``` npm install sym-cli
quick symphony server cli tools
MIL-STD-2525 D/E symbol rendering TypeScript library
ZXing-C++ WebAssembly as an ES/CJS module with types
Translate symbol names generated by `--basic-perf-prof` into JavaScript names
Infrastructure and protocol for multi-agent collective intelligence
MIL-STD-2525 D/E symbol rendering TypeScript library
Vue.js Components Library implementing Material Design
set value at property, create intermediate properties if necessary
Gulp symlink
Symmetry debugger MCP server + cloud-agent control tools. Stdio transport, device-code OAuth sign-in.
Cognitive core for SYM mesh nodes — SVAF fusion, CMB encoding, xMesh intelligence
Web Access Control check access function
MCP server — real-time agent-to-agent cognition for Claude Code remote teams via the SYM mesh.
Pretty unicode tables for the command line. Based on the original cli-table.
Utility methods for writing Custom Tasks consumed by the Keg-CLI
Get stdout window width, with two fallbacks, tty and then a default.
Codex CLI is a coding agent from OpenAI that runs locally on your computer.
Toggle the CLI cursor
No description provided.
Spinners for use in the terminal
The linux x64 distribution of the Sentry CLI binary.
A command line utility to work with Sentry. https://docs.sentry.io/hosted/learn/cli/
The autonomous agent runtime for xmesh.dev — wake-on-admission reasoning with wake-budget, cycle detection, token cap, and approval gates, agent-to-agent over the open mesh.
sym-crypt is a core encryption module for the symmetric encryption app (and a corresponding gem) "sym", and contains the main base serialization, encryption, encoding, compression routines. sym-crypt uses a symmetric 256-bit key with the AES-256-CBC cipher, which is the same cipher as the one used by the US Government. For encyption with a password sym-crypt uses AES-128-CBC cipher. The resulting data is zlib-compressed and base64-encoded. The keys are also base64 encoded for easy copying/pasting/etc.
Sym is a ruby library (gem) that offers both the command line interface (CLI) and a set of rich Ruby APIs, which make it rather trivial to add encryption and decryption of sensitive data to your development or deployment workflow. For additional security the private key itself can be encrypted with a user-generated password. For decryption using the key the password can be input into STDIN, or be defined by an ENV variable, or an OS-X Keychain Entry. Unlike many other existing encryption tools, Sym focuses on getting out of your way by offering a streamlined interface with password caching (if MemCached is installed and running locally) in hopes to make encryption of application secrets nearly completely transparent to the developers. Sym uses symmetric 256-bit key encryption with the AES-256-CBC cipher, same cipher as used by the US Government. For password-protecting the key Sym uses AES-128-CBC cipher. The resulting data is zlib-compressed and base64-encoded. The keys are also base64 encoded for easy copying/pasting/etc. Sym accomplishes encryption transparency by combining several convenient features: 1. Sym can read the private key from multiple source types, such as pathname, an environment variable name, a keychain entry, or CLI argument. You simply pass either of these to the -k flag — one flag that works for all source types. 2. By utilizing OS-X Keychain on a Mac, Sym offers truly secure way of storing the key on a local machine, much more secure then storing it on a file system, 3. By using a local password cache (activated with -c) via an in-memory provider such as memcached, sym invocations take advantage of password cache, and only ask for a password once per a configurable time period, 4. By using SYM_ARGS environment variable, where common flags can be saved. This is activated with sym -A, 5. By reading the key from the default key source file ~/.sym.key which requires no flags at all, 6. By utilizing the --negate option to quickly encrypt a regular file, or decrypt an encrypted file with extension .enc 7. By implementing the -t (edit) mode, that opens an encrypted file in your $EDITOR, and replaces the encrypted version upon save & exit, optionally creating a backup. 8. By offering the Sym::MagicFile ruby API to easily read encrypted files into memory. Please refer the module documentation available here: https://www.rubydoc.info/gems/sym