compute across multiple processes using pull streams
The engine that powers scroll-into-view-if-needed
Google Compute Engine Client Library for Node.js
Computes the greatest common divisor (gcd).
Computes the least common multiple (lcm).
JavaScript SDK and CLI for building JavaScript applications on [Fastly Compute](https://www.fastly.com/products/edge-compute/serverless).
Computes the dot product between two numeric arrays.
A generated SDK for ComputeManagementClient.
Computes the L2 norm (Euclidean norm) of an array of values.
Computes the cosine similarity between two arrays.
The luma.gl core Device API
Pure Javascript implementation of the BLAKE2b and BLAKE2s hash functions
Node.js Streams, a user-land copy of the stream library from Node.js
Symbolic computing and numeric evaluations for JavaScript and Node.js
* implements render engine's interface with WebGPU/WebGL
compute
Compute a diff of two Slate documents
OCI NodeJS client for Compute Instance Agent Service
OCI NodeJS client for Compute Cloud At Customer Service
AWS SDK for JavaScript Lambda Client for Node.js, Browser and React Native
Google APIs Authentication Client Library for Node.js
AWS SDK for JavaScript Compute Optimizer Client for Node.js, Browser and React Native
Excel Workbook Manager - Read and Write xlsx and csv Files.
A calculator for humanity’s peculiar conventions of time.
Provides coverage computation for git pull requests.
Provides coverage computation for git pull requests.
# Netchk Simple tool to troubleshoot internet connectivity issues. This tool verifies: - your computer has at least one IP address - you have at least one DNS configured - you can reach the configured nameservers - the nameservers can resolve hosts Finally, some ICMP ping statistics are presented with average durations and error rates. ## Installation ```sh gem install netchk ``` ## Usage Just run `netchk` from your terminal and basic diagnosis will start showing you progress and any error if present. Note: On Linux system, this gem requires `sudo` to perform the ICMP ping operations. On macOS, this is not needed. You also can configure how netchk verifies your connections by configuring a `~/.netchk.yaml` or `~/.netchk.yml` file like below. ```yaml # Settings to test DNS server connectivity. dns: # Path to resolv.conf file to check presence and connectivity of DNS. # Path should be absolute to avoid issues when running netchk # from different directories. resolv.conf: /etc/resolv.conf # Settings to test DNS resolution. resolv: # Path to resolv.conf file to use for testing DNS resolution. # Path should be absolute to avoid issues when running netchk # from different directories. It is advised to be the same # as dns.resolv.conf. resolv.conf: /etc/resolv.conf # The list of domains to test for DNS resolution. domains: - google.com - youtube.com - facebook.com # Settings to test icmp ping. icmp: # A list of hosts to ping with ICMP. It is advised to use # IP addresses instead of domains to rule out any issues with # DNS resolution, which is tested separately. hosts: - 1.1.1.1 - 8.8.8.8 # The number of ping to issue each host. count: 20 # The duration in seconds to wait between each ping. # Setting this value too low might cause timeouts. interval: 0.2 ``` Each value is optional. If one is missing the default value will be used. The file above shows the default values. ## Contributing Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/moray95/netchk.
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