Project

Reverse Dependencies for Platform

The projects listed here declare Platform as a runtime or development dependency

0.04
No commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over 3 years
POpen4 provides the Rubyist a single API across platforms for executing a command in a child process with handles on stdout, stderr, stdin streams as well as access to the process ID and exit status.
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0.02
No release in over 3 years
Net::Netrc provides ftp(1)-style .netrc parsing
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0.01
No commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over 3 years
A grab-bag of IRB power user madness (originaly Giles Bowkett's utility_belt).
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0.01
Repository is gone
No release in over 3 years
An automated web acceptance test framework for non-technical resources using selenium-wedriver.
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0.01
No release in over 3 years
A grab-bag of IRB power user madness.
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0.0
No release in over 3 years
A grab-bag of IRB power user madness. -- now with linux
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0.0
No release in over 3 years
ExecuteShell provides cross-platform shell command execution. Linux, Windows, and Mac OS X are currently supported. In other words, it lays the smack down like a hungry t-rex in the octagon with a pig.
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0.0
No release in over 3 years
A grab-bag of IRB power user madness. (With Linux Support!)
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0.0
No release in over 3 years
Low commit activity in last 3 years
This gem includes protoc, the protobuf compiler, binaries for Linux, Mac, and Windows. It installs a executable shim called `protoc` that picks the right one to run on your platform. You can use this gem to ensure that you have a protoc of the version you need. By using this gem, you will not need to manually install the right protoc on your hosts. The pre-built linux protoc binaries are not compatible with all systems. For this reason the protobuf source code is included in this gem, and a new protoc binary is built upon gem installation when the pre-built one does not function.
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0.0
No release in over 3 years
A grab-bag of IRB power user madness. (fork of http://utilitybelt.rubyforge.org by Giles Bowkett)
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0.0
No release in over a year
Ruby version of the [Threat Stack](https://www.threatstack.com) agent which helps identify security vulnerabilities at runtime. Refer detailed instructions on how to install the Threat Stack agent [here](https://threatstack.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/360039993431). All components of this product are - Copyright (c) 2021 Threatstack, Inc. All rights reserved.Certain inventions disclosed in this file may be claimed within patents owned or patent applications filed by Threatstack, Inc. or third parties. The Threatstack Ruby agent also uses code from the following open source projects under the following licenses: libinjection http://opensource.org/licenses/BSD-3-Clause
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0.0
No commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over 3 years
TKXXS provides a very simple and very easy to use GUI (graphical user interface) for Ruby; It gives you a persistent output window and popping up (modal) dialogs for input; For a screenshot, see: <tt>https://github.com/Axel2/tkxxs/blob/master/images/screenshot.png</tt>; I tested it on Windows, only; Got user report, that it works on Ubuntu, too. TKXXS shall: * improve the usability of little applications, which otherwise would use a command line interface (CLI); for example by a GUI-file chooser * give a simple GUI front-end for apps, which take parameters on the command line. (stdout can easily be redirected to the OutputWindow.) * take only little more effort and coding time over programming a CLI; * be able to easily upgrade existing CLI-applications; * be comfortable in use (e.g. provide incremental search, tool-tip-help, ...); * be easy to install. Drawbacks: * I'v tested it only on Windows, but got user report, that it works on Ubuntu, too.l * For sure some more drawbacks which I'm not aware of now. TKXXS uses TK (easy to install).
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