Project
Reverse Dependencies for bones
The projects listed here declare bones as a runtime or development dependency
2.13
**Logging** is a flexible logging library for use in Ruby programs based on the
design of Java's log4j library. It features a hierarchical logging system,
custom level names, multiple output destinations per log event, custom
formatting, and more.
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0.71
Although made popular by Windows, INI files can be used on any system thanks
to their flexibility. They allow a program to store configuration data, which
can then be easily parsed and changed. Two notable systems that use the INI
format are Samba and Trac.
More information about INI files can be found on the [Wikipedia Page](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/INI_file).
### Properties
The basic element contained in an INI file is the property. Every property has
a name and a value, delimited by an equals sign *=*. The name appears to the
left of the equals sign and the value to the right.
name=value
### Sections
Section declarations start with *[* and end with *]* as in `[section1]` and
`[section2]` shown in the example below. The section declaration marks the
beginning of a section. All properties after the section declaration will be
associated with that section.
### Comments
All lines beginning with a semicolon *;* or a number sign *#* are considered
to be comments. Comment lines are ignored when parsing INI files.
### Example File Format
A typical INI file might look like this:
[section1]
; some comment on section1
var1 = foo
var2 = doodle
var3 = multiline values \
are also possible
[section2]
# another comment
var1 = baz
var2 = shoodle
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0.17
Serv-O-Lux is a collection of Ruby classes that are useful for daemon and
process management, and for writing your own Ruby services. The code is well
documented and tested. It works with Ruby and JRuby supporting 1.9 and 2.0
interpreters.
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0.1
A Railtie for for integrating the [Logging](https://github.com/TwP/logging)
framework into your Rails 3 application.
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0.08
A simple, clean DSL for describing, writing, and parsing fixed-width text files.
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0.08
A simple, clean DSL for describing, writing, and parsing fixed-width text files.
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0.08
(Temporary fork of slither gem that works with ruby 1.9) A simple, clean DSL for describing, writing, and parsing fixed-width text files.
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Observe your web applications in the wild!
== DESCRIPTION
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0.05
Greenletterrs is a console automation framework, similar to the classic
utility Expect. You give it a command to execute, and tell it which outputs
or events to expect and how to respond to them.
Greenletters also includes a set of Cucumber steps which simplify the task
of spcifying interactive command-line applications.
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0.05
Ruby Radius Library
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0.03
The directory watcher operates by scanning a directory at some interval and
generating a list of files based on a user supplied glob pattern. As the file
list changes from one interval to the next, events are generated and
dispatched to registered observers. Three types of events are supported --
added, modified, and removed.
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0.03
WWMD was originally intended to provide a console helper tool for conducting web application security assessments (which is something I find myself doing alot of). I've spent alot of time and had alot of success writing application specific fuzzers + scrapers to test with. WWMD provides a base of useful code to help you work with web sites both in IRB and by writing scripts that can be as generic or as application specific as you choose. There's alot of helpful stuff crammed in here and its usage has evolved alot. It's not intended to replace, remove or be better than any of the tools you currently use. In fact, WWMD works best *with* the tools you currently use to get stuff done. You get convenience methods for getting, scraping, spidering, decoding, decrypting and munging user inputs, pages and web applications. It doesn't try to be smart. That's up to you. What's here is the basic framework for getting started. There's a raft of cookbook scripts and examples that are coming soon so make sure you check the wiki regularly.
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0.03
A Rails plugin which provides a hook to preview and map the fields of an uploaded CSV file to a pre-defined schema
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0.03
WWMD was originally intended to provide a console helper tool for conducting web application security assessments (which is something I find myself doing alot of). I've spent alot of time and had alot of success writing application specific fuzzers + scrapers to test with. WWMD provides a base of useful code to help you work with web sites both in IRB and by writing scripts that can be as generic or as application specific as you choose. There's alot of helpful stuff crammed in here and its usage has evolved alot. It's not intended to replace, remove or be better than any of the tools you currently use. In fact, WWMD works best *with* the tools you currently use to get stuff done. You get convenience methods for getting, scraping, spidering, decoding, decrypting and munging user inputs, pages and web applications. It doesn't try to be smart. That's up to you. What's here is the basic framework for getting started. There's a raft of cookbook scripts and examples that are coming soon so make sure you check the wiki regularly.
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0.03
Interface for working with Request Tracker (RT) tickets inspired by ActiveRecord.
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0.03
Interface for working with Request Tracker (RT) tickets inspired by ActiveRecord.
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0.03
General debugging tool written in Ruby for OSX/Win32/Linux
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0.03
WWMD was originally intended to provide a console helper tool for
conducting web application security assessments (which is something I
find myself doing alot of). I've spent alot of time and had alot of
success writing application specific fuzzers + scrapers to test with.
WWMD provides a base of useful code to help you work with web sites both
in IRB and by writing scripts that can be as generic or as application
specific as you choose.
There's alot of helpful stuff crammed in here and its usage has evolved
alot. It's not intended to replace, remove or be better than any of the
tools you currently use. In fact, WWMD works best *with* the tools you
currently use to get stuff done. You get convenience methods for
getting, scraping, spidering, decoding, decrypting and munging user
inputs, pages and web applications.
It doesn't try to be smart. That's up to you.
What's here is the basic framework for getting started. There's a raft
of cookbook scripts and examples that are coming soon so make sure you
check the wiki regularly.
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0.03
ZMQMachine is another Ruby implementation of the reactor pattern but this
time using 0mq sockets rather than POSIX sockets.
Unlike the great Eventmachine ruby project and the Python Twisted
project which work with POSIX sockets, ZMQMachine is inherently threaded. The
0mq sockets backing the reactor use a thread pool for performing
their work so already it is different from most other reactors. Also, a
single program may create multiple reactor instances which runs in
its own thread. All activity within the reactor is single-threaded
and asynchronous.
It is possible to extend the 0mq library to "poll" normal file
descriptors. This isn't on my roadmap but patches are accepted.
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0.02
Pure ruby implementation of a btree as described in Introduction to Algorithms by
Cormen, Leiserson, Rivest and Stein, Chapter 18.
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