facttest matlab
fact test module
node's assert.deepEqual algorithm except for NaN being equal to NaN
A JavaScript library that breaks strings into their individual user-perceived characters (including emojis!)
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Tap plugin that adds a heaping pile of assertion methods. Pretty much all of the "test" methods other than `t.pass`, `t.fail`, and [snapshot methods](https://tapjs.github.io/tapjs/modules/_tapjs_snapshot.html) come from this plugin.
Resolve a nested selector in a PostCSS AST
A testing utility for nest-commander. It builds on top of ideas from @nestjs/testing and is not tied to any test framework directly.
A superset of the JSDOM environment for Jest that respects Node.js globals.
Parse CSS and add vendor prefixes to CSS rules using values from the Can I Use website
The citeproc-js citation formatting module, in CommonJS format. This version is based on citeproc-js 1.4.63
Cypress's fork of the simplified HTTP request client 'request' with Promise support. Powered by Bluebird.
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Seamless REST/GraphQL API mocking library for browser and Node.js.
MongoDB Shell Async Rewriter Package
Is this JS value callable? Works with Functions and GeneratorFunctions, despite ES6 @@toStringTag.
ECL Fact & Figures
AWS region information, such as service principal names
Helpers for generating and transforming key material
This project demonstrates a basic Hardhat use case. It comes with a sample contract, a test for that contract, and a script that deploys that contract.
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TON transaction emulator
An event-sourcing toolkit for Node and MongoDB
Convert JUnit XML format to JSON
Factis is a simple DSL for tracking state and such in your tests without muddying up the global object space.
Using new `on_unsupported_os` method you can get a number of random provided OS's with their factsto be used in rspec-puppet tests
Sample factsets for puppet testing. A factset is a representative sample of the set of facts for a particular OS
Octofacts provides fact fixtures built from recently-updated Puppet facts to rspec-puppet tests.
For when the reality of your tests is just too much to bear, turn your failures into fake news and errors into alt-facts, or golf. == Features/Problems: * Turns failures into Fake News. * Turns errors into Alt-Facts. * Turns skips into Golf. * May alter your perception of reality, and not for the better.
== DESCRIPTION: Puppet Provisioner for Test Kitchen == FEATURES: Supports puppet apply, puppet agent, puppet bolt, hiera, hiera-eyaml, hiera-eyaml-gpg, custom facts, librarian-puppet, puppet collections
Octocatalog-Diff assists with Puppet development and testing by enabling the user to compile 2 Puppet catalogs and compare them. It is possible to compare different branches, different versions, and different fact values. This is intended to be run from a local development environment or in CI.
This gem removes common margin from indented strings, such as the ones produced by indented heredocs. In other words, it strips out leading whitespace chars at the beggining of each line, but only as much as the line with the smallest margin. It is acknowledged that many strings defined by heredocs are just code and fact is that most parsers are insensitive to indentation. If, however, the strings are to be used otherwise, be it for printing or testing, the extra indentation will probably be an issue and hence this gem.
`fingerpuppet` is a simple library and commandline tool to interact with Puppet's REST API without needing to have Puppet itself installed. This may be integrated, for example, into a provisioning tool to allow your provisioning process to remotely sign certificates of newly built systems. Alternatively, you could use it to request known facts about a node from your Puppet Master, or even to request a catalog for a node to, for example, perform acceptance testing against a new version of Puppet before upgrading your production master. Install the binford2k/fingerpuppet puppet module to get a class that can automatically configure your `auth.conf` file under Puppet Enterprise, where that file is managed.
WWMD was originally intended to provide a console helper tool for conducting web application security assessments (which is something I find myself doing alot of). I've spent alot of time and had alot of success writing application specific fuzzers + scrapers to test with. WWMD provides a base of useful code to help you work with web sites both in IRB and by writing scripts that can be as generic or as application specific as you choose. There's alot of helpful stuff crammed in here and its usage has evolved alot. It's not intended to replace, remove or be better than any of the tools you currently use. In fact, WWMD works best *with* the tools you currently use to get stuff done. You get convenience methods for getting, scraping, spidering, decoding, decrypting and munging user inputs, pages and web applications. It doesn't try to be smart. That's up to you. What's here is the basic framework for getting started. There's a raft of cookbook scripts and examples that are coming soon so make sure you check the wiki regularly.
WWMD was originally intended to provide a console helper tool for conducting web application security assessments (which is something I find myself doing alot of). I've spent alot of time and had alot of success writing application specific fuzzers + scrapers to test with. WWMD provides a base of useful code to help you work with web sites both in IRB and by writing scripts that can be as generic or as application specific as you choose. There's alot of helpful stuff crammed in here and its usage has evolved alot. It's not intended to replace, remove or be better than any of the tools you currently use. In fact, WWMD works best *with* the tools you currently use to get stuff done. You get convenience methods for getting, scraping, spidering, decoding, decrypting and munging user inputs, pages and web applications. It doesn't try to be smart. That's up to you. What's here is the basic framework for getting started. There's a raft of cookbook scripts and examples that are coming soon so make sure you check the wiki regularly.
WWMD was originally intended to provide a console helper tool for conducting web application security assessments (which is something I find myself doing alot of). I've spent alot of time and had alot of success writing application specific fuzzers + scrapers to test with. WWMD provides a base of useful code to help you work with web sites both in IRB and by writing scripts that can be as generic or as application specific as you choose. There's alot of helpful stuff crammed in here and its usage has evolved alot. It's not intended to replace, remove or be better than any of the tools you currently use. In fact, WWMD works best *with* the tools you currently use to get stuff done. You get convenience methods for getting, scraping, spidering, decoding, decrypting and munging user inputs, pages and web applications. It doesn't try to be smart. That's up to you. What's here is the basic framework for getting started. There's a raft of cookbook scripts and examples that are coming soon so make sure you check the wiki regularly.
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