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RPMPackage libvirt-client-7.7.0-1.lbn25.x86_64
The client binaries needed to access the virtualization capabilities of recent versions of Linux (and other OSes).
RPMPackage libvirt-7.7.0-1.lbn25.x86_64
Libvirt is a C toolkit to interact with the virtualization capabilities of recent versions of Linux (and other OSes). The main package includes the libvirtd server exporting the virtualization support.
RPMPackage libverto-tevent-0.2.6-6.fc24.x86_64
Module for libverto which provides integration with tevent. This package provides libverto-module-base since it supports io, timeout and signal.
RPMPackage libverto-0.2.6-6.fc24.x86_64
libverto provides a way for libraries to expose asynchronous interfaces without having to choose a particular event loop, offloading this decision to the end application which consumes the library. If you are packaging an application, not library, based on libverto, you should depend either on a specific implementation module or you can depend on the virtual provides 'libverto-module-base'. This will ensure that you have at least one module installed that provides io, timeout and signal functionality. Currently glib is the only module that does not provide these three because it lacks signal. However, glib will support signal in the future.
RPMPackage libvdpau-1.4-2.lbn25.x86_64
VDPAU is the Video Decode and Presentation API for UNIX. It provides an interface to video decode acceleration and presentation hardware present in modern GPUs.
RPMPackage libva-2.8.0-2.lbn25.x86_64
Libva is a library providing the VA API video acceleration API.
RPMPackage libv4l-1.18.0-4.lbn25.x86_64
libv4l is a collection of libraries which adds a thin abstraction layer on top of video4linux2 devices. The purpose of this (thin) layer is to make it easy for application writers to support a wide variety of devices without having to write separate code for different devices in the same class. libv4l consists of 3 different libraries: libv4lconvert, libv4l1 and libv4l2. libv4lconvert offers functions to convert from any (known) pixel-format to V4l2_PIX_FMT_BGR24 or V4l2_PIX_FMT_YUV420. libv4l1 offers the (deprecated) v4l1 API on top of v4l2 devices, independent of the drivers for those devices supporting v4l1 compatibility (which many v4l2 drivers do not). libv4l2 offers the v4l2 API on top of v4l2 devices, while adding for the application transparent libv4lconvert conversion where necessary.
RPMPackage libuv-1.40.0-1.lbn25.x86_64
libuv is a new platform layer for Node. Its purpose is to abstract IOCP on Windows and libev on Unix systems. We intend to eventually contain all platform differences in this library.
RPMPackage libuuid-2.37.2-1.lbn25.x86_64
This is the universally unique ID library, part of util-linux. The libuuid library generates and parses 128-bit universally unique id's (UUID's). A UUID is an identifier that is unique across both space and time, with respect to the space of all UUIDs. A UUID can be used for multiple purposes, from tagging objects with an extremely short lifetime, to reliably identifying very persistent objects across a network. See also the "uuid" package, which is a separate implementation.
RPMPackage libutempter-1.1.6-8.fc24.x86_64
This library provides interface for terminal emulators such as screen and xterm to record user sessions to utmp and wtmp files.
RPMPackage libuser-python-0.62-4.fc25.x86_64
The libuser-python package contains the Python 2 bindings for the libuser library, which provides a Python 2 API for manipulating and administering user and group accounts.
RPMPackage libuser-0.62-4.fc25.x86_64
The libuser library implements a standardized interface for manipulating and administering user and group accounts. The library uses pluggable back-ends to interface to its data sources. Sample applications modeled after those included with the shadow password suite are included.
RPMPackage libusbx-1.0.23-1.lbn25.x86_64
This package provides a way for applications to access USB devices. Libusbx is a fork of the original libusb, which is a fully API and ABI compatible drop in for the libusb-1.0.9 release. The libusbx fork was started by most of the libusb-1.0 developers, after the original libusb project did not produce a new release for over 18 months. Note that this library is not compatible with the original libusb-0.1 series, if you need libusb-0.1 compatibility install the libusb package.
RPMPackage libusbmuxd-2.0.0-2.lbn25.x86_64
libusbmuxd is the client library used for communicating with Apple's iPod Touch, iPhone, iPad and Apple TV devices. It allows multiple services on the device to be accessed simultaneously.
RPMPackage libusb-0.1.7-1.lbn25.x86_64
This package provides a shim / compatibility layer on top of libusb-1.0 offering the old 0.1 API for applications which do not have been ported to the new 1.0 API yet. Where ever possible applications really should use and / or be ported to the new 1.0 API instead of relying on this compatibility library.
RPMPackage libusal-1.1.11-48.lbn25.x86_64
The libusal package contains C libraries that allows applications to communicate with SCSI devices and is well suitable for writing CD-R media.
RPMPackage libupnp-1.6.20-1.fc25.x86_64
The Universal Plug and Play (UPnP) SDK for Linux provides support for building UPnP-compliant control points, devices, and bridges on Linux.
RPMPackage libunwind-1.3.1-3.lbn25.x86_64
Libunwind provides a C ABI to determine the call-chain of a program.
RPMPackage libunistring-0.9.10-9.lbn25.x86_64
This portable C library implements Unicode string types in three flavours: (UTF-8, UTF-16, UTF-32), together with functions for character processing (names, classifications, properties) and functions for string processing (iteration, formatted output, width, word breaks, line breaks, normalization, case folding and regular expressions).
RPMPackage libtool-ltdl-2.4.6-43.lbn25.x86_64
The libtool-ltdl package contains the GNU Libtool Dynamic Module Loader, a library that provides a consistent, portable interface which simplifies the process of using dynamic modules. These runtime libraries are needed by programs that link directly to the system-installed ltdl libraries; they are not needed by software built using the rest of the GNU Autotools (including GNU Autoconf and GNU Automake).