blt-1.9-3.i386.rpm (227328) | BLT is an extention to the Tcl/Tk toolset. It provides more widgets for Tk. It is useful for folks writing programs that make use of the Tk widget set and need more widgets. |
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blt-devel-1.9-3.i386.rpm (101376) | This is the development environment for BLT. It provides the headers and static libraries for doing BLT development. |
byacc-1.9-4.i386.rpm (29696) | This is a public domain yacc parser. It is used by many programs during their build process. You probably want this package if you do development. |
libelf-0.5.2-4.i386.rpm (24576) | This library gives you access to the internals of the ELF object file format. It lets you poke around in the various different sections of an ELF file, check out the symbols, etc. |
cproto-4.4-4.i386.rpm (40960) | Cproto generates function prototypes for functions defined in the specified C source files to the standard output. The function definitions may be in the old style or ANSI C style. Optionally, cproto also outputs declarations for variables defined in the files. If no file argument is given, cproto reads its input from the standard input. |
cim-1.90-1.i386.rpm (664576) | Cim translates Simula code to C and uses a C compiler like gcc to translate it further to machine-code. Simula was the first language with object-oriented features. The Simula language has features for quasi-paralell execution and a framework for doing simulations. |
cim-tools-1.0-1.i386.rpm (455680) | Class library for set/list handling, terminal user interaction and X11 programming with Simula, using cim and gcc. Cim compiler front end `sc` handles compilation. See `man sc`. Source is available from ftp.ifi.uio.no/pub/simulatools. More info available from http://www.ifi.uio.no/~ftp. |
ftplib-0.1-1.i386.rpm (57344) | This package implements a callable interface to FTP. The FTP protocol is specified in RFC 959. |
xlispstat-3.44-5.i386.rpm (804864) | An implementation of the Lisp programming language for X-Windows, with extensions for advanced statistics computations. |
libc-5.4.38-2.i386.rpm (436224) | Contains the standard libraries that are used by multiple programs on the system. In order to save disk space and memory, as well as to ease upgrades, common system code is kept in one place and shared between programs. This package contains the most important sets of shared libraries, the standard C library and the standard math library. Without these, a Linux system will not function. |
libdes-l-4.01.tar.gz (68608) | |
ddd-2.2-1.README (2048) | |
ddd-semistatic-2.2-1.i386.rpm (1169408) | Dynamically linked DDD binary with Motif 2.0 library statically linked in. The Data Display Debugger (DDD) is a common graphical user interface for GDB, DBX, and XDB, the popular UNIX debuggers. Besides ``classical'' front-end features such as viewing source texts, DDD provides a graphical data display, where data structures are displayed as graphs. A simple mouse click dereferences pointers or views structure contents, updated each time the program stops. Using DDD, you can reason about your application by viewing its data, not just by viewing it execute lines of source code. Other DDD features include: debugging of programs written in C, C++, Ada, Fortran, Pascal, Modula-2, or Modula-3; machine-level debugging; hypertext source navigation and lookup; breakpoint, backtrace, and history editors; preferences and settings editors; program execution in terminal emulator window; debugging on remote host; on-line manual; interactive help on the Motif user interface; GDB/DBX/XDB command-line interface with full editing, history, search, and completion capabilities. DDD has been designed to compete with well-known commercial debuggers For more info on DDD see http://www.cs.tu-bs.de/softech/ddd/ |
ddd-doc-2.2-1.i386.rpm (1042432) | This package contains various DDD documentation and a manual page. |
gnumalloc.so-0-1.i386.rpm (7168) | gnumalloc.so; needed run some programs that have the "malloc() bug"; a famous one is netscape v. 3 |
ldconfig-1.9.5-2.i386.rpm (54272) | ldconfig scans a running system and sets up the symbolic links that are used to load shared libraries properly. It also creates /etc/ld.so.cache which speeds the loading programs which use shared libraries. |
ldconfig-1.9.5-2.src.rpm (64512) | ldconfig scans a running system and sets up the symbolic links that are used to load shared libraries properly. It also creates /etc/ld.so.cache which speeds the loading programs which use shared libraries. |
libg++-2.7.2.8-6.i386.rpm (518144) | This is the GNU implementation of the standard C++ libraries, along with additional GNU tools. This package includes the shared libraries necessary to run C++ applications. |
libg++-devel-2.7.2.8-6.i386.rpm (966656) | This is the GNU implementation of the standard C++ libraries, along with additional GNU tools. The GNU C++ library, libg++ is an attempt to provide a variety of C++ programming tools and other support to GNU C++ programmers. This package includes the header files and libraries needed for C++ development. |
zlib-1.0.4-2.i386.rpm (26624) | The 'zlib' compression library provides in-memory compression and decompression functions, including integrity checks of the uncompressed data. This version of the library supports only one compression method (deflation) but other algorithms may be added later and will have the same stream interface. This library is used by a number of different system programs. |
db1-1.85-2.i386.rpm (34816) | DB provides routines for creating simple database indexes. It is used by many applications, including Python and Perl, so this should be installed on all systems. This is version 1 only. It should be used for building apps that require v1 support only. All new apps should be written to use version 2 from glibc. |
db1-1.85-2.src.rpm (281600) | DB provides routines for creating simple database indexes. It is used by many applications, including Python and Perl, so this should be installed on all systems. This is version 1 only. It should be used for building apps that require v1 support only. All new apps should be written to use version 2 from glibc. |
db1-devel-1.85-2.i386.rpm (58368) | DB provides routines for creating simple database indexes. It allows you to create hash, record number, or BTree indexes whose elements have arbitrary sizes. This package contains the header files, libraries, and documentation for building programs with use DB. This is version 1 only. It should be used for building apps that require v1 support only. All new apps should be written to use version 2 from glibc. |
