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A persistent key-value store for fast storage environments.
RocksDB is an embeddable persistent key-value store for fast storage.
UnQLite is a in-process software library which implements a self-contained, serverless, zero-configuration, transactional NoSQL database engine. UnQLite is a document store database similar to MongoDB, Redis, CouchDB etc. as well a standard Key/Value store similar to BerkeleyDB, LevelDB, etc.
UnQLite is an embedded NoSQL (Key/Value store and Document-store) database engine. Unlike most other NoSQL databases, UnQLite does not have a separate server process. UnQLite reads and writes directly to ordinary disk files. A complete database with multiple collections, is contained in a single disk file. The database file format is cross-platform, you can freely copy a database between 32-bit and 64-bit systems or between big-endian and little-endian architectures. UnQLite features includes:
- Serverless, NoSQL database engine.
- Transactional (ACID) database.
- Zero configuration.
- Single database file, does not use temporary files.
- Cross-platform file format.
- UnQLite is a Self-Contained C library without dependency.
- Standard Key/Value store.
- Document store (JSON) database via Jx9.
- Support cursors for linear records traversal.
- Pluggable run-time interchangeable storage engine.
- Support for on-disk as well in-memory databases.
- Built with a powerful disk storage engine which support O(1) lookup.
- Thread safe and full reentrant.
- Simple, Clean and easy to use API.
- Support Terabyte sized databases.
- BSD licensed product.
- Amalgamation: All C source code for UnQLite and Jx9 are combined into a single source file.
- Highly available online support.
Column-store features
When your database grows into millions of records spread over lots of tables and used in business or science data warehouse applications, you really want a column-store database management system.
MonetDB innovates at all layers of a DBMS, e.g. a storage model based on vertical fragmentation, a modern CPU-tuned query execution architecture, automatic and self-tuning indexes, run-time query optimization, and a modular software architecture.
The filtering system is designed after ibuffer: every dired
buffer has associated "filter stack" where user can push
filters (predicates). These filters are by default
logically "anded", meaning, only the files satsifying all the
predicates are shown.
Some filters take additional input from the user such as part of
name, regexp or extension, other filters only use a predefined
predicate such as "show only directories" or "omit dot files".
In addition, there are two "metafilters", the or' filter and the
not' filter. These take other filters as arguments and change
their logical interpretation. The or' filter takes the two filters on top of the stack, pops them and pushes a filter that matches files satisfying one or the other (or both) filters. The
not' filter pops the top filter and pushes its logical negation.
To enable or disable the filters toggle minor mode
`dired-filter-mode'. Toggling this mode preserves the filter
stack, so you can use it to quickly hide/unhide files filtered by
the current filter setup.
All the provided interactive functions are available from
dired-filter-map'. You can customize
dired-filter-prefix' to set
a prefix for this map or bind it manually to a prefix of your
choice using:
(define-key dired-mode-map (kbd "some-key") dired-filter-map)
The bindings follow a convention where the filters are mapped on
lower-case letters or punctuation, operators are mapped on symbols
(such as !, |, * etc.) and group commands are mapped on upper-case
letters. The exception to this is p' which is bound to
dired-filter-pop', which is a very common operation and warrants a
quick binding.
In addition to filtering, you can also use the same predicates to
only mark files without removing the rest. All the filtering
functions of the form dired-filter-by-*' have their marking counterpart
dired-filter-mark-by-*'. These are available from
dired-filter-mark-map'. You can customize
dired-filter-mark-prefix' a prefix for this map or bind it
manually to a prefix of your choice using:
(define-key dired-mode-map (kbd "some-key") dired-filter-mark-map)
The marking operations are not placed on stack, instead, the marks
are immediately updated by "OR"-ing them together. To remove marks
that would otherwise be selected by a filter, use prefix argument
(usually bound to C-u'). To logically negate the meaning of the filter, you can call the function with a double prefix argument (usually
C-u' `C-u')
You can use saved filters to mark files by calling
`dired-filter-mark-by-saved-filters'.
Forge allows you to work with Git forges, such as Github and Gitlab, from the comfort of Magit and the rest of Emacs.
Forge fetches issues, pull-requests and other data using the forge’s API and stores that in a local database. Additionally it fetches the pull-request references using Git. Forge implements various features that use this data but the database and pull-request refs can also be used by third-party packages.
fd is a simple, fast and user-friendly alternative to
find.
While it does not seek to mirror all of find's powerful functionality, it provides sensible
(opinionated) defaults for 80% of the use cases.
Features
- Convenient syntax:
fd PATTERN
instead offind -iname '*PATTERN*'
. - Colorized terminal output (similar to ls).
- It's fast (see benchmarks below).
- Smart case: the search is case-insensitive by default. It switches to
case-sensitive if the pattern contains an uppercase
character*. - Ignores hidden directories and files, by default.
- Ignores patterns from your
.gitignore
, by default. - Regular expressions.
- Unicode-awareness.
- The command name is 50% shorter* than
find
:-). - Parallel command execution with a syntax similar to GNU Parallel.
ρEmacs is a preconfigured distribution of GNU Emacs editor for Microsoft Windows. It offers nearly GNU/Linux Emacs experience in Windows with minimum configuration efforts. A set of additional GNU command-line and development tools is available through the network installer.
resource on Fediverse, federated networks, mesh networks, distributed web, alternative internet, alternative social media, decentralisation.
# Loading from __DATA__
my @hosts = <DATA>;
chomp @hosts;
# => ["coucou.com", "coco.com", "cici.com", "chichi.com", "cucu.com", "cece.com" ]
__DATA__
coucou.com
coco.com
cici.com
chichi.com
cucu.com
cece.com
# Loading from file ./hosts
use Mojo::File;
my $file = Mojo::File->new('hosts');
my @hosts = grep { $_ ne '' } grep { $_ !~ m/^#/ } split '\n', $file->slurp;
# => ["coucou.com", "coco.com", "cici.com", "chichi.com", "cucu.com", "cece.com" ]
# ./hosts
# Deals with comments and blank lines
coucou.com
coco.com
# More hosts
cici.com
chichi.com
cucu.com
cece.com
ModSecurity is an open source, cross-platform web application firewall (WAF) module. Known as the "Swiss Army Knife" of WAFs, it enables web application defenders to gain visibility into HTTP(S) traffic and provides a power rules language and API to implement advanced protections.
The world’s most used penetration testing framework
Knowledge is power, especially when it’s shared. A collaboration between the open source community and Rapid7, Metasploit helps security teams do more than just verify vulnerabilities, manage security assessments, and improve security awareness; it empowers and arms defenders to always stay one step (or two) ahead of the game.
Three weird tricks to make your object-oriented codemore encapsulated, more reusable, and more maintainable.
App::UpdateCPANfile reads cpanfile, pin dependencies, update dependencies and write back to cpanfile.
Explains how to install and configure Apache with a mod_md module to secure traffic with Let's Encrypt free TLS/SSL certificate on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Linux.