Aloha, as some of you may remember from Planet Lisp posts passim, I have been
doodling on a network/system management tool, currently named "noctool". I've
had the odd offer of coding help on it and thought that common-lisp.met would
be a suitable platform for central version-control and the like.
The project, in short, is to build a distributed network and sysem monitoring
and data-collecting platform. It currently supports gathering ping RTT data
(for delay and aliveness monitoring), disk usage, web server checks and a
framework for doing TCP-based application cheks (the web server check is but a
special case of the TCP-based checking). In time, I hope to add assorted
SNMP-based monitoring.
The distribution model is intended both as a means for the viewer portion to
conect to the data gatherers and to make it easy (or at least easier) to use
multiple data-gathering stations (with the drawback that any given element and
the things monitored on that element must be monitored from one of the
existing data gatherers).
Noctool can also graph all the things it monitors, an example graph can be
seen at http://src.hexapodia.net/noctool/disktest.gif
MC, I suspect that if you just reply to this, including an ASCII-armoured PGP
key, they'll set you up with an account and add you to the project (if,
indeed, it is approved).
I already have a cl.net account, "imattsson".
//Ingvar
Hi,
I'd like to put up a project called cl-dises.
This is a Discrete Event Simulation kernel.
Licence is BSD and the only developer is me right now: Levente
Mészáros or the user lmeszaros at common-lisp.net
levy
--
There's no perfectoin
hi,
the folks on #lisp suggested you might be willing to host a very minor
cl package
that i've just written.
full name: "Streaming pattern matching for XML"
asdf system name: cl-xmlspam
my full name: Roger Peppe.
there's an example of its use at http://paste.lisp.org/display/57178
i've attached my public key and a .tgz containing the code, some
preliminary documentation
and a couple of examples.
please could you let me know if this is possible.
thanks,
rog.
Speaking with my common-lisp.net admin hat on, I'm happy to install
either git, hg or both. In fact, they'd probably be good to have in
any case.
With my usual hat on (the one with funny ears), I'm wondering "why not
darcs?". Did darcs lose out in the DVCS "wars" because they haven't
managed to fix the "exponential time" bug?
thanks,
On Mar 4, 2008, at 10:26 AM, Helmut Eller wrote:
> * Nikodemus Siivola [2008-03-04 16:07+0100] writes:
>
>> On 3/4/08, Helmut Eller <heller(a)common-lisp.net> wrote:
>>
>>> What do people think of switching from CVS to Mercurial[*] ?
>>
>> I have no experience with it, but no objections either. The only
>> question I have is the status of Mercurial support on common-
>> lisp.net.
>
> It's currently not installed. But I hope the cl.netters don't mind to
> install it. I did a local install there and also installed the cgi
> script (well, server-side include) under
> http://common-lisp.net/project/slime/hgweb.shtml. I think it doesn't
> need any other upgrades.
>
> I think hg has some hooks to send emails after a commit, so we would
> send that to the slime-cvs mailing list. I haven't tried it, though.
> The script for the daily changelog summary would probably need some
> adjustments.
>
> It would be nice to have a CVS mirror of the Mercurial repository (so
> that non-committers wouldn't notice the switch) but I couldn't find an
> simple solution to that.
>
> Helmut.
>
> _______________________________________________
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> slime-devel(a)common-lisp.net
> http://common-lisp.net/mailman/listinfo/slime-devel
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