From DESCR:
Monitoring::Plugin and its associated Monitoring::Plugin::* modules are
a family of perl modules to streamline writing Monitoring plugins. The
main end user modules are Monitoring::Plugin, providing an
object-oriented interface to the entire Monitoring::Plugin::*
collection, and Monitoring::Plugin::Functions, providing a simpler
functional interface to a useful subset of the available functionality.
availability and performance of IT infrastructure components. Zabbix is open
source and comes at no cost.
With Zabbix it is possible to gather virtually limitless types of data from
the network. High performance real-time monitoring means that tens of thousands
of servers, virtual machines and network devices can be monitored
simultaneously. Along with storing the data, visualization features are
available (overviews, maps, graphs, screens, etc), as well as very flexible
ways of analyzing the data for the purpose of alerting.
This includes stub domains support, but it should be considered
experimental at this time. Stub domains hangs with serial ports,
or more more than one virual disk (multiple virtual ethernet have not been
tested).
The guest environment denotes the Google provided configuration and tooling
inside of a Google Compute Engine (GCE) virtual machine. The metadata server is
a communication channel for transferring information from a client into the
guest. The guest environment includes a set of scripts and daemons (long
running processes) that read the content of the metadata server to make a
virtual machine run properly on our platform.
You probably do not need this package unless you are running in a virtual
machine on Google Compute Engine.
sandboxctl is a tool to interact with chroot-based sandboxes.
The sandboxctl tool provides an automated mechanism to create and
interact with chroot-based sandboxes. These sandboxes can be transient
(e.g. to run a single command within them) or long-lived (e.g. to run a
system service in a safe manner).
Sandboxes can be created using multiple mechanisms, which range from
extracting fresh distribution sets to bind-mounting the outer file
systems inside the sandbox. The specific mechanism depends on the
features supported by the underlying operating system and the chosen
sandbox type. Currently, sandboxctl includes support for FreeBSD,
Linux, macOS (Darwin), and NetBSD.
Each sandbox is defined via a configuration file provided by the user
and a system-specific template provided by this package. The user
configuration is simple and semantically-rich, allowing the system
administrator to not worry about the environment-specific details.
This package is primarily targetted at supporting pkgtools/pkg_comp
but is provided as a standalone tool for flexibility.
unburden-home-dir allows users to move cache files from browsers,
etc. off their (nfs or ssd based) home directory, i.e. on a local
harddisk or tmpfs and replace them with a symbolic link to the new
location (e.g. on /tmp/ or /scratch/) upon login.
Optionally the contents of these directories and files can be removed
instead of moved.
Added devel/p5-File-Flock version 2014.01
Added devel/p5-Data-Structure-Util version 0.16
Added devel/p5-TheSchwartz version 1.12
Added devel/p5-Eval-LineNumbers version 0.1
Added sysutils/p5-Daemon-Generic version 0.84
lf (as in "list files") is a terminal file manager written in Go. It is heavily
inspired by ranger with some missing and extra features. Some of the missing
features are deliberately ommited since it is better if they are handled by
external tools.
Features
- no external runtime dependencies (except for terminfo database)
- fast startup and low memory footprint (due to native code and static
binaries)
- server/client architecture to share selection between multiple instances
- custom commands as shell scripts (hence any other language as well)
- sync (waiting and skipping) and async commands
- fully customizable keybindings
Non-Features
- tabs or windows (handled by the window manager or the terminal multiplexer)
- built-in pager (handled by your pager of choice)