| [CentOS](https://www.centos.org/) | The CentOS Project is a community-driven free software effort focused on delivering a robust open source ecosystem. For users, we offer a consistent manageable platform that suits a wide variety of deployments. For open source communities, we offer a solid, predictable base to build upon, along with extensive resources to build, test, release, and maintain their code. We’re also expanding the availability of CentOS images across a number of vendors, providing official images for Amazon, Google, and more. For self-hosted cloud, we also provide a generic cloud-init enabled image. For more information about updates and improvements in CentOS 7, please check out the release notes or the release announcement in the mailing list archive. |
| [CentOS](https://www.centos.org/) | The CentOS Project is a community-driven free software effort focused on delivering a robust open source ecosystem. For users, we offer a consistent manageable platform that suits a wide variety of deployments. For open source communities, we offer a solid, predictable base to build upon, along with extensive resources to build, test, release, and maintain their code. We’re also expanding the availability of CentOS images across a number of vendors, providing official images for Amazon, Google, and more. For self-hosted cloud, we also provide a generic cloud-init enabled image. For more information about updates and improvements in CentOS 7, please check out the release notes or the release announcement in the mailing list archive. |
| [Fedora](https://www.ubuntu.com/) | Ubuntu is a Debian-based Linux operating system for personal computers, tablets and smartphones, where Ubuntu Touch edition is used. It also runs network servers. That is usually with the Ubuntu Server edition, either on physical or virtual servers (such as on mainframes) or with containers, that is with enterprise-class features. It runs on the most popular architectures, including server-class ARM-based. Ubuntu is published by Canonical Ltd, who offer commercial support. It is based on free software and named after the Southern African philosophy of ubuntu (literally, 'human-ness'), which Canonical Ltd. suggests can be loosely translated as "humanity to others" or "I am what I am because of who we all are". Since Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal Ubuntu has used Unity as its default user interface for the desktop, but following the release of Ubuntu 17.10 it will move to the GNOME 3 desktop instead, as work on Unity ends. Ubuntu is the most popular operating system running in hosted environments, so–called "clouds", as it is the most popular server Linux distribution. Development of Ubuntu is led by UK-based Canonical Ltd., a company of South African entrepreneur Mark Shuttleworth. Canonical generates revenue through the sale of technical support and other services related to Ubuntu. The Ubuntu project is publicly committed to the principles of open-source software development; people are encouraged to use free software, study how it works, improve upon it, and distribute it. |
| [Fedora](https://www.ubuntu.com/) | Ubuntu is a Debian-based Linux operating system for personal computers, tablets and smartphones, where Ubuntu Touch edition is used. It also runs network servers. That is usually with the Ubuntu Server edition, either on physical or virtual servers (such as on mainframes) or with containers, that is with enterprise-class features. It runs on the most popular architectures, including server-class ARM-based. Ubuntu is published by Canonical Ltd, who offer commercial support. It is based on free software and named after the Southern African philosophy of ubuntu (literally, 'human-ness'), which Canonical Ltd. suggests can be loosely translated as "humanity to others" or "I am what I am because of who we all are". Since Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal Ubuntu has used Unity as its default user interface for the desktop, but following the release of Ubuntu 17.10 it will move to the GNOME 3 desktop instead, as work on Unity ends. Ubuntu is the most popular operating system running in hosted environments, so–called "clouds", as it is the most popular server Linux distribution. Development of Ubuntu is led by UK-based Canonical Ltd., a company of South African entrepreneur Mark Shuttleworth. Canonical generates revenue through the sale of technical support and other services related to Ubuntu. The Ubuntu project is publicly committed to the principles of open-source software development; people are encouraged to use free software, study how it works, improve upon it, and distribute it. |
| Rocky | Old module, description not available. |
| Rocky | Description not available. |
