`detect-file-content` will detect file content string intervally.
Detects if a file exists and returns the resolved filepath.
Detect the indentation of code
A JavaScript parser built from the Hermes engine
Detect the dominant newline character of a string
Improved typeof detection for node.js and the browser.
Detect Node.JS (as opposite to browser environment). ESM modification
Detect the indentation of code (commonjs fork)
Package manager detector
Charset Detector - Detect the encoding and language of text files - Use it in the browser, with Node.js, or via CLI
Node.js module to detect the C standard library (libc) implementation family and version
Node.js implementation of port detector
Small utility library that check if a new file content can be merged safely in the on-disk existing file.
Unpack a browser type and version from the useragent string
Create a security plugin for node.js
Classify GPU's based on their benchmark score in order to provide an adaptive experience.
detect available port
Detect which package manager you're using (yarn or npm)
Analyze the exported API for a TypeScript library and generate reviews, documentation, and .d.ts rollups
Detect device type and render your component according to it
Library will help you to detect if the locale is right-to-left language.
Convert and detect character encoding in JavaScript
Detect if the browser supports passive events
Detect the file type of a file, stream, or data
FileTypeDetector is a Ruby gem that provides functionality for determining the type of a file based on its extension or content.
ace-search gives one command that auto-detects file vs content search, with preset support and git-aware filtering
Detect MIME types from file extensions, filenames, and binary content using magic byte signatures. Includes 200+ extension mappings, 30+ magic byte patterns, custom registration, charset detection, Accept header parsing, and content negotiation.
Provides MIME detection magic based on file contents - nothing more.
Build and parse multipart/form-data request bodies with a clean DSL for adding text fields and file uploads, including automatic MIME type detection, IO streaming, boundary generation, and content type headers.
Copyleaks detects plagiarism and checks content distribution online. Use Copyleaks to find out if textual content is original and if it has been used before. With Copyleaks cloud publishers, academics, and more can scan files (pdf, doc, docx, ocr...), URLs and free text for plagiarism check.
This gem allows you to detect the encoding of strings/files based on their content. This can be useful if you need to load data from sources with unknown encodings. The gem uses character distribution statistics to check which encoding is the one that gives you the best results.
Contentful API wrapper library exposing an ActiveRecord-like interface
This library performs diffs of CSV data, or any table-like source. Unlike a standard diff that compares line by line, and is sensitive to the ordering of records, CSV-Diff identifies common lines by key field(s), and then compares the contents of the fields in each line. Data may be supplied in the form of CSV files, or as an array of arrays. The diff process provides a fine level of control over what to diff, and can optionally ignore certain types of changes (e.g. changes in position). CSV-Diff is particularly well suited to data in parent-child format. Parent- child data does not lend itself well to standard text diffs, as small changes in the organisation of the tree at an upper level can lead to big movements in the position of descendant records. By instead matching records by key, CSV-Diff avoids this issue, while still being able to detect changes in sibling order. This gem implements the core diff algorithm, and handles the loading and diffing of CSV files (or Arrays of Arrays). It also supports converting data in XML format into tabular form, so that it can then be processed like any other CSV or table-like source. It returns a CSVDiff object containing the details of differences in object form. This is useful for projects that need diff capability, but want to handle the reporting or actioning of differences themselves. For a pre-built diff reporting capability, see the csv-diff-report gem, which provides a command-line tool for generating diff reports in HTML, Excel, or text formats.
# SecureDataBag / Knife Secure Bag Knife Secure Bag provides a consistent interface to DataBagItem, EncryptedDataBagItem as well as the custom created SecureDataBagItem while also providing a few extra handy features to help in your DataBag workflows. SecureDataBagItem, can not only manage your existing DataBagItems and EncryptedDataBagItems, but it also provides you with a DataBag type which enables you to selectively encrypt only some of the fields in your DataBag thus allowing you to be able to search for the remaining fields. ## Installation To build and install the plugin add it your Gemfile or run: ```shell gem install secure_data_bag ``` ## Configuration #### Knife Secure Bag Defaults for the Knife command may be provided in your _knife.rb_ file. ```ruby knife[:secure_data_bag][:encrypted_keys] = %w( password ssh_keys ssh_ids public_keys private_keys keys secret ) knife[:secure_data_bag][:secret_file] = "#{local_dir}/secret.pem" knife[:secure_data_bag][:export_root] = "#{kitchen_dir}/data_bags" knife[:secure_data_bag][:export_on_upload] = true knife[:secure_data_bag][:defaults][:secrets][:export_format] = 'plain' ``` To break this up: `knife[:secure_data_bag][:encrypted_keys] = []` When Knife Secure Bag encrypts a hash with an _encryption format_ of *nested*, it will recursively walk through the