Project

Reverse Dependencies for wwtd

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

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No commit activity in last 3 years
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MovingSign Communication Protocol V2.1 Implementation in Ruby
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Code that drives multiple MovingSign display boards in unison.
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This is a fork of nokogiri-xmlsec. This fork uses mini_portile to improve code predictiveness and allow heroku deploys. This gem adds support to Ruby for encrypting, decrypting, signing and validating the signatures of XML documents, according to the [XML Encryption Syntax and Processing](http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlenc-core/) standard, by wrapping around the [xmlsec1](http://www.aleksey.com/xmlsec) C library and adding relevant methods to `Nokogiri::XML::Document`.
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An adjustable rate progress bar that does not monkey patch Ruby objects
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Utility class for calling functions defined in a PostgreSQL database.
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Consolidation of PO and XLIFF files into one PO file per language
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Rack middleware for declaratively setting the HTTP ContentSecurityPolicy (W3C CSP Level 2/3) security header to help prevent against XSS and other browser based attacks.
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Rack middleware for authentication using JSON Web Tokens using the jwt_claims and json_web_token gems.
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Repository is archived
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"development" is not always the best name for the local environment. An alternate environment name, like "localdev", will prevent confusion, when "dev", or "develop", is used as a deployed environment.
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Backports the :params, :headers and :env options introduced in Rails 5 to older versions of Rails.
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A long-lived project that still receives updates
The missing bits.
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Allows you to test whether your database schema matches the validations in your ActiveRecord models.'
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A light-weight library to convert seconds to human-readable forms
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SessionKeys is a cryptographic tool for the deterministic generation of NaCl compatible Curve25519 encryption and Ed25519 digital signature keys. The strength of the system is rooted in the fact that the keypairs are derived from passing an identifier, such as a username or email address, and a high-entropy passphrase through the SHA256 one-way hash and the scrypt key derivation functions. This means that no private key material need ever be writter to disk or transmitted. The generated keys are deterministic; for any given ID, password, and strength combination the same keys will always be returned.
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should_change / should_create / should_destroy matchers for shoulda 3 backported from shoulda 2
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