System
Votes: 8
GNU grep, egrep and fgrep
'grep' is a utility to search for text in files; it can be used from the command line or in scripts. Even if you don't want to use it, other packages on your system probably will.
The GNU family of grep utilities may be the "fastest grep in the west". GNU grep is based on a fast lazy-state deterministic matcher (about twice as fast as stock Unix egrep) hybridized with a Boyer-Moore-Gosper search for a fixed string that eliminates impossible text from being considered by the full regexp matcher without necessarily having to look at every character. The result is typically many times faster than Unix grep or egrep. (Regular expressions containing backreferencing will run more slowly, however.)
Due to conflicts with busybox and SDK, all binaries are stored in /usr/bin/gnu, which could be added to $PATH, or can be called with a 'g' prefix, e.g., 'ggrep' for grep.
Votes: 5
OpenBSD NTP daemon
NTP, the Network Time Protocol, is used to keep the computers clock synchronize. It provides the ability to sync the local clock to remote NTP servers and can act as NTP server itself, redistributing the local clock.
This is an alternative implementation of the NTP software made by the OpenBSD project. It makes use of privilege separation.
It only implements a subset of the NTP protocol and does not adjust the rate of the clock. Alternatives packages are ntp and chrony.
