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I have been working with a lpc1788 (Cortex M3) evaluation board. For some application developement I used a GUI library/tool by Segger, called emWin. Though I have completed the applicatiopn developement on keil uVision 4, I am keen to whether the same can be done on a linux gnu-arm toolchain used along with a GUI library. As the name itself suggests, emWin is not meant for linux platform developement. And, its costly too not being an open source. Can anybody please inform me if there are any options available?
QT and wxWidgets both have ports for embedded systems, especially those that are capable of running a decent linux distro such as your arm board.
QT Embeded packs it's own window manager.. and doesn't seem to need X11. link to Wiki
wxWidgets usually wraps around other GUI libs. Link to ArticlesThere's :-
wxGTK for GTK+ if you squeeze GTK into your device.
wxX11 if you can get an X Window system to run on your device.
wxDFB for "resource free" devices that use DirectFB
wxNano-X for Nano-X
There should be other options out there, but you may the above because:-
They have excellent community support.
Both libraries are Free and Open Source.
They have very nice development tools...IDEs and RAD tools that are Free & Open Source.
Ease of development of your GUIs on desktop.
Portability of your app to other platforms ( Android, win32/64, OSX ..etc ).
.....The list goes on and on.
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I need a best browser compatibility checking tool for my linux machine ( dont want online checking tool) .
Wanted a tool which should be run in my local. Is there any tool ? If yes please recommend.
Regards,
ArunRaj.
I also tried to solve this issue a few weeks ago. After some hours of research i came to the conclusion that sand-boxing or building virtual-machines would be the best solution for me.
I can also recommend ievms script to install virtual machines for running IE6 up to IE10 with a single command:
Automated installation of the Microsoft IE App Compat virtual machines
The Images are provided by Microsoft itself:
Internet Explorer Application Compatibility VPC Image
For realistic testing, think about using virtual machines and virtual environments like Vmware Player or VirtualBox (https://www.virtualbox.org/). You can install different operating systems and different browsers to see what your page looks like.
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I'm working on some new techniques for Linux Kernel Rootkit Detections as my thesis. I need some sample of rootkits to test my method and also do some machine learning tests.
But not the old-dusty ones in packetstorm that could be found in computer history books as well. I've read alot about it and I've seen some new methods of rootkit implementations in phrack and some other resources. It would take a lot of time to just implement PoC rootkits out of them for me and I would just get to the starting point for my project by then.
If anyone could help me with this it would be greatly appreciated.
Any site, ftp, compromised system, unknown rootkit libraries, anything that might be a sample for my work is appreciated. But with this in mind that what I need are Linux kernel Rootkits.
Any type, LKM, System Call Hooking, Object hooking, system.map /dev/mem working stuff
Thanks
p.s by new rootkits I don't mean like non-reported or all-over-the-news rootkit, something that would work on ubuntu 10.04 or newer would be great (Kernel version 2.6.32+)
you can get some kernel rk from the follow link
http://www.ussrback.com/UNIX/penetration/rootkits/
For obvious reasons, you aren't going to find any rootkits available for download on the public internet. Doing so would be a huge liability exposure to anyone hosting them. Your options are: make some friends in the security research or black hat communities, or run some honeypots and capture them yourself.
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I know its possible to use haskell with web development, but what about for mobile development? Since Haskell runs almost flawlessly windows, Linux, and Mac, I can't see why this wouldn't be possible.
GHC does support ARM to some extent, so you could compile Haskell programs to run on most mobile phones.
That said, there's very little library support for Haskell mobile applications on the big platforms (iOS and Android) at the moment. The issue is that they use custom system and UI libraries that aren't (really) available outside their ecosystems. You could interface Haskell code with Android or iOS apps (probably via the C bindings), but there's no automated way of it, and there's no simple library to use. So, although you could write some Haskell program that computes something, getting input from a user, and showing them the result would be quite a hassle (see the relevant HaskellWiki articles on Android and IPhone).
Your best bet at the moment would probably be Maemo, which should be able to run GTK Haskell apps for ARM without much hassle. That said, there aren't many Maemo phones out there. There are also a few other mobile distributions that just run vanilla Linux systems and those would work just as well; in particular, any tablet that runs a vanilla Linux (as opposed to Android, or some other heavily customized distribution) would probably run even graphical Haskell apps just fine.
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I'm working with GeoTiff related files and would like to know what's a good viewer to see the outcome of my work? It needs to work on a Windows machine.
Thanks.
ERViewer from ERMapper was good, you need to register now to get it from ERDAS:
https://download.hexagongeospatial.com/downloads/imagine/erdas-er-viewer-2014-v14-01
Irfanview can also open GeoTIFF, but won't be as efficient for very large files.
OpenEV in the GDAL suite will also display GeoTIFF: http://openev.sourceforge.net/ - GDAL is very helpful in general for GeoTIFF.
Manifold 9.0 is also very good, there's a free viewer for use on Windows. http://www.manifold.net/viewer.shtml
You can also use uDig for viewing GeoTiff (and other GIS-data): http://udig.refractions.net/
uDig - User-friendly Desktop Internet GIS: A GIS Framework for Eclipse
uDig is an open source (LGPL) desktop application framework, built with Eclipse Rich Client (RCP) technology.
uDig can be used as a stand-alone application.
uDig can be extended with RCP “plug-ins”.
uDig can be used as a plug-in in an existing RCP application.
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I've read on some development blogs that it is nearly to impossible to build BlackBerry application properly on operating systems other than Windows. Any possible workarounds on veryfication, rapc usage etc may result in serious and hidden bugs.
There is a nice blog about BB development under Linux:
www.slashdev.ca:
BlackBerry Development Using Linux
BlackBerry Simulator in Linux – Sort of
Simulator in Linux – Slightly More Reliable
MDS Simulator… in Linux
Using sigtool in Linux
And build it all: BlackBerry Development with Ant & Eclipse