Project
Reverse Dependencies for rdoc
The projects listed here declare rdoc as a runtime or development dependency
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This class provides an enumeration function to have the object which I added tree information to in an argument.
The instance receives an enumerable object and provides #each and #each_method. The #each method calls a block in an argument in own. The #each_method method calls the method of an object appointed own in an argument.
I have the information of the object equal to the ancestors in own and front and back and hierarchy structure, and a block and the argument handed to a method maintain the state flag in the enumeration again.
It is necessary to appoint the information about the descendant in the hierarchy structure in a block - a method explicitly. When the #into method receives an enumerable object, and a block is not exhibited, a block - a method is used recursively.
This class provides a function to enumerate it, but it is not the object which it can enumerate.
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Use this to store status information from across a big-program while keeping it simple.
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Tools and scripts for building and managing infrastructure on AWS.
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Windows bindings for opine
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Stingray gem for interfacing with the Riverbed Stingray loadbalancers.
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Stockpile is a simple key-value store connection manager framework. Stockpile
itself does not implement a connection manager, but places expectations for
implemented connection managers. So far, only Redis has been implemented
(stockpile-redis).
Stockpile also provides an adapter so that its functionality can be accessed
from within a module.
Release 2.0 fixes an issue when Stockpile options are provided with an
OpenStruct, originally reported as
{stockpile-redis#1}[https://github.com/halostatue/stockpile-redis/issues/1].
Support for Ruby 1.9 has been dropped.
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stockpile-redis is a connection manager for Redis to be used with
{Stockpile}[https://github.com/halostatue/stockpile].
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A Ruby gem that provides a command-line interface for fetching stock information.
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Stocktastic fetches stock quotes
It uses Yahoo Finance as a source by default.
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Content filter to determine the XSS, spam or offensive quality of text.
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CI::Reporter is an add-on to Test::Unit, RSpec and Cucumber that allows you to generate XML reports of your test, spec and/or feature runs. The resulting files can be read by a continuous integration system that understands Ant's JUnit report XML format, thus allowing your CI system to track test/spec successes and failures.
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A client library for StormMQ's Cloud Messaging service. See http://www.stormmq.com/ for details of the service.
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Random real user-agents
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Strapper is a tool to help you make sure your environment is ready to run your project. It uses things like Homebrew to install the required tools but is softer than Boxen or Vagrant to manage what you need.
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Custom rules to prettify stream output
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Compute statistics on stream data
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Imagine a semaphore that shows each worker in a web app, busy in red, and available in green.
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Strelka is a framework for creating and deploying Mongrel2 web applications
in Ruby, and for managing a Mongrel2 cluster.
It's named after the Russian dog who was one of the first space travelers
to orbit the Earth and return alive.
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This is a web content-management application written for the Strelka
web application framework.
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This is a Strelka application plugin for describing rules for [Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS)](http://www.w3.org/TR/cors/).
NOTE: It's still a work in progress.
By default, the plugin has paranoid defaults, and doesn't do anything. You'll need to grant access to the resources you want to share.
To grant access, you declare one or more `access_control` blocks which can modify responses to matching access-control requests. All the blocks which match the incoming request's URI are called with the request and response objects in the order in which they're declared:
# Allow access to all resources from any origin by default
access_control do |req, res|
res.allow_origin '*'
res.allow_methods 'GET', 'POST'
res.allow_credentials
res.allow_headers :content_type
end
These are applied in the order you declare them, with each matching block passed the request if it matches. This happens before the application gets the request, so it can do any further modification it needs to, and so it can block requests from disallowed origins/methods/etc.
There are a number of helper methods added to the request and response objects for applying and declaring access-control rules when this plugin is loaded:
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