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DOM trap for a focus
It is a trap! (for a focus)
A mutex for guarding async workflows
A inter-process and inter-machine lockfile utility that works on a local or network file system
provides locking mechanism to sync across browser tabs
Lock on asynchronous code
TypeScript definitions for async-lock
Mutex locks for async functions
React focus lock for all Chakra components
Enables body scroll locking (for iOS Mobile and Tablet, Android, desktop Safari/Chrome/Firefox) without breaking scrolling of a target element (eg. modal/lightbox/flyouts/nav-menus)
Simple lock class
lock asynchronous resources.
Throttle the parallelism of an asynchronous (promise returning) function / functions
mutex lock for javascript
🔐Body scroll locking that just works with everything
It is a trap! (for a focus)
Get accurate and well named css box model information about an Element 📦
Tool to convert a pnpm-lock.yaml into a package-lock.json
Implements Lock and RWLock synchronization primitives.
The Screen Orientation API provides methods to lock and unlock the screen orientation.
Mutex locks for async functions with functionality to use keys for separate locks
TypeScript definitions for dom-screen-wake-lock
Enables body scroll locking (for iOS Mobile and Tablet, Android, desktop Safari/Chrome/Firefox) without breaking scrolling of a target element (eg. modal/lightbox/flyouts/nav-menus)
Deploy your rails application to AWS with `rake deploy`. This ruby / rails gem was created by Charlie Reese (charliereese.ca/about) for Clientelify. It creates AWS infrastructure for your rails application and deploys it in 5 steps (3 installation steps and 2 rake tasks). It is free to use. Out of the box, terra_boi provides remote state locking, load-balancing, simple scaling, zero-downtime deployments, CloudWatch logging, DBs, and S3 buckets for multiple infrastructure environments: by default, terra_boi creates staging and prod environments for your web app.
== E9Tags An extension to ActsAsTaggableOn[http://github.com/mbleigh/acts-as-taggable-on] which "improves" on custom tagging, or at least makes it more dynamic. Additionally it provides some autocomplete rack apps and the corresponding javascript. == Installation 1. E9Tags requires jquery and jquery-ui for the autocompletion and tag-adding form, be sure they're loaded in your pages where the tags form will be rendered. 2. E9Tags extends ActsAsTaggableOn and requires it. Run it's generator if you have not. 3. Run the E9Tags install script to copy over the required JS rails g e9_tags:install 4. Then make sure it is loaded, how you do that doesn't matter, e.g. <%= javascript_include_tag 'e9_tags' %> 5. Create an initializer for that sets up the taggable models and their controllers. This gives the models the tag associations and methods and prepares their controller to handle the otherwise unexpected tag params. require 'e9_tags' require 'contacts_controller' require 'contact' E9Tags.controllers << ContactsController E9Tags.models << Contact OR You can just include the modules in your classes yourself. The first way really exists for the case where the classes you wish to extend are part of another plugin/gem. # in contact.rb include E9Tags:Model # in contacts_controller.rb include E9Tags::Controller 6. Render the tags form partial in whatever model forms require it. = render 'e9_tags/form', :f => f If you pass a context, it will be locked and no longer possible to change/add the contexts on the form (and as a side effect, the tags autocompletion will be restricted to that context). = render 'e9_tags/form', :f => f, :context => :users Finally if you pass a 2nd arg to :context you can set a tag context to be "private" (default is false). In this case the tag context will be locked as private (typically suffixed with *), meaning that the tags will not be publicly searchable/visible. This is useful for organizational tags tags, say if you wanted to arbitrarily group records, or create a custom search based on a tag context. = render 'e9_tags/form', :f => f, :context => [:users, true] NOTE: The form and javascript are intended to work out of the box, but the certainly aren't going to look pretty. If you do intend to use the forms, you'll no doubt need to style them.
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.
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