Showing 7 open source projects for "proxy software tool"

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  • 1
    asdf

    asdf

    Extendable version manager with support for Ruby, Node.js, Elixir, etc

    Manage multiple runtime versions with a single CLI tool. Manage each of your project runtimes with a single CLI tool and command interface. asdf is a CLI tool that can manage multiple language runtime versions on a per-project basis. It is like gvm, nvm, rbenv & pyenv (and more) all in one! Simply install your language's plugin! Large ecosystem of existing runtimes & tools. Simple API to add support for new tools as you need! Support for existing config files .nvmrc, .node-versions,...
    Downloads: 4 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 2
    forgit

    forgit

    A utility tool powered by fzf for using git interactively

    This tool is designed to help you use git more efficiently. It's lightweight and easy to use. Fig adds apps, shortcuts, and autocomplete to your existing terminal. Options can be set via environment variables. They have to be exported in order to be recognized by forgit. You can use forgit as a subcommand of git by making git-forgit available in $PATH. Forgit will use the default configured pager from git (core.pager, pager.show, pager.diff) but can be altered with several environment...
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 3

    Husky

    Git hooks made easy

    Husky is a tool that makes handling Git hooks a lot easier, and lets you run the scripts you want at those stages. It works by including an object right within your package.json file. This then configures Husky so that it runs the scripts you specify. After that, it's Husky's responsibility to manage at which point in the Git lifecycle your scripts will run. Husky helps to improve your commits, lets you run tests, lint code and more when you commit or push. It is very lightweight, with...
    Downloads: 7 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 4
    git-secret

    git-secret

    A bash-tool to store your private data inside a git repository

    There’s a well-known issue with deploying and configuring software on servers: generally, you have to store your private data (such as database passwords, application secret-keys, OAuth secret keys, etc) outside of the git repository. If you do choose to store these secrets unencrypted in your git repo, even if the repository is private, it is a security risk to copy the secrets everywhere you check out your repo. These files are not version controlled. Filenames, locations, and passwords...
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 5
    Git-FTP

    Git-FTP

    Uses Git to upload only changed files to FTP servers

    If you use Git and you need to upload your files to an FTP server, Git-ftp can save you some time and bandwidth by uploading only those files that changed since the last upload. It keeps track of the uploaded files by storing the commit id in a log file on the server. It uses Git to determine which local files have changed. You can easily deploy another branch or go back in the Git history to upload an older version. git-ftp was not designed as centralized deployment tool. While a commit is...
    Downloads: 3 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 6
    Git Blame Someone Else

    Git Blame Someone Else

    Blame someone else for your bad code

    git-blame-someone-else is a humorous Git utility created as a joke to let developers attribute problematic code to someone else. It modifies both the author and committer information of a commit, making it appear as though another contributor is responsible for the changes. While not intended for production repositories, it demonstrates how Git’s metadata can be manipulated for fun or demonstration purposes. The project highlights how easily commit authorship can be altered, serving as both...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 7
    git-recall

    git-recall

    An interactive way to peruse your git history from the terminal

    An interactive way to peruse your git history from the terminal. git-recall is a simple tool that allows you to easily go through your commits and check what you or other contributors in your team did. It doesn't aim to be a replacement for the git log command, but just to be a convenient way to recall what you've done from your terminal. You can install it by simply copying the git-recall script into any existing path (e.g. /usr/local/bin) or create your own directory and add it to the PATH...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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