GestióIP is an automated, Web based IPv4/IPv6 address management (IPAM) software. It features powerful network discovery functions and offers search and filter functions for both networks and host, permitting Internet Search Engine equivalent expressions. This lets you find the information that administrators frequently need easily and quickly. GestióIP also incorporates an automated VLAN management system.
Ora2Pg is a free tool used to migrate an Oracle database to a PostgreSQL compatible schema. It connects your
Oracle database, scan it automaticaly and extracts its structure or data, it then generates SQL scripts that you can
load into your PostgreSQL database.
Ora2Pg can be used from reverse engineering Oracle database to huge enterprise database migration or simply to replicate
some Oracle data into a PostgreSQL database. It is really easy to used and doesn't need any Oracle database knowledge than
providing the parameters needed to connect to the Oracle database.
New Relic is the only dashboard you need to keep an eye on application health and availability while monitoring real user experience. Complete visibility anytime you want it.
Lilith is a logging and access event viewer for the Logback logging framework.
It has features comparable to Chainsaw, a logging event viewer for log4j. This means that it can receive logging events from remote applications using Logback as their logging backend.
It uses files to buffer the received events locally, so it is possible to keep vast amounts of logging events at your fingertip while still being able to check only the ones you are really interested in by using filtering conditions.
As of V0.9.35, Lilith does also support LOG4j and java.util.logging XML file import.
Lilith V0.9.37 has been released on 2009-11-11!
sbt is a simple build tool for Scala projects that aims to do the basics well. It requires Java 1.5 or later.
Features
* Fairly fast, unintrusive, and easy to set up for simple projects
* Configuration is done in Scala
* The default source directory layout is the same as maven's so you can always switch to maven should you need/want to
* Regardless of what sources you have added, changed, or removed, sbt should (in theory) recompile the right sources using information extracted from compilation with a compiler plugin
* Supports ScalaCheck, specs, and ScalaTest.
* Can generate documentation with scaladoc
* Packages jars (classes, sources, or api docs)
* Can start the Scala interpreter with the right classpath (dependencies and compiled classes)
* Multiple project/subproject support
* Parallel task execution, including parallel test execution
* Dependency management support: basic inline declarations, configuration with Maven (partial support) or Ivy, or manual management.
iston eases your vendor branch management worries. A vendor branch is when you copy a vendor's code (plugins, gems, etc) inside your own repository / project.
What are the advantages of doing that?
* You don't depend on another repository to deploy to your staging or production machines;
* You are insulated from upstream changes, until you really want those changes and have a chance to test them;
* Piston allows you to apply local patches to your vendor code, until the upstream maintainers have applied them.
Ripplet is a powerful,high available,flexible,collaborative load/stress test tool. It aims at providing an environment where users are able to do the tasks as follows :
* illustrate test design and outline load description clearly
* control realistic performance load efficiently, both on logic and data flow
* diagnose performance spikes and bottlenecks easily
* evaluate system capacity quickly and correctly
* share achievements for developers or customers, not only reports but test plan for product enviroment stage evaluation
Use it, extend it, just making your load test fruitful, your production stable. Hopefully, it's pretty much everything you seek in load test and it's beyond your expectation.
XMind, combined with online sharing service, provides a revolutionary way to enable both team brainstorming and personal mind mapping. With this major upgrade, we bring Web 2.0 concepts on community sharing into a popular desktop application. New Gantt view allows project managers to easily track project tasks and schedules. You'll find many more useful and time-saving functions in XMind product family.
Write or Die is a web application that encourages writing by punishing the tendency to avoid writing. Start typing in the box. As long as you keep typing, you're fine, but once you stop typing, you have a grace period of a certain number of seconds and then there are consequences.
Many people find themselves unable to write consistently. I believe that this is because their reason to write is intangible. For instance, I want to write and finish a book because I want to be published and make a living as a writer. That goal is a long way away so I often find it difficult to sit down to the task of writing.
Conversely, I'm in a creative writing class for which I manage to consistently write and finish projects (albeit at the last minute). I therefore draw the conclusion:
A tangible consequence is more effective than an intangible reward.
