Showing 3 open source projects for "using"

View related business solutions
  • Vibes don’t ship, Retool does Icon
    Vibes don’t ship, Retool does

    Start from a prompt and build production-ready apps on your data—with security, permissions, and compliance built in.

    Vibe coding tools create cool demos, but Retool helps you build software your company can actually use. Generate internal apps that connect directly to your data—deployed in your cloud with enterprise security from day one. Build dashboards, admin panels, and workflows with granular permissions already in place. Stop prototyping and ship on a platform that actually passes security review.
    Build apps that ship
  • Find Hidden Risks in Windows Task Scheduler Icon
    Find Hidden Risks in Windows Task Scheduler

    Free diagnostic script reveals configuration issues, error patterns, and security risks. Instant HTML report.

    Windows Task Scheduler might be hiding critical failures. Download the free JAMS diagnostic tool to uncover problems before they impact production—get a color-coded risk report with clear remediation steps in minutes.
    Download Free Tool
  • 1
    Puma

    Puma

    A Ruby/Rack web server built for concurrency

    ...What makes Puma so fast is the careful use of a Ragel extension to provide fast, accurate HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing. This makes the server scream without too many portability issues. If you are using Bundler, just add Puma to your project's Gemfile. Once you've installed your bundle, start Puma. If you are not using Bundler, you can install Puma directly from the command line. On MRI, there is a Global VM Lock (GVL) that ensures only one thread can run Ruby code at a time. But if you're doing a lot of blocking IO (such as HTTP calls to external APIs like Twitter), Puma still improves MRI's throughput by allowing IO waiting to be done in parallel.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    Amazon DynamoDB Session Store

    Amazon DynamoDB Session Store

    Handles sessions for Ruby web applications using DynamoDB as a backend

    The Amazon DynamoDB Session Store handles sessions for Ruby web applications using a DynamoDB backend. The session store is compatible with all Rack-based frameworks. For Rails applications, use the aws-sdk-rails gem. The session store is a Rack Middleware, meaning that it will implement the Rack interface for dealing with HTTP request/responses. This session store uses a DynamoDB backend in order to provide scaling and centralized data benefits for session storage with more ease than other containers, like local servers or cookies. ...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 3
    This is a collection of REST specifications, and implementations of those specs, for very low-level information sharing and workflow operations using REST actions over HTTP. Implementations are in various languages, mainly Java, Python, and Ruby.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next