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Saved by uncleflo on September 14th, 2018.
The Monetra (MCVE) PHP API, which depends on libmonetra (C API), is designed to take advantage of all three of our "supported” communication methods, which include Drop-File, Unencrypted IP and Encrypted IP (SSL v3/TLS v1.0). Each method has its advantages and will be explained briefly below. Libmonetra is also the basis of the Perl, PHP and JAVA JNI modules, so the usage of those API's is nearly identical to Libmonetra itself, minus language semantics. In addition, this API was designed to be fully thread-safe and allows interleaving of transactions (streaming of transactions with out-of-order responses). The Drop-File communication method is the most simplistic form of communication with Monetra. A transaction directory is specified where .trn (transaction) files are written, "picked up" and .rtn (response) files are written in reply. Advantages are the debug-ability and the fact that it does not require an IP stack to be present on the local machine. Although this method is not designed for networking, it is possible to share the transaction directory via NFS or SAMBA (for windows), to integrate with legacy applications. Because of security concerns, this should not be utilized for new integrations. Newer monetra releases also support client certificate validation which is available in this API. For any feature/anomaly, requests or support questions regarding libmonetra, feel free to contact our support staff via e-mail at support@mainstreetsoftworks.com
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Saved by uncleflo on July 10th, 2017.
Sodium is a modern, easy-to-use software library for encryption, decryption, signatures, password hashing and more. It is a portable, cross-compilable, installable, packageable fork of NaCl, with a compatible API, and an extended API to improve usability even further. Its goal is to provide all of the core operations needed to build higher-level cryptographic tools. Sodium supports a variety of compilers and operating systems, including Windows (with MinGW or Visual Studio, x86 and x86_64), iOS and Android. The design choices emphasize security, and "magic constants" have clear rationales. And despite the emphasis on high security, primitives are faster across-the-board than most implementations of the NIST standards.
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Saved by uncleflo on August 21st, 2013.
Markdown is a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown allows you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML). Thus, “Markdown” is two things: (1) a plain text formatting syntax; and (2) a software tool, written in Perl, that converts the plain text formatting to HTML. See the Syntax page for details pertaining to Markdown’s formatting syntax. You can try it out, right now, using the online Dingus.
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Saved by uncleflo on July 4th, 2013.
I am getting an error when trying to install gitolite via chef-solo. running "yum install perl-Time-HiRes" seems to fix it
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Saved by uncleflo on November 29th, 2012.
Webmin is designed to allow the easy addition of new modules without changing any of the existing code. A module can be thought of as something like a Netscape or Photoshop plugin - it can be written by someone other than the developers of Webmin, and distributed under a and licence the developer chooses. A module should be written to administer one service or server, such as the Unix password file or the Apache web server. Some complex system functions may even be split over several modules - for example, disk partitioning, mounting disks and disk quota management are 3 separate modules in the standard Webmin distribution. Modules can theoretically be written in any language. However, to make use of the Webmin API Perl version 5.002 or above should be used. A module should be written entirely in Perl, with no C functions or external binary programs. The aim is for modules to be as portable as possible across different Unix systems and CPU types.
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