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Linux

bup

by on Mar.30, 2005, under Linux

bup is a backup and restore tool that uses tar to create archives.  The archives are
automatically named and split into 1GB chunks to accomodate any file system.  The archives
are optionally compressed using bzip2.  It is essentially another wrapper for tar,
which can be a pain when the backups are large.  I haven’t found one that is as easy to use
as this one (at least for me).  I do all my backups to a remote machine with a removeable
hard drive bay via NFS.

Packages

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subversion-helper-scripts 0.5-2

by on Mar.22, 2005, under Linux

Version 0.5-2 of subversion-helper-scripts has been released. This is a bug fix update to the initial public release, which includes an example global config file.

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Sorune

by on Mar.22, 2005, under Linux

Sorune is a tool written in Perl by Darren Smith.  It is used to manage the database on the Neuros Audio player.  Features include:

  • A simple GUI that makes management easy (requires Perl Tk).
  • All music formats are supported (mp3, ogg, wav, wma(non-drm)). All native file tags are supported.
  • Full m3u playlist support.
  • Database rebuild support.
  • Tagging by directory layout.
  • Sort by title on artists, genres, songs and recordings. Sort by track number on albums.
  • Maintains directory/file names as well as file access/modification times during sync.
  • Moving of recordings to user specified directory.
  • Foreign language accents in tags are handled (converted to the nearest English equivalent).
  • Handling of duplicate title names. Appends a number in parenthesis “(2)” or “(3)” to the title.
  • Sub-menu support.
  • Various artist support.Separate binary from libraries.

See the man page for more information.

Packages

The latest beta release:

Latest stable release:

Changes from Original Source

  • Separate binary from libraries.
  • Fix native library include path.
  • Created man page.
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cats2procmailrc

by on Oct.11, 2004, under Linux

cats2procmailrc is a tool written in Perl by Cameron Simpson.  It reads a human friendly mail category description file and emits a matching procmail recipe to implement it. The intent is to have an extremely succinct file of easily editable one line rules, generally of the form:

    folder tag pattern

See the man page for more information.

Packages

Changes from Original Source

  • Add missing -T option implementation.
  • Disable double quote stripping for maildirs.
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PureDigital Single Use Camera Support for gphoto

by on Nov.25, 2003, under Linux

I have taken John Maushammer’s gphoto changes and have rebuilt the gphoto2-2.3.1 and libgphoto2-2.3.1 Debian packages.  They are available here:

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Debian on Motorola MCP750

by on May.05, 2003, under Linux

I actually did not do the work to create this, but I wanted to make
it available to the free software community. Special thanks to Eric Valette for all the hard
work in putting it together.

Basically, the kernel image used on the rescue disk for the Debian
2.2 “Potato” PowerPC distribution will not work on the Motorola MCP750.
There are a few patches required to make the IRQ mapping and IDE
controller work properly. If you do not have a native PPC or
cross-compiler environment to build a PPC kernel, then you will not be
able build a kernel with the required patches. Even if you do, the
MCP750 may not be able to boot from floppy or CDROM, depending on what
type of CompactPCI chassis it is installed in. Therefore, you will
need to network boot the board, which requires a combination rescue/root
image to be transferred to the board via TFTP. Eric’s image provides
that setup, using a Linux 2.2.17-pre9 kernel. Here
are the files:

Be sure that you have “Network PReP-Boot Mode Enabled” set to “Y”
and don’t be surprised if the “nbo” command fails with “Network Boot
Controller/Device Error”. Just try again. Once the installer is up,
you may install Debian in the usual fashion EXCEPT if you are installing
to hard disk. If that is the case DO NOT use the installer to setup
your partition table (cfdisk). Doing so will not work and will also
break the installer, requiring a reboot. Instead, scroll down to the
last few installation options and select “Start a shell”. From here,
use fdisk (not cfdisk) to setup the partitions and exit the shell when
complete. Also, I recommend using /dev/hdc1 as the root partition,
since this is the default boot parameter in Eric’s image. Otherwise, you can use a hex editor to easily change it (is there an rdev for PPC?).

Once I had Debian installed and upgraded to a sid/woody setup, I built a 2.4.x kernel for it. The 2.4.18-pre6 kernel worked on the MCP750 without any special modifications. While the 2.2.17-pre9 from Eric did not work on the MCPN750 (non-system slot version of the MCP750), the 2.4.18 seemed to.

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