This package is help programmer to develop nodeJs program.
> [!CAUTION] > This SDK has been deprecated for use in Node.js environments. It is still supported for use in web elements and reactor environments. > > Our new Node.js SDK can be found at https://github.com/Basis-Theory/node-sdk > > See our documentation
A robust, performance-focused and full-featured Redis client for Node.js.
A tool set for CSS: fast detailed parser (CSS → AST), walker (AST traversal), generator (AST → CSS) and lexer (validation and matching) based on specs and browser implementations
[](https://www.npmjs.org/package/@basis-theory/react-elements) [](https://www.npmjs.org/package/@basis-the
[](https://buildwithfern.com?utm_source=github&utm_medium=github&utm_campaign=readme&utm_source=https%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2FBasis-Theory%2Fnode-sdk) [ x64
Prebuilt sharp for use with Linux (musl) x64
CLI for Jasmine, a simple JavaScript testing framework for browsers and Node
Thin React wrapper for BasisTheory JS SDK
Require hook for automatic V8 compile cache persistence
Require hook for automatic V8 compile cache persistence
No description provided.
Underlying schema language parsed from arktype syntax.
Prebuilt sharp for use with Linux (glibc) 64-bit ARM
Prebuilt sharp for use with macOS x64
Prebuilt sharp for use with macOS 64-bit ARM
Prebuilt sharp for use with Linux (musl) 64-bit ARM
Node.js bindings for librdkafka
A node.js client for the Plaid API
Prebuilt sharp for use with Linux (glibc) ARM (32-bit)
Prebuilt sharp for use with Linux (glibc) s390x
Lightweight Ethereum libraries
A library for obtaining browser versions with their maximum supported Baseline feature set and Widely Available status.
GQLite is a Rust-language library, with a C interface, that implements a small, fast, self-contained, high-reliability, full-featured, Graph Query database engine. GQLite support multiple database backends, such as SQLite and redb. This enable to achieve high performance and for application to combine Graph queries with traditional SQL queries. GQLite source code is license under the [MIT License](LICENSE) and is free to everyone to use for any purpose. The official repositories contains bindings/APIs for C, C++, Python, Ruby and Crystal. The library is still in its early stage, but it is now fully functional. Development effort has now slowed down and new features are added on a by-need basis. It supports a subset of OpenCypher, with some ISO GQL extensions. Example of use -------------- ```ruby require 'gqlite' begin # Create a database on the file "test.db" connection = GQLite::Connection.new filename: "test.db" # Execute a simple query to create a node and return all the nodes value = connection.execute_oc_query("CREATE () MATCH (n) RETURN n") # Print the result if value.nil? puts "Empty results" else puts "Results are #{value.to_s}" end rescue GQLite::Error => ex # Report any error puts "An error has occured: #{ex.message}" end ``` The documentation for the GQL query language can found in [OpenCypher](https://auksys.org/documentation/5/libraries/gqlite/opencypher/) and for the [API](https://auksys.org/documentation/5/libraries/gqlite/api/).
= DESCRIPTION: Provides a Chef handler which can report run status, including any changes that were made, to a Graylog2 server. In the case of failed runs a backtrace will be included in the details reported. = REQUIREMENTS: * A Graylog2 server running somewhere. = USAGE: This example makes of the chef_handler cookbook, place some thing like this in cookbooks/chef_handler/recipes/gelf.rb and add it to your run list. It also assumes your Graylog2 server has set the attribute rsyslog_server to true. log_server = search(:node, "rsyslog_server:true").first if log_server include_recipe "chef_handler::default" gem_package "chef-gelf" do action :nothing end.run_action(:install) # Make sure the newly installed Gem is loaded. Gem.clear_paths require 'chef/gelf' chef_handler "Chef::GELF::Handler" do source "chef/gelf" arguments({ :server => log_server['fqdn'] }) supports :exception => true, :report => true end.run_action(:enable) end Arguments take the form of an options hash, with the following options: * :server - The server to send messages to. * :port (12201) - The port to send on. * :facility (chef-client) - The facility to report under. * :host (node.fqdn) - The host to report messages as coming from. * :blacklist ({}) - A hash of cookbooks, resources and actions to ignore in the change list. = BLACKLISTING: Some resources report themselves as having updated on every run even if nothing changed, or are just things you don't care about. To reduce the amount of noise in your logs these can be ignored by providing a blacklist. In this example we don't want to be told about the GELF handler being activated: chef_handler "Chef::GELF::Handler" do source "chef/gelf" arguments({ :server => log_server['fqdn'], :blacklist => { "chef_handler" => { "chef_handler" => [ "nothing", "enable" ] } } }) supports :exception => true, :report => true end.run_action(:enable) = LICENSE and AUTHOR: Author:: Jon Wood (<jon@blankpad.net>) Copyright:: 2011, Blank Pad Development Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
Diff and patch tables
Diff and patch tables
Contentful API wrapper library exposing an ActiveRecord-like interface