Recent Projects

mbignami/font-tools

A set of tools to easly convert fonts between formats and to create webfonts (fonts in various formats with the appropriate CSS). This repo includes: ttf2eot: a simple conversion tool that takes a TrueType font and convert it to Embedded OpenType woff2-tools: a compressor and a decompressor to convert TrueType fonts to WOFF2 format. font-tools: a set of utility scripts font-tools script list: font2ttf: to convert a fontforge supported font file to ttf font2otf: to convert a fontforge supported font file to otf font2svg: to convert a fontforge supported font file to svg font2woff: to convert a fontforge supported font file to woff mkwebfont: a tool that can take several font files, converts them into various formats (EOT, TTF, OTF, WOFF, WOFF2, SVG), and creates a CSS file that aims to be compatible with all browsers and to be efficent (checking local files and matching lighter file formats first) binding them togheter into a unified font-family guessing font-weight and font-style parameters.
  • Centos-stream 8 : aarch64, ppc64le, x86_64
  • Centos-stream 9 : aarch64, ppc64le, s390x, x86_64
  • EPEL 7 : ppc64le, x86_64
  • EPEL 8 : aarch64, ppc64le, s390x, x86_64
  • EPEL 9 : aarch64, ppc64le, s390x, x86_64
  • Fedora 38 : aarch64, ppc64le, s390x, x86_64
  • Fedora 39 : aarch64, ppc64le, s390x, x86_64

gronki/kernel-dell

Issue If you have Dell Inspiron 7xxx or other similar laptop and face battery detection issues, using this kernel instead of default one might help. The main symptom is battery slot being present, but battery being absent: [root@dell9 ~]# dmesg | grep batt [ 1.248629] ACPI: Battery Slot [BAT0] (battery absent) About this repo This is Fedora LInux Kernel for use with Dell laptops. It has the following configuration flag: CONFIG_ACPI_REV_OVERRIDE_POSSIBLE=y References Battery absent with kernel 4.6 Battery not detected at boot on Dell Inspiron Series 7000 model 7437 with v4.2 Battery not working since Fedora 24 on Dell Inspiron 7537 No battery after boot. Dell 7537 15.10 - no battery detected in Dell Inspiron 7000 series laptops Ubuntu 14.04 doesn’t recognize laptop battery in Dell Inspiron 15 7537 16.04 - Battery not detected until plugged in via AC acpi: allow for an override to set _REV

revhom/taffybar

Description not filled in by author. Very likely personal repository for testing purpose, which you should not use.

mmarusak/abrt-server-info-page

Webpage for servers containing ABRT's services

jlinton/kvmtool

Fedora package of kvmtool
  • Centos-stream 8 : aarch64, ppc64le, x86_64
  • Centos-stream 9 : aarch64, ppc64le, x86_64
  • EPEL 8 : aarch64, ppc64le, x86_64
  • EPEL 9 : aarch64, ppc64le, x86_64
  • Fedora 38 : aarch64, ppc64le, x86_64
  • Fedora 39 : aarch64, ppc64le, x86_64
  • Fedora 40 : aarch64, ppc64le, x86_64
  • Fedora rawhide : aarch64, ppc64le, x86_64

whosthere/zeromq

Fresh ZeroMQ builds for CentOS 6 and CentOS 7.
  • EPEL 6 : x86_64
  • EPEL 7 : x86_64

tomkukral/mgmt

Description not filled in by author. Very likely personal repository for testing purpose, which you should not use.

hub/emscripten

Emscripten, the C/C++ compiler to JavaScript

ifas/postfix

Description not filled in by author. Very likely personal repository for testing purpose, which you should not use.
  • EPEL 7 : x86_64

bugzy/keepassxc

This Repository contains unofficial builds of KeePassXC with the KeePassHTTP plugin enabled, but turned off by default (See section below on "Note about KeePassHTTP") About KeePassXC KeePassXC is a community fork of KeePassX, the cross-platform port of KeePass for Windows. Every feature is cross-platform and tested to give users the same feel on each operating system, including the loved auto-type feature. Features over KeePassX Autotype on all three major platforms (Linux, Windows, OS X) Stand-alone password generator Password strength meter Use website's favicons as entry icons Merging of databases Automatic reload when the database changed on disk KeePassHTTP support for use with PassIFox in Mozilla Firefox and chromeIPass in Google Chrome or Chromium. For a full list of new features and changes, have a look at the full KeePassXC changelog[1]. Note about KeePassHTTP KeePassHTTP is not a highly secure protocol and has certain flaw which allow an attacker to decrypt your passwords when they manage to intercept communication between a KeePassHTTP server and PassIFox/chromeIPass over a network connection (see [2] and [3]). KeePassXC therefore strictly limits communication between itself and the browser plugin to your local computer. As long as your computer is not compromised, your passwords are fairly safe that way, but still use it at your own risk! Warning: If you decide to build KeePassXC yourself with KeePassHTTP support, please make sure that it only listens to localhost (127.0.0.1) and not to any network-routable interface and especially not to 0.0.0.0! [1] https://github.com/keepassxreboot/keepassxc/blob/master/CHANGELOG [2] https://github.com/pfn/keepasshttp/issues/258 [3] https://github.com/keepassxreboot/keepassxc/issues/147
  • EPEL 7 : x86_64
  • Fedora rawhide : x86_64