36 projects tagged "Terminals"
GNU Teseq is a tool for analyzing files that contain control characters and terminal control sequences. It is intended to be useful for diagnosing terminal emulators and programs that make heavy use of terminal features (such as those based on the Curses library). It is primarily targeted at individuals who possess a basic understanding of terminal control sequences, especially CSI sequences. However, by default Teseq will try to identify and describe the sequences that it encounters and the behavior they might produce in a terminal.
Web Console is an application that provides access to a Web server command prompt from a Web browser. Furthermore, it includes a file manager, a feature to upload and download files, and an editor for editing text files on the Web server from the browser. Web Console uses AJAX technology, does not require any database, and can be installed on any Web server that is capable of running Perl CGI applications.
metashell is a lightweight, heavy punch, interactive, intelligent command line shell. The difference lies in its ability to determine a file's data type, and automatically run your desired applications. It uses file data types (MIME types) to determine a file's type, and then using user-defined applications automatically opens the file.
NOTE is a small console program that allows you to manage notes similar to programs like "knotes" from the command line. It supports different database backends for storage, and includes a DBI-based MySQL module and another module that uses a binary file for storage and a DBM module.
ClusTerm is used to SSH into a cluster of systems and execute the same command on all the systems. It combines a number of Gnome Terminal Widgets (VTE) in a single graphical window and copies the input to one terminal to all other terminals. It shows the differences between different terminals. Different layouts: table, row, column, and notebook. It is a GNOME application based on libvte.
Time Based Text allows the user to include more information in written text by saving the time delta between keystrokes and offering a way to reproduce it exactly how it has been written. It offers a protocol and reference implementation that is easily embeddable in applications using text-based human communication. The idea behind it is that email systems as well poetry and literature may benefit from a time-based approach to text. It comes with a portable C++ reference implementation to generate TBT messages and save them in HTML and DokuWiki (JSON), a Website to upload and exchange TBT poetry, plus various advanced TBT implementations in Javascript, Python, and Perl.
Golfinho is a J2EE application to administrate qmail-ldap. It provides a Web-service facade with administrative operations on a qmail-ldap installation, a command-line interface called "golfinhosh", and a binding to the Java language through JNDI. It must be deployed on a J2EE container, and is only useful if you have a qmail-ldap installation.
KildClient is a MUD client written with the GTK+ windowing toolkit. It supports many common features of other clients, such as triggers, gags, aliases, macros, timers, and much more. But its main feature is the built-in Perl interpreter. At any moment, the user can execute Perl statements and functions to do things much more powerful than simply sending text the the MUD. Perl statements can also be run, for example, as the action of a trigger, allowing you to do complex things.