Project

Reverse Dependencies for rubocop-performance

The projects listed here declare rubocop-performance as a runtime or development dependency

0.0
No release in over 3 years
Low commit activity in last 3 years
HasJwtToken provides JWT autheticationfor models which are kean to use `has_secure_password`in Rails app. It allows find resource by some identificatorand password of by JWT token itself.
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Low commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over a year
Adds custom handling for database uniqueness constraints to ActiveRecord.
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A threadded web/app-server that focuses on threadding, shared ressources, speed and more.
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No release in over 3 years
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A simplistic game engine based on SDL2. Because I can.
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No commit activity in last 3 years
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Homelight Shared Ruby Style Guides
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No commit activity in last 3 years
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Homelight Shared Ruby Style Guides
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A Ruby toolkit for building and using Hookdeck webhooks. Manage webhook sources, destinations, connections, events, and more.
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Library that print your text as horse talk
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0.0
Repository is gone
No release in over 3 years
Simple DSL that supports creating complex strutures of objects
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 Popularity
0.0
No release in over 3 years
HttpLoader is a powerful, high-concurrency performance and load testing console tool. Built on asynchronous Ruby, it evaluates server limits by opening massive numbers of persistent connections and holding them open. It utilizes event-driven I/O with optional periodic ping requests to keep connections active, allowing you to rigorously benchmark maximum concurrent socket capacity with precision and minimal client-side overhead.
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No commit activity in last 3 years
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A HTTP/REST Client to help you wrap APIs easily.
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A Ruby gem that enhances I18n functionality with advanced interpolation and piping features
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Asserts blocks, prints introspective failure messages.
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Low commit activity in last 3 years
No release in over a year
A CLI (as in Command Line Interface) to delete your tweets based on faves, RTs, and time. There are some services out there with a friendly web interface, but this is not one of them. You must know the basics of working with a UNIX terminal and configuring a Twitter API app, as this will only work if you have a Twitter Developer account. Due to the irrevocable nature of tweet deletion, all delete commands are dry-run true, meaning you must call all of them with a --dry-run=false flag if you want them to really do something. Called with --dry-run=false, there is no way to revoke tweet deletion. They are just gone, disappeared into the ether (or the stashed in the Twitter-owned secret place you have no access to without a mandate since nothing gets really deleted from the web these days, folks). This tool won't delete all of your tweets in one fell swoop; it is more of a way to delete your old tweets from time to time. The Twitter API rate limits are relatively complicated, and I don't even wanna go there, but if you do intend on deleting all of your tweets, you can do it with this CLI and some perseverance. I did delete more than 100k of mine by using this script every day for a couple of weeks. The more tweets you delete, the fewer of them you have, and with time the rate limits won't be that much of a problem. I Delete My Tweets (IDMT) can delete your tweets by fetching them via API using an APP you will have to set up yourself. Still, it can also delete tweets from an CSV (comma-separated file) that you can generate from the archive you can request from twitter.com by going to Settings and privacy > Your Account > Download an archive of your data. It is out of the scope of this CLI to generate the CSV (at the moment) but there are scripts out there that can do this for you.
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