Bandwidth is primarily a memory bandwidth benchmark, but as of release 0.24a, it can also measure network bandwidth. The memory benchmark measures the maximum memory bandwidth of each part of the memory system, including main memory, L1 and L2 caches, framebuffer memory, and register-to-register. It does this using fast, sequential memory accesses. It also performs random memory accesses to provide a more real-world performance estimate. The memory bandwidth tests support Linux (Intel and ARM), Windows/Cygwin, Mac OS X, and Windows Mobile. Its core routines are in assembly for x86, Intel64, and ARM architectures. Bandwidth also includes automatic graphing of the results, stored to a BMP image file. The network bandwidth tests support Linux, Mac OS X, and Windows/Cygwin.
A C library for interacting with FBUI, which is an in-kernel windowing system for Linux. The library provides window management, drawing, event management, image manipulation, and a PCF font sublibrary. Included with the library is a set of programs that use the library, including a clock, load monitor, terminal, JPEG/TIFF image viewer, MPEG2 player, two window managers, a benchmark program, etc.
Xvi is a portable multi-window version of 'vi', derived from 'stevie'. In spite of its name there is no X Window support. Instead xvi uses text windows separated by horizontal status lines on character mode displays. The windows may represent different files being edited, or different views on to the same file.
A set of tools and libraries to access human-editable text-based databases called recfiles.