db-libc5-1.85-3.i386.rpm (34816) | DB provides routines for creating simple database indexes. It is used by many applications, including Python and Perl, so this should be installed on all systems. This is version 1 only. It should be used for building apps that require v1 support only. All new apps should be written to use version 2 from glibc. |
gcc-2.7.2.3-8.i386.rpm (1088512) | The GNU C compiler -- a full featured ANSI C compiler, with support for K&R C as well. GCC provides many levels of source code error checking tradionaly provided by other tools (such as lint), produces debugging information, and can perform many different optimizations to the resulting object code. This contains the back end for C++ and Objective C compilers as well. |
gcc-c++-2.7.2.3-8.i386.rpm (658432) | This package adds C++ support to the GNU C compiler. It includes support for most of the current C++ specification, including templates and exception handling. It does not include a standard C++ library, which is available separately. |
gcc-objc-2.7.2.3-8.i386.rpm (562176) | This package adds Objective C support to the GNU C compiler. Objective C is a object oriented derivative of the C language, mainly used on systems running NeXTSTEP. This package does not include the standard objective C object library. |
perl-5.004-2.i386.rpm (3229696) | Perl is an interpreted language optimized for scanning arbitrary text files, extracting information from those text files, and printing reports based on that information. It's also a good language for many system management tasks. The language is intended to be practical (easy to use, efficient, complete) rather than beautiful (tiny, elegant, minimal). |
perl-5.004-2.src.rpm (2524160) | Perl is an interpreted language optimized for scanning arbitrary text files, extracting information from those text files, and printing reports based on that information. It's also a good language for many system management tasks. The language is intended to be practical (easy to use, efficient, complete) rather than beautiful (tiny, elegant, minimal). |
zlib-libc5-1.0.4-1.i386.rpm (26624) | The 'zlib' compression library provides in-memory compression and decompression functions, including integrity checks of the uncompressed data. This version of the library supports only one compression method (deflation) but other algorithms may be added later and will have the same stream interface. This library is used by a number of different system programs. |
libg++-libc5-2.7.1.4-4.i386.rpm (460800) | This is the GNU implementation of the standard C++ libraries, along with additional GNU tools. This package includes the shared libraries necessary to run C++ applications. |
aout-libs-1.5-1.i386.rpm (206848) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libX11-3-1.5-1.i386.rpm (136192) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libX11-6-1.5-1.i386.rpm (217088) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libXIE-6-1.5-1.i386.rpm (12288) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libXaw-3-1.5-1.i386.rpm (74752) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libXaw-6-1.5-1.i386.rpm (87040) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libXpm-4-1.5-1.i386.rpm (21504) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libXt-3-1.5-1.i386.rpm (126976) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libXt-6-1.5-1.i386.rpm (144384) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libcurses-0-1.5-1.i386.rpm (18432) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libdb-1-1.5-1.i386.rpm (27648) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libe2p-1-1.5-1.i386.rpm (16384) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libet-1-1.5-1.i386.rpm (16384) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libgr-1-1.5-1.i386.rpm (143360) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libtcl-3-1.5-1.i386.rpm (77824) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libtk-3-1.5-1.i386.rpm (223232) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
aout-libs-libvga-1-1.5-1.i386.rpm (72704) | Old Linux systems used a format for programs and shared libraries called a.out while newer ones use the ELF format. In order to run old a.out format programs, you need the a.out format libraries which this package provide. With it, you are to run most a.out format packages for text, X, and SVGAlib modes. |
slang-0.99.38-2.i386.rpm (80896) | Slang (pronounced ``sssslang'') is a powerful stack based interpreter that supports a C-like syntax. It has been designed from the beginning to be easily embedded into a program to make it extensible. Slang also provides a way to quickly develop and debug the application embedding it in a safe and efficient manner. Since slang resembles C, it is easy to recode slang procedures in C if the need arises. |
slang-0.99.38-2.src.rpm (333824) | Slang (pronounced ``sssslang'') is a powerful stack based interpreter that supports a C-like syntax. It has been designed from the beginning to be easily embedded into a program to make it extensible. Slang also provides a way to quickly develop and debug the application embedding it in a safe and efficient manner. Since slang resembles C, it is easy to recode slang procedures in C if the need arises. |
slang-devel-0.99.38-2.i386.rpm (166912) | This package contains the slang static libraries and header files required to develop slang-based applications. It also includes documentation to help you write slang-based apps. |
libdes-4.01-2.i386.rpm (47104) | This is the libdes 4.01 - The DES encryption algorithm is somewhat outdated and not really trustly (install the pgp rpm instead) but it is used by the MSCHAP authentification of pppd; so if you want to compile pppd whith MSCHAP support, or any other program whith libdes support, then install this package. NOTE: If you live in North America you can't distribute this library due to stupid USA laws that consider it as 'ammunitions' (sic) :-( |
libdes-4.01-2.src.rpm (117760) | This is the libdes 4.01 - The DES encryption algorithm is somewhat outdated and not really trustly (install the pgp rpm instead) but it is used by the MSCHAP authentification of pppd; so if you want to compile pppd whith MSCHAP support, or any other program whith libdes support, then install this package. NOTE: If you live in North America you can't distribute this library due to stupid USA laws that consider it as 'ammunitions' (sic) :-( |
libtermcap-2.0.8-6.i386.rpm (8192) | This is the library for accessing the termcap database. It is necessary to be installed for a system to be able to do much of anything. |
libtermcap-2.0.8-6.src.rpm (272384) | This is the library for accessing the termcap database. It is necessary to be installed for a system to be able to do much of anything. |
