User manual

findutils (4.2.31)
The GNU Find Utilities are the basic directory searching
utilities of the GNU operating system.
These programs are typically used in conjunction with other
programs to provide modular and powerful directory search
and file locating capabilities to other commands.
Source: http://www.gnu.org/software/findutils/
Freetype (2.4.3)
FreeType is a software font engine that is designed to be
small, efficient, highly customizable, and portable while
capable of producing high-quality output (glyph images).
Source: http://freetype.sourceforge.net
fuse (2.8.4)
Fuse is a simple interface for userspace programs to export a
virtual filesystem to the linux kernel.
This piece of software is made available under the terms and
conditions of the fuse license, which can be found below.
Source: http://fuse.sourceforge.net/
gawk (3.1.5)
If you are like many computer users, you would frequently like
to make changes in various text files wherever certain
patterns appear, or extract data from parts of certain lines
while discarding the rest.
To write a program to do this in a language such as C or Pascal
is a time-consuming inconvenience that may take many lines
of code.
The job is easy with awk, especially the GNU implementation:
gawk.
Source: http://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/
glibc (2.12.2)
Any Unix-like operating system needs a C library: the library
which defines the “system calls” and other basic facilities such
as open, malloc, printf, exit...The GNU C library is used as the C
library in the GNU system and most systems with the Linux
kernel
This piece of software is made available under the terms and
conditions of the glibc license, which can be found below.
Source: http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/
grep (2.5.1a)
The grep command searches one or more input files for lines
containing a match to a specified pattern. By default, grep
prints the matching lines.
Source: http://www.gnu.org/software/grep/
gzip (1.3.12)
GNU Gzip is a popular data compression program originally
written by Jean-loup Gailly for the GNU project. Mark Adler
wrote the decompression part.
Source: http://www.gnu.org/software/gzip/
inetutils (1.4.2)
Inetutils is a collection of common network programs.
Source: http://www.gnu.org/software/inetutils/
iptables (1.4.15)
For Cross connection.
Source: http://www.netfilter.org/projects/iptables/
iputils (s20101006)
The iputils package is set of small useful utilities for Linux
networking. It was originally maintained by Alexey Kuznetsov.
Source: http://www.skbuff.net/iputils/
Libcurl (7.30.0)
HTTP client;libcurl is a free and easy-to-use client-side URL
transfer library, supporting FTP, FTPS, HTTP, HTTPS, SCP, SFTP,
TFTP, TELNET, DICT, LDAP, LDAPS, FILE, IMAP, SMTP, POP3 and
RTSP. libcurl supports SSL certificates, HTTP POST, HTTP PUT,
FTP uploading, HTTP form based upload, proxies, cookies,
user+password authentication (Basic, Digest, NTLM,
Negotiate, Kerberos4), file transfer resume, http proxy
tunneling and more!
This piece of software is made available under the terms and
conditions of the Libcurl license, which can be found below.
Source: http://curl.haxx.se/
libiconv (1.11.1)
This library provides an iconv() implementation, for use on
systems which don't have one, or whose implementation
cannot convert from/to Unicode. .
This piece of software is made available under the terms and
conditions of the libiconv license, which can be found below.
Source: http://ftp.gnu.org/pub/gnu/libiconv
libmtp (0.3.6)
libmtp is an Initiator implementation of the Media Transfer
Protocol (MTP) in the form of a library suitable primarily for
POSIX compliant operating systems. We implement MTP Basic,
the stuff proposed for standardization.
Source: http://libmtp.sourceforge.net/
libjpg (6b)
This library is used to perform JPEG decoding tasks.
This piece of software is made available under the terms and
conditions of the libjpg license, which can be found below.
Source: http://www.ijg.org/
libusb
This is the home of libusb, a library that gives user level
applications uniform access to USB devices across many
different operating systems. libusb is an open source project
licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License version
2.1.
Many participants in the libusb community have helped and
continue to help with ideas, implementation, support and
improvements for libusb.
This piece of software is made available under the terms and
conditions of the libusb license, which can be found below.
Source:
http://libusb.wiki.sourceforge.net
http://www.libusb.org/
libusb-compat
Library to enable user space application programs to
communicate with USB devices.
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