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  • Shenzhen,China
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@danmaispace
danmaispace / update_git_repos.sh
Created January 29, 2019 10:23 — forked from douglas/update_git_repos.sh
Update all git repositories under a base directory
#!/bin/bash
# store the current dir
CUR_DIR=$(pwd)
# Let the person running the script know what's going on.
echo "\n\033[1mPulling in latest changes for all repositories...\033[0m\n"
# Find all git repositories and update it to the master latest revision
for i in $(find . -name ".git" | cut -c 3-); do
@danmaispace
danmaispace / .gitconfig
Created May 20, 2016 09:27 — forked from pksunkara/config
Sample of git config file (Example .gitconfig)
[user]
name = Pavan Kumar Sunkara
email = pavan.sss1991@gmail.com
[core]
editor = vim
whitespace = fix,-indent-with-non-tab,trailing-space,cr-at-eol
excludesfile = ~/.gitignore
[sendemail]
smtpencryption = tls
smtpserver = smtp.gmail.com
@danmaispace
danmaispace / private.xml
Created April 5, 2016 09:19 — forked from pjan/private.xml
Karabiner private.xml for Topre REALFORCE 87U on Mac
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<root>
<item>
<name>For Topre REALFORCE 87 Users</name>
<devicevendordef>
<vendorname>TopreCorporation</vendorname>
<vendorid>0x0853</vendorid>
</devicevendordef>
<item>
@danmaispace
danmaispace / ADB.conf
Last active December 24, 2015 04:25 — forked from jason5ng32/surge.conf
Surge Configs ( Both 2 files are needed )
[General]
loglevel = notify
skip-proxy = 192.168.0.0/16, 10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12,127.0.0.0/24,100.64.0.0/10
bypass-tun = 0.0.0.0/8, 1.0.0.0/9, 1.160.0.0/11, 1.192.0.0/11, 10.0.0.0/8, 14.0.0.0/11, 14.96.0.0/11, 14.128.0.0/11, 14.192.0.0/11, 27.0.0.0/10, 27.96.0.0/11, 27.128.0.0/9, 36.0.0.0/10, 36.96.0.0/11, 36.128.0.0/9, 39.0.0.0/11, 39.64.0.0/10, 39.128.0.0/10, 42.0.0.0/8, 43.224.0.0/11, 45.64.0.0/10, 47.64.0.0/10, 49.0.0.0/9, 49.128.0.0/11, 49.192.0.0/10, 54.192.0.0/11, 58.0.0.0/9, 58.128.0.0/11, 58.192.0.0/10, 59.32.0.0/11, 59.64.0.0/10, 59.128.0.0/9, 60.0.0.0/10, 60.160.0.0/11, 60.192.0.0/10, 61.0.0.0/10, 61.64.0.0/11, 61.128.0.0/10, 61.224.0.0/11, 100.64.0.0/10, 101.0.0.0/9, 101.128.0.0/11, 101.192.0.0/10, 103.0.0.0/10, 103.192.0.0/10, 106.0.0.0/9, 106.224.0.0/11, 110.0.0.0/7, 112.0.0.0/9, 112.128.0.0/11, 112.192.0.0/10, 113.0.0.0/9, 113.128.0.0/11, 113.192.0.0/10, 114.0.0.0/9, 114.128.0.0/11, 114.192.0.0/10, 115.0.0.0/8, 116.0.0.0/8, 117.0.0.0/9, 117.128.0.0/10, 118.0.0.0/11, 118.64.0.0/10, 118.128.0.0
@echo off
@rem ==================
@rem Source:
@rem https://gist.github.com/jcppkkk/8330314
@rem Description:
@rem Install context menu to allow user opens file with Sublime Text as User or Admin, or Open Folder with Sublime Text.
@rem Usage:
@rem Download this .bat file to in Sublime Text's installation folder.
@rem Execute this batch file. It will download elevate codes and setup context menu.
@rem ==================
$server = "JZSOF-SQL01"
$user = "robert.toland"
$password = "N3wt0ns@ppl3!"
$database = "TmsEPrd"
sqlcmd -S $server -U $user -P $password -d $database -Q "Execute [dbo].[sofp_cnv001_create_transfer_data];"
# Author: Pieter Noordhuis
# Description: Simple demo to showcase Redis PubSub with EventMachine
#
# Update 7 Oct 2010:
# - This example does *not* appear to work with Chrome >=6.0. Apparently,
# the WebSocket protocol implementation in the cramp gem does not work
# well with Chrome's (newer) WebSocket implementation.
#
# Requirements:
# - rubygems: eventmachine, thin, cramp, sinatra, yajl-ruby
require 'bundler/capistrano'
set :application, "net"
set :repository, "git@githost.com:net.git"
set :scm, :git
set :default_environment, {
'PATH' => "$HOME/.rbenv/shims:$HOME/.rbenv/bin:$PATH"
}
@danmaispace
danmaispace / writeup.md
Created October 12, 2012 02:10 — forked from cespare/writeup.md
A Simple Webserver Comparison

This is a very simple benchmark comparing the response times of a few different webservers for an extremely simple response: just reply with a snippet of static json. It came up in discussion of a real-life service: in the actual server, a long-running thread/process periodically updates the state from a database, but requests will be served with the data directly from memory. It is imperative, though, that the latencies be extremely low for this service.

This comparison was partly inspired by this blog post.

Method