just emit 'log' events on the process object
TypeScript definitions for proc-log
A Node.js interface for working with Android's logcat output.
Spawn a dependent child process.
Simple logger based on proc-log
Get the output of a process.
A minimal library for executing processes in Node
Opentelemetry resource detector to get container resource attributes
programmatically install npm dependencies
Azure Functions Core Tools
proc(ess)-that - easy extendable etl tool for nodejs written in typesript
rxjs operators for execute shell command with ease
Get running processes
Sandbox environment management for Sapiom SDK
Zero dependency library for reading and parsing various files from `procfs` for Node.js, implemented in pure JS.
A Node.js interface for working with Android's logcat output.
Node-API bindings for .Net
port-authority
Process-isolated test runner for tape-six. Runs each test file in its own subprocess. Works with Node, Deno, and Bun. Supports TypeScript without transpilation.
pluggable core of node-tap
API for interacting with the file system, asynchronously.
Colored symbols for various log levels. Example: `✔︎ Success`
Lightweight promise utility toolkit fit for royalty
Jelly - call graph and library usage analyzer for JavaScript
Background per-core CPU monitoring for Ruby/Rails applications. Reads /proc/stat on Linux (Heroku) or top on macOS. Writes a rotating 1 MB JSON-lines log per dyno. On single dynos the file backend is used; on multi-dyno Heroku deployments the Redis backend aggregates all dynos into a single CpuInspectCore.status view. Ships with a Rails Railtie for zero-config boot and a CLI executable for bash usage.
== Devise::Revokable A module for Devise[http://github.com/plataformatec/devise] This gem was created by "borrowing" heavily from Devise::Invitable[http://github.com/scambra/devise_invitable] It exists to extend Devise to provide the basis for what is essentially the reverse of the standard <tt>confirmable</tt> module. Where <tt>confirmable</tt> sends an email and awaits a response, before confirming a new registration, <tt>revokable</tt> allows immediate access and sends an email which provides a link to "revoke" the account if it was created fraudulently. This is useful if you want to lower the barrier to entry to creating accounts, and clearly, if account security isn't a concern. Note that tests are non-existent. Use freely but at your own risk. === Configuring It works like normal Devise modules. Add the <tt>:revokable</tt> module to the declaration. # in user.rb devise :revokable # plus other devise modules If the user who received the revocation email follows the provided link and confirms revocation, the account will effectively be "revoked" and inactive, unable to log in. Additionally, you may want to override <tt>#revoke!</tt> to perfom additional revocation on the account, e.g. deleting posts made, resetting personal information, etc. The super method yields to a block for this purpose. # in user.rb def revoke! super do self.some_method_that_resets_me! end end That's about the extent of it. As with typical devise modules you can override the mailers and views with your own. Additionally you can define the module accessor <tt>@@mailer</tt> on the module with a proc to handle your mail if you need to. This proc is yielded two arguments, the method name (e.g. :revocation_instructions), and the affected resource. # in config/initializers/devise_revokable.rb require 'devise_revokable' require 'my_mailer' DeviseRevokable.mailer = proc {|method_name, resource| MyMailer.send(:method_name, resource) }
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