libtermcap-devel-2.0.8-6.i386.rpm (8192) | This is the package containing the development libaries and header files for writing programs that access the termcap database. It may be necessary to build some other packages as well. |
libgr-libc5-2.0.9-1.i386.rpm (227328) | This package is a library for handling various graphics file formats, including FBM, JPEG, PBM, PGM, PNM, PPM, REL, and TIFF. |
libtermcap-libc5-2.0.8-2.i386.rpm (8192) | This is the library for accessing the termcap database. libc5 version |
ncurses-libc5-4.0-2.i386.rpm (138240) | The curses library routines give the user a terminal-independent method of updating character screens with reasonable optimization. This implementation is ``new curses'' (ncurses) and is the approved replacement for 4.4BSD classic curses, which is being discontinued. |
ncurses-4.1b980124-1.i386.rpm (649216) | The curses library routines give the user a terminal-independent method of updating character screens with reasonable optimization. This implementation is ``new curses'' (ncurses) and is the approved replacement for 4.4BSD classic curses, which is being discontinued. |
ncurses-4.1b980124-1.src.rpm (1710080) | The curses library routines give the user a terminal-independent method of updating character screens with reasonable optimization. This implementation is ``new curses'' (ncurses) and is the approved replacement for 4.4BSD classic curses, which is being discontinued. |
ncurses-devel-4.1b980124-1.i386.rpm (1363968) | This package includes the header files necessary to develop applications that use ncurses and static libraries. |
binutils-2.8.1.0.1-1.i386.rpm (1848320) | binutils is a collection of utilities necessary for compiling programs. It includes the assembler and linker, as well as a number of other miscellaneous programs for dealing with executable formats. |
binutils-2.8.1.0.1-1.src.rpm (5156864) | binutils is a collection of utilities necessary for compiling programs. It includes the assembler and linker, as well as a number of other miscellaneous programs for dealing with executable formats. |
libpng-0.96-1.i386.rpm (77824) | The PNG library is a collection of routines used to crate and manipulate PNG format graphics files. The PNG format was designed as a replacement for GIF, with many improvements and extensions. |
libpng-libc5-0.89c-1.i386.rpm (40960) | The PNG library is a collection of routines used to crate and manipulate PNG format graphics files. The PNG format was designed as a replacement for GIF, with many improvements and extensions. |
popt-1.0-1.i386.rpm (7168) | Popt is a C library for pasing command line parameters. It was heavily influenced by the getopt() and getopt_long() functions, but it allows more powerfull argument expansion. It can parse arbitrary argv[] style arrays and automatically set variables based on command line arguments. It also allows command line arguments to be aliased via configuration files and includes utility functions for parsing arbitrary strings into argv[] arrays using shell-like rules. |
popt-1.0-1.src.rpm (8192) | Popt is a C library for pasing command line parameters. It was heavily influenced by the getopt() and getopt_long() functions, but it allows more powerfull argument expansion. It can parse arbitrary argv[] style arrays and automatically set variables based on command line arguments. It also allows command line arguments to be aliased via configuration files and includes utility functions for parsing arbitrary strings into argv[] arrays using shell-like rules. |
gdbm-1.7.3-14.i386.rpm (15360) | This is a database indexing library. It is useful for those who need to write C applications and need access to a simple and efficient database or build C applications which use it. |
gdbm-1.7.3-14.src.rpm (88064) | This is a database indexing library. It is useful for those who need to write C applications and need access to a simple and efficient database or build C applications which use it. |
gdbm-devel-1.7.3-14.i386.rpm (31744) | These are the development libraries and header files for gdbm, the GNU database system. These are required if you plan to do development using the gdbm database. |
gdbm-libc5-1.7.3-1.i386.rpm (14336) | This is a database indexing library. It is useful for those who need to write C applications and need access to a simple and efficient database or build C applications which use it. |
p2c-libc5-1.20-1.i386.rpm (8192) | p2c is the Pascal to C translation system. It is used to convert Pascal source code into C source code so that it can be compiled using a standard C compiler (such as gcc). |
qt-libc5-1.31-1.i386.rpm (486400) | Contains the shared library needed to run Qt applications, as well as the README files for Qt. |
readline-2.1-5.i386.rpm (126976) | The "readline" library will read a line from the terminal and return it, allowing the user to edit the line with the standard emacs editing keys. It allows the programmer to give the user an easier-to-use and more intuitive interface. |
readline-2.1-5.src.rpm (570368) | The "readline" library will read a line from the terminal and return it, allowing the user to edit the line with the standard emacs editing keys. It allows the programmer to give the user an easier-to-use and more intuitive interface. |
readline-devel-2.1-5.i386.rpm (89088) | The "readline" library will read a line from the terminal and return it, using prompt as a prompt. If prompt is null, no prompt is issued. The line returned is allocated with malloc(3), so the caller must free it when finished. The line returned has the final newline removed, so only the text of the line remains. |
readline-libc5-2.0-1.i386.rpm (64512) | The "readline" library will read a line from the terminal and return it, allowing the user to edit the line with the standard emacs editing keys. It allows the programmer to give the user an easier-to-use and more intuitive interface. |
svgalib-libc5-1.2.10-1.i386.rpm (151552) | VGAlib is a library which allows applications to use full screen graphics on a variety of hardware platforms. Many games and utilities are avaiable which take advantage of SVGAlib for graphics access, as it is more suitable for machines with little memory then X Windows is. |
basic-1.20-8.i386.rpm (25600) | This is a BASIC language interpreter. You can use it to run programs written in BASIC. For those who may not know, BASIC is an archaic language used only to learn early fundamentals of programming, and it isn't very good for that, either. :-) |
p2c-1.20-8.i386.rpm (9216) | p2c is the Pascal to C translation system. It is used to convert Pascal source code into C source code so that it can be compiled using a standard C compiler (such as gcc). |
