Marcus Meissner
msmeissn
- ibs-maintenance-team 2 tasks
- maintenance-opensuse.org 10 tasks
- proactive-security 0 tasks
- qam-openqa 4 tasks
- reactive-security 0 tasks
- security-team 58 tasks
Involved Projects and Packages
Photobooth like application supporting libgphoto2 cameras. (for webcams look at cheese)
EtherApe is a graphical network monitor for Unix, modeled after
etherman. Featuring link layer, IP, and TCP modes, it displays network
activity graphically. Hosts and links change in size with traffic.
Various protocols are color coded in the display. It supports ethernet,
FDDI, token ring, ISDN, PPP, and SLIP devices. It can filter traffic to
show and can read traffic from a file as well as live from the network.
This package contains the fetchmsttfonts helper script, which on
running retrieves and unpacks the freely available MS Truetype fonts.
This tool contains simple GTK interface for viewing EXIF information
within JPEG images created by some digital cameras.
gPhoto (GNU Photo) is a command line tool for previewing, retrieving,
and capturing images from a range of supported digital cameras to your
local hard drive. It does not support digital cameras based on the USB
storage protocol, because those can be mounted by Linux directly. Find
the list of supported cameras at the following URL:
http://gphoto.org/proj/libgphoto2/support.php
or by running
gphoto2 --list-cameras
This package provides a fuse module to make digital cameras supported
by libgphoto2 visible as a file system.
GTKam is a GTK and GNOME based tool for accessing a digital camera,
viewing thumbnails, and downloading pictures from the camera.
Imlib2 is an advanced replacement library for libraries like libXpm
that provides many more features with much greater flexibility and
speed than standard libraries, including font rasterization, rotation,
RGBA space rendering and blending, dynamic binary filters, scripting,
and more.
Utilities to control the kernel key management facility and to provide
a mechanism by which the kernel can call back to user space to get a
key instantiated.
The libelf package contains a library for accessing ELF object files.
Libelf allows you to access the internals of the ELF object file
format, so you can see the different sections of an ELF file.
The libevent library provides a mechanism to execute a function when a
specific event on a file descriptor occurs or after a given time has
passed.
This library is used to parse EXIF information from JPEGs created by
digital cameras.
This library contains GTK widgets for viewing EXIF information within
JPEG images created by some digital cameras.
gPhoto (GNU Photo) is a set of libraries for previewing, retrieving,
and capturing images from a range of supported digital cameras to your
local hard drive. It does not support digital cameras based on the USB
storage protocol. Those can be mounted by Linux directly.
As of this time, gPhoto supports around 1200 cameras, listed on:
http://gphoto.org/proj/libgphoto2/support.php
or by running
gphoto2 --list-cameras
This package contains binaries and documentation that allow access to
USB based media players based on the MTP (Media Transfer Protocol)
authored by Microsoft.
Common devices using this technology are Creative Zen, iRiver, Samsung
and others.
This library implements the GSS security mechanism for ONC RPC. It can
be used to provide strong authentication and security for NFS.
The libspe is a library interface that has been established on top of
the spufs low-level programming model. The library interface does not
rely on implementation details of the file system and can also be used
on other operating systems that might have a different kernel
interface.
This package contains the SCTP base runtime library and command line
tools.
SCTP (Stream Control Transmission Protocol) is a message-oriented,
reliable transport protocol with congestion control, support for
transparent multihoming, and multiple ordered streams of messages.
In NFSv4, identities of users are conveyed by names rather than user ID
and group ID. Both the NFS server and client code in the kernel need to
translate these to numeric IDs.
This is the first alpha release of the new NVIDIA Texture Tools. The main highlights of
this release are support for all DX10 texture formats, higher speed and improved
compression quality.
In addition to that it also comes with a hardware accelerated compressor that
uses CUDA to compress blocks in parallel on the GPU and runs around 10 times
faster than the CPU counterpart.
You can obtain CUDA from our developer site at:
http://developer.nvidia.com/object/cuda.html
The source code of the Texture Tools is being released under the terms of
the MIT license.
OpenSCAP is a set of open source libraries providing an easier path for integration of the SCAP line of standards.
SCAP is a line of standards managed by NIST with the goal of providing a standard language for the expression of Computer Network Defense related information.
More information about SCAP can be found at nvd.nist.gov.
This package contains a plugin a for OpenSSL which connects it with the
Trusted Platform Module found on newer machines and a create_tpm_key
helper binary to create and extract a TPM key.
This package contains the gpg key that is used to sign official SuSE
rpm packages. It will be installed as a keyring in
/usr/lib/rpm/gnupg/pubring.gpg. Administrators who wish to add their
own keys to verify against should use the following commandline command
to add the key to the keyring as used by RPM:
gpg --no-options --no-default-keyring \ --keyring
/usr/lib/rpm/gnupg/pubring.gpg --import
OPIE stands for One-time Passwords In Everything. One-time passwords
can be used to foil password sniffers because they cannot be reused by
the attacker.
This package provides a PAM module and several utility programs that
let you use one-time passwords for authentication.
These manpages give you the most important information about Chart. There
is also a complete documentation (Documentation.pdf) within the Chart
package. Look at it to get more information. This module is an attempt to
build a general purpose graphing module that is easily modified and
expanded. I borrowed most of the API from Martien Verbruggen's GIFgraph
module. I liked most of GIFgraph, but I thought it was to difficult to
modify, and it was missing a few things that I needed, most notably
legends. So I decided to write a new module from scratch, and I've designed
it from the bottom up to be easy to modify. Like GIFgraph, Chart uses
Lincoln Stein's GD module for all of its graphics primitives calls.
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- 6 commits in openSUSE:Maintenance:18645
- 4 commits in openSUSE:Maintenance:18644
- 4 commits in openSUSE:Maintenance:18652