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@jbenet
jbenet / simple-git-branching-model.md
Last active September 19, 2024 16:05
a simple git branching model

a simple git branching model (written in 2013)

This is a very simple git workflow. It (and variants) is in use by many people. I settled on it after using it very effectively at Athena. GitHub does something similar; Zach Holman mentioned it in this talk.

Update: Woah, thanks for all the attention. Didn't expect this simple rant to get popular.

@dedy-purwanto
dedy-purwanto / gist:11312110
Created April 26, 2014 05:00
Bulk remove iTerm2 color schemes.
# There was a day where I have too many color schemes in iTerm2 and I want to remove them all.
# iTerm2 doesn't have "bulk remove" and it was literally painful to delete them one-by-one.
# iTerm2 save it's preference in ~/Library/Preferences/com.googlecode.iterm2.plist in a binary format
# What you need to do is basically copy that somewhere, convert to xml and remove color schemes in the xml files.
$ cd /tmp/
$ cp ~/Library/Preferences/com.googlecode.iterm2.plist .
$ plutil -convert xml1 com.googlecode.iterm2.plist
$ vi com.googlecode.iterm2.plist
# Defaults / Configuration options for homebridge
# The following settings tells homebridge where to find the config.json file and where to persist the data (i.e. pairing and others)
HOMEBRIDGE_OPTS=-U /var/lib/homebridge
# If you uncomment the following line, homebridge will log more
# You can display this via systemd's journalctl: journalctl -f -u homebridge
# DEBUG=*
@chrislavender
chrislavender / gist:cad26500c9655627544f
Last active April 19, 2024 15:28
HTTP Live Streaming Tutorial

Note: This is an older post that I did back when I thought I might have time to be a blogger. Oh I was oh so wrong. However, it has proven useful for some folks on stackoverflow. Thus I'm keeping it alive here on Gist.

One of my past projects dealt heavily with an open source Apple technology called HTTP Live Streaming. It’s an HTTP based streaming protocol that at its most fundamental level provides a way to stream video and audio from just about any server with nothing but a few free software tools provided by Apple**. However, it has a few additional features that I think make it a really exciting tool. Yet, I haven’t seen HTTP Live Streaming used very much. This is probably mainly due to the combination of a lack of good/clear documentation, and Apple’s Live Streaming Developer Tools being command line based also make the barrier to entry higher than many developers want to deal with.

The hope is to share my understanding of how to use this technology to:

@sstephenson
sstephenson / Simple Encryption.md
Created April 11, 2013 23:48
Simple file/stream encryption using OpenSSL

Simple file/stream encryption using OpenSSL

Create and store a 512-byte random encryption key named secret:

$ mkkey secret

Encrypt the contents of file with the secret key and write it to file.enc:

$ encrypt secret < file > file.enc
@fnichol
fnichol / README.md
Created March 12, 2011 20:52
Download a cacert.pem for RailsInstaller

Why?

There is a long standing issue in Ruby where the net/http library by default does not check the validity of an SSL certificate during a TLS handshake. Rather than deal with the underlying problem (a missing certificate authority, a self-signed certificate, etc.) one tends to see bad hacks everywhere. This can lead to problems down the road.

From what I can see the OpenSSL library that Rails Installer delivers has no certificate authorities defined. So, let's go fetch some from the curl website. And since this is for ruby, why don't we download and install the file with a ruby script?

Installation

The Ruby Way! (Fun)

@jhermann
jhermann / git-commit-emojis.md
Last active September 23, 2023 07:09
Useful emoji for git commit messages

Useful emoji for git commit messages

If you add emoji to your commit messages for a GitHub repo, they become less boring, and you can convey the kind of change you're adding. See the full set of GitHub supported emoji here (also useful for easy copy&paste via a simple click).

Example commit message

The following is a possible scheme to use:

@JALsnipe
JALsnipe / crc32.swift
Created October 11, 2016 15:14 — forked from MaddTheSane/crc32.swift
crc32 implemented in Swift (Swift 3)
//
// crc32.swift
// SuperSFV
//
// Created by C.W. Betts on 8/23/15.
//
//
/* crc32.swift -- compute the CRC-32 of a data stream
Copyright (C) 1995-1998 Mark Adler
Copyright (C) 2015 C.W. "Madd the Sane" Betts
@harlanhaskins
harlanhaskins / StringScanner.swift
Last active August 4, 2020 23:45
Swift String Scanner
import Foundation
/// `StringScanner` is a fast scanner for Strings and String-like objects.
/// It's used to extract structured bits from unstructured strings, while
/// avoiding making extra copies of string bits until absolutely necessary.
/// You can build Scanners over Substrings, allowing you to scan
/// parts of strings and use smaller, more specialized scanners to extract bits
/// of that String without needing to reuse another scanner.
public struct StringScanner<Input: StringProtocol> {
let input: Input
@rlivsey
rlivsey / git-prune-tags.rb
Created March 26, 2010 15:47
Script to prune any tags which exist locally but not on the remote
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
require 'readline'
def prompt(prompt="> ")
input = nil
prompt += " " unless prompt =~ /\s$/
loop do
input = Readline.readline(prompt)
break if input.length > 0
end