A PNG decoder in JavaScript
Safer Node.js Buffer API
Modern Buffer API polyfill without footguns
A PNG decoder in JS
Node.js Buffer API, for the browser
smart-buffer is a Buffer wrapper that adds automatic read & write offset tracking, string operations, data insertions, and more.
Read and parse a YAML file.
Get the byte length of an ArrayBuffer, even in engines without a `.byteLength` method.
Get the ArrayBuffer out of a TypedArray, robustly.
A port of the Brotli compression algorithm as used in WOFF2
Is this value a JS ArrayBuffer?
Reads / writes floats / doubles from / to buffers in both modern and ancient browsers.
Detect the file type of a file, stream, or data
A [ponyfill](https://ponyfill.com) for `Buffer.from`, uses native implementation if available.
Is this value a JS SharedArrayBuffer?
Get the ArrayBuffer out of a DataView, robustly.
Determine if an object is a Buffer
Pass in a string, array, Buffer, Data View, or Uint8Array, and get a Buffer back.
JSON parse & stringify that supports binary via bops & base64
A pure javascript CRC32 algorithm that plays nice with binary data
Convert a typed array to a Buffer without a copy
minimal implementation of a PassThrough stream
Read/write IEEE754 floating point numbers from/to a Buffer or array-like object
MMD parser
Crate for loading data into a fixed-sized buffer. Similar to BufRead, but allowing static or dynamic sizes, and no_std use.
Tmux MCP server in Rust
Terminal-based clipboard manager
FileBuffer Gem
Combine buffer output data to cut-down net-i/o load
PostgreSQL Cursor is an extension to the ActiveRecord PostgreSQLAdapter for very large result sets. It provides a cursor open/fetch/close interface to access data without loading all rows into memory, and instead loads the result rows in 'chunks' (default of 1_000 rows), buffers them, and returns the rows one at a time.
Ruby bindings for archive_r, a libarchive-based library for processing many archive formats. It streams entry data directly from the source to recursively read nested archives without extracting to temporary files or loading large in-memory buffers.
NLog is a logging platform for .NET with rich log routing and management capabilities. It can help you produce and manage high-quality logs for your application regardless of its size or complexity. It uses familar logger pattern known from log4xxx. NLog is very easy to use and configure, both through Configuration File and programmatically at runtime. Advanced routing options include buffering, asynchronous logging, load balancing, failover, and more.
E11y (Easy Telemetry) - Observability for Rails developers who hate noise. UNIQUE FEATURES: • Request-scoped debug buffering - buffers debug logs in memory, flushes ONLY on errors • Zero-config SLO tracking - automatic Service Level Objectives for HTTP endpoints and jobs • Schema-validated events - catch bugs before production with dry-schema DEVELOPER EXPERIENCE: • Minimal setup — one config block, works with stdout out of the box • Auto-metrics from events (no manual Yabeda.increment) • Rails-first design (follows Rails conventions) • Pluggable adapters (Loki, Sentry, OpenTelemetry, custom backends) COST SAVINGS: • Reduce log storage costs by 90% (request-scoped buffering) • Replace expensive APM SaaS ($500-5k/month → infra costs only) • Own your observability data (no vendor lock-in) PRODUCTION-READY: • Thread-safe for multi-threaded Rails + Sidekiq • Adaptive sampling (error-based, load-based, value-based) • PII filtering (GDPR-compliant masking/hashing) • Performance optimized (hash-based events, minimal allocations) Perfect for Rails 7.0+ teams who need observability without complexity or high costs.
Lookout-Rake Lookout-Rake provides Rake¹ tasks for testing using Lookout. ¹ See http://rake.rubyforge.org/ § Installation Install Lookout-Rake with % gem install lookout-rake § Usage Include the following code in your ‹Rakefile›: require 'lookout-rake-3.0' Lookout::Rake::Tasks::Test.new If the ‹:default› task hasn’t been defined it’ll be set to depend on the ‹:test› task. The ‹:check› task will also depend on the ‹:test› task. There’s also a ‹:test:coverage› task that gets defined that uses the coverage library that comes with Ruby 1.9 to check the test coverage when the tests are run. You can hook up your test task to use your Inventory¹: load File.expand_path('../lib/library-X.0/version.rb', __FILE__) Lookout::Rake::Tasks::Test.new :inventory => Library::Version Also, if you use the tasks that come with Inventory-Rake², the test task will hook into the inventory you tell them to use automatically, that is, the following will do: load File.expand_path('../lib/library-X.0/version.rb', __FILE__) Inventory::Rake::Tasks.define Library::Version Lookout::Rake::Tasks::Test.new For further usage information, see the {API documentation}³. ¹ Inventory: http://disu.se/software/inventory/ ² Inventory-Rake: http://disu.se/software/inventory-rake/ ³ API: http://disu.se/software/lookout-rake/api/Lookout/Rake/Tasks/Test/ § Integration To use Lookout together with Vim¹, place ‹contrib/rakelookout.vim› in ‹~/.vim/compiler› and add compiler rakelookout to ‹~/.vim/after/ftplugin/ruby.vim›. Executing ‹:make› from inside Vim will now run your tests and an errors and failures can be visited with ‹:cnext›. Execute ‹:help quickfix› for additional information. Another useful addition to your ‹~/.vim/after/ftplugin/ruby.vim› file may be nnoremap <buffer> <silent> <Leader>M <Esc>:call <SID>run_test()<CR> let b:undo_ftplugin .= ' | nunmap <buffer> <Leader>M' function! s:run_test() let test = expand('%') let line = 'LINE=' . line('.') if test =~ '^lib/' let test = substitute(test, '^lib/', 'test/', '') let line = "" endif execute 'make' 'TEST=' . shellescape(test) line endfunction Now, pressing ‹<Leader>M› will either run all tests for a given class, if the implementation file is active, or run the test at or just before the cursor, if the test file is active. This is useful if you’re currently receiving a lot of errors and/or failures and want to focus on those associated with a specific class or on a specific test. ¹ Find out more about Vim at http://www.vim.org/ § Financing Currently, most of my time is spent at my day job and in my rather busy private life. Please motivate me to spend time on this piece of software by donating some of your money to this project. Yeah, I realize that requesting money to develop software is a bit, well, capitalistic of me. But please realize that I live in a capitalistic society and I need money to have other people give me the things that I need to continue living under the rules of said society. So, if you feel that this piece of software has helped you out enough to warrant a reward, please PayPal a donation to now@disu.se¹. Thanks! Your support won’t go unnoticed! ¹ Send a donation: https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_donations&business=now%40disu%2ese&item_name=Nikolai%20Weibull%20Software%20Services § Reporting Bugs Please report any bugs that you encounter to the {issue tracker}¹. ¹ See https://github.com/now/lookout-rake/issues § Authors Nikolai Weibull wrote the code, the tests, the manual pages, and this README.
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