Tiny web server with HTTPS support, static file serving, subdomain support, middleware support, and service worker support.
A tiny invariant function
Tiny LiveReload server, background-friendly
A tiny warning function
Universal Storage Layer
A fast, lightweight LRU (Least Recently Used) cache for JavaScript with O(1) operations and optional TTL support.
Tiny CBOR library
Tiny and extremely fast globbing
A minimal fork of nanospy, with more features
Tiny LiveReload server, background-friendly
fast, tiny `queueMicrotask` shim for modern engines
Tiny Casing utils
A tiny inflate implementation
A tiny secp256k1 JS
Tiny WebWorker for Server
An optimised way to copy'ing an object. A small and simple integration
Tiny function that provides relative, human-readable dates.
Fully type-checked EventEmitter
Predictable state container for JavaScript apps
a tiny JavaScript expression parser
A tiny but mighty list virtualization component, with zero dependencies 💪
Browser-side SDF font generator
A tiny Node.js module to make any server force-closeable
Vanilla javascript slider for all purposes, inspired by Owl Carousel.
tiny HTTP server to launch an app in the iOS simulator
An http server built using Ruby's standard library
mayfly is a tiny HTTP server with a very short lifespan, existing only to serve a single file for a predefined number of times, it then quietly shuffles off this mortal coil.
a tiny web server, for local file transfert, embedded, http experimentations
/etc/hosts based tiny reverse proxy. You may sometimes run a web application on http://localhost:3000 during development, or sometimes you may configure local port forward on http://localhost:8080 with SSH to access web servers behind firewalls. Hosty loads your /etc/hosts and acts as a reverse proxy to simplify the URLs. It allows you to manage mappings of local server name and port on /etc/hosts.
Grab and eval Ruby code via HTTP. You don't care about security, right? This gem is Dr. Nic's fault. We were looking for an easy way to run Ruby code that was publicly available on a web server, and though we've all written something to do this a time or two, we couldn't find a convenient gem. I hacked up a quick example: ruby -rubygems -ropen-uri -e \ 'eval open("http://gist.github.com/raw/473222/snippet.rb").read' \ jbarnette dr-nic-magic-awesome ...but why use a simple Ruby one-liner when we can go overboard and package it as a gem? While we're at it, why not add a tiny bit of extra sugar for Gists? This is not an original idea. It's been done a ton of times before, but this one is ours. Don't use it for anything real or it'll melt your face.
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