Constant-time comparison of Buffers
A simple module for bitwise-xor on buffers
Pass two numbers, get a regex-compatible source string for matching ranges. Validated against more than 2.78 million test assertions.
two functions: One that returns true, one that returns false
Official library for using the Slack Platform's Web API
AWS CDK Programmatic Toolkit Library
Lightweight App extensibility and hookable middleware customization.
A simple object to represent an http response
Lexicographically compare two buffers.
SAP Fiori tools - Specification
A logger package for use in the Firebase JS SDK
Just create a single stylesheet...
Wrapper around is-valid-instance and is-registered for validating `base` plugins. Returns true if `app` is a valid instance of base and a plugin is not registered yet.
Returns true if a value is a valid instance of Base.
node style md5 on pure JavaScript
Turn any collection of objects into its own efficient tree or linked list using Symbol
Deterministic random bit generator (hmac)
Official library for using the Slack Platform's Socket Mode API
A module to parse color values
backwards compatible version of builtin events.listenercount
Lexical is an extensible text editor framework that provides excellent reliability, accessible and performance.
Core abstract of Caching layer for Apollo Client
Take an array of token and produce a more useful API to give to a parser
Custom error messages in JSON Schemas for Ajv validator
Manage multiple Heroku instances/apps for a single Rails app using Rake
Manage multiple Heroku instances/apps for a single Rails app using Rake.
Manage multiple Heroku instances/apps for a single Rails app using Rake. It's the Capistrano for Heroku, without the suck.
The rubber plugin enables relatively complex multi-instance deployments of RubyOnRails applications to Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). Like capistrano, rubber is role based, so you can define a set of configuration files for a role and then assign that role to as many concrete instances as needed. One can also assign multiple roles to a single instance. This lets one start out with a single ec2 instance (belonging to all roles), and add new instances into the mix as needed to scale specific facets of your deployment, e.g. adding in instances that serve only as an 'app' role to handle increased app server load.
Manage multiple Heroku instances/apps for a single Rails app using Rake
Manage multiple Heroku instances/apps for a single Rails app using Rake
Manage multiple Heroku instances/apps for a single Rails app using Rake. It's the Capistrano for Heroku, without the suck.
The rubber plugin enables relatively complex multi-instance deployments of RubyOnRails applications to Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). Like capistrano, rubber is role based, so you can define a set of configuration files for a role and then assign that role to as many concrete instances as needed. One can also assign multiple roles to a single instance. This lets one start out with a single ec2 instance (belonging to all roles), and add new instances into the mix as needed to scale specific facets of your deployment, e.g. adding in instances that serve only as an 'app' role to handle increased app server load.
The rubber plugin enables relatively complex multi-instance deployments of RubyOnRails applications to Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). Like capistrano, rubber is role based, so you can define a set of configuration files for a role and then assign that role to as many concrete instances as needed. One can also assign multiple roles to a single instance. This lets one start out with a single ec2 instance (belonging to all roles), and add new instances into the mix as needed to scale specific facets of your deployment, e.g. adding in instances that serve only as an 'app' role to handle increased app server load.
The rubber plugin enables relatively complex multi-instance deployments of RubyOnRails applications to Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). Like capistrano, rubber is role based, so you can define a set of configuration files for a role and then assign that role to as many concrete instances as needed. One can also assign multiple roles to a single instance. This lets one start out with a single ec2 instance (belonging to all roles), and add new instances into the mix as needed to scale specific facets of your deployment, e.g. adding in instances that serve only as an 'app' role to handle increased app server load.
The rubber plugin enables relatively complex multi-instance deployments of RubyOnRails applications to AmazonÕs Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). Like capistrano, rubber is role based, so you can define a set of configuration files for a role and then assign that role to as many concrete instances as needed. One can also assign multiple roles to a single instance. This lets one start out with a single ec2 instance (belonging to all roles), and add new instances into the mix as needed to scale specific facets of your deployment, e.g. adding in instances that serve only as an 'app' role to handle increased app server load.
The rubber plugin enables relatively complex multi-instance deployments of RubyOnRails applications to Amazon's Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2). Like capistrano, rubber is role based, so you can define a set of configuration files for a role and then assign that role to as many concrete instances as needed. One can also assign multiple roles to a single instance. This lets one start out with a single ec2 instance (belonging to all roles), and add new instances into the mix as needed to scale specific facets of your deployment, e.g. adding in instances that serve only as an 'app' role to handle increased app server load.
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