Ethan Miller's FTP archive (via HTTP)
Welcome to my FTP archive. You're the
visitor to this page (since 1 May 1996); please let
me know if you have any
comments or suggestions.
General instructions
Many of the files in this directory are gzipped tar files
(.tgz). These are standard tar archives that have been compressed
using gzip, a publically-available compression package that
replaces compress. You can obtain copies of the gzip source via
anonymous ftp from the following locations:
Gzip has two advantages over compress: it's capable of compressing
files smaller, and it's totally free with no (patent-related) strings
attached.
Another problem that may occur when you get these files via http is
that some browsers don't automagically save them to a file in your
directory. If your browser simply reads the file without asking for a
place to save, you must save the screen yourself. I know this works in
Netscape (I've tried it); a similar feature should exist in other
browsers.
Directory contents
- I/O benchmarks (directory)
- A collection of several I/O benchmark programs. Download as
many (or as few) as you like. Suggestions and contributions
are welcome!
- template693.mif
- FrameMaker template for CMSC 693 reports at UMBC (MIF format).
- template693.fm4
- FrameMaker template for CMSC 693 reports at UMBC (maker format).
- bibframe.tgz
- gzipped tar file containing the latest BibFrame bibliography
package for FrameMaker. This package requires perl v4 or
higher and BibTeX (both available elsewhere). It has been
tested for FrameMaker version 4, but will probably work for
FrameMaker version 3 (with some effort). It should also work
for FrameMaker version 5 (again, it hasn't been tested by me
because we haven't gotten Frame 5 here yet). This link will
always point to the latest version of bibframe. You may also
want to retrieve
bibframe using gopher.
- option.tgz
- C files to parse command line options. This code is originally
from the Sprite project at UC Berkeley. I've modified it to
add a few additional features.
Last updated
by
Ethan Miller
(elm@cs.umbc.edu)