| [Ubuntu](https://www.ubuntu.com/) | Ubuntu is a Debian-based Linux operating system for personal computers, tablets and smartphones, where Ubuntu Touch edition is used. It also runs network servers. That is usually with the Ubuntu Server edition, either on physical or virtual servers (such as on mainframes) or with containers, that is with enterprise-class features. It runs on the most popular architectures, including server-class ARM-based. Ubuntu is published by Canonical Ltd, who offer commercial support. It is based on free software and named after the Southern African philosophy of ubuntu (literally, 'human-ness'), which Canonical Ltd. suggests can be loosely translated as "humanity to others" or "I am what I am because of who we all are". Since Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal Ubuntu has used Unity as its default user interface for the desktop, but following the release of Ubuntu 17.10 it will move to the GNOME 3 desktop instead, as work on Unity ends. Ubuntu is the most popular operating system running in hosted environments, so–called "clouds", as it is the most popular server Linux distribution. Development of Ubuntu is led by UK-based Canonical Ltd., a company of South African entrepreneur Mark Shuttleworth. Canonical generates revenue through the sale of technical support and other services related to Ubuntu. The Ubuntu project is publicly committed to the principles of open-source software development; people are encouraged to use free software, study how it works, improve upon it, and distribute it. |
| [Ubuntu](https://www.ubuntu.com/) | Ubuntu is a Debian-based Linux operating system for personal computers, tablets and smartphones, where Ubuntu Touch edition is used. It also runs network servers. That is usually with the Ubuntu Server edition, either on physical or virtual servers (such as on mainframes) or with containers, that is with enterprise-class features. It runs on the most popular architectures, including server-class ARM-based. Ubuntu is published by Canonical Ltd, who offer commercial support. It is based on free software and named after the Southern African philosophy of ubuntu (literally, 'human-ness'), which Canonical Ltd. suggests can be loosely translated as "humanity to others" or "I am what I am because of who we all are". Since Ubuntu 11.04 Natty Narwhal Ubuntu has used Unity as its default user interface for the desktop, but following the release of Ubuntu 17.10 it will move to the GNOME 3 desktop instead, as work on Unity ends. Ubuntu is the most popular operating system running in hosted environments, so–called "clouds", as it is the most popular server Linux distribution. Development of Ubuntu is led by UK-based Canonical Ltd., a company of South African entrepreneur Mark Shuttleworth. Canonical generates revenue through the sale of technical support and other services related to Ubuntu. The Ubuntu project is publicly committed to the principles of open-source software development; people are encouraged to use free software, study how it works, improve upon it, and distribute it. |
## Perf
## Perf
...
@@ -436,7 +436,7 @@
...
@@ -436,7 +436,7 @@
| [groff](https://www.gnu.org/software/groff) | Groff (GNU troff) is a typesetting system that reads plain text mixed with formatting commands and produces formatted output. |
| [groff](https://www.gnu.org/software/groff) | Groff (GNU troff) is a typesetting system that reads plain text mixed with formatting commands and produces formatted output. |
| [gzip](https://www.gnu.org/software/gzip/) | gzip (GNU zip) is a popular data compression program as a replacement for compress |
| [gzip](https://www.gnu.org/software/gzip/) | gzip (GNU zip) is a popular data compression program as a replacement for compress |
| [hatchling](https://hatch.pypa.io) | Extensible, standards compliant build backend used by Hatch, a modern, extensible Python project manager. |
| [hatchling](https://hatch.pypa.io) | Extensible, standards compliant build backend used by Hatch, a modern, extensible Python project manager. |
| HDEEM | Old module, description not available. |
| HDEEM | Description not available. |
| [help2man](https://www.gnu.org/software/help2man/) | help2man produces simple manual pages from the '--help' and '--version' output of other commands. |
| [help2man](https://www.gnu.org/software/help2man/) | help2man produces simple manual pages from the '--help' and '--version' output of other commands. |
| [htop](https://htop.dev) | An interactive process viewer for Unix |
| [htop](https://htop.dev) | An interactive process viewer for Unix |
| [hypothesis](https://github.com/HypothesisWorks/hypothesis) | Hypothesis is an advanced testing library for Python. It lets you write tests which are parametrized by a source of examples, and then generates simple and comprehensible examples that make your tests fail. This lets you find more bugs in your code with less work. |
