Browser process kill, cross platform
kill trees of processes
Kill process running on given port
Easily kill hanging processes on ports - on any platform!
Adds cross-platform `kill` function to spawn-command processes
Fabulously kill processes. Cross-platform.
TypeScript definitions for kill-port
kill trees of processes
Launch latest Edge with the Devtools Protocol port open
Run a process in the background and attach to it
Get all children of a pid
Kill the process running on a given TCP port on Windows, Linux and Mac
Simple streaming wrapper around phantomjs(1)
Add kill method to http server
Launch latest Chrome with the Devtools Protocol port open
Fabulously kill processes. Cross-platform.
Adds cross-platform `kill` function to cross-spawn processes
Cross-platform kill command. Supports recusive/tree-kill in a synchronous manner.
Headed Playwright browser with React DevTools pre-loaded
Lightweight reactive-push and write-behind-cache primitives for Elysia and the AbsoluteJS ecosystem — kill polling and keep a remote store off your hot path, without adopting a whole sync-engine backend.
Run several commands concurrently. Show output for one command at a time. Kill all at once.
It kills a process group. No dependencies. Windows support.
A library for obtaining browser versions with their maximum supported Baseline feature set and Widely Available status.
Simple key-value storage with support for multiple backends
Heel is a small static web server for use when you need a quick web server for a directory. Once the server is running, heel will use (https://rubygems.org/gems/launchy/) to open your browser at the URL of your document root. Run it right now! `gem exec heel` ----- Heel is built using (https://github.com/rack/rack) and (https://puma.io) % heel Launching your browser... Puma starting in single mode... * Puma version: 6.2.1 (ruby 3.2.2-p53) ("Speaking of Now") * Min threads: 0 * Max threads: 5 * Environment: none * PID: 11322 * Listening on http://0.0.0.0:4331 Use Ctrl-C to stop Or run it in the background % heel --daemonize Launching your browser at http://0.0.0.0:4331/ % heel --kill Sending TERM to process 3304 Done.
Clarity - a log search tool By John Tajima & Tobi Lütke Clarity is a Splunk like web interface for your server log files. It supports searching (using grep) as well as trailing log files in realtime. It has been written using the event based architecture based on EventMachine and so allows real-time search of very large log files. If you hit the browser Stop button it will also kill the grep / tail utility. We wrote Clarity to allow our support staff to use a simple interface to look through the various log files in our server farm. The application was such a big success internally that we decided to release it as open source.
Clarity - a log search tool By John Tajima & Tobi Lütke Clarity is a Splunk like web interface for your server log files. It supports searching (using grep) as well as trailing log files in realtime. It has been written using the event based architecture based on EventMachine and so allows real-time search of very large log files. If you hit the browser Stop button it will also kill the grep / tail utility. We wrote Clarity to allow our support staff to use a simple interface to look through the various log files in our server farm. The application was such a big success internally that we decided to release it as open source.
Clarity - a log search tool By John Tajima & Tobi Lütke Clarity is a Splunk like web interface for your server log files. It supports searching (using grep) as well as trailing log files in realtime. It has been written using the event based architecture based on EventMachine and so allows real-time search of very large log files. If you hit the browser Stop button it will also kill the grep / tail utility. We wrote Clarity to allow our support staff to use a simple interface to look through the various log files in our server farm. The application was such a big success internally that we decided to release it as open source.