Get or check the current macOS version
Get or check the current macOS version
Get the macOS version of the current system
Get the name and version of a macOS release from the Darwin version
Node.js native addon build tool
A Node.js module for sending notifications on native Mac, Windows (post and pre 8) and Linux (or Growl as fallback)
Cross platform children list of a PID
Skia prebuilt binaries for macOS (arm64 + x64)
Utility for downloading artifacts from different versions of Electron
Google sign in for your react native applications
Get the name of a Windows version from the release number: `5.1.2600` → `XP`
CodeMirror component for React.
A simple micro-library for defining and dispatching keyboard shortcuts. It has no dependencies.
General Language Independent Driver for the Enterprise (GLIDE) for Valkey
React Native Network Info API for iOS & Android
Download and launch browsers
Native bindings for valkey-glide on linux-x64-gnu
Rewrite element with rehype.
Basic configuration for the CodeMirror6 code editor.
Themes for CodeMirror.
Alerts are a Markdown extension based on the blockquote syntax that you can use to emphasize critical information.
New syntax to add attributes to Markdown.
Smaller distribution of node-pty.
Appium driver for Safari browser
Macros to embed metadata as an ELF/Mach-O section in your final binary
Common types and constants for emboss
Proc macro implementations for emboss
Ruby wrapper around the modern version of the macOS `say` command. Inspired by the @bratta's mactts
motion-sparkle-sandbox makes it easy to use the sandboxed version of Sparkle in your RubyMotion macOS apps
Ruby wrapper for liboqs from Open Quantum Safe library. This version included platform binary of Linux, MacOS and Windows based on git commit b803b54179c1cea9091d9331cc8085fc235e1be4
Cross-platform way of finding executables in all the paths in $PATH. This is similar to the Unix 'which' command, however, instead of finding the first occurence of the executable in $PATH, it finds all occurences in $PATH. This could be useful if you installed something that modified your PATH and now you're executing a different version but can't figure out what happened. Example: On OS X, OpenSSL is installed in /usr/bin/openssl % which openssl ==> /usr/bin/openssl After installing PostgreSQL: % which openssl ==> /Applications/Postgres.app/Contents/MacOS/bin/openssl If you're trying to diagnose what happened, you can use: % whiches openssl ==> [ [0] "/Applications/Postgres.app/Contents/MacOS/bin/openssl", [1] "/usr/bin/openssl" ] This will show you that the first one that is found in the PATH is the one from Postgres, so if you want to get back your original one, you have to modify your PATH accordingly.
Windoo provides a Ruby interface to the REST API of the [Jamf Title Editor](https://docs.jamf.com/title-editor/documentation/About_Title_Editor.html), formerly known as 'Kinobi'. The Title Editor is a 'patch source' provided to users of Jamf Pro that provides a way to manage macOS software titles and their versions. Windoo allows ruby developers to interact with the Title Editor's API to automate tasks such as creating, updating, and managing patches and related resources.
Ukiryu is a platform-adaptive command execution framework that transforms CLI tools into declarative APIs. It provides the "OpenAPI" for command-line interfaces, enabling cross-platform tool integration with type safety and structured results. Key features: * Declarative YAML profiles define tool behavior, eliminating hardcoded command strings * Platform-adaptive execution across macOS, Linux, and Windows * Shell-aware command formatting for bash, zsh, fish, PowerShell, and cmd * Type-safe parameter validation with automatic coercion * Version routing support with semantic version matching (via Versionian) * Interface contracts allow multiple tools to implement the same abstract API * Structured Result objects with success/failure information instead of parsing stdout * Comprehensive error handling under Ukiryu::Errors namespace The Ukiryu ecosystem consists of: * ukiryu gem - The runtime framework * ukiryu/register - Collection of YAML tool profiles * ukiryu/schemas - JSON Schema for validation Use Ukiryu to integrate command-line tools like ImageMagick, FFmpeg, Inkscape, Ghostscript, and more into your Ruby applications with consistent, predictable interfaces.
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