track the rate of flow of a pull-stream.
Checking Your Current Docker Pull Rate Limits and Status
Basic IP rate-limiting middleware for Express. Use to limit repeated requests to public APIs and/or endpoints such as password reset.
React Star Rate Component
A Redis store for the `express-rate-limit` middleware
Node.js atomic and non-atomic counters, rate limiting tools, protection from DoS and brute-force attacks at scale
Node.js Streams, a user-land copy of the stream library from Node.js
A generic rate limiter for the web and node.js. Useful for API clients, web crawling, or other tasks that need to be throttled
pull-stream with a push interface
React Star Rate Component
A rate limiter for Node.js streams.
Rate limit middleware for Hono.
abstract rate limiter backed by redis
A low overhead rate limiter for your routes
Lightweight utilities for debouncing, throttling, and more - designed for npm packages.
A scheduler based on requestAnimationFrame
Rate limit for axios
Excel Workbook Manager - Read and Write xlsx and csv Files.
User replays for Sentry
Utilities for debouncing, throttling, rate-limiting, queuing, and more.
A rate limiter component for Convex. Define and use application-layer rate limits. Type-safe, transactional, fair, safe, and configurable sharding to scale.
Fixed window rate-limiting directive for GraphQL. Use to limit repeated requests to queries and mutations.
Replay canvas integration
IP rate-limiting middleware for Koajs 2. Use to limit repeated requests to APIs and/or endpoints such as password reset.
Provides an easy to use API to get currency rates data from the Bloomberg website
Currency models currencies, monetary values, foreign exchanges rates. Pulls live and historical rates from http://xe.com/, http://newyorkfed.org/, http://thefinancials.com/. Can store/retrieve historical rate data from database using ActiveRecord. Can store/retrieve Money values using ActiveRecord. For more details, see: http://rubyforge.org/projects/currency/ http://currency.rubyforge.org/ http://currency.rubyforge.org/files/README_txt.html
A Ruby gem for retrieving local sales tax rates from various government APIs. Currently only supports Washington State tax, but feel free to submit pull requests.
GiTerm is a powerful terminal interface for Git and GitHub, providing an intuitive TUI for repository management, issue tracking, and pull request handling. Version 2.0.4: Improved GitHub API error recovery with specific messages for auth, rate-limit, and network failures.
If you are tracking any kind of assets the currencies gem is for you. It contains every currency in the ISO 4217 standard and allows you to add your own as well. So if you decide to take sparkly buttons as a form of payment you can use currencies to display the shiny button unicode symbol ☼ (disclaimer: ☼ may not look like a shiny button to everyone.) when used with something like the money gem. Speaking of the money gem, currencies gives you an ExchangeBank that the money gem can use to convert from one currency to another. There are plans to have ExchangeRate provider plugin system. Right now the rates are either set manually or pulled from Yahoo Finance.
# Sparrow is a really fast lightweight queue written in Ruby that speaks memcached. # That means you can use Sparrow with any memcached client library (Ruby or otherwise). # # Basic tests shows that Sparrow processes messages at a rate of 850-900 per second. # The load Sparrow can cope with increases exponentially as you add to the cluster. # Sparrow also takes advantage of eventmachine, which uses a non-blocking io, offering great performance. # # Sparrow is a in-memory queue but will persist the data to disk when receiving a term signal. # # Sparrow comes with built in support for daemonization and clustering. # Also included are example libraries and clients. For example: # # require 'memcache' # m = MemCache.new('127.0.0.1:11212') # m['queue_name'] = '1' # Publish to queue # m['queue_name'] #=> 1 Pull next msg from queue # m['queue_name'] #=> nil # m.delete('queue_name) # Delete queue # # # or using the included client: # # class MyQueue < MQ3::Queue # def on_message # logger.info "Received msg with args: #{args.inspect}" # end # end # # MyQueue.servers = [ # MQ3::Protocols::Memcache.new({:host => '127.0.0.1', :port => 11212, :weight => 1}) # ] # MyQueue.publish('test msg') # MyQueue.run # # Messages are deleted as soon as they're read and the order you add messages to the queue probably won't # be the same order when they're removed. # # Additional memcached commands that are supported are: # flush_all # Deletes all queues # version # quit # The memcached commands 'add', and 'replace' just call 'set'. # # Call sparrow with --help for usage options # # The daemonization won't work on Windows. # # Check out the code: # svn checkout http://sparrow.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/ sparrow # # Sparrow was inspired by Twitter's Starling
# 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.
# Mint::Money Mint::Money perform currency conversion and arithmetics with different currencies. ## Installation Add this line to your application's Gemfile: ```ruby gem 'mint-money' ``` And then execute: $ bundle Or install it yourself as: $ gem install mint-money ## Usage ``` # Configure the currency rates with respect to a base currency (here EUR): Money.conversion_rates('EUR', { 'USD' => 1.11, 'Bitcoin' => 0.0047 }) ``` ``` # Instantiate money objects: fifty_eur = Money.new(50, 'EUR') # Get amount and currency: fifty_eur.amount # => 50 fifty_eur.currency # => "EUR" fifty_eur.inspect # => "50.00 EUR" ``` ``` # Convert to a different currency (should return a Money # instance, not a String): fifty_eur.convert_to('USD') # => 55.50 USD ``` ``` # Perform operations in different currencies: twenty_dollars = Money.new(20, 'USD') # Arithmetics: fifty_eur + twenty_dollars # => 68.02 EUR fifty_eur - twenty_dollars # => 31.98 EUR fifty_eur / 2 # => 25 EUR twenty_dollars * 3 # => 60 USD ``` ``` # Comparisons (also in different currencies): twenty_dollars == Money.new(20, 'USD') # => true twenty_dollars == Money.new(30, 'USD') # => false fifty_eur_in_usd = fifty_eur.convert_to('USD') fifty_eur_in_usd == fifty_eur # => true twenty_dollars > Money.new(5, 'USD') # => true twenty_dollars < fifty_eur # => true ``` ## Development After checking out the repo, run `bin/setup` to install dependencies. Then, run `rake spec` to run the tests. You can also run `bin/console` for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment. To install this gem onto your local machine, run `bundle exec rake install`. To release a new version, update the version number in `version.rb`, and then run `bundle exec rake release`, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the `.gem` file to [rubygems.org](https://rubygems.org). ## Contributing Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/mpakus/mint-money. [](https://circleci.com/gh/mpakus/mint-money)