Qas Driver
WebSocket protocol handler with pluggable I/O
OpenTelemetry instrumentation for `cassandra-driver` database client library for Apache Cassandra
Base driver class for Appium drivers
UiAutomator2 integration for Appium
Internal set of utilities and types for Prisma's driver adapters.
Prisma's driver adapter for "pg"
Microsoft SQL Server client for Node.js.
The official MongoDB driver for Node.js
Android UiAutomator and Chrome support for Appium
Appium driver for iOS using XCUITest for backend
The official Neo4j driver for Javascript
Implements the connection with the Neo4j Database using the Bolt Protocol
Node.js driver for Snowflake
Internals of neo4j-driver
Appium driver for Safari browser
Applitools universal framework wrapper
Appium driver for Chromium-based browsers that work with Chromedriver
Apache Cassandra Node.js Driver
The Node.js driver for working with Amazon Quantum Ledger Database
Appium driver for Gecko-based browsers and web views
Prisma's driver adapter for better-sqlite3, a fast SQLite3 driver for JavaScript runtimes
Normalized SQL driver error types for Prisma Next
The official WebDriver JavaScript bindings from the Selenium project
== About Sequel adapter for OpenEdge RDBMS. Can use ODBC/JDBC drivers provided by DataDirect, bundled with OpenEdge or from client networking installation. See project readme for details.
== Ruby Data Objects If you're building something in Ruby that needs access to a database, you may opt to use an ORM like ActiveRecord, DataMapper or Sequel. But if your needs don't fit well with an ORM—maybe you're even writing an ORM—then you'll need some other way of talking to your database. RDO provides a common interface to a number of RDBMS backends, using a clean Ruby syntax, while supporting all the functionality you'd expect from a robust database connection library: * Consistent API to connect to various DBMS's * Type casting to Ruby types * Time zone handling (via the DBMS, not via some crazy time logic in Ruby) * Native bind values parameterization of queries, where supported by the DBMS * Retrieve query info from executed commands (e.g. affected rows) * Access RETURNING values just like any read query * Native prepared statements where supported, emulated where not * Results given using simple core Ruby data types == RDBMS Support Support for each RDBMS is provided in separate gems, so as to minimize the installation requirements and to facilitate the maintenace of each driver. Many gems are maintained by separate users who work more closely with those RDBMS's. Due to the nature of this gem, most of the nitty-gritty code is actually written in C. See the official README for full details.
= sinatra-mongo Extends Sinatra with an extension method for dealing with monogodb using the ruby driver. Install it with gem: $ gem install sinatra-mongo Now we can use it an example application. require 'sinatra' require 'sinatra/mongo' # Specify the database to use. Defaults to mongo://localhost:27017/default, # so you will almost definitely want to change this. # # Alternatively, you can specify the MONGO_URL as an environment variable set :mongo, 'mongo://localhost:27017/sinatra-mongo-example' # At this point, you can access the Mongo::Database object using the 'mongo' helper: puts mongo["testCollection"].insert {"name" => "MongoDB", "type" => "database", "count" => 1, "info" => {"x" => 203, "y" => '102'}} get '/' do mongo["testCollection"].find_one end If you need to use authentication, you can specify this in the mongo uri: set :mongo, 'mongo://myuser:mypass@localhost:27017/sinatra-mongo-example' == Mongo Reference * http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Ruby+Tutorial == Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project. * Make your feature addition or bug fix. * Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally. * Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull) * Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches. == Copyright Copyright (c) 2009 Joshua Nichols. See LICENSE for details.
= sinatra-mongo Extends Sinatra with an extension method for dealing with monogodb using the ruby driver. Install it with gem: $ gem install sinatra-mongo Now we can use it an example application. require 'sinatra' require 'sinatra/mongo' # Specify the database to use. Defaults to mongo://localhost:27017/default, # so you will almost definitely want to change this. # # Alternatively, you can specify the MONGO_URL as an environment variable set :mongo, 'mongo://localhost:27017/sinatra-mongo-example' # At this point, you can access the Mongo::Database object using the 'mongo' helper: puts mongo["testCollection"].insert {"name" => "MongoDB", "type" => "database", "count" => 1, "info" => {"x" => 203, "y" => '102'}} get '/' do mongo["testCollection"].find_one end If you need to use authentication, you can specify this in the mongo uri: set :mongo, 'mongo://myuser:mypass@localhost:27017/sinatra-mongo-example' == Mongo Reference * http://www.mongodb.org/display/DOCS/Ruby+Tutorial == Note on Patches/Pull Requests * Fork the project. * Make your feature addition or bug fix. * Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally. * Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull) * Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches. == Copyright Copyright (c) 2009 Joshua Nichols. See LICENSE for details.
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