The Courier IMAP/POP3 maildir creation patch adds the ability to automatically create a user's home directory when he/she is successfully authenticated for the first time. It works by calling an admin-created script that takes care of creating the directory. It is quite useful in combination with authentication-modules based on network databases like MySQL or LDAP.
mod-xslt is an Apache module which converts XML files into HTML files using XSLT stylesheets. It is able to parse dynamically-generated documents, both in POST and GET requests, includes a fully-featured language to choose the stylesheet to load from both configuration files and other .xml files, and provides extensions so stylesheets can access headers or get variables. It also supports redirects and dynamically-generated stylesheets.
PigeonAdmin is the mail administration interface of the PigeonAir project, a solution for easily building clustered, scalable, and modular email services. PigeonAdmin allows many virtual domains of the mail server to be easily managed using a simple Web interface. It allows every domain to have a different configuration than any other. It also allows domain administrators to choose which configurations to force on their own users or which parameters the users will be able to configure and modify by themselves.
PigeonDeliver is the delivery agent of the PigeonAir project, a solution to easily build up clustered, scalable, and modular email services. PigeonDeliver is modular in nature, allowing it to be used on Postfix and other MTAs using their own native APIs without performance loss. It allows mail services to be easily and transparently distributed among a cluster of mail server, easily supporting new services and new modules added using the PigeonDeliver API, which simplifies writing filters and/or delivery agents.
PigeonReader is the Web mail client of the PigeonAir project, a solution for easily building clustered, scalable, and modular email services. PigeonReader is completely UTF-8 compliant, allowing any charset to be used. It is based on XML, which allows skins and themes to be easily written using the XSLT language. It was written to be easily used in a cluster of Web servers, where multiple and different domains are to be managed transparently to the end user, possibly with different skins, features, and configurations.
ssh-ident allows you to have a single line in your .bashrc, then let it take care of loading ssh-agents when first needed, load all the necessary keys, and share ssh-agents across login consoles. If you have multiple identities for the same account, it is able to load different keys depending on the host you connect to or the path you are working from. At the same time, it keeps the ssh-agents separated and forwards only the keys which are needed for the specific host. It also allows you to specify ssh-add options, so you can automatically lock keys which are unused for a certain time, or have a confirmation request every time a specific key is used.