Showing 2 open source projects for "auto click ubuntu"

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
  • Cloud tools for web scraping and data extraction Icon
    Cloud tools for web scraping and data extraction

    Deploy pre-built tools that crawl websites, extract structured data, and feed your applications. Reliable web data without maintaining scrapers.

    Automate web data collection with cloud tools that handle anti-bot measures, browser rendering, and data transformation out of the box. Extract content from any website, push to vector databases for RAG workflows, or pipe directly into your apps via API. Schedule runs, set up webhooks, and connect to your existing stack. Free tier available, then scale as you need to.
    Explore 10,000+ tools
  • 1
    git-auto-commit Action

    git-auto-commit Action

    Automatically Commit changed Files back to GitHub

    Automatically Commit changed Files back to GitHub with GitHub Actions for the 80% use case. A GitHub Action to detect changed files during a Workflow run and to commit and push them back to the GitHub repository. By default, the commit is made in the name of "GitHub Actions" and co-authored by the user that made the last commit. Note that the Action has to be used in a Job that runs on a UNIX system (e.g. ubuntu-latest). If you don't use the default permission of the GITHUB_TOKEN, give the...
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    gitwatch

    gitwatch

    Watch a file or folder and automatically commit changes to a git repo

    A bash script to watch a file or folder and commit changes to a git repo. Some programs auto-write their config files, without waiting for you to click an 'Apply' button; or even if there is such a button, most programs offer you no way of going back to an earlier version of your settings. If you commit your config file(s) to a git repo, you can track changes and go back to older versions. This script makes it convenient, to have all changes recorded automatically.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next