A port of File::ReadBackwards, the Perl module by Uri Guttman,
for reading a file line by line in reverse order. This can
often be helpful for things like log files, where the
interesting information is usually at the end.
FlexMock is a flexible mocking library for use in unit testing and behavior
specification. Mocks are defined with a fluent API that makes mock
specifications easy to read and easy to remember.
Foreigner introduces a few methods to your migrations for adding and removing
foreign key constraints. It also dumps foreign keys to schema.rb.
The following adapters are supported:
- mysql2
- postgres
- sqlite (foreign key methods are a no-op)
A high-level IO library that provides validation, type conversion, and more
for command-line interfaces. HighLine also includes a complete menu system
that can crank out anything from simple list selection to complete shells
with just minutes of work.
Lager (as in the beer) is a logging framework for Erlang. Its purpose is to
provide a more traditional way to perform logging in an erlang application
that plays nicely with traditional UNIX logging tools like logrotate and
syslog.
Logging is a flexible logging library for use in Ruby programs based on the
design of Java's log4j library. It features a hierarchical logging system,
custom level names, multiple output destinations per log event, custom
formatting, and more.
A simple, powerful, and very fast logging utility that can be a drop in
replacement for Logger or ActiveSupport::BufferedLogger. Provides support for
automatically rolling log files even with multiple processes writing the same
log file.
Mocha is a library for mocking and stubbing using a syntax like that
of JMock, and SchMock. One of its main advantages is that it allows
you to mock and stub methods on real (non-mock) classes and instances.
This is a simple wrapper over the kqueue BSD event notification interface
(supported on FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, and Darwin). It uses the FFI gem to
avoid having to compile a C extension.
ruby_parser (RP) is a ruby parser written in pure ruby (utilizing
racc--which does by default use a C extension). RP's output is
the same as ParseTree's output: s-expressions using ruby's arrays and
base types.