| [hypothesis](https://github.com/HypothesisWorks/hypothesis) | Hypothesis is an advanced testing library for Python. It lets you write tests which are parametrized by a source of examples, and then generates simple and comprehensible examples that make your tests fail. This lets you find more bugs in your code with less work. |
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@@ -451,13 +451,13 @@
| [Meson](https://mesonbuild.com) | Meson is a cross-platform build system designed to be both as fast and as user friendly as possible. |
| [Meson](https://mesonbuild.com) | Meson is a cross-platform build system designed to be both as fast and as user friendly as possible. |
| [MIKE](http://www.mikepoweredbydhi.com/) | MIKE Powered by DHI is a part of DHI, the global organisation dedicated to solving challenges in water environments worldwide. |
| [MIKE](http://www.mikepoweredbydhi.com/) | MIKE Powered by DHI is a part of DHI, the global organisation dedicated to solving challenges in water environments worldwide. |
| [nano](https://www.nano-editor.org/) | a simple editor, inspired by Pico |
| [nano](https://www.nano-editor.org/) | a simple editor, inspired by Pico |
| NetKet | Old module, description not available. |
| NetKet | Description not available. |
| [networkx](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/networkx) | NetworkX is a Python package for the creation, manipulation, and study of the structure, dynamics, and functions of complex networks. |
| [networkx](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/networkx) | NetworkX is a Python package for the creation, manipulation, and study of the structure, dynamics, and functions of complex networks. |
| [Nextflow](https://www.nextflow.io) | Nextflow is a reactive workflow framework and a programming DSL that eases writing computational pipelines with complex data |
| [Nextflow](https://www.nextflow.io) | Nextflow is a reactive workflow framework and a programming DSL that eases writing computational pipelines with complex data |
| [Ninja](https://ninja-build.org/) | Ninja is a small build system with a focus on speed. |
| [Ninja](https://ninja-build.org/) | Ninja is a small build system with a focus on speed. |
| [numactl](https://github.com/numactl/numactl) | The numactl program allows you to run your application program on specific cpu's and memory nodes. It does this by supplying a NUMA memory policy to the operating system before running your program. The libnuma library provides convenient ways for you to add NUMA memory policies into your own program. |
| [numactl](https://github.com/numactl/numactl) | The numactl program allows you to run your application program on specific cpu's and memory nodes. It does this by supplying a NUMA memory policy to the operating system before running your program. The libnuma library provides convenient ways for you to add NUMA memory policies into your own program. |
| [parallel](https://savannah.gnu.org/projects/parallel/) | parallel: Build and execute shell commands in parallel |
| [parallel](https://savannah.gnu.org/projects/parallel/) | parallel: Build and execute shell commands in parallel |
| Particleworks | Old module, description not available. |
| Particleworks | Description not available. |
| [patchelf](https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf) | PatchELF is a small utility to modify the dynamic linker and RPATH of ELF executables. |
| [patchelf](https://github.com/NixOS/patchelf) | PatchELF is a small utility to modify the dynamic linker and RPATH of ELF executables. |
| [pigz](http://zlib.net/pigz/) | pigz, which stands for parallel implementation of gzip, is a fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple processors and multiple cores to the hilt when local_compressing data. pigz was written by Mark Adler, and uses the zlib and pthread libraries. |
| [pigz](http://zlib.net/pigz/) | pigz, which stands for parallel implementation of gzip, is a fully functional replacement for gzip that exploits multiple processors and multiple cores to the hilt when local_compressing data. pigz was written by Mark Adler, and uses the zlib and pthread libraries. |
| [poetry](https://python-poetry.org) | Python packaging and dependency management made easy. Poetry helps you declare, manage and install dependencies of Python projects, ensuring you have the right stack everywhere. |
| [poetry](https://python-poetry.org) | Python packaging and dependency management made easy. Poetry helps you declare, manage and install dependencies of Python projects, ensuring you have the right stack everywhere. |
...