p2c-1.20-8.src.rpm (572416) | p2c is the Pascal to C translation system. It is used to convert Pascal source code into C source code so that it can be compiled using a standard C compiler (such as gcc). |
p2c-devel-1.20-8.i386.rpm (218112) | This is the development kit for the Pascal to C translator. It contains the header files and some other programs that might be useful to someone using the translator. |
qb2c-19960105-3.i386.rpm (46080) | This package attempts to conver Microsoft QBASIC programs into compilable C code. A 'brun' script is also provided to directly execute a qbasic program. |
qb2c-19960105-3.src.rpm (41984) | This package attempts to conver Microsoft QBASIC programs into compilable C code. A 'brun' script is also provided to directly execute a qbasic program. |
slang-libc5-0.99.33-3.i386.rpm (84992) | Slang (pronounced ``sssslang'') is a powerful stack based interpreter that supports a C-like syntax. It has been designed from the beginning to be easily embedded into a program to make it extensible. Slang also provides a way to quickly develop and debug the application embedding it in a safe and efficient manner. Since slang resembles C, it is easy to recode slang procedures in C if the need arises. |
newt-0.21-2.i386.rpm (105472) | Newt is a windowing toolkit for text mode built from the slang library. It allows color text mode applications to easily use stackable windows, push buttons, check boxes, radio buttons, lists, entry fields, labels, and displayable text. Scrollbars are supported, and forms may be nested to provide extra functionality. This pacakge contains the shared library for programs that have been built with newt as well as a /usr/bin/dialog replacement called whiptail. |
newt-0.21-2.src.rpm (53248) | Newt is a windowing toolkit for text mode built from the slang library. It allows color text mode applications to easily use stackable windows, push buttons, check boxes, radio buttons, lists, entry fields, labels, and displayable text. Scrollbars are supported, and forms may be nested to provide extra functionality. This pacakge contains the shared library for programs that have been built with newt as well as a /usr/bin/dialog replacement called whiptail. |
newt-devel-0.21-2.i386.rpm (63488) | These are the header files and libraries for developing applications which use newt. Newt is a windowing toolkit for text mode, which provides many widgets and stackable windows. |
python-extralibs-1.5-1.i386.rpm (76800) | This includes several Python libraries whose inclusion in the default package would be rather excessive: nis, resource, audioop, imageop, rgbimg, new, and zlib. |
tkinter-1.5-1.i386.rpm (141312) | A graphical interface for Python, based on Tcl/Tk, and used by many of the configuration tools. |
qt-1.32-2.i386.rpm (479232) | Contains the shared library needed to run Qt applications, as well as the README files for Qt. |
qt-1.32-2.src.rpm (1963008) | Contains the shared library needed to run Qt applications, as well as the README files for Qt. |
qt-devel-1.32-2.i386.rpm (508928) | Contains the files necessary to develop applications using Qt: header files, the Qt meta object compiler & man pages. See http://www.troll.no for more information about Qt. |
qt-doc-1.32-2.i386.rpm (1464320) | Contains the HTML documentation and example programs for Qt library. See http://www.troll.no for more information about Qt, or file:/usr/lib/qt/html/index.html for Qt documentation in HTML. |
svgalib-1.2.11-3.src.rpm (662528) | SVGAlib is a library which allows applications to use full screen graphics on a variety of hardware platforms. Many games and utilities are avaiable which take advantage of SVGAlib for graphics access, as it is more suitable for machines with little memory then X Windows is. |
bin86-0.4-3.i386.rpm (35840) | This package provides an assembler and linker for real mode 80x86 instructions. Programs that run in real mode, including LILO and the kernel's bootstrapping code, need to have this package installed to be built from the sources. |
bin86-0.4-3.src.rpm (126976) | This package provides an assembler and linker for real mode 80x86 instructions. Programs that run in real mode, including LILO and the kernel's bootstrapping code, need to have this package installed to be built from the sources. |
cracklib-2.5-4.i386.rpm (19456) | Checks passwords for security related characteristics - length, uniqueness, whether they are in a word database, etc. |
cracklib-2.5-4.src.rpm (40960) | Checks passwords for security related characteristics - length, uniqueness, whether they are in a word database, etc. |
cracklib-dicts-2.5-4.i386.rpm (8192) | Includes the cracklib dictionaries for the standard /usr/dict/words, as well as utilities needed to create new dictionaries. |
gdb-4.16-9.i386.rpm (610304) | This is a full featured, command driven debugger. It allows you to trace the exectuion of programs and examine their internal state at any time. It works for C and C++ compiled with the GNU C compiler gcc. |
gdb-4.16-9.src.rpm (10546176) | This is a full featured, command driven debugger. It allows you to trace the exectuion of programs and examine their internal state at any time. It works for C and C++ compiled with the GNU C compiler gcc. |
libgr-2.0.13-4.i386.rpm (94208) | This package is a library for handling various graphics file formats, including FBM, PBM, PGM, PNM, PPM, and REL. |
libgr-2.0.13-4.src.rpm (1959936) | This package is a library for handling various graphics file formats, including FBM, PBM, PGM, PNM, PPM, and REL. |
libgr-devel-2.0.13-4.i386.rpm (110592) | This package is all you need to develop programs that handle the various graphics file formats supported by libgr. |
libgr-progs-2.0.13-4.i386.rpm (579584) | This package includes various utility programs for manipulating JPEG files for use by libgr programs. |
zlib-devel-1.0.4-2.i386.rpm (46080) | The 'zlib' compression library provides in-memory compression and decompression functions, including integrity checks of the uncompressed data. This version of the library supports only one compression method (deflation) but other algorithms may be added later and will have the same stream interface. This package contains the header files and libraries needed to develop programs that use these zlib. |
libgif2-2.3-2.i386.rpm (20480) | This is a shared library for working with GIF images. |
svgalib-1.2.11-3.i386.rpm (196608) | SVGAlib is a library which allows applications to use full screen graphics on a variety of hardware platforms. Many games and utilities are avaiable which take advantage of SVGAlib for graphics access, as it is more suitable for machines with little memory then X Windows is. |
