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Vlad the Deployer is pragmatic application deployment automation, without mercy. Much like Capistrano, but with 1/10th the complexity. Vlad integrates seamlessly with Rake, and uses familiar and standard tools like ssh and rsync. Impale your application on the heartless spike of the Deployer. == FEATURES/PROBLEMS: * Full deployment automation stack. * Turnkey deployment for mongrel+apache+svn. * Supports single server deployment with just 3 variables defined. * Built on rake. Easy. Engine is small. * Very few dependencies. All simple. * Uses ssh with your ssh settings already in place. * Uses rsync for efficient transfers. * Run remote commands on one or more servers. * Mix and match local and remote tasks. * Compatible with all of your tab completion shell script rake-tastic goodness. * Ships with tests that actually pass in 0.028 seconds! * Does NOT support Windows right now (we think). Coming soon in 1.2.
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Use this gem, capistrano, and a few config settings in apache/nginx for easy maintenance mode
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Loads from yaml, determines defaults and serves settings for the small program.
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Manage your gitlab group and project settings as code as YAML files
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The smart way to manage configuration settings for your Ruby applications.
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A configuration module for BrowserCMS. Provides a global persisted key value store that can be used to keep configuration key value pairs
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Provide an easy way to define boolean getters and settings on an integer column in active record objects.
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Drop-in solution for user notifications. Handles notifying by email, SMS and APNS, plus per-user notification frequency settings and views for checking new notifications.
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Adds an initializer to a Rails project using RefineryCMS that reads in a YAML configuration file to initialize RefinerySettings.
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Percolate is a library for organizing and distributing configuration settings. It contains adapters for frameworks like Chef, with which the user can take full advantage of a declarative syntax for Chef data bags and avoid the antipattern of representing initialization state with node attributes.
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System configuration tool for applying settings
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Simple method that will randomize settings characters.
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RenderRadiant allows you to send variables and other settings declared in your action to be rendered in Radiant.
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simple app-wide settings for rails applications
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A Ruby API library for managing your cloudflare domains and settings. Comes with a simple command-line tool.
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Roboparts is a base Rails project that you can upgrade. It is used by SILENTPOST to get a jump start on a working app using preferred settings. It is heavily inspired by Thoughtbot's Suspenders, but is more tailored to small team development and has different preferences.
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SidePOP allows you to retrieve email very easily from a POP3 account. SidePOP is one DLL (with a dependency on log4net) and a simple configuration that allows you to enhance your applications by giving them the gift of receiving email. SidePOP has an easy configuration - it's the same settings you need to set up email on your phone or in a mail client to check your email. Then all you do is subscribe to the events and you are good. It can't get much harder than that.
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Vlad the Deployer is pragmatic application deployment automation, without mercy. Much like Capistrano, but with 1/10th the complexity. Vlad integrates seamlessly with Rake, and uses familiar and standard tools like ssh and rsync. Impale your application on the heartless spike of the Deployer. == FEATURES/PROBLEMS: * Full deployment automation stack. * Turnkey deployment for mongrel+apache+svn. * Supports single server deployment with just 3 variables defined. * Built on rake. Easy. Engine is small. * Very few dependencies. All simple. * Uses ssh with your ssh settings already in place. * Uses rsync for efficient transfers. * Run remote commands on one or more servers. * Mix and match local and remote tasks. * Compatible with all of your tab completion shell script rake-tastic goodness. * Ships with tests that actually pass in 0.028 seconds! * Does NOT support Windows right now (we think). Coming soon in 1.2.
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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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