@@ -466,7 +466,7 @@
...
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| [Quandl](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/Quandl) | A Python library for Quandl’s RESTful API. |
| [Quandl](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/Quandl) | A Python library for Quandl’s RESTful API. |
| [rclone](https://rclone.org) | Rclone is a command line program to sync files and directories to and from a variety of online storage services |
| [rclone](https://rclone.org) | Rclone is a command line program to sync files and directories to and from a variety of online storage services |
| [re2c](https://re2c.org/) | re2c is a free and open-source lexer generator for C and C++. Its main goal is generating fast lexers: at least as fast as their reasonably optimized hand-coded counterparts. Instead of using traditional table-driven approach, re2c encodes the generated finite state automata directly in the form of conditional jumps and comparisons. |
| [re2c](https://re2c.org/) | re2c is a free and open-source lexer generator for C and C++. Its main goal is generating fast lexers: at least as fast as their reasonably optimized hand-coded counterparts. Instead of using traditional table-driven approach, re2c encodes the generated finite state automata directly in the form of conditional jumps and comparisons. |
| s3cmd | Old module, description not available. |
| s3cmd | Description not available. |
| [s5cmd](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/s3cmd) | s5cmd is a very fast S3 and local filesystem execution tool. It comes with support for a multitude of operations including tab completion and wildcard support for files, which can be very handy for your object storage workflow while working with large number of files. There are already other utilities to work with S3 and similar object storage services, thus it is natural to wonder what s5cmd has to offer that others don't. In short, s5cmd offers a very fast speed. Thanks to Joshua Robinson for his study and experimentation on s5cmd; to quote his medium post: For uploads, s5cmd is 32x faster than s3cmd and 12x faster than aws-cli. For downloads, s5cmd can saturate a 40Gbps link (~4.3 GB/s), whereas s3cmd and aws-cli can only reach 85 MB/s and 375 MB/s respectively. If you would like to know more about performance of s5cmd and the reasons for its fast speed, refer to benchmarks section |
| [s5cmd](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/s3cmd) | s5cmd is a very fast S3 and local filesystem execution tool. It comes with support for a multitude of operations including tab completion and wildcard support for files, which can be very handy for your object storage workflow while working with large number of files. There are already other utilities to work with S3 and similar object storage services, thus it is natural to wonder what s5cmd has to offer that others don't. In short, s5cmd offers a very fast speed. Thanks to Joshua Robinson for his study and experimentation on s5cmd; to quote his medium post: For uploads, s5cmd is 32x faster than s3cmd and 12x faster than aws-cli. For downloads, s5cmd can saturate a 40Gbps link (~4.3 GB/s), whereas s3cmd and aws-cli can only reach 85 MB/s and 375 MB/s respectively. If you would like to know more about performance of s5cmd and the reasons for its fast speed, refer to benchmarks section |
| [SDE](https://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/intel-software-development-emulator) | Intel Software Development Emulator is a pintool that enables the development of applications using instruction set extensions that are not currently implemented in hardware. |
| [SDE](https://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/intel-software-development-emulator) | Intel Software Development Emulator is a pintool that enables the development of applications using instruction set extensions that are not currently implemented in hardware. |
| [setuptools-rust](https://github.com/PyO3/setuptools-rust) | setuptools-rust is a plugin for setuptools to build Rust Python extensions implemented with PyO3 or rust-cpython. |
| [setuptools-rust](https://github.com/PyO3/setuptools-rust) | setuptools-rust is a plugin for setuptools to build Rust Python extensions implemented with PyO3 or rust-cpython. |