Open Source Mobile Operating Systems Container Management Software

Container Management Software for Mobile Operating Systems

Browse free open source Container Management software and projects for Mobile Operating Systems below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source Container Management software by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

  • Monitoring, Securing, Optimizing 3rd party scripts Icon
    Monitoring, Securing, Optimizing 3rd party scripts

    For developers looking for a solution to monitor, script, and optimize 3rd party scripts

    c/side is crawling many sites to get ahead of new attacks. c/side is the only fully autonomous detection tool for assessing 3rd party scripts. We do not rely purely on threat feed intel or easy to circumvent detections. We also use historical context and AI to review the payload and behavior of scripts.
    Learn More
  • Jesta I.S. | Enterprise Software For Retail and Supply Chain Icon
    Jesta I.S. | Enterprise Software For Retail and Supply Chain

    Transition from fragmented entry-level or legacy systems to an enterprise suite.

    Unify your people and operations across all departments and channels. Discover end-to-end retail, wholesale, and supply chain management software suites designed to scale.
    Learn More
  • 1
    NVIDIA device plugin for Kubernetes

    NVIDIA device plugin for Kubernetes

    NVIDIA device plugin for Kubernetes

    The NVIDIA device plugin for Kubernetes is a Daemonset that allows you to automatically Expose the number of GPUs on each node of your cluster. Keep track of the health of your GPUs. Run GPU-enabled containers in your Kubernetes cluster.
    Downloads: 12 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    Factory

    Factory

    A new approach to Container-Based Dependency Injection for Swift

    A new approach to Container-Based Dependency Injection for Swift and SwiftUI. Factory is strongly influenced by SwiftUI, and in my opinion is highly suited for use in that environment. Most container-based dependency injection systems require you to define in some way that a given service type is available for injection and many require some sort of factory or mechanism that will provide a new instance of the service when needed. Unlike Resolver which often requires defining a plethora of nested registration functions, or SwiftUI, where defining a new environment variable requires creating a new EnvironmentKey and adding additional getters and setters, here we simply add a new Factory computed variable to the default container. When it's called our Factory is created, its closure is evaluated, and we get an instance of our dependency when we need it.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
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