With up to 25k MAUs and unlimited Okta connections, our Free Plan lets you focus on what you do best—building great apps.
You asked, we delivered! Auth0 is excited to expand our Free and Paid plans to include more options so you can focus on building, deploying, and scaling applications without having to worry about your security. Auth0 now, thank yourself later.
Try free now
Context for your AI agents
Crawl websites, sync to vector databases, and power RAG applications. Pre-built integrations for LLM pipelines and AI assistants.
Build data pipelines that feed your AI models and agents without managing infrastructure. Crawl any website, transform content, and push directly to your preferred vector store. Use 10,000+ tools for RAG applications, AI assistants, and real-time knowledge bases. Monitor site changes, trigger workflows on new data, and keep your AIs fed with fresh, structured information. Cloud-native, API-first, and free to start until you need to scale.
...The capistrano-rails gem includes extras specifically designed for Ruby on Rails, specifically Asset Pipeline Support and Database Migration Support. Capistrano deploys using SSH. Thus, you must be able to SSH (ideally with keys and ssh-agent) from the deployment system to the destination system for Capistrano to work.
...Currently this works on Debian and RedHat-based Linux systems. The latest Elasticsearch versions of 7.x & 6.x are actively tested. Elasticsearch default version is described in es_version. You can override this variable in your playbook to install another version. While we are testing this role only with one 7.x and one 6.x version. All Elasticsearch configuration parameters are supported. This is achieved using a configuration map parameter 'es_config' which is serialized into the elasticsearch.yml file. The use of a map ensures the Ansible playbook does not need to be updated to reflect new/deprecated/plugin configuration parameters. ...
CLI workflow for the administration of macOS apps as binaries
Homebrew installs the stuff you need that Apple (or your Linux system) didn’t. Homebrew installs packages to their own directory and then symlinks their files into /usr/local. Homebrew won’t install files outside its prefix and you can place a Homebrew installation wherever you like. Trivially create your own Homebrew packages. It’s all Git and Ruby underneath, so hack away with the knowledge that you can easily revert your modifications and merge upstream updates. ...