Start building on Google Cloud with $300 in free credits. No commitment, no credit card required until you're ready to scale.
Launch your next project with $300 in free Google Cloud credits—no strings attached. Test, build, and deploy without risk. Use your credits across the entire Google Cloud platform to find what works best for your needs. After your credits are used, continue with always-free tier services. Only pay when you're ready to scale. Sign up in minutes and start exploring.
Start Free Trial
Stop Storing Third-Party Tokens in Your Database
Auth0 Token Vault handles secure token storage, exchange, and refresh for external providers so you don't have to build it yourself.
Rolling your own OAuth token storage can be a security liability. Token Vault securely stores access and refresh tokens from federated providers and handles exchange and renewal automatically. Connected accounts, refresh exchange, and privileged worker flows included.
Java classfile assembler/disassembler and interactive low-level editor
Java Classfile assembler/disassembler and low-level interactive editor. Allows viewing and manipulation of Java class data both manually and via scripts. Load in a class file, make changes, and then save the result.
A disassembler for the linux platform. Currently this supports x86 ELF files assumed to be written in C and output to intel- syntax assembly language; however the design is modular and replacements for any of these can be written.
jbytecode is a Java bytecode disassembler/assembler written in Python. Dissasembly code is aligned with Java bytecodes in the class file so modification and re-assembly is always possible, even when class is obfuscated.
AI-powered service management for IT and enterprise teams
Enterprise-grade ITSM, for every business
Give your IT, operations, and business teams the ability to deliver exceptional services—without the complexity. Maximize operational efficiency with refreshingly simple, AI-powered Freshservice.
Decompyle is a python disassembler and decompiler which converts Python byte-code (.pyc or .pyo) back into equivalent Python source. Verification of the produced code (re-compiled) is avaliable as well.