svgalib-devel-1.2.11-3.i386.rpm (151552) | These are the libraries and header files that are needed to build programs which use SVGAlib. SVGAlib allows programs to use full screen graphics on a variety of hardware platforms and without the overhead X requires. |
gsl-0.3b-2.i386.rpm (144384) | This is the GNU scientific library. Linking against it gives access to functions for handling many problems that arise in scientific computing. #%package devel #Summary: GNU Scientific Library header files, static libraries, and documentation. #Group: Libraries #PreReq: /sbin/install-info #%description devel #These are the static libraries, header files, and documentation for using the #GNU scientific library in your own programs. With these, you can #create your own own programs that use this library. |
gsl-0.3b-2.src.rpm (467968) | This is the GNU scientific library. Linking against it gives access to functions for handling many problems that arise in scientific computing. #%package devel #Summary: GNU Scientific Library header files, static libraries, and documentation. #Group: Libraries #PreReq: /sbin/install-info #%description devel #These are the static libraries, header files, and documentation for using the #GNU scientific library in your own programs. With these, you can #create your own own programs that use this library. |
umb-scheme-3.2-5.i386.rpm (344064) | UMB Scheme is an implementation of the language described in the IEEE Standard for the Scheme Programming Language (December, 1990). |
umb-scheme-3.2-5.src.rpm (587776) | UMB Scheme is an implementation of the language described in the IEEE Standard for the Scheme Programming Language (December, 1990). |
bison-1.25-3.i386.rpm (112640) | This is the GNU parser generator which is mostly compatible with yacc. Many programs use this as part of their build process. Bison is only needed on systems that are used for development. |
bison-1.25-3.src.rpm (293888) | This is the GNU parser generator which is mostly compatible with yacc. Many programs use this as part of their build process. Bison is only needed on systems that are used for development. |
make-3.76.1-2.i386.rpm (188416) | The program make is used to coordinate the compilation and linking of a set of sources into a program, recompiling only what is necessary, thus saving a developer a lot of time. In fact, make can do a lot more - read the info docs. |
make-3.76.1-2.src.rpm (638976) | The program make is used to coordinate the compilation and linking of a set of sources into a program, recompiling only what is necessary, thus saving a developer a lot of time. In fact, make can do a lot more - read the info docs. |
libjpeg6a-6a-2.src.rpm (548864) | This package is a library of functions that manipulate jpeg images, along with simple clients for manipulating jpeg images. |
libjpeg-6b-5.i386.rpm (111616) | This package is a library of functions that manipulate jpeg images, along with simple clients for manipulating jpeg images. |
libjpeg-6b-5.src.rpm (621568) | This package is a library of functions that manipulate jpeg images, along with simple clients for manipulating jpeg images. |
libjpeg-devel-6b-5.i386.rpm (89088) | This package is all you need to develop programs that manipulate jpeg images, including documentation. |
libjpeg6a-6a-2.i386.rpm (65536) | This package is a library of functions that manipulate jpeg images, along with simple clients for manipulating jpeg images. |
libpng-1.0.1-1.i386.rpm (97280) | The PNG library is a collection of routines used to crate and manipulate PNG format graphics files. The PNG format was designed as a replacement for GIF, with many improvements and extensions. |
libpng-1.0.1-1.src.rpm (214016) | The PNG library is a collection of routines used to crate and manipulate PNG format graphics files. The PNG format was designed as a replacement for GIF, with many improvements and extensions. |
libpng-devel-1.0.1-1.i386.rpm (81920) | The header files and static libraries are only needed for development of programs using the PNG library. |
libtiff-3.4-2.i386.rpm (185344) | This package is a library of functions that manipulate TIFF images. |
libtiff-3.4-2.src.rpm (581632) | This package is a library of functions that manipulate TIFF images. |
libtiff-devel-3.4-2.i386.rpm (525312) | This package is all you need to develop programs that manipulate tiff images. |
perl-4.036-1.i386.rpm (378880) | Perl is an interpreted language optimized for scanning arbitrary text files, extracting information from those text files, and printing reports based on that information. It's also a good language for many system management tasks. The language is intended to be practical (easy to use, efficient, complete) rather than beautiful (tiny, elegant, minimal). |
gmp-2.0.2-4.i386.rpm (50176) | This is the GNU arbitrary precision library. Linking against it gives access to functions for handling arbitrarily large numbers with either a high level or a low level interface. |
gmp-2.0.2-4.src.rpm (378880) | This is the GNU arbitrary precision library. Linking against it gives access to functions for handling arbitrarily large numbers with either a high level or a low level interface. |
gmp-devel-2.0.2-4.i386.rpm (78848) | These are the static libraries, header files, and documentation for using the GNU arbitrary precision library in your own programs. With these, you can create your own own programs that use this library. |
guile-1.2-4.i386.rpm (242688) | Guile, a portable, embeddable Scheme implementation written in C. Guile provides a machine independent execution platform that can be linked in as a library when building extensible programs. |
guile-1.2-4.src.rpm (622592) | Guile, a portable, embeddable Scheme implementation written in C. Guile provides a machine independent execution platform that can be linked in as a library when building extensible programs. |
guile-devel-1.2-4.i386.rpm (522240) | What's needed to develop apps linked w/ guile |
libg++-2.8.1-2.i386.rpm (286720) | This package includes the shared libraries necessary to run libg++-based applications. |
libg++-devel-2.8.1-2.i386.rpm (632832) | The GNU C++ library, libg++ is an attempt to provide a variety of C++ programming tools and other support to GNU C++ programmers. This package contains the libg++ static libraries and header files required to develop libg++-based applications. |
libstdc++-2.8.1.1-1.i386.rpm (84992) | This is the GNU implementation of the standard C++ libraries. This package includes the shared libraries necessary to run C++ applications. |
libstdc++-devel-2.8.1.1-1.i386.rpm (242688) | This is the GNU implementation of the standard C++ libraries. This package includes the header files and libraries needed for C++ |
libungif-3.0-4.i386.rpm (22528) | GIF loading and saving shared library. (Saving uses an uncompressed gif algorithm that does not use LZW compression.) |
