802 projects tagged "Apache 2.0"
tadedon is a set of utilities that form a foundation for applications written with one of the many Java frameworks, such as GWT, GIN, Guice, Google App Engine, commons-configuration, and many others. It lets you specify the default configuration of your application and upgrade it automatically on each new release. It can redirect all java.util.logging to slf4j and easily configure logback. It can bind application configuration in a Guice module. It supports @PostConstruct and @PreDestroy annotations (JSR 250) in Guice applications. It lets you annotate your methods with @Transactional annotation. It supports Guice injector stage in your Web application. It lets you test your Guice managed servlets and filters without needing a real servlet container. It lets you use Guice Matchers for matching super class, interface, and type literal annotations. It can inject event bus to your GWT applications with the help of GIN.
TagEventor is a project to enable radically simple computer usage by creating physical-object-based user interfaces. It does this using commercially available (and relatively cheap), standardized RFID technology in the form of small, simple USB connected contacted card/tag readers and small, cheap tags. The project was started based on products available from the "touchatag" company, which has clients for Windows and Mac, and run their own Web service to enable many interesting Web-based applications. However, no simple, lightweight Linux client was available, and the Web focus meant that some client-focused functionality was not possible. The software is currently a daemon that monitors the presence of one or more RFID tags on a connected reader and generates "system events" when tags are placed on it or removed from it.
TCRun is a tool written by software engineers in QA to help in writing, managing, and running automated test cases. The current version is written in C# for use on Windows, though other versions / platforms may be created later as necessary. It tries to make writing automated test cases as simple and painless as possible. It includes support for NUnit exceptions, logging (both test case specific and framwork/runtime), parameterized tests, test case resource files, and a validation framework. It can be used in mono, but is somewhat untested (it's actually built by mono, and it tests itself).
tmin is a quick and simple tool to minimize the size and syntax of complex test cases in automated security testing. It is meant specifically for dealing with unknown or complex data formats (without the need to tokenize and re-serialize testcases), and for easy integration with UI testing harnesses.
The purpose of tomcat-plugin is to provide Java Web Developers with a tool to easily deploy their changes to a locally installed Tomcat. At the moment, the main benefits of such a plugin are that you can: change a Web resource (HTML, CSS, Javascript, etc. -- specified by a resources section) without having to build the entire project and then manually copy files around; build your module as usual and then have the produced jars copied to Tomcat's webapps/$myWebapp/WEB-INF/lib and have Tomcat restarted for you; build your module as usual and then have the produced WAR copied to Tomcat's webapps; start/stop/restart your Tomcat; clean Tomcat work, logs, temp, and webapps; and integrate it with Eclipse and IntelliJ Idea.
tools4j-config supports long-running enterprise Java applications with a framework for handling configuration changes without restarting. It also aids in developing applications which are decoupled from knowing how and where to store, retrieve, and validate configurations. The aim is to liberate applications to use configurations seamlessly on the terms of their particular environment, without constraining them to Java SE, EE, OSGi, Spring, CDI, or any other programming model or framework.
treap.py is a treap implementation for Python. A treap is a hybrid of a binary tree and a binary heap that is self-balancing and is O(nlog2(n)) for most operations, including deleting a value, inserting a value, finding the least value, and finding the greatest value. This particular treap implementation looks like a dictionary to the caller, but it also supports getting an ordered list (forward or reverse) in O(n) time. The code is available as pure Python (should run on about any Python implementation supporting generators, but was tested on CPython 2.6) or as part Python and part Cython for performance. The version with Cython should run on CPython or Unladen Swallow, but was only tested on CPython 2.6.
uimaFIT provides Java annotations for describing UIMA components which can be used to directly describe the UIMA components in Java code without the need for traditional UIMA XML descriptors. This greatly simplifies refactoring a component definition (e.g., changing a configuration parameter name). uimaFIT also makes it easy to instantiate UIMA components without using XML descriptor files by providing convenient factory methods. This makes uimaFIT an ideal library for testing UIMA components because the component can be easily instantiated and invoked without requiring a descriptor file to be created first. uimaFIT is very useful in research environments in which programmatic/dynamic instantiation of UIMA pipelines can simplify experimentation. For example, when performing 10-fold cross-validation across a number of experimental conditions, it can be quite laborious to create a different set of descriptor files for each run, or even a script which generates such descriptor files. uimaFIT is type system agnostic and does not depend on (or provide) a specific type system.