Managed Projects

PowerDNS on Rails

  Analyzed about 1 year ago

PowerDNS is a reliable alternative to BIND and sports a flexible, feature rich design and support for various backends, including MySQL and PostgreSQL. This simplifies the management of thousands of zones, and provides added redundancy (by way of database replication) and opens the doors for web ... [More] frontends that ease this even more. PowerDNS on Rails is built based on our experience of managing thousands of DNS records through various (often crude) techniques, that included building zone files from databases via cron, and implementing PowerDNS for its database backends. PowerDNS on Rails is currently tightly integrated into one of South Africa's premier hosting & email platforms and works tirelessly everyday. [Less]

14.7K lines of code

0 current contributors

over 9 years since last commit

3 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
4.5
   
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ruote-kit

  Analyzed about 1 year ago

ruote-kit is a RESTful container for the ruote workflow engine, simplifying deployment and integration of ruote into a local or distributed architecture.

4.83K lines of code

0 current contributors

over 11 years since last commit

2 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
0.0
 
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ruote-kit-client

  Analyzed about 1 year ago

Ruby client library for interacting with ruote-kit

868 lines of code

0 current contributors

about 15 years since last commit

1 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
0.0
 
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Ratpack

  Analyzed about 1 year ago

Ratpack is a simple Ruby HTTP to XMPP (Jabber) bridge built on the Sinatra micro-framework

340 lines of code

0 current contributors

over 15 years since last commit

0 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
0.0
 
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daemon-kit

  Analyzed about 1 year ago

Daemon Kit aims to simplify creating Ruby daemons by providing a sound application skeleton (through a generator), task specific generators (jabber bot, etc) and robust environment management code.

3.35K lines of code

0 current contributors

almost 7 years since last commit

0 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
0.0
 
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ruote-amqp

  Analyzed about 1 year ago

Allow ruote to have remote participants that communicate with the engine via AMQP.

764 lines of code

0 current contributors

almost 12 years since last commit

0 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
0.0
 
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ruote-activerecord

  Analyzed about 1 year ago

ActiveRecord persistence for the ruote workflow engine.

916 lines of code

0 current contributors

about 15 years since last commit

0 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
0.0
 
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BIND DLZ on Rails

  Analyzed about 1 year ago

Bind is the defacto DNS server out there, and the bind-dlz extensions enhances it even further by providing support for database backends. This simplifies the management of thousands of zones, and provides added redundancy (by way of database replication) and opens the doors for web frontends that ... [More] ease this even more. Bind DLZ on Rails is built based on our experience of managing thousands of DNS records through various (often crude) techniques, that included building zone files from databases via cron, and implementing PowerDNS for its database backends. Nothing we tried seemed convincing, and we opted to go back to Bind using bind-dlz on a MySQL 5.0 backend. Using Rails 2 for a interface just makes sense because we can build a rich interface and an REST API in a single go. [Less]

150K lines of code

0 current contributors

over 16 years since last commit

0 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
0.0
 
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correlate

  Analyzed about 1 year ago

An experiment in expressing relationships between couchrest documents and activerecord models.

1.05K lines of code

0 current contributors

about 15 years since last commit

0 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
0.0
 
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synaptein

  Analyzed about 1 year ago

As per Wikipedia: The word "synapse" comes from "synaptein", which Sir Charles Scott Sherrington and colleagues coined from the Greek "syn-" ("together") and "haptein" ("to clasp"). synaptein is a simple daemon that translate from other protocols into Jabber,and in future versions back again. ... [More] This has several (not immediately obvious) benefits: * Quicker message dispatching for stateless and short lived services. This includes bash scripts sending via curl, or cron notifications, etc. * Translating incoming Jabber messages into AMQP for true distributed processing and task delegation * Translating incoming Jabber messages into REST for processing by Merb, Rails or Halcyon And many others... synaptein will be written in Ruby, and initially support incoming XML message t [Less]

2.04K lines of code

0 current contributors

over 16 years since last commit

0 users on Open Hub

Activity Not Available
0.0
 
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