Warden Introduction – a Ruby Rack authentication framework
A introductory talk about Warden, a Ruby Rack authentication framework, to the Melbourne Ruby Users Group
(Link: Warden Introduction – a Ruby Rack authentication framework)
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A introductory talk about Warden, a Ruby Rack authentication framework, to the Melbourne Ruby Users Group
(Link: Warden Introduction – a Ruby Rack authentication framework)
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Karma Chameleon
Rach::Rewrite
Canonical Host
Racj::Tidy
Zombie Shotgun
ImageSizer
Firebug Logger
EnforceSSL
InlineUploader
RefererControl
Rack::GoogleAnalytics
Rack::NoIE
BanHammer
Rack::Codehighlighter
Response Time Injector
Probably Versioned
Rack::Proxy
Server Proxy
Casrack the Authentication
Rack::ChromeFrame
Raksiment
(Link: 21 Rack Middlewares To Turbocharge Your Ruby Webapps)
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Unicorn: Rack HTTP server for Unix and fast clients
Unicorn is a HTTP server for Rack applications designed to take advantage of features in Unix/Unix-like kernels and only serve fast clients on low-latency, high-bandwidth connections. Slow clients should only be served by placing a reverse proxy capable of fully-buffering both the the request and response in between Unicorn and slow clients.
(Link: Unicorn is a HTTP server for Rack applications designed to take advantage of features in Unix/Unix-like kernels)
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What the heck is Rack and why is it getting so much press lately? Well, from it’s tag-line: “Rack provides an minimal interface between webservers supporting Ruby and Ruby frameworks.”
But what does that mean? Prior to Rack if you wanted to interface with Mongrel or Thin you had to write your own custom wrapper for talking to that web server. Rack standardized the interface for doing that and even added some icing on the cake.
(Link: 32 Rack Resources to Get You Started | Jason Seifer)
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