Anders Kaseorg

San Francisco, CA, USA
 

Managed Projects

Ksplice

  Analyzed about 15 hours ago

Ksplice is practical technology for updating the Linux kernel without rebooting. It enables you to avoid the disruptive process of rebooting for kernel security updates and bugfixes. By making it easy to keep your systems up to date, Ksplice helps you avoid the security and stability risks of running out-of-date software

15.5K lines of code

0 current contributors

over 14 years since last commit

4 users on Open Hub

Inactive
5.0
 
I Use This

Debathena

  No analysis available

Debathena brings the full functionality of an MIT Athena workstation to your Debian or Ubuntu system through a set of Debian packages. You can easily install, and cleanly uninstall, whatever packages you want—from a few of the client utilities, to a full-fledged Kerberos login system supporting AFS home directories and locker software.

0 lines of code

0 current contributors

0 since last commit

3 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
5.0
 
I Use This
Mostly written in language not available
Licenses: mit

scripts.mit.edu

  No analysis available

scripts.mit.edu is a hosting service for the MIT community that provides several popular web packages such as MediaWiki and WordPress, as well as CGI script, MySQL, cron, and procmail hosting. The service is free to any Athena account holder or group locker. It has over 2000 registered user ... [More] accounts, and is used by a number of student organizations and academic groups at MIT. The scripts.mit.edu service is provided by the Student Information Processing Board (SIPB), MIT’s volunteer student group dedicated to computing. [Less]

0 lines of code

0 current contributors

0 since last commit

1 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
5.0
 
I Use This
Mostly written in language not available
Licenses: No declared licenses

Haskell unix-handle library

  No analysis available

This package provides versions of functions from System.Posix.Files that operate on Handle instead of FilePath or Fd. This is useful to prevent race conditions that may arise from looking up the same path twice.

0 lines of code

0 current contributors

0 since last commit

0 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
0.0
 
I Use This
Mostly written in language not available
Licenses: bsd