Libraries tagged by follower

mohammed-abd-razaq/laravel-phone-otp-auth

0 Favers
1 Downloads

A professional Laravel package for phone-based authentication with OTP verification, following clean architecture principles and Laravel best practices.

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mjohann/paginated-file-reader

0 Favers
45 Downloads

A PHP library to read files page by page, supporting multiple formats like TXT, PDF, DOCX, and ODT. Each file type is handled by a dedicated reader class, all following a unified interface for seamless integration.

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mixologic/legacy-project

0 Favers
1 Downloads

Project template for Drupal 8 projects with composer following drupal/drupal layout

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mix/tracing

0 Favers
140 Downloads

Tracing library, following PSR-7 / PSR-15 / Opentracing standard

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mix/session

1 Favers
1845 Downloads

Session library based on Swoole coroutine Redis, following PSR-7 standard

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mix/route

0 Favers
934 Downloads

Http route library, following PSR-7 / PSR-15 standard

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mix/fast-route

2 Favers
970 Downloads

Routing library based on Fast-Route, following PSR-7 / PSR-15 standard

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mix-plus/tracing

0 Favers
4 Downloads

Tracing library, following PSR-7 / PSR-15 / Opentracing standard

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mix-plus/http-server

0 Favers
3 Downloads

Http server library based on Swoole coroutine, following PSR-7 / PSR-15 standard

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minusmillonaer/php-ipp-server

1 Favers
25 Downloads

An IPP parser for PHP, following RFC 2910/2911

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mdwheele/stemmer

1 Favers
20 Downloads

A word stemmer following the Porter Stemming Algorithm.

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mcadare/eventhub

0 Favers
19 Downloads

EventHub is a library which goal is to trigger downstream events following a simple configuration.

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maxvaer/docker-openapi-php-client

0 Favers
4 Downloads

The Engine API is an HTTP API served by Docker Engine. It is the API the Docker client uses to communicate with the Engine, so everything the Docker client can do can be done with the API. Most of the client's commands map directly to API endpoints (e.g. `docker ps` is `GET /containers/json`). The notable exception is running containers, which consists of several API calls. # Errors The API uses standard HTTP status codes to indicate the success or failure of the API call. The body of the response will be JSON in the following format: ``` { "message": "page not found" } ``` # Versioning The API is usually changed in each release, so API calls are versioned to ensure that clients don't break. To lock to a specific version of the API, you prefix the URL with its version, for example, call `/v1.30/info` to use the v1.30 version of the `/info` endpoint. If the API version specified in the URL is not supported by the daemon, a HTTP `400 Bad Request` error message is returned. If you omit the version-prefix, the current version of the API (v1.40) is used. For example, calling `/info` is the same as calling `/v1.40/info`. Using the API without a version-prefix is deprecated and will be removed in a future release. Engine releases in the near future should support this version of the API, so your client will continue to work even if it is talking to a newer Engine. The API uses an open schema model, which means server may add extra properties to responses. Likewise, the server will ignore any extra query parameters and request body properties. When you write clients, you need to ignore additional properties in responses to ensure they do not break when talking to newer daemons. # Authentication Authentication for registries is handled client side. The client has to send authentication details to various endpoints that need to communicate with registries, such as `POST /images/(name)/push`. These are sent as `X-Registry-Auth` header as a Base64 encoded (JSON) string with the following structure: ``` { "username": "string", "password": "string", "email": "string", "serveraddress": "string" } ``` The `serveraddress` is a domain/IP without a protocol. Throughout this structure, double quotes are required. If you have already got an identity token from the [`/auth` endpoint](#operation/SystemAuth), you can just pass this instead of credentials: ``` { "identitytoken": "9cbaf023786cd7..." } ```

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matthewbaggett/docker-api-php-client

0 Favers
7 Downloads

The Engine API is an HTTP API served by Docker Engine. It is the API the Docker client uses to communicate with the Engine, so everything the Docker client can do can be done with the API. Most of the client's commands map directly to API endpoints (e.g. `docker ps` is `GET /containers/json`). The notable exception is running containers, which consists of several API calls. # Errors The API uses standard HTTP status codes to indicate the success or failure of the API call. The body of the response will be JSON in the following format: ``` { "message": "page not found" } ``` # Versioning The API is usually changed in each release, so API calls are versioned to ensure that clients don't break. To lock to a specific version of the API, you prefix the URL with its version, for example, call `/v1.30/info` to use the v1.30 version of the `/info` endpoint. If the API version specified in the URL is not supported by the daemon, a HTTP `400 Bad Request` error message is returned. If you omit the version-prefix, the current version of the API (v1.43) is used. For example, calling `/info` is the same as calling `/v1.43/info`. Using the API without a version-prefix is deprecated and will be removed in a future release. Engine releases in the near future should support this version of the API, so your client will continue to work even if it is talking to a newer Engine. The API uses an open schema model, which means server may add extra properties to responses. Likewise, the server will ignore any extra query parameters and request body properties. When you write clients, you need to ignore additional properties in responses to ensure they do not break when talking to newer daemons. # Authentication Authentication for registries is handled client side. The client has to send authentication details to various endpoints that need to communicate with registries, such as `POST /images/(name)/push`. These are sent as `X-Registry-Auth` header as a [base64url encoded](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4648#section-5) (JSON) string with the following structure: ``` { "username": "string", "password": "string", "email": "string", "serveraddress": "string" } ``` The `serveraddress` is a domain/IP without a protocol. Throughout this structure, double quotes are required. If you have already got an identity token from the [`/auth` endpoint](#operation/SystemAuth), you can just pass this instead of credentials: ``` { "identitytoken": "9cbaf023786cd7..." } ```

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magikcypress/slim-boot-boilerplate

1 Favers
6 Downloads

Slim-Boilerplate is a bundling of the following components. It can be used as a starting point for small projects.

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