hash from the bottom up and encrypt any key found within this array. `knife[:secure_data_bag][:secret_file]` When encryption is required, the shared secret found at this location will be loaded. `knife[:secure_data_bag][:export_root]` When exporting a data\_bag\_item, files will be created in below this root directory. Typically this would be the data\_bag folder located within your kitchen. `knife[:secure_data_bag][:export_on_upload]` When a data\_bag\_item is edited using `knife secure bag edit`, it may be automatically exported to the _export\_root_. `knife[:secure_data_bag][:defaults][:secrets][:export_format]` The configuration file additionally supports the _defaults_ hash which provides default values for all _command line arguments_ that one might use. Of all of them only the _export\_format_ key is likely to be of much use. ## Examples #### Chef cookbook recipe ```ruby metadata = {} # Define the keys we wish to encrypt metadata[:encrypted_keys] = %w(encoded) # Optionally load a specific shared secret. Otherwise, the global # encrypted\_data\_bag\_secret will be automatically used. secret_key = SecureDataBagItem.load_key("/path/to/secret") # Create a hash of data to use as an exampe raw_data = { id: "item", data_bag: "data_bag", encoded: "my string", unencoded: "other string" } # Instantiate a SecureDataBagItem from a hash item = SecureDataBagItem.from_hash(data, metadata) # Or more explicitely item = SecureDataBagItem.from_hash(data, encrypted_keys: %w(encoded)) # Or load from server item = SecureDataBagItem.load("data_bag", "item") # Print the un-encrypted raw data pp item.raw_data # Print the un-encrypted `encoded` key pp item['encoded'] # Print the encrypted hash as a data_bag_item hash pp item.to_hash =begin { id: "item", data_bag: "data_bag", encoded: { encrypted_data: "encoded", cipher: aes-256-cbc, iv: 13453453dkgfefg== version: 1 } unencoded: "other string", } =end ``` ## Usage #### Knife commands Print an DataBagItem, EncryptedDataBagItem or SecureDataBagItem, auto-detecting the encryption method used as plain text. ```shell knife secure bag show -F js secrets secret_item ``` Print an DataBagItem, EncryptedDataBagItem or SecureDataBagItem, auto-detecting the encryption method used as a SecureDataBagItem in encrypted format. ```shell knife secure bag show -F js secrets secret_item --enc-format nested ``` Edit an EncryptedDataBagItem, preserve it's encryption type, and export a copy to the _data\_bag_ folder in your kitchen. ```shell knife secure bag edit secrets secret_item --export ``` ## Knife SubCommands Most of the SubCommands support the following command-line options: `--enc-format [plain,encrypted,nested]` Ensure that, when displaying or uploading the data\_bag\_item, we forcibly encrypt the data\_bag\_item using the specified format instead of preserving the existing format. In this case: - plain: refers to a DataBagItem - encrypted: refers to an EnrytpedDataBagItem - nested: refers to a SecureDataBagItem `--dec-format [plain,encrypted,nested]` Attempt to decrypt the data\_bag\_item using the given format rather than the auto-detected one. The only real reason to use this is when you wish to specifically select _plain_ as the format so as to not decrypt the item. `--enc-keys key1,key2,key3` Provide a comma delimited list of hash keys which should be encrypted when encrypting the data\_bag\_item. This list will be concatenated with any key names listed in the configuration file or which were previously encrypted. `--export` Export the data\_bag\_item to json file in either of _export-format_ or _enc-format_. `--export-format` Overrides the encryption format only for the _export_ feature. `--export-root` Root directly under which a folder should exist for each _data_bag_ into which to export _data_bag_items_ as json files. When displaying the content of the _data\_bag\_item_, an additional key of *_secure_metadata* will be added to the output which contains gem specific metadata such as the encryption formats and any encrypted keys found. This key will _not_ be saved with the item, however it may be manipulated to alter the behavior of the _edit_ or _export_ commands. #### knife secure bag show DATA_BAG ITEM This command functions just like `knife data bag show` and is used to print out the content of either a DataBagItem, EncryptedDataBagItem or SecureDataBagItem. By default, it will auto-detect the Item type, and print it's unencrypted version to the terminal. This behavior, however, may be altered using the previously mentioned command line options. #### knife secure bag open PATH This commands functions much like `knife secure bag show`, however it is designed to load a _data\_bag\_item_ from disk as opposed to loading it from Chef server. This may be of use when view the content of an exported encrypted file. #### knife secure bag edit DATA_BAG DATA_BAG_ITEM This command functions just like `knife data bag edit` and is used to edit either a DataBagItem, EncryptedDataBagItem or a SecureDataBagItem. It supports all of the same options as `knife secure bag show`. #### knife secure bag from file DATA_BAG PATH This command functions just like `knife data bag from file` and is used to upload either a DataBagItem, EncryptedDataBagItem or a SecureDataBagItem. It supports all of the same options as `knife secure bag show`. ## Recipe DSL The gem additionally provides a few Recipe DSL methods which may be useful. ```ruby load_secure_item = secure_data_bag_item( data_bag_name, data_bag_item, cache: false ) load_plain_item = data_bag_item(data_bag_name, data_bag_item) convert_plain_to_secure = secure_data_bag_item!(load_plain_item) ```
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