Showing 4 open source projects for "automatic"

View related business solutions
  • Our Free Plans just got better! | Auth0 Icon
    Our Free Plans just got better! | Auth0

    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
  • Payments you can rely on to run smarter. Icon
    Payments you can rely on to run smarter.

    Never miss a sale. Square payment processing serves customers better with tools and integrations that make work more efficient.

    Accept payments at your counter or on the go. It’s easy to get started. Try the Square POS app on your phone or pick from a range of hardworking hardware.
    Learn More
  • 1
    Svix

    Svix

    The enterprise-ready webhooks service

    ...Building a secure, reliable, and scalable webhook service is hard and time-consuming. We built it so you can focus on what matters most, your business. Customer endpoints fail or hang more often than you think. You need automatic retries to ensure deliverability. You need to monitor the deliverability of your webhooks to different endpoints, disable failing ones and notify your customers. Webhooks come with a myriad of security implications, such as SSRF, replay attacks and unauthenticated webhook events. You would need to build a UI for your users to add and remove endpoints, inspect logs and get ongoing reports. ...
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    derive(Error)

    derive(Error)

    derive(Error) for struct and enum error types

    This is a Rust crate that provides a convenient derive macro (#[derive(Error)]) for implementing std::error::Error on your custom error types (structs or enums). The goal is to enable library authors to build expressive, typed error types, with readable Display implementations (via #[error("...")] annotations) as well as From conversions (#[from]), source tracking (#[source]), and optionally backtraces. It is designed so that switching from handwritten error implementation to using this...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 3
    Anyhow

    Anyhow

    Flexible concrete Error type built on std::error::Error

    This is a Rust library (crate) that provides a flexible, concrete error type built atop the standard std::error::Error trait. Its primary goal is to make error handling in applications easy: instead of defining lots of custom error types, you can use anyhow::Error (or the alias anyhow::Result<T>) for fallible functions. The crate supports attaching context to errors, so you can convert a low-level error (like “file not found”) into one with richer diagnostics (“Failed to read instructions...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 4
    GraphQL Juniper

    GraphQL Juniper

    GraphQL server library for Rust

    GraphQL is a data query language developed by Facebook intended to serve mobile and web application frontends. Juniper makes it possible to write GraphQL servers in Rust that are type-safe and blazingly fast. We also try to make declaring and resolving GraphQL schemas as convenient as Rust will allow. Juniper does not include a web server - instead it provides building blocks to make integration with existing servers straightforward. It optionally provides a pre-built integration for the...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Next-Gen Encryption for Post-Quantum Security | CLEAR by Quantum Knight Icon
    Next-Gen Encryption for Post-Quantum Security | CLEAR by Quantum Knight

    Lock Down Any Resource, Anywhere, Anytime

    CLEAR by Quantum Knight is a FIPS-140-3 validated encryption SDK engineered for enterprises requiring top-tier security. Offering robust post-quantum cryptography, CLEAR secures files, streaming media, databases, and networks with ease across over 30 modern platforms. Its compact design, smaller than a single smartphone image, ensures maximum efficiency and low energy consumption.
    Learn More
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next