a negotiator for the accept-headers
WebSocket protocol handler with pluggable I/O
NTLM single-sign-on for Node.js. Only Windows OS supported.
The fastest http(s) client (and much more) for Node.js - Node.js bindings for libcurl
Generic extension manager for WebSocket connections
Express middleware to handle negotiate authentication
Passport strategy for Kerberos authentication.
Content negotiation for Next.js - serve Markdown to LLMs, HTML to browsers, from a single URL
Streaming TFTP client and server
NTLM authentication plugin for Cypress
RFC-aware HTTP media type negotiator - parses and normalises Accept headers and media types (RFC 9110), supports q-value ranking, wildcard matching, and a permissive mode for real-world headers.
An error-first callback friendly user agent.
Clinch Protocol CLI — agent negotiation from your terminal
Boclips Keycloak Wrapper
Dataspace Control Plane service implementation for Eclipse Dataspace Protocol Transfer Process Protocol
JavaScript HTML-to-Markdown engine for mdream. Escape hatch for hooks and edge runtimes.
A Connect/Express style middleware for negotiating notification protocols
JavaScript framework for SASL authentication.
minimal implementation of a PassThrough stream
An HTTP(s) proxy `http.Agent` implementation for HTTP
A query library for ECMAScript AST using a CSS selector like query language.
Provides a way to make requests
Create HTTP error objects
Enables authenticating with Steam
An implementation of Gisle Aas's HTTP::Negotiate
Parse and build Accept, Accept-Language, Accept-Encoding, Authorization, Cache-Control, Content-Type, Cookie, Link, CORS, Forwarded, and Via HTTP headers. Includes content negotiation and security header generation.
Given an HTTP Accept header and a set of available content types, this gem will tell you what to do.
A ruby library that does content negotiation and parses and sorts http accept headers. Adheres to RFC 2616.
This gem provides bindings to the Win32 SSPI libraries, primarily to support Negotiate (i.e. SPNEGO, NTLM) authentication with a proxy server. Enough support is implemented to provide the necessary support for the authentication. A module is also provided which overrides Net::HTTP and adds support for Negotiate authentication to it. This implies that open-uri automatically gets support for it, as long as the http_proxy environment variable is set.
Manages persistent connections using Net::HTTP including a thread pool for connecting to multiple hosts. Using persistent HTTP connections can dramatically increase the speed of HTTP. Creating a new HTTP connection for every request involves an extra TCP round-trip and causes TCP congestion avoidance negotiation to start over. Net::HTTP supports persistent connections with some API methods but does not make setting up a single persistent connection or managing multiple connections easy. Net::HTTP::Persistent wraps Net::HTTP and allows you to focus on how to make HTTP requests.
Server Interface for PubliSci
Checks negotiated TLS key exchange groups for RubyGems gem-server HTTPS connections.
Manages persistent connections using Net::HTTP. It's thread-safe too! Using persistent HTTP connections can dramatically increase the speed of HTTP. Creating a new HTTP connection for every request involves an extra TCP round-trip and causes TCP congestion avoidance negotiation to start over. Net::HTTP supports persistent connections with some API methods but does not handle reconnection gracefully. Net::HTTP::Persistent supports reconnection and retry according to RFC 2616.
Manages persistent connections using Net::HTTP plus a speed fix for Ruby 1.8. It's thread-safe too! Using persistent HTTP connections can dramatically increase the speed of HTTP. Creating a new HTTP connection for every request involves an extra TCP round-trip and causes TCP congestion avoidance negotiation to start over. Net::HTTP supports persistent connections with some API methods but does not handle reconnection gracefully. Net::HTTP::Persistent supports reconnection and retry according to RFC 2616.
Manages persistent connections using Net::HTTP plus a speed fix for Ruby 1.8. It's thread-safe too! Using persistent HTTP connections can dramatically increase the speed of HTTP. Creating a new HTTP connection for every request involves an extra TCP round-trip and causes TCP congestion avoidance negotiation to start over. Net::HTTP supports persistent connections with some API methods but does not handle reconnection gracefully. Net::HTTP::Persistent supports reconnection and retry according to RFC 2616.
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