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RPMPackage system-config-printer-1.4.3-2.fc19.x86_64
system-config-printer is a graphical user interface that allows the user to configure a CUPS print server.
RPMPackage system-config-printer-1.4.1-6.fc19.armv6hl
system-config-printer is a graphical user interface that allows the user to configure a CUPS print server.
RPMPackage system-config-nfs-1.4.2-1.fc19.noarch
The tool system-config-nfs provides a graphical user interface for creating, modifying and deleting NFS shares.
RPMPackage system-config-language-1.4.0-8.fc19.noarch
system-config-language is a graphical user interface that allows the user to change the default language of the system.
RPMPackage system-config-kickstart-2.9.1-2.fc19.noarch
Kickstart Configurator is a graphical tool for creating kickstart files.
RPMPackage system-config-keyboard-1.3.1-14.fc19.x86_64
system-config-keyboard is a graphical user interface that allows the user to change the default keyboard of the system.
RPMPackage system-config-keyboard-1.3.1-14.fc19.armv6hl
system-config-keyboard is a graphical user interface that allows the user to change the default keyboard of the system.
RPMPackage system-config-firewall-tui-1.2.29-12.lbn19.noarch
system-config-firewall-tui is a text user interface for basic firewall setup.
RPMPackage system-config-firewall-base-1.2.29-12.lbn19.noarch
Base components of system-config-firewall with lokkit, the command line tool for basic firewall setup.
RPMPackage system-config-date-1.10.7-1.fc19.noarch
system-config-date is a graphical interface for changing the system date and time, configuring the system time zone, and setting up the NTP daemon to synchronize the time of the system with an NTP time server.
RPMPackage sysstat-10.1.5-1.fc19.armv6hl
The sysstat package contains sar, sadf, mpstat, iostat, pidstat, nfsiostat, cifsiostat and sa tools for Linux. The sar command collects and reports system activity information. This information can be saved in a file in a binary format for future inspection. The statistics reported by sar concern I/O transfer rates, paging activity, process-related activities, interrupts, network activity, memory and swap space utilization, CPU utilization, kernel activities and TTY statistics, among others. Both UP and SMP machines are fully supported. The sadf command may be used to display data collected by sar in various formats (CSV, XML, etc.). The iostat command reports CPU utilization and I/O statistics for disks. The mpstat command reports global and per-processor statistics. The pidstat command reports statistics for Linux tasks (processes). The nfsiostat command reports I/O statistics for network file systems. The cifsiostat command reports I/O statistics for CIFS file systems.
RPMPackage sysstat-10.1.5-1.fc19.x86_64
The sysstat package contains sar, sadf, mpstat, iostat, pidstat, nfsiostat, cifsiostat and sa tools for Linux. The sar command collects and reports system activity information. This information can be saved in a file in a binary format for future inspection. The statistics reported by sar concern I/O transfer rates, paging activity, process-related activities, interrupts, network activity, memory and swap space utilization, CPU utilization, kernel activities and TTY statistics, among others. Both UP and SMP machines are fully supported. The sadf command may be used to display data collected by sar in various formats (CSV, XML, etc.). The iostat command reports CPU utilization and I/O statistics for disks. The mpstat command reports global and per-processor statistics. The pidstat command reports statistics for Linux tasks (processes). The nfsiostat command reports I/O statistics for network file systems. The cifsiostat command reports I/O statistics for CIFS file systems.
RPMPackage syslog-ng-3.4.7-1.fc19.x86_64
syslog-ng, as the name shows, is a syslogd replacement, but with new functionality for the new generation. The original syslogd allows messages only to be sorted based on priority/facility pairs; syslog-ng adds the possibility to filter based on message contents using regular expressions. The new configuration scheme is intuitive and powerful. Forwarding logs over TCP and remembering all forwarding hops makes it ideal for firewalled environments.
RPMPackage syslog-ng-3.4.6-1.fc19.armv6hl
syslog-ng, as the name shows, is a syslogd replacement, but with new functionality for the new generation. The original syslogd allows messages only to be sorted based on priority/facility pairs; syslog-ng adds the possibility to filter based on message contents using regular expressions. The new configuration scheme is intuitive and powerful. Forwarding logs over TCP and remembering all forwarding hops makes it ideal for firewalled environments.
RPMPackage syslinux-nonlinux-6.02-5.lbn19.noarch
All the SYSLINUX binaries that run from the firmware rather than from a linux host. It also includes a tool, MEMDISK, which loads legacy operating systems from media.
RPMPackage syslinux-extlinux-nonlinux-6.02-5.lbn19.noarch
All the EXTLINUX binaries that run from the firmware rather than from a linux host.
RPMPackage syslinux-extlinux-6.02-5.lbn19.x86_64
The EXTLINUX bootloader, for booting the local system, as well as all the SYSLINUX/PXELINUX modules in /boot.
RPMPackage syslinux-6.02-5.lbn19.x86_64
SYSLINUX is a suite of bootloaders, currently supporting DOS FAT filesystems, Linux ext2/ext3 filesystems (EXTLINUX), PXE network boots (PXELINUX), or ISO 9660 CD-ROMs (ISOLINUX). It also includes a tool, MEMDISK, which loads legacy operating systems from these media.
RPMPackage sysfsutils-2.1.0-14.fc19.x86_64
This package's purpose is to provide a set of utilities for interfacing with sysfs.
RPMPackage syncthing-relaysrv-0.12.1-1.lbn19.x86_64
This is the relay server for the syncthing project. By default, all relay servers will join the default public relay pool, which means that the relay server will be availble for public use, and will consume your bandwidth helping others to connect. If you wish to disable this behaviour, please specify -pools="" argument. Please note that relaysrv is only usable by syncthing version v0.12 and onwards. To run relaysrv you need to have port 22067 available to the internet, which means you might need to allow it through your firewall if you have a public IP, or setup a port-forwarding (22067 to 22067) if you are behind a router. Running for public use Make sure you have a public IP with port 22067 open, or make sure you have port-forwarding (22067 to 22067) if you are behind a router. Run the relaysrv with no arguments (or -debug if you want more output), and that should be enough for the server to join the public relay pool. You should see a message saying: 2015/09/21 22:45:46 pool.go:60: Joined https://relays.syncthing.net rejoining in 48m0s See relaysrv -help for other options, such as rate limits, timeout intervals, etc. Running for private use Once you've started the relaysrv, it will generate a key pair and print an URI: relay://:22067/?id=EZQOIDM-6DDD4ZI-DJ65NSM-4OQWRAT-EIKSMJO-OZ552BO-WQZEGYY-STS5RQM&pingInterval=1m0s&networkTimeout=2m0s&sessionLimitBps=0&globalLimitBps=0&statusAddr=:22070 This URI contains partial address of the relay server, as well as it's options which in the future may be taken into account when choosing the best suitable relay out of multiple available. Because -listen option was not used, the relaysrv does not know it's external IP, therefore you should replace the host part of the URI with your public IP address on which the relaysrv will be available: relay://123.123.123.123:22067/?id=EZQOIDM-6DDD4ZI-DJ65NSM-4OQWRAT-EIKSMJO-OZ552BO-WQZEGYY-STS5RQM&pingInterval=1m0s&networkTimeout=2m0s&sessionLimitBps=0&globalLimitBps=0&statusAddr=:22070 If you do not care about certificate pinning (improved security) or do not care about passing verbose settings to the clients, you can shorten the URL to just the host part: relay://123.123.123.123:22067 This URI can then be used in syncthing as one of the relay servers. See relaysrv -help for other options, such as rate limits, timeout intervals, etc.