Recent Projects

lyarwood/Hugo

A Fast and Flexible Static Site Generator built with love by spf13 and friends in Go. Website | Forum | Dev Chat | Documentation | Installation Guide | Twitter Hugo is a static HTML and CSS website generator written in Go. It is optimized for speed, easy use and configurability. Hugo takes a directory with content and templates and renders them into a full HTML website. Hugo relies on Markdown files with front matter for meta data. And you can run Hugo from any directory. This works well for shared hosts and other systems where you don’t have a privileged account. Hugo renders a typical website of moderate size in a fraction of a second. A good rule of thumb is that each piece of content renders in around 1 millisecond. Hugo is designed to work well for any kind of website including blogs, tumbles and docs. Supported Architectures Currently, we provide pre-built Hugo binaries for Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD and OS X (Darwin) for x64, i386 and ARM architectures. Hugo may also be compiled from source wherever the Go compiler tool chain can run, e.g. for other operating systems including DragonFly BSD, OpenBSD, Plan 9 and Solaris. Complete documentation is available at Hugo Documentation.
  • EPEL 7 : x86_64

darkgallium/mGBA

mGBA is a new Game Boy Advance emulator written in C. The project started in April 2013 with the goal of being fast enough to run on lower end hardware than other emulators support, without sacrificing accuracy or portability. Even in the initial version, games generally play without problems. It is loosely based on the previous GBA.js emulator, although very little of GBA.js can still be seen in mGBA. Other goals include accurate enough emulation to provide a development environment for homebrew software, a good workflow for tool-assist runners, and a modern feature set for emulators that older emulators may not support. mGBA is licensed under the Mozilla Public License 2.0, and the code can be found on GitHub.

neteler/proj_epel6

PROJ4 library for EPEL6 Source: https://kojipkgs.fedoraproject.org//packages/proj/4.9.3/1.fc26/src/proj-4.9.3-1.fc26.src.rpm

bijumon/emacs-git

emacs-git

aminasyan/wiringlmk

build of WiringLMK project, a WiringPi clone for Banana Pi/Pro
  • EPEL 7 : x86_64

giesen/postfix-policyd-spf-perl

This is a basic Postfix policy engine for Sender Policy Framework (SPF) checking. It is implemented in pure Perl and uses Mail::SPF. This SPF policy server implementation is very basic and requires almost no configuration.
  • EPEL 7 : x86_64

geroy/prosody-0.10

Prosody 0.10 nightly builds based on https://prosody.im/nightly/0.10/. Prosody is a flexible communications server for Jabber/XMPP written in Lua. It aims to be easy to use, and light on resources. For developers it aims to be easy to extend and give a flexible system on which to rapidly develop added functionality, or prototype new protocols.
  • EPEL 7 : x86_64

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 10 : aarch64, ppc64le, s390x, x86_64
  • 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 40 : aarch64, ppc64le, s390x, x86_64
  • Fedora 41 : 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.