This is a JavaScript Web Framework inspired by Express
Buffers events from a stream until you are ready to handle them.
Analytics Next (aka Analytics 2.0) is the latest version of Segment’s JavaScript SDK - enabling you to send your data to any tool without having to learn, test, or use a new API every time.
This is a tiny and dependency-free web framework for Node.js
React hook for setting State with delay
an opinionated implementation of resque in node
XState for finite state machines
Solana Token Registry
A React hook that allows you to use a ResizeObserver to measure an element's size.
An asynchronous setInterval that is properly delayed using promises and can be delayed on boot
AnyCable Client plugin to support Turbo Streams
A React hook for delaying a value.
Marker.io browser SDK
JavaScript library to make drawing animation on SVG
Database-managed scheduled jobs with admin UI
Snabbdom class module with support for delayed/on-remove class updates
amqplib wrapper for Rabbit MQ
Redis backed Node.js implementation of delayed job
A collection of setTimeout-related function wranglers
Timing Events tied to @colyseus/clock
Analytics Next (aka Analytics 2.0) is the latest version of Dreamdata's JavaScript SDK.
Array manipulation, ordering, searching, summarizing, etc.
AWS credential provider that calls STS assumeRole for temporary AWS credentials
Web Streams, based on the WHATWG spec reference implementation
A Rails engine that provides a simple web interface for exposing the Delayed::Job queue.
Web interface for delayed_job inspired by resque
Probably the best interface for Delayed Job
Web interface for delayed_job inspired by resque
Web interface for delayed_job inspired by resque
resque-retry provides retry, delay and exponential backoff support for resque jobs. Features: * Redis backed retry count/limit. * Retry on all or specific exceptions. * Exponential backoff (varying the delay between retrys). * Multiple failure backend with retry suppression & resque-web tab. * Small & Extendable - plenty of places to override retry logic/settings.
Simple web server and client with adjustable delays for testing timeouts on clients, servers and proxy servers
resque-retry provides retry, delay and exponential backoff support for resque jobs. Features: * Redis backed retry count/limit. * Retry on all or specific exceptions. * Exponential backoff (varying the delay between retrys). * Multiple failure backend with retry suppression & resque-web tab. * Small & Extendable - plenty of places to override retry logic/settings.
Airbrake Ruby is a plain Ruby notifier for Airbrake (https://airbrake.io), the leading exception reporting service. Airbrake Ruby provides minimalist API that enables the ability to send any Ruby exception to the Airbrake dashboard. The library is extremely lightweight and it perfectly suits plain Ruby applications. For apps that are built with Rails, Sinatra or any other Rack-compliant web framework we offer the airbrake gem (https://github.com/airbrake/airbrake). It has additional features such as reporting of any unhandled exceptions automatically, integrations with Resque, Sidekiq, Delayed Job and many more.
Fire and Forget replaces the need to write resque tasks or delayed jobs to fire off web requests (usually notification webhooks or a anti-spam service, like defensio or akismet). A single worker reads and executes web requests from a blocking named pipe, while clients queue up them up in a non blocking manner. It uses typhoeus internally to execute the web requests for maximum speed.
Use GrabzIt to convert HTML or URL's into images, PDF, videos, rendered HTML or DOCX. These captures have highly customizable options include altering quality, delay, size, browser type, geographic location and much more. Additionally GrabzIt can even convert HTML tables on the web into a CSV or Excel spreadsheet. As well as enabling online video's to be converted into animated GIF's.
Imperator is a small gem to help with command objects. The command pattern is a design pattern used to encapsulate all of the information needed to execute a method or process at a point in time. In a web application, commands are typically used to delay execution of a method from the request cycle to a background processor.
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