Module/application for management your disk
Modular disk management tools
Disk management tool for VPS
Light multi-platform disk space checker without third party for Node.js
A simple key/value storage using files to persist the data
Get the first path that exists on disk of multiple paths
sync disk cache
Async disk cache
Compile `using` and `await using` declarations to ES2015
Read and write files atomically and reliably.
Apache Arrow columnar in-memory format
Enforces module path case sensitivity in Webpack
Terminal string styling with tagged template literals
Get the first fulfilled promise that satisfies the provided testing function
Advanced cross-platform operating system monitoring utilities with TypeScript support
Persistent local-disk (and/or memory) adapter for Sails.js / Waterline.
Receive streaming file uploads on your local filesystem.
Local development World implementation for Workflow SDK
A plugin for Expo CLI that provides disk-based app build caching
Unzip cross-platform streaming API
Get total diskspace and free diskspace using bindings around platform specific calls.
Javascript implementation of zip for nodejs with support for electron original-fs. Allows user to create or extract zip files both in memory or to/from disk
Minimalistic and developer friendly middleware and an Upload scalar to add support for GraphQL multipart requests (file uploads via queries and mutations) to various Node.js GraphQL servers.
Poisson disk sampling in arbitrary dimensions
Liberator helps you find and delete files and directories consuming large amounts of space. It uses a curses interface and is ideally suited for *nix servers running without a GUI.
Interactive command line interface for safely managing disks
Internal virtual machine operations application: including Notepad operations, disk management, connectivity testing, drive management, system resource queries, network test, serial test, windows system power management
This package provides reliable messaging and persistent queues for building asynchronous applications in Ruby. It supports transaction processing, message selectors, priorities, delivery semantics, remote queue managers, disk-based and MySQL message stores and more.
Daemon launching and management made dead simple. With daemon-spawn you can start, stop and restart processes that run in the background. Processed are tracked by a simple PID file written to disk. In addition, you can choose to either execute ruby in your daemonized process or 'exec' another process altogether (handy for wrapping other services).
Hitsuji is a library that implements a tree data structure, where each node is represented by a value, points to other values, or performs a function on some values. When the tree is updated, the inputs to the functions will change, hence changing the outputs, eventually propagating the update through the entire tree. Data structures can also be exported to disk, allowing for wide applications of this software, e.g. handling big data, managing content, etc.
Daemon launching and management made dead simple. With daemon-spawn you can start, stop and restart processes that run in the background. Processed are tracked by a simple PID file written to disk. In addition, you can choose to either execute ruby in your daemonized process or 'exec' another process altogether (handy for wrapping other services).
Nesta is a lightweight Content Management System, written in Ruby using the Sinatra web framework. Nesta has the simplicity of a static site generator, but (being a fully fledged Rack application) allows you to serve dynamic content on demand. Content is stored on disk in plain text files (there is no database). Edit your content in a text editor and keep it under version control (most people use git, but any version control system will do fine). Implementing your site's design is easy, but Nesta also has a small selection of themes to choose from.
Very-Simple-Cms is a lightweight Content Management System, written in Ruby using the Ruby on Rails web framework. Very-Simple-Cms has the simplicity of a static site generator, but allows you to serve dynamic content on demand. Content is stored on disk in plain text files (there is no database). Edit your content in a text editor and keep it under version control (most people use git, but any version control system will do fine).
Nesta is a lightweight Content Management System, written in Ruby using the Sinatra web framework. Nesta has the simplicity of a static site generator, but (being a fully fledged Rack application) allows you to serve dynamic content on demand. Content is stored on disk in plain text files (there is no database). Edit your content in a text editor and keep it under version control (most people use git, but any version control system will do fine). Implementing your site's design is easy, but Nesta also has a small selection of themes to choose from.
Paperclip is intended as an easy file attachment library for ActiveRecord. The intent behind it was to keep setup as easy as possible and to treat files as much like other attributes as possible. This means they aren't saved to their final locations on disk, nor are they deleted if set to nil, until ActiveRecord::Base#save is called. It manages validations based on size and presence, if required. It can transform its assigned image into thumbnails if needed, and the prerequisites are as simple as installing ImageMagick (which, for most modern Unix-based systems, is as easy as installing the right packages). Attached files are saved to the filesystem and referenced in the browser by an easily understandable specification, which has sensible and useful defaults.
Ditz is a simple, light-weight distributed issue tracker designed to work with distributed version control systems like git, darcs, Mercurial, and Bazaar. It can also be used with centralized systems like SVN. Ditz maintains an issue database directory on disk, with files written in a line-based and human-editable format. This directory can be kept under version control, alongside project code. Ditz provides a simple, console-based interface for creating and updating the issue database files, and some basic static HTML generation capabilities for producing world-readable status pages (for a demo, see the ditz ditz page). Ditz includes a robust plugin system for adding commands, model fields, and modifying output. See PLUGINS.txt for documentation on the pre-shipped plugins. Ditz currently offers no central public method of bug submission. == USING DITZ There are several different ways to use Ditz: 1. Treat issue change the same as code change: include it as part of commits, and merge it with changes from other developers, resolving conflicts in the usual manner. 2. Keep the issue database in the repository but in a separate branch. Issue changes can be managed by your VCS, but is not tied directly to code commits. 3. Keep the issue database separate and not under VCS at all.
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