Use web Workers and other Windows through a simple Promise API
Angular service using the post-me library for bidirectional communication between browser windows/frames via window.postMessage
Match balanced character pairs, like "{" and "}"
A light-weight module that brings Fetch API to node.js
Let your JS API users either give you a callback or receive a promise
📝 Generate a Simple and Portable Markdown documentation for your API
MPI-like concurrency for a pool of web workers
A Node.js module for creating REST clients with easy request model templating and straightforward extensibility
Match balanced character pairs, like "{" and "}"
The modular and type safe schema library for validating structural data
Traverse JSON Schema passing each schema object to callback
Help command for node, partner of minimist and commist
A light-weight module that brings window.fetch to node.js
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@aws-sdk/s3-presigned-post) [](https://www.npmjs.com/package/@
Intuitive, type safe and flexible Store for Vue
Implementation of window.fetch which can use http2 seamlessly
A low level parser for ANSI sequences.
Open the map app of the user's choice with a specific location.
A Serverless Plugin to write If Else conditions in serverless YAML file
Remove the trailing spaces from a string.
A shim for the setImmediate efficient script yielding API
A module that parses a string as regular expression and returns the parsed value.
Parse paths (local paths, urls: ssh/git/etc)
Get the protocols of an input url.
Ruby library to access the Post For Me API
an easy way to deal with simple http request
The Instaman gem interacts with the latest posts on the Instagram according to hashtags that you choose. It likes, follows and unfollows photos and users. Give me feedback and contact me via Instagram with @hasannkursunn username.
What is send? ============= It’s a tiny wee ruby gem that is a fork of [Object#try](http://ozmm.org/posts/try.html) and [Object#try from Rails](http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/Object.html#M000027). It will *never* throw a NoMethodError (no matter the receiver), and returns nil if called on a nil-class or if the method in the receiver does not exist. Note on Patches/Pull Requests ----------------------------- 1. [Fork me!](http://github.com/Burgestrand/send-/fork) 2. Write tests for your new feature or bug fix (important, I don’t want to break your stuff in a future update by accident!) 3. Hack away on the code; make your tests pass. 4. Commit! Don’t touch Rakefile, version or git history in any of the commits you want me to pick. 5. ??? 6. Send me a pull request!
== DESCRIPTION: html-me converts text to html for posting in the web. It does this two ways. First, it processes the text unsing RedCloth (a textile engine), then it finds all of the _pre_ tags and adds syntax highlighting. == FEATURES/PROBLEMS: * The syntax highlighting embeds the styles in the HTML tags. I currently don't have access to my blog's stylesheet (damned Wordpress) so that's how it needed to be. CSS class names should be added soon.
If there is one thing that has plagued me over the years, it's that I constantly have more tabs in my browser open that necessary. And these tabs are usually images of Japanese idols I intend to save at some point but never do. This is because the whole process of grabbing the image either through right clicking the image or having to search for it via my browser's inspector then moving it to the desired directory via the GUI interface is an incredibly tedious and time consuming task. But through the power of code and this library, I will be able to just point the links of posts containing the images I want using this library and it will generate for me the links to the images which I can then pipe into some other tool dedicated for downloading like wget. With that being said, Hashimoto Kanna is your master now and she will show you the true nature of the force.
Wesabot is a Campfire bot framework we've been using and developing at Wesabe since not long after our inception. It started as a way to avoid parking tickets near our office ("Wes, remind me in 2 hours to move my car"), and has evolved into an essential work aid. When you enter the room, Wes greets you with a link to the point in the transcript where you last left. You can also ask him to bookmark points in the transcript, send an sms message (well, an email) to someone, or even post a tweet, among other things. His functionality is easily extendable via plugins.