libungif-3.0-4.src.rpm (336896) | GIF loading and saving shared library. (Saving uses an uncompressed gif algorithm that does not use LZW compression.) |
libungif-devel-3.0-4.i386.rpm (75776) | Libraries and headers needed for developing programs that use libungif to load and save gif image files. |
libungif-progs-3.0-4.i386.rpm (86016) | This package contains various programs for manipulating gif image files. |
libc5-devel-5.4.17-5.i386.rpm (3168256) | All the basic needed to devellop using ELF-libc5 format on a ELF-libc6 based system; this packages includes the libc5 header files, and needed things for the compiler. If need to use other librairies you must also install their ELF-libc5 versions too, on /usr/i486-linuxlibc5/lib/. If the header files are not compatible whith their ELF-libc6 version (like in the case of libc) you must put the ELF-libc5 version headers under /usr/i486-linuxlibc5/include/ To compile you need to use the following command: gcc -b i486-linuxlibc5 |
slib-2c0-1.noarch.rpm (397312) | SLIB is a portable scheme library meant to provide compatibiliy and utility functions for all standard scheme implementations. |
slib-2c0-1.src.rpm (271360) | SLIB is a portable scheme library meant to provide compatibiliy and utility functions for all standard scheme implementations. |
gcc-2.8.1-1.i386.rpm (1306624) | The GNU C compiler -- a full featured ANSI C compiler, with support for K&R C as well. GCC provides many levels of source code error checking tradionaly provided by other tools (such as lint), produces debugging information, and can perform many different optimizations to the resulting object code. This contains the back end for C++ and Objective C compilers as well. |
gcc-c++-2.8.1-1.i386.rpm (820224) | This package adds C++ support to the GNU C compiler. It includes support for most of the current C++ specification, including templates and exception handling. It does not include a standard C++ library, which is available separately. |
gcc-objc-2.8.1-1.i386.rpm (680960) | This package adds Objective C support to the GNU C compiler. Objective C is a object oriented derivative of the C language, mainly used on systems running NeXTSTEP. This package does not include the standard objective C object library. |
giflib-3.0-3.src.rpm (200704) | GIF loading and saving shared library and tools. |
flex-2.5.4a-2.i386.rpm (112640) | This is the GNU fast lexical analyzer generator. It generates lexical tokenizing code based on a lexical (regular expression based) description of the input. It is designed to work with both yacc and bison, and is used by many programs as part of their build process. |
flex-2.5.4a-2.src.rpm (387072) | This is the GNU fast lexical analyzer generator. It generates lexical tokenizing code based on a lexical (regular expression based) description of the input. It is designed to work with both yacc and bison, and is used by many programs as part of their build process. |
binutils-2.9.1.0.15-1.src.rpm (5824512) | Binutils is a collection of utilities necessary for compiling programs. It includes the assembler and linker, as well as a number of other miscellaneous programs for dealing with executable formats. |
binutils-2.9.1.0.15-1.i386.rpm (1173504) | Binutils is a collection of utilities necessary for compiling programs. It includes the assembler and linker, as well as a number of other miscellaneous programs for dealing with executable formats. |
glibc-2.0.7-29.i386.rpm (2013184) | Contains the standard libraries that are used by multiple programs on the system. In order to save disk space and memory, as well as to ease upgrades, common system code is kept in one place and shared between programs. This package contains the most important sets of shared libraries, the standard C library and the standard math library. Without these, a Linux system will not function. It also contains national language (locale) support and timezone databases. |
glibc-2.0.7-29.src.rpm (5713920) | Contains the standard libraries that are used by multiple programs on the system. In order to save disk space and memory, as well as to ease upgrades, common system code is kept in one place and shared between programs. This package contains the most important sets of shared libraries, the standard C library and the standard math library. Without these, a Linux system will not function. It also contains national language (locale) support and timezone databases. |
glibc-devel-2.0.7-29.i386.rpm (1353728) | To develop programs which use the standard C libraries (which nearly all programs do), the system needs to have these standard header files and object files available for creating the executables. |
glibc-2.0.7-30.i386.rpm (1328128) | Contains the standard libraries that are used by multiple programs on the system. In order to save disk space and memory, as well as to ease upgrades, common system code is kept in one place and shared between programs. This package contains the most important sets of shared libraries, the standard C library and the standard math library. Without these, a Linux system will not function. It also contains national language (locale) support and timezone databases. |
glibc-2.0.7-30.src.rpm (6619136) | Contains the standard libraries that are used by multiple programs on the system. In order to save disk space and memory, as well as to ease upgrades, common system code is kept in one place and shared between programs. This package contains the most important sets of shared libraries, the standard C library and the standard math library. Without these, a Linux system will not function. It also contains national language (locale) support and timezone databases. |
glibc-debug-2.0.7-30.i386.rpm (11264) | These libraries have the debugging information debuggers use for tracing the execution of programs. These are only needed when the shared libraries themselves are being debugged -- they are not needed to debug programs which use them. |
glibc-devel-2.0.7-30.i386.rpm (1364992) | To develop programs which use the standard C libraries (which nearly all programs do), the system needs to have these standard header files and object files available for creating the executables. |
glibc-localedata-2.0.7-30.i386.rpm (858112) | These are the sources to build support for various locales. |
glibc-profile-2.0.7-30.i386.rpm (542720) | When programs are being profiled used gprof, they must use these libraries instrad of the standard C libraries for gprof to be able to profile them correctly. |
glibc-zoneinfo-2.0.7-30.i386.rpm (141312) | The database for local time information |
guile-1.3.1-1.i386.rpm (323584) | Guile, a portable, embeddable Scheme implementation written in C. Guile provides a machine independent execution platform that can be linked in as a library when building extensible programs. |
