package are: - special-purpose implementations of
Lists and Maps for fast access
- adapter classes from Java1-style containers (arrays,
enumerations) to Java2-style collections
- methods to test or create typical set theory properties
of collections such as union, intersection, and closure
Commons CSV reads and writes files in variations of the Comma Separated Value (CSV) format.
The Daemon Component contains a set of Java and native code, including
a set of Java interfaces applications must implement and Unix native
code to control a Java daemon from a Unix operating system.
Although the java.net package provides basic functionality for
accessing resources via HTTP, it doesn't provide the full flexibility
or functionality needed by many applications. The Apache Commons
HttpClient component provides a package implementing the client side
of the most recent HTTP standards and recommendations.
The HttpClient component may be of interest to anyone building
HTTP-aware client applications such as web browsers, web service
clients, or systems that leverage or extend the HTTP protocol for
distributed communication.
Commons-IO contains utility classes, stream implementations,
file filters, and endian classes. It is a library of utilities
to assist with developing IO functionality.
Java Expression Language (JEXL) is an expression language engine which can be
embedded in applications and frameworks. JEXL is inspired by Jakarta Velocity
and the Expression Language defined in the JavaServer Pages Standard Tag
Library version 1.1 (JSTL) and JavaServer Pages version 2.0 (JSP). While
inspired by JSTL EL, it must be noted that JEXL is not a compatible
implementation of EL as defined in JSTL 1.1 (JSR-052) or JSP 2.0 (JSR-152).
For a compatible implementation of these specifications, see the Commons EL
project.
JEXL attempts to bring some of the lessons learned by the Velocity community
about expression languages in templating to a wider audience. Commons Jelly
needed Velocity-ish method access, it just had to have it.
The standard Java libraries fail to provide enough methods for
manipulation of its core classes. The Commons Lang Component provides
these extra methods.
The Commons Lang Component provides a host of helper utilities for the
java.lang API, notably String manipulation methods, basic numerical
methods, object reflection, creation and serialization, and System
properties. Additionally it contains an inheritable enum type, an
exception structure that supports multiple types of nested-Exceptions
and a series of utilities dedicated to help with building methods, such
as hashCode, toString and equals.
The commons-logging package provides a simple, component oriented
interface (org.apache.commons.logging.Log) together with wrappers for
logging systems. The user can choose at runtime which system they want
to use. In addition, a small number of basic implementations are
provided to allow users to use the package standalone.
commons-logging was heavily influenced by Avalon's Logkit and Log4J. The
commons-logging abstraction is meant to minimize the differences between
the two, and to allow a developer to not tie himself to a particular
logging implementation.
The Project Object Model files for the apache-commons packages.
Apache Ivy is a tool for managing (recording, tracking, resolving and
reporting) project dependencies. It is designed as process agnostic and is
not tied to any methodology or structure. while available as a standalone
tool, Apache Ivy works particularly well with Apache Ant providing a number
of powerful Ant tasks ranging from dependency resolution to dependency
reporting and publication.
The Apache PDFBox library is an open source Java tool for working with PDF documents.
This project allows creation of new PDF documents, manipulation of existing documents
and the ability to extract content from documents.
Apache PDFBox also includes several command line utilities.
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