This gem is still under active development. Please contact me directly with any questions or suggestions. To start: r = RedcapAPI.new(token, url) # your institution has it's own url, and each project has it's own token r.get(optional record_id) # returns all records in JSON format or a specific record if specified r.get_fields # returns all fields for that instrument r.post(data) # this will either update an old record or create a new one. the data should be in form of array of hashes or as a hash (for one item). dates are accepted in Date class or in strftime('%F') format. for example data = {name: 'this is a test', field_2: Date.today} r.post(data) # creates a new object using the fields above. field names must match those in the existing project "{\"count\": 1}" --> indicates the object posted. to update an existing record: data = {record_id: 3, name: 'this is a test to update', field_2: Date.today} r.post(data) # this will update the record with record_id 3. if record_id 3 does not exist it will create an entry with that record id
Send SMS messages using the CellForce API
This is an experimental branch that implements a connection pool of Net::HTTP objects instead of a connection/thread. C/T is fine if you're only using your http threads to make connections but if you use them in child threads then I suspect you will have a thread memory leak. Also, I want to see if I get less connection resets if the most recently used connection is always returned. Also added a :force_retry option that if set to true will retry POST requests as well as idempotent requests. This branch is currently incompatible with the master branch in the following ways: * It doesn't allow you to recreate the Net::HTTP::Persistent object on the fly. This is possible in the master version since all the data is kept in thread local storage. For this version, you should probably create a class instance of the object and use that in your instance methods. * It uses a hash in the initialize method. This was easier for me as I use a HashWithIndifferentAccess created from a YAML file to define my options. This should probably be modified to check the arguments to achieve backwards compatibility. * The method shutdown is unimplemented as I wasn't sure how I should implement it and I don't need it as I do a graceful shutdown from nginx to finish up my connections. For connection issues, I completely recreate a new Net::HTTP instance. I was running into an issue which I suspect is a JRuby bug where an SSL connection that times out would leave the ssl context in a frozen state which would then make that connection unusable so each time that thread handled a connection a 500 error with the exception "TypeError: can't modify frozen". I think Joseph West's fork resolves this issue but I'm paranoid so I recreate the object. Compatibility with the master version could probably be achieved by creating a Strategy wrapper class for GenePool and a separate strategy class with the connection/thread implementation.
Lookout-Rack Lookout-Rack provides easy interaction with Rack¹ from Lookout². It provides you with a session connected to your Rack application through which you can make requests, check responses, follow redirects and set, inspect, and clear cookies. ¹ See http://rack.rubyforge.org/ ² See http://disu.se/software/lookout/ § Installation Install Lookout-Rack with % gem install lookout-rack § Usage Include the following code in your ‹Rakefile› (provided that you’re using Lookout-Rake¹): require 'lookout-rack-3.0' Lookout::Rake::Tasks::Test.new do |t| t.requires << 'lookout-rack-3.0' end ¹ See http://disu.se/software/lookout-rake/ Then set up a ‹fixtures/config.ru› file that Lookout-Rack will use for loading your Rack app. load 'path/to/app.rb' use Rack::Lint run Path::To::App This file, if it exists, will be loaded during the first call to #session. If it doesn’t exist, ‹config.ru› will be used instead. You can now test your app: Expectations do expect 200 do session.get('/').response.status end end The #session method returns an object that lets you #get, #post, #put, and #delete resources from the Rack app. You call these method with a URI¹ that you want to access/modify together with any parameters that you want to pass and any Rack environment that you want to use (which isn’t very common). For example, let’s get ‹/pizzas/› with olives on them: expect 200 do session.get('/pizzas/', 'olives' => '1').response.status end ¹ Abbreviation for Uniform Resource Identifier The #response method on #session returns a mock Rack response object that can be queried for results. Similarly, there’s a #request method that lets you inspect the request that was made. Lookout-Rack also deals with cookies. Assuming that ‹/cookies/set/› will set any cookies that we pass it and that ‹/cookies/show/› will simply do nothing relevant, the following expectation