-
atlas-3.8.4-6.fc18.armv6hl
The ATLAS (Automatically Tuned Linear Algebra Software) project is an
ongoing research effort focusing on applying empirical techniques in
order to provide portable performance. At present, it provides C and
Fortran77 interfaces to a portably efficient BLAS implementation, as
well as a few routines from LAPACK.
The performance improvements in ATLAS are obtained largely via
compile-time optimizations and tend to be specific to a given hardware
configuration. In order to package ATLAS for Fedora some compromises
are necessary so that good performance can be obtained on a variety
of hardware. This set of ATLAS binary packages is therefore not
necessarily optimal for any specific hardware configuration. However,
the source package can be used to compile customized ATLAS packages;
see the documentation for information.
Located in
LBN
/
…
/
Core Linux
/
BastionLinux 13
-
atlas-3.8.4-8.fc19.armv6hl
The ATLAS (Automatically Tuned Linear Algebra Software) project is an
ongoing research effort focusing on applying empirical techniques in
order to provide portable performance. At present, it provides C and
Fortran77 interfaces to a portably efficient BLAS implementation, as
well as a few routines from LAPACK.
The performance improvements in ATLAS are obtained largely via
compile-time optimizations and tend to be specific to a given hardware
configuration. In order to package ATLAS for Fedora some compromises
are necessary so that good performance can be obtained on a variety
of hardware. This set of ATLAS binary packages is therefore not
necessarily optimal for any specific hardware configuration. However,
the source package can be used to compile customized ATLAS packages;
see the documentation for information.
Located in
LBN
/
…
/
Core Linux
/
BastionLinux 19
-
atlas-3.10.2-12.lbn19.x86_64
The ATLAS (Automatically Tuned Linear Algebra Software) project is an
ongoing research effort focusing on applying empirical techniques in
order to provide portable performance. At present, it provides C and
Fortran77 interfaces to a portably efficient BLAS implementation, as
well as a few routines from LAPACK.
The performance improvements in ATLAS are obtained largely via
compile-time optimizations and tend to be specific to a given hardware
configuration. In order to package ATLAS some compromises
are necessary so that good performance can be obtained on a variety
of hardware. This set of ATLAS binary packages is therefore not
necessarily optimal for any specific hardware configuration. However,
the source package can be used to compile customized ATLAS packages;
see the documentation for information.
Located in
LBN
/
…
/
Core Linux
/
BastionLinux 19
-
atlas-3.10.2-12.lbn19.x86_64
The ATLAS (Automatically Tuned Linear Algebra Software) project is an
ongoing research effort focusing on applying empirical techniques in
order to provide portable performance. At present, it provides C and
Fortran77 interfaces to a portably efficient BLAS implementation, as
well as a few routines from LAPACK.
The performance improvements in ATLAS are obtained largely via
compile-time optimizations and tend to be specific to a given hardware
configuration. In order to package ATLAS some compromises
are necessary so that good performance can be obtained on a variety
of hardware. This set of ATLAS binary packages is therefore not
necessarily optimal for any specific hardware configuration. However,
the source package can be used to compile customized ATLAS packages;
see the documentation for information.
Located in
LBN
/
…
/
Plone and Zope
/
BastionLinux 19
-
atlas-3.10.3-18.lbn25.x86_64
The ATLAS (Automatically Tuned Linear Algebra Software) project is an
ongoing research effort f(ocusing on applying empirical techniques in
order to provide portable performance. At present, it provides C and
Fortran77 interfaces to a portably efficient BLAS implementation, as
well as a few routines from LAPACK.
The performance improvements in ATLAS are obtained largely via
compile-time optimizations and tend to be specific to a given hardware
configuration. In order to package ATLAS some compromises
are necessary so that good performance can be obtained on a variety
of hardware. This set of ATLAS binary packages is therefore not
necessarily optimal for any specific hardware configuration. However,
the source package can be used to compile customized ATLAS packages;
see the documentation for information.
Located in
LBN
/
…
/
Core Linux
/
BastionLinux 25
-
atmel-firmware-1.3-7.fc13.noarch
The drivers for Atmel at76c50x wireless network chips in the Linux 2.6.x kernel
but do not include the firmware.
This firmware needs to be loaded by the host on most cards using these chips.
Located in
LBN
/
…
/
Core Linux
/
BastionLinux 13
-
atmel-firmware-1.3-11.fc19.noarch
The drivers for Atmel at76c50x wireless network chips in the Linux 2.6.x kernel
but do not include the firmware.
This firmware needs to be loaded by the host on most cards using these chips.
Located in
LBN
/
…
/
Core Linux
/
BastionLinux 19
-
atmel-firmware-1.3-33.lbn36.noarch
The drivers for Atmel at76c50x wireless network chips in the Linux kernel
but do not include the firmware.
This firmware needs to be loaded by the host on most cards using these chips.
Located in
LBN
/
…
/
Core Linux
/
BastionLinux 36
-
atop-2.6.0-7.lbn25.x86_64
An advanced interactive monitor for Linux-systems to view the load on
system-level and process-level.
The command atop has some major advantages compared to other
performance-monitors:
- Resource consumption by all processes
- Utilization of all relevant resources
- Permanent logging of resource utilization
- Highlight critical resources
- Watch activity only
- Watch deviations only
- Accumulated process activity per user
- Accumulated process activity per program
For more informations: http://www.atcomputing.nl/Tools/atop
The package does not make use of the patches available at
http://www.atcomputing.nl/Tools/atop/kernpatch.html
Located in
LBN
/
…
/
Core Linux
/
BastionLinux 25
-
atop-2.10.0-3.lbn36.x86_64
An advanced interactive monitor for Linux-systems to view the load on
system-level and process-level.
The command atop has some major advantages compared to other
performance-monitors:
- Resource consumption by all processes
- Utilization of all relevant resources
- Permanent logging of resource utilization
- Highlight critical resources
- Watch activity only
- Watch deviations only
- Accumulated process activity per user
- Accumulated process activity per program
Located in
LBN
/
…
/
Core Linux
/
BastionLinux 36