Project

Reverse Dependencies for rspec

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

1.55
No commit activity in last 3 years
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A fix for a no_proxy bug: https://github.com/ruby/ruby/commit/556e3da4216c926e71dea9ce4ea4a08dcfdc1275
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1.53
No release in over 3 years
Have you ever wanted to call <code>exit()</code> with an error condition, but weren't sure what exit status to use? No? Maybe it's just me, then. Anyway, I was reading manpages late one evening before retiring to bed in my palatial estate in rural Oregon, and I stumbled across <code>sysexits(3)</code>. Much to my chagrin, I couldn't find a +sysexits+ for Ruby! Well, for the other 2 people that actually care about <code>style(9)</code> as it applies to Ruby code, now there is one! Sysexits is a *completely* *awesome* collection of human-readable constants for the standard (BSDish) exit codes, used as arguments to +exit+ to indicate a specific error condition to the parent process. It's so fantastically fabulous that you'll want to fork it right away to avoid being thought of as that guy that's still using Webrick for his blog. I mean, <code>exit(1)</code> is so passé! This is like the 14-point font of Systems Programming. Like the C header file from which this was derived (I mean forked, naturally), error numbers begin at <code>Sysexits::EX__BASE</code> (which is way more cool than plain old +64+) to reduce the possibility of clashing with other exit statuses that other programs may already return. The codes are available in two forms: as constants which can be imported into your own namespace via <code>include Sysexits</code>, or as <code>Sysexits::STATUS_CODES</code>, a Hash keyed by Symbols derived from the constant names. Allow me to demonstrate. First, the old way: exit( 69 ) Whaaa...? Is that a euphemism? What's going on? See how unattractive and... well, 1970 that is? We're not changing vaccuum tubes here, people, we're <em>building a totally-awesome future in the Cloud™!</em> include Sysexits exit EX_UNAVAILABLE Okay, at least this is readable to people who have used <code>fork()</code> more than twice, but you could do so much better! include Sysexits exit :unavailable Holy Toledo! It's like we're writing Ruby, but our own made-up dialect in which variable++ is possible! Well, okay, it's not quite that cool. But it does look more Rubyish. And no monkeys were patched in the filming of this episode! All the simpletons still exiting with icky _numbers_ can still continue blithely along, none the wiser.
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1.52
Repository is archived
No commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over 3 years
A lightweight Sass grid framework
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1.51
There's a lot of open issues
A long-lived project that still receives updates
A Ruby CLI gem that beautifies the terminal's ls command, with color and font-awesome icons.
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1.51
A long-lived project that still receives updates
InSpec provides a framework for creating end-to-end infrastructure tests. You can use it for integration or even compliance testing. Create fully portable test profiles and use them in your workflow to ensure stability and security. Integrate InSpec in your change lifecycle for local testing, CI/CD, and deployment verification. This has local support only. See the `inspec` gem for full support. Packaged distributions of Progress® Chef® products obtained from RubyGems are made available pursuant to the Progress Chef EULA at https://www.chef.io/end-user-license-agreement, unless there is an executed agreement in effect between you and Progress that covers the Progress Chef products ("Master Agreement"), in which case the Master Agreement shall govern. Source code obtained from the Chef GitHub repository is made available under Apache-2.0, a copy of which is included.
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1.49
No release in over a year
SitemapGenerator is a framework-agnostic XML Sitemap generator written in Ruby with automatic Rails integration. It supports Video, News, Image, Mobile, PageMap and Alternate Links sitemap extensions and includes Rake tasks for managing your sitemaps, as well as many other great features.
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A long-lived project that still receives updates
Easiest way to manage multi-environment settings in any ruby project or framework: Rails, Sinatra, Padrino and others
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1.48
Low commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over a year
Ruby/NTLM provides message creator and parser for the NTLM authentication.
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A long-lived project that still receives updates
Airbrake is an online tool that provides robust exception tracking in any of your Ruby applications. In doing so, it allows you to easily review errors, tie an error to an individual piece of code, and trace the cause back to recent changes. The Airbrake dashboard provides easy categorization, searching, and prioritization of exceptions so that when errors occur, your team can quickly determine the root cause. Additionally, this gem includes integrations with such popular libraries and frameworks as Rails, Sinatra, Resque, Sidekiq, Delayed Job, Shoryuken, ActiveJob and many more.
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1.44
A long-lived project that still receives updates
Licensee automates the process of reading LICENSE files and compares their contents to known licenses using a fancy maths.
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