will pass: expect 'value' => '1' do session. get('/cookies/set/', 'value' => '1'). get('/cookies/show/').request.cookies end Sometimes you may want to set cookies yourself before making a request. You then use the #cookie method, which takes a String of ‹KEY=VALUE› pairs separated by newlines, commas, and/or semicolons and sets those cookies in the session: expect 'value' => '1', 'other' => '2' do session. cookie("value=1\n\nother=2"). get('/cookies/show/').request.cookies end You may also want to clear all cookies in your session using #clear: expect({}) do session. get('/cookies/set', 'value' => '1'). clear. get('/cookies/show').request.cookies end Finally, to test redirects, call the #redirect! method on the session object, assuming that ‹/redirected/› redirects to another location: expect result.redirect? do session.get('/redirected/').response end expect result.not.redirect? do session.get('/redirected/').redirect!.response end That’s basically all there’s to it. You can check the {API documentation}¹ for more information. ¹ See http://disu.se/software/lookout-rack/api/Lookout/Rack/ § 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@disu.se&item_name=Lookout-Rack § Reporting Bugs Please report any bugs that you encounter to the {issue tracker}¹. ¹ See https://github.com/now/lookout-rack/issues § Authors Nikolai Weibull wrote the code, the tests, the documentation, and this README. § Licensing Lookout-Rack is free software: you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the {GNU Lesser General Public License, version 3}¹ or later², as published by the {Free Software Foundation}³. ¹ See http://disu.se/licenses/lgpl-3.0/ ² See http://gnu.org/licenses/ ³ See http://fsf.org/
Log2json lets you read, filter and send logs as JSON objects via Unix pipes. It is inspired by Logstash, and is meant to be compatible with it at the JSON event/record level so that it can easily work with Kibana. Reading logs is done via a shell script(eg, `tail`) running in its own process. You then configure(see the `syslog2json` or the `nginxlog2json` script for examples) and run your filters in Ruby using the `Log2Json` module and its contained helper classes. `Log2Json` reads from stdin the logs(one log record per line), parses the log lines into JSON records, and then serializes and writes the records to stdout, which then can be piped to another process for processing or sending it to somewhere else. Currently, Log2json ships with a `tail-log` script that can be run as the input process. It's the same as using the Linux `tail` utility with the `-v -F` options except that it also tracks the positions(as the numbers of lines read from the beginning of the files) in a few files in the file system so that if the input process is interrupted, it can continue reading from where it left off next time if the files had been followed. This feature is similar to the sincedb feature in Logstash's file input. Note: If you don't need the tracking feature(ie, you are fine with always tailling from the end of file with `-v -F -n0`), then you can just use the `tail` utility that comes with your Linux distribution.(Or more specifically, the `tail` from the GNU coreutils). Other versions of the `tail` utility may also work, but are not tested. The input protocol expected by Log2json is very simple and documented in the source code. ** The `tail-log` script uses a patched version of `tail` from the GNU coreutils package. A binary of the `tail` utility compiled for Ubuntu 12.04 LTS is included with the Log2json gem. If the binary doesn't work for your distribution, then you'll need to get GNU coreutils-8.13, apply the patch(it can be found in the src/ directory of the installed gem), and then replace the bin/tail binary in the directory of the installed gem with your version of the binary. ** P.S. If you know of a way to configure and compile ONLY the tail program in coreutils, please let me know! The reason I'm not building tail post gem installation is that it takes too long to configure && make because that actually builds every utilties in coreutils. For shipping logs to Redis, there's the `lines2redis` script that can be used as the output process in the pipe. For shipping logs from Redis to ElasticSearch, Log2json provides a `redis2es` script. Finally here's an example of Log2json in action: From a client machine: tail-log /var/log/{sys,mail}log /var/log/{kern,auth}.log | syslog2json | queue=jsonlogs \ flush_size=20 \ flush_interval=30 \ lines2redis host.to.redis.server 6379 0 # use redis DB 0 On the Redis server: redis_queue=jsonlogs redis2es host.to.es.server Resources that help writing log2json filters: - look at log2json.rb source and example filters - http://grokdebug.herokuapp.com/ - http://www.ruby-doc.org/stdlib-1.9.3/libdoc/date/rdoc/DateTime.html#method-i-strftime
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