React component to run Mocha tests on-the-fly on live code edits.
Get the first fulfilled promise that satisfies the provided testing function
Tooling to test ESLint rules
A simple NodeJS gmail client which checks the inbox for specific message existence
Utilities for testing babel plugins
Give a regex, get a robust predicate function that tests it against a string.
ESLint plugin to follow best practices and anticipate common mistakes when writing tests with Testing Library
a ThroughStream that strictly buffers all readable events when paused.
ESLint rule tester with Vitest
ExTester is a package that is designed to help you run UI tests for your Visual Studio Code extensions using selenium-webdriver.
Compliance tests for textlint's AST(Abstract Syntax Tree).
testing tool for textlint rule.
Page Object API implementation for a VS Code editor used by ExTester framework.
Quick and dirty smtp server, that accepts handlers to process messages
Pluggable Page Objects locators for an ExTester framework.
A npm package to simplify testing react application using msal-react
Tool for running ESLint on multiple repositories
Shared repositories for eslint-remote-tester.config.js
Node.js library that validates an AWS SNS payload of an HTTP/S POST or Lambda.
Unit/Integration tests for AWS Lambda handlers
A WebdriverIO plugin to fetch e-mails from Google Mail
TypeScript definition testing library
Default code highlighter for HonKit
TypeScript definitions for lambda-tester
Heckle is unit test sadism(tm) at it's core. Heckle is a mutation tester. It modifies your code and runs your tests to make sure they fail. The idea is that if code can be changed and your tests don't notice, either that code isn't being covered or it doesn't do anything. It's like hiring a white-hat hacker to try to break into your server and making sure you detect it. You learn the most by trying to break things and watching the outcome in an act of unit test sadism.
Arachni is a feature-full, modular, high-performance Ruby framework aimed towards helping penetration testers and administrators evaluate the security of web applications. It is smart, it trains itself by monitoring and learning from the web application's behavior during the scan process and is able to perform meta-analysis using a number of factors in order to correctly assess the trustworthiness of results and intelligently identify (or avoid) false-positives. Unlike other scanners, it takes into account the dynamic nature of web applications, can detect changes caused while travelling through the paths of a web application’s cyclomatic complexity and is able to adjust itself accordingly. This way, attack/input vectors that would otherwise be undetectable by non-humans can be handled seamlessly. Moreover, due to its integrated browser environment, it can also audit and inspect client-side code, as well as support highly complicated web applications which make heavy use of technologies such as JavaScript, HTML5, DOM manipulation and AJAX. Finally, it is versatile enough to cover a great deal of use cases, ranging from a simple command line scanner utility, to a global high performance grid of scanners, to a Ruby library allowing for scripted audits, to a multi-user multi-scan web collaboration platform.
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