Encode a URL to a percent-encoded form, excluding already-encoded sequences
micromark utility to encode dangerous html characters
Fastest HTML entities encode/decode library.
URL utilities for markdown-it
Small package to encode or decode IP addresses from buffers to strings.
A stricter URI encode adhering to RFC 3986
Optimise inline SVG with PostCSS.
Encode and decode base64 encoded strings
Visual encoding transforms for Vega dataflows.
Encode and decode quoted-printable strings according to rfc2045
Turn a string into an ArrayBuffer by using the UTF8 encoding.
Encodes a registry URL. Memoized.
Codecs for numbers of different sizes and endianness
Percent-encode characters in strings matching a regular expression
micromark utility with a couple of typescript types
encode-url rewrite in TypeScript
Entity parser for XML, HTML, External entites with security and NCR control
Encode/decode base64 data into ArrayBuffers
High-performance Base64 encoder and decoder
A collection of utilities for better-auth
XRP Ledger binary codec
A simple Base32 encode / decode function for JavaScript supports UTF-8 encoding.
Codecs for strings of different sizes and encodings
Process-global proxy routing for Node.js.
This gem provides an interface to transcoding services such as Ffmpeg, Amazon Elastic Transcoder, or Amazon Elemental MediaConvert.
This gem serves as the basis for the interface between a Ruby (Rails) application and a provider of transcoding services such as Opencast Matterhorn, Zencoder, and Amazon Elastic Transcoder.
Hyrax plugin to enable audiovisual derivative generation through active_encode
Sqinky adds a thin access layer on top of Sqids to work effortlessly with Sqids in Active Record models. It supports encodings composed of multiple attributes, and multiple encodings per model.
This gem allows you to define `file`-attributes on an active record class which can receive base64-encoded strings which comes in handy for json rest clients posting images to a rails application. Simply post your base64-encoded string using the `_base64`-suffix on the attribute name.
The Authorize.Net Ruby SDK is meant to offer an alternate object-oriented model of development with the Authorize.net APIs (Version 3.1). The SDK is based entirely off the name-value pair API, but performs the core payment activities (such as error handling/parsing, network communication, and data encoding) behind the scenes. Providing the end developer with this allows the developer to start integrating immediately without having to write out a mass of boiler plate code.
This library provides GIF encoding, decoding and editing capabilities natively within Ruby. It aims to support the complete GIF specification for both encoding and decoding, as well as having decent editing functionality, while maintaining a succint syntax. The current version only supports encoding, together with a decent drawing suite The gem is actively developed and decoding will soon follow, so stay tuned if you're interested!
Sym is a ruby library (gem) that offers both the command line interface (CLI) and a set of rich Ruby APIs, which make it rather trivial to add encryption and decryption of sensitive data to your development or deployment workflow. For additional security the private key itself can be encrypted with a user-generated password. For decryption using the key the password can be input into STDIN, or be defined by an ENV variable, or an OS-X Keychain Entry. Unlike many other existing encryption tools, Sym focuses on getting out of your way by offering a streamlined interface with password caching (if MemCached is installed and running locally) in hopes to make encryption of application secrets nearly completely transparent to the developers. Sym uses symmetric 256-bit key encryption with the AES-256-CBC cipher, same cipher as used by the US Government. For password-protecting the key Sym uses AES-128-CBC cipher. The resulting data is zlib-compressed and base64-encoded. The keys are also base64 encoded for easy copying/pasting/etc. Sym accomplishes encryption transparency by combining several convenient features: 1. Sym can read the private key from multiple source types, such as pathname, an environment variable name, a keychain entry, or CLI argument. You simply pass either of these to the -k flag — one flag that works for all source types. 2. By utilizing OS-X Keychain on a Mac, Sym offers truly secure way of storing the key on a local machine, much more secure then storing it on a file system, 3. By using a local password cache (activated with -c) via an in-memory provider such as memcached, sym invocations take advantage of password cache, and only ask for a password once per a configurable time period, 4. By using SYM_ARGS environment variable, where common flags can be saved. This is activated with sym -A, 5. By reading the key from the default key source file ~/.sym.key which requires no flags at all, 6. By utilizing the --negate option to quickly encrypt a regular file, or decrypt an encrypted file with extension .enc 7. By implementing the -t (edit) mode, that opens an encrypted file in your $EDITOR, and replaces the encrypted version upon save & exit, optionally creating a backup. 8. By offering the Sym::MagicFile ruby API to easily read encrypted files into memory. Please refer the module documentation available here: https://www.rubydoc.info/gems/sym