distributed lock manager based on mysql
DOM trap for a focus
It is a trap! (for a focus)
mutex lock for javascript
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
A very polite lock file utility, which endeavors to not litter, and to wait patiently for others.
lock asynchronous resources.
Throttle the parallelism of an asynchronous (promise returning) function / functions
🔐Body scroll locking that just works with everything
It is a trap! (for a focus)
Implements Lock and RWLock synchronization primitives.
Plugin to enable cooperation between AVA test files
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)
Teensy wrapper around gpg, mostly to make it easier to lock up my project euler files
Chef-Berksfile-Env ================== A Chef plugin which allows you to lock down your Chef Environment's cookbook versions with a Berksfile. This is effectively the same as doing `berks apply ...` but via `knife environment from file ...`. View the [Change Log](https://github.com/bbaugher/chef-berksfile-env/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md) to see what has changed. Installation ------------ /opt/chef/embedded/bin/gem install chef-berksfile-env Usage ----- In your chef repo create a Berksfile next to your Chef environment file like this, chef-repo/environments/[ENV_NAME]/Berksfile This is the default location that will used by the plugin. We have to put the Berksfile in its own directory since [multiple Berksfiles can't exist in the same directory](https://github.com/berkshelf/berkshelf/issues/1247). The berksfile should include any cookbooks that your nodes or roles explicitly mention for that environment, source "https://supermarket.getchef.com" cookbook "java" cookbook "yum", "~> 2.0" ... Next we need to generate our Berksfile's lock file, berks install Your environment file must by in `.rb` format and look like this, require 'chef-berksfile-env' # The name must be defined first so we can use it to find the Berksfile name "my_env" # Load Berksfile locked dependencies as my environment's cookbook version contraints load_berksfile ... Now our environment will use the locked versions of the cookbooks and transitive dependencies generated by our Berksfile. Upgrading to the latest dependecies is now as simple as, berks install Our Berksfile also provides an easy way to ensure all the cookbooks and their versions that our environment requires are uploaded to our chef-server, berks upload How the Plugin Finds the Berksfile ---------------------------------- If you are curious how the plugin knows to find the Berksfile in `chef-repo/environments/[ENV]/Berksfile`, you want to put your Berksfile somewhere else or you have run into this error `Expected Berksfile at [/path/../Berksfile] but does not exist`, this section will explain how this works and ways to tweak the path or fix your error. `load_berksfile` has an optional argument which represents the path to your Berksfile. This path can be pseduo relative (explained in a moment) or absolute. By default the value is `environments/[ENV_NAME]/Berksfile`. By pseduo relative I mean that its a relative path but the plugin will check to see if the directory we are executing from partially matches our relative path. So if we are running knife from `/home/chef-repo/environments` and our relative path is `chef-repo/environments/dev/Berksfile` the plugin will see that the relative path is partially included in our execution directory and will attempt to merge the two to come up with `/home/chef-repo/environments/dev/Berksfile`. If we can't make any match at all we attempt to guess the path by just joining the relative path with our execution directory. So why do we do this? Well the only way to use this plugin is if your environment is in Ruby format. Chef's `knife from file ...` uses Ruby's `instance_eval` in order to do this. This means the code on Chef's end effectively looks like this, env.instance_eval(IO.read(env_ruby_file)) which means that any context about the location of the environment file is lost. So we have no great way to discern the location of our environment Ruby file, so instead we guess.
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