guile-1.3.1-1.src.rpm (891904) | Guile, a portable, embeddable Scheme implementation written in C. Guile provides a machine independent execution platform that can be linked in as a library when building extensible programs. |
guile-devel-1.3.1-1.i386.rpm (286720) | What's needed to develop apps linked w/ guile |
cracklib-2.7-2.i386.rpm (31744) | Checks passwords for security related characteristics - length, uniqueness, whether they are in a word database, etc. |
cracklib-dicts-2.7-2.i386.rpm (103424) | Includes the cracklib dictionaries for the standard /usr/dict/words, as well as utilities needed to create new dictionaries. |
ld.so-1.9.9-1.i386.rpm (122880) | This package contains the shared library configuration tool, ldconfig, which is required by many packages. It also includes the shared library loader and dynamic loader for Linux libc 5. |
ld.so-1.9.9-1.src.rpm (363520) | This package contains the shared library configuration tool, ldconfig, which is required by many packages. It also includes the shared library loader and dynamic loader for Linux libc 5. |
python-devel-1.5.1-5.i386.rpm (983040) | The Python interpreter is relatively easy to extend with dynamically loaded extensions and to embed in other programs. This packages contains the header files and libraries which are needed to do both of these tasks. |
popt-1.2.1-1.i386.rpm (14336) | Popt is a C library for pasing command line parameters. It was heavily influenced by the getopt() and getopt_long() functions, but it allows more powerfull argument expansion. It can parse arbitrary argv[] style arrays and automatically set variables based on command line arguments. It also allows command line arguments to be aliased via configuration files and includes utility functions for parsing arbitrary strings into argv[] arrays using shell-like rules. |
popt-1.2.1-1.src.rpm (45056) | Popt is a C library for pasing command line parameters. It was heavily influenced by the getopt() and getopt_long() functions, but it allows more powerfull argument expansion. It can parse arbitrary argv[] style arrays and automatically set variables based on command line arguments. It also allows command line arguments to be aliased via configuration files and includes utility functions for parsing arbitrary strings into argv[] arrays using shell-like rules. |
nasm-0.97-2.i386.rpm (285696) | NASM is an 80x86 assembler designed for portability and modularity. It supports a range of object file formats including Linux a.out and ELF, COFF, Microsoft 16-bit OBJ and Win32. It will also output plain binary files. Its syntax is designed to be simple and easy to understand, similar to Intel's but less complex. It supports Pentium, P6 and MMX opcodes, and has macro capability. It includes a disassembler as well. Version 0.97 was entirely a bug fix release, since 0.96 had more bugs than we could shake a large stick at. |
nasm-0.97-2.src.rpm (1117184) | NASM is an 80x86 assembler designed for portability and modularity. It supports a range of object file formats including Linux a.out and ELF, COFF, Microsoft 16-bit OBJ and Win32. It will also output plain binary files. Its syntax is designed to be simple and easy to understand, similar to Intel's but less complex. It supports Pentium, P6 and MMX opcodes, and has macro capability. It includes a disassembler as well. Version 0.97 was entirely a bug fix release, since 0.96 had more bugs than we could shake a large stick at. |
nasm-doc-0.97-2.i386.rpm (398336) | Documentation for nasm in various formats. |
gpc-2.0-1.i386.rpm (1041408) | The GNU Pascal compiler allows compiling of Pascal programs written in most of the popular Pascal dialects, such as ISO, ANSI, Turbo, and Borland. Note that some of the Turbo and Borland extensions are not supported fully yet. |
gettext-0.10.35-9mdk.i386.rpm (359424) | The GNU gettext package provides a set of tools and documentation for producing multi-lingual messages in programs. Tools include a set of conventions about how programs should be written to support message catalogs, a directory and file naming organization for the message catalogs, a runtime library which supports the retrieval of translated messages, and stand-alone programs for handling the translatable and the already translated strings. Gettext provides an easy to use library and tools for creating, using, and modifying natural language catalogs and is a powerful and simple method for internationalizing programs. If you would like to internationalize or incorporate multi-lingual messages into programs that you're developing, you should install gettext. |
gettext-0.10.35-9mdk.src.rpm (591872) | The GNU gettext package provides a set of tools and documentation for producing multi-lingual messages in programs. Tools include a set of conventions about how programs should be written to support message catalogs, a directory and file naming organization for the message catalogs, a runtime library which supports the retrieval of translated messages, and stand-alone programs for handling the translatable and the already translated strings. Gettext provides an easy to use library and tools for creating, using, and modifying natural language catalogs and is a powerful and simple method for internationalizing programs. If you would like to internationalize or incorporate multi-lingual messages into programs that you're developing, you should install gettext. |
autoconf-2.14.1-6mdk.noarch.rpm (218112) | GNU's Autoconf is a tool for configuring source code and Makefiles. Using Autoconf, programmers can create portable and configurable packages, since the person building the package is allowed to specify various configuration options. You should install Autoconf if you are developing software and you'd like to use it to create shell scripts which will configure your source code packages. If you are installing Autoconf, you will also need to install the GNU m4 package. Note that the Autoconf package is not required for the end user who may be configuring software with an Autoconf-generated script; Autoconf is only required for the generation of the scripts, not their use. |
autoconf-2.14.1-6mdk.src.rpm (342016) | GNU's Autoconf is a tool for configuring source code and Makefiles. Using Autoconf, programmers can create portable and configurable packages, since the person building the package is allowed to specify various configuration options. You should install Autoconf if you are developing software and you'd like to use it to create shell scripts which will configure your source code packages. If you are installing Autoconf, you will also need to install the GNU m4 package. Note that the Autoconf package is not required for the end user who may be configuring software with an Autoconf-generated script; Autoconf is only required for the generation of the scripts, not their use. |
