This is a hands-on way to pull down a set of MySQL dumps from Amazon S3 and restore your database with it
Sister Document - Backup MySQL to Amazon S3 - read that first
# Set our variables
export mysqlpass="ROOTPASSWORD"
- (instancetype)init | |
{ | |
// return [self initWithURL:[RCTConvert NSURL:@"http://localhost:8081/debugger-proxy"]]; | |
NSString *serverIP = [[NSBundle mainBundle] objectForInfoDictionaryKey:@"SERVER_IP"]; | |
NSString *debugUrlString = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"http://%@:8081/debugger-proxy", serverIP]; | |
return [self initWithURL:[RCTConvert NSURL:debugUrlString]]; | |
} |
#!/bin/sh | |
# | |
# chkconfig: 2345 55 25 | |
# Description: Nginx init.d script, put in /etc/init.d, chmod +x /etc/init.d/nginx | |
# For Debian, run: update-rc.d -f nginx defaults | |
# For CentOS, run: chkconfig --add nginx | |
# | |
### BEGIN INIT INFO | |
# Provides: nginx | |
# Required-Start: $all |
This is a hands-on way to pull down a set of MySQL dumps from Amazon S3 and restore your database with it
Sister Document - Backup MySQL to Amazon S3 - read that first
# Set our variables
export mysqlpass="ROOTPASSWORD"
This is a simple way to backup your MySQL tables to Amazon S3 for a nightly backup - this is all to be done on your server :-)
Sister Document - Restore MySQL from Amazon S3 - read that next
this is for Centos 5.6, see http://s3tools.org/repositories for other systems like ubuntu etc
//////////////////////push_notifications.js/////////////////////// | |
var apns = function(){ | |
var pref = require('preferences').preferences; | |
Titanium.Network.registerForPushNotifications({ | |
types: [ | |
Titanium.Network.NOTIFICATION_TYPE_BADGE, | |
Titanium.Network.NOTIFICATION_TYPE_ALERT | |
], | |
success:function(e) |