If I don't write stories for class, I will receive scorn from my teacher and a bad grade in the class. If I don't write my own stories I am only disappointing myself. I experience perpetual disappointment in myself so I'm kindof used to it. Add to that the fact that I simply have neither the self-discipline to write consistently on my own nor the capacity for self-deception that would enable me to create artificial deadlines. That is how Write or Die was born.
The idea is to instill in the would-be writer with a fear of not writing. We do this by employing principles taught in Introduction to Psychology. Anyone remember Operant Conditioning and Negative Reinforcement?
Bizcal is a component library for calendar widgets written in java using swing. It has components for day view, week view, month view, group view, etc.
OW2 is a global open-source software community which goal is the development of open-source distributed middleware, in the form of flexible and adaptable components. These components range from specific software frameworks and protocols to integrated platforms. OW2 developments follow a component-based approach.
The consortium is an independent non-profit organization open to companies, institutions and individuals.
OW2 mission is to develop open source code middleware and to foster a vibrant community and business ecosystem.
OW2 is committed to growing a community of open source code developers. The organization is dedicated to the creation of new technology: original code development is one of its fundamental characteristics. As the organization becomes part of the open source marketplace, it also stresses the quality and market usability of its software. It fosters a common technical architecture to be shared by its members and to facilitate the implementation of its technology by systems integrators and end-users.
The OW2 projects aim at facilitating the development, deployment and management of distributed applications with a focus on open source middleware and related development and management tools. In the open source software value chain, OW2 is positioned as an industry platform facilitating interaction between open source code Producers and open source code Consumers.
Piggy Bank is a Firefox extension that turns your browser into a mashup platform, by allowing you to extract data from different web sites and mix them together.
Piggy Bank also allows you to store this extracted information locally for you to search later and to exchange at need the collected information with others
Do you hate starting on a new project and having to try to figure out someone else's idea of a database? Or are you in QA and the developers expect you to understand all the relationships in their schema? If so then this tool's for you.
SchemaSpy is a Java-based tool (requires Java 1.4 or higher) that analyzes the metadata of a schema in a database and generates a visual representation of it in a browser-displayable format. It lets you click through the hierarchy of database tables via child and parent table relationships. The browsing through relationships can occur though HTML links and/or though the graphical representation of the relationships. It's also designed to help resolve the obtuse errors that a database sometimes gives related to failures due to constraints.
The Software Process Dashboard Project is an open-source initiative to create a PSP(SM) / TSP(SM) support tool.
We feel that the PSP and the TSP are remarkable technologies that can change the face of the software industry, and we share the SEI's zeal to promote their widespread use. We feel that a freely available, powerful support tool could help to remove one of the most significant barriers to PSP / TSP adoption. We therefore aim to develop a world-class tool under the open-source model, and distribute it freely to anyone using the PSP and/or TSP. We feel that this is the least we can do to thank the SEI for developing and distributing these remarkable processes.
There is, of course, no shortage of management tools for Agile software development. But none of them seem to be targeted at developers, small teams, or first-level managers. They seem to attempt to implement in software everything in any particular Agile methodology (for example Scrum and XP). They attempt to manage across the entire organization, especially highlighting managing above the project to the program and enterprise levels and in doing so become mostly an effort tracking system where developers become resources and are simply required to enter time spent on tasks. They also attempt to track all aspects of development by integrating testing (test tasks and test results) and defect tracking. By being all things to all people, the eventual interface become useless for a developer in their day-to-day development. By trying to provide a "complete" picture of a project's status, their interfaces become a mass of "percent complete" statistics where any particular stat one is looking for is not quickly identifiable.
Another refactoring tool from FernUni Hagen:
Purpose
to check code for possible generalizations of declared types; to detect the smell of not using suitable abstractions
(FromLinux Magazine Artiecle) Mstone is a multi-protocol stress and performance measurement tool. Mstone can test multiple protocols simultaneously and measures the performance of every transaction. The performance can be graphed throughout the duration of the test.