automake-1.4-6mdk.noarch.rpm (294912) | Automake is an experimental Makefile generator. Automake was inspired by the 4.4BSD make and include files, but aims to be portable and to conform to the GNU standards for Makefile variables and targets. You should install Automake if you are developing software and would like to use its capabilities of automatically generating GNU standard Makefiles. if you install Automake, you will also need to install GNU's Autoconf package. |
automake-1.4-6mdk.src.rpm (302080) | Automake is an experimental Makefile generator. Automake was inspired by the 4.4BSD make and include files, but aims to be portable and to conform to the GNU standards for Makefile variables and targets. You should install Automake if you are developing software and would like to use its capabilities of automatically generating GNU standard Makefiles. if you install Automake, you will also need to install GNU's Autoconf package. |
binutils-2.9.4.0.7-1mdk.i386.rpm (2249728) | Binutils is a collection of utilities necessary for compiling programs. It includes the assembler and linker, as well as a number of other miscellaneous programs for dealing with executable formats. |
libtool-1.3.3-1mdk.noarch.rpm (274432) | The libtool package contains the GNU libtool, a set of shell scripts which automatically configure UNIX and UNIX-like architectures to generically build shared libraries. Libtool provides a consistent, portable interface which simplifies the process of using shared libraries. If you are developing programs which will use shared libraries, you should install libtool. |
libtool-1.3.3-1mdk.src.rpm (372736) | The libtool package contains the GNU libtool, a set of shell scripts which automatically configure UNIX and UNIX-like architectures to generically build shared libraries. Libtool provides a consistent, portable interface which simplifies the process of using shared libraries. If you are developing programs which will use shared libraries, you should install libtool. |
aalib-1.2-3mdk.i586.rpm (113664) | AA-lib is a low level gfx library just as many other libraries are. The main difference is that AA-lib does not require graphics device. In fact, there is no graphical output possible. AA-lib replaces those old-fashioned output methods with powerful ascii-art renderer. Now my linux boots with a nice penguin logo at secondary display (yes! Like Win95 does:) AA-lib API is designed to be similar to other graphics libraries. Learning a new API would be a piece of cake! The AA library is needed for GIMP |
aalib-1.2-3mdk.src.rpm (208896) | AA-lib is a low level gfx library just as many other libraries are. The main difference is that AA-lib does not require graphics device. In fact, there is no graphical output possible. AA-lib replaces those old-fashioned output methods with powerful ascii-art renderer. Now my linux boots with a nice penguin logo at secondary display (yes! Like Win95 does:) AA-lib API is designed to be similar to other graphics libraries. Learning a new API would be a piece of cake! The AA library is needed for GIMP |
python-1.5.1-11mdk.src.rpm (2491392) | Python is an interpreted, interactive, object-oriented programming language often compared to Tcl, Perl, Scheme or Java. Python includes modules, classes, exceptions, very high level dynamic data types and dynamic typing. Python supports interfaces to many system calls and libraries, as well as to various windowing systems (X11, Motif, Tk, Mac and MFC). Programmers can write new built-in modules for Python in C or C++. Python can be used as an extension language for applications that need a programmable interface. This package contains most of the standard Python modules, as well as modules for interfacing to the Tix widget set for Tk and RPM. Note that documentation for Python is provided in the python-docs package. |
python-1.5.2-1mdk.i586.rpm (1794048) | Python is an interpreted, interactive, object-oriented programming language often compared to Tcl, Perl, Scheme or Java. Python includes modules, classes, exceptions, very high level dynamic data types and dynamic typing. Python supports interfaces to many system calls and libraries, as well as to various windowing systems (X11, Motif, Tk, Mac and MFC). Programmers can write new built-in modules for Python in C or C++. Python can be used as an extension language for applications that need a programmable interface. This package contains most of the standard Python modules, as well as modules for interfacing to the Tix widget set for Tk and RPM. Note that documentation for Python is provided in the python-docs package. |
python-1.5.2-1mdk.src.rpm (3115008) | Python is an interpreted, interactive, object-oriented programming language often compared to Tcl, Perl, Scheme or Java. Python includes modules, classes, exceptions, very high level dynamic data types and dynamic typing. Python supports interfaces to many system calls and libraries, as well as to various windowing systems (X11, Motif, Tk, Mac and MFC). Programmers can write new built-in modules for Python in C or C++. Python can be used as an extension language for applications that need a programmable interface. This package contains most of the standard Python modules, as well as modules for interfacing to the Tix widget set for Tk and RPM. Note that documentation for Python is provided in the python-docs package. |
python-devel-1.5.2-1mdk.i586.rpm (1271808) | The Python programming language's interpreter can be extended with dynamically loaded extensions and can be embedded in other programs. This package contains the header files and libraries needed to do these types of tasks. Install python-devel if you want to develop Python extensions. The python package will also need to be installed. You'll probably also want to install the python-docs package, which contains Python documentation. |
python-docs-1.5.2-1mdk.i586.rpm (863232) | The python-docs package contains documentation on the Python programming language and interpreter. The documentation is provided in ASCII text files and in LaTeX source files. Install the python-docs package if you'd like to use the documentation for the Python language. |
Cette page html a été crée avec un simple script shell sous linux. Merci aux auteurs de linux, gawk, grep et bash ! :)
Le format a été inspiré du programme BBS to HTML
d'Eric Lapaille
Ce script a été modifié par Christian Vanguers Les modifications sont : Ajout de cellules qui font une mise en ordre des fichiers et leur description sur la page HTML.