987 projects tagged "Apache 2.0"
CSS Import Resolver resolves the @import url(...); statements in input CSS files (by replacing the @import statement with the actual content of the linked CSS) and creates a huge CSS output (written to STDOUT by default). Including the combined CSS in your Web pages will improve the performance of a site by avoiding additional HTTP roundtrips.
kongcurrent provides an easy-to use helper to assist debugging issues which cause exceptions under concurrent access. It was inspired by a problem in which a non-thread-safe Map object held by a third party framework was accidentally shared between threads, causing a ConcurrentModificationException. The helper (a "monitor") creates a proxied version of an object implementing some interface. The proxy can track invocations of the objects' methods and can report on potential concurrent access on the object. This can be used to help find code paths which concurrently access the object through its interface methods. By design, the helper is extensible, and can be adapted to more specific needs.
BitNami LimeSurvey Stack Native Installer is an easy-to-install distribution of the LimeSurvey application. It includes pre-configured, ready-to-run versions of Apache, MySQL, PHP, and phpMyAdmin so users can get a LimeSurvey installation up and running in minutes after answering a few questions. Windows, Linux, Linux 64, Mac OS X, and Unix operating systems are supported. LimeSurvey allows users to quickly create intuitive, powerful, online question-and-answer surveys that can work for tens to thousands of participants without much effort. The survey software itself is self-guiding for the respondents who are participating.
PyMuTester is tool to facilitate Mutant Testing (a.k.a Mutant Analysis or Program Mutation) on software systems written in Python. Its main purpose is to assist you in improving your existing unit tests to cover missing checks and “loopholes” in your testing. It works by making small changes (technically known as mutants) to your Python application’s source code and re-running your unit tests over these mutated applications' source code. Since the mutants usually go against the specifications, your unit tests should fail in such tests. If the unit tests still pass, then that is an indication that your unit tests might have missed some checks.