| var mediaJSON = { "categories" : [ { "name" : "Movies", | |
| "videos" : [ | |
| { "description" : "Big Buck Bunny tells the story of a giant rabbit with a heart bigger than himself. When one sunny day three rodents rudely harass him, something snaps... and the rabbit ain't no bunny anymore! In the typical cartoon tradition he prepares the nasty rodents a comical revenge.\n\nLicensed under the Creative Commons Attribution license\nhttp://www.bigbuckbunny.org", | |
| "sources" : [ "http://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/gtv-videos-bucket/sample/BigBuckBunny.mp4" ], | |
| "subtitle" : "By Blender Foundation", | |
| "thumb" : "images/BigBuckBunny.jpg", | |
| "title" : "Big Buck Bunny" | |
| }, | |
| { "description" : "The first Blender Open Movie from 2006", | |
| "sources" : [ "http://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/gtv-videos-bucket/sample/ElephantsDream.mp4" ], |
| # source : http://code.google.com/p/natvpn/source/browse/trunk/stun_server_list | |
| # A list of available STUN server. | |
| stun.l.google.com:19302 | |
| stun1.l.google.com:19302 | |
| stun2.l.google.com:19302 | |
| stun3.l.google.com:19302 | |
| stun4.l.google.com:19302 | |
| stun01.sipphone.com | |
| stun.ekiga.net |
This gist assumes you are migrating an existing site for www.example.com — ideally WordPress — to a new server — ideally Ubuntu Server 16.04 LTS — and wish to enable HTTP/2 (backwards compatibile with HTTP/1.1) with always-on HTTPS, caching, compression, and more. Although these instructions are geared towards WordPress, they should be trivially extensible to other PHP frameworks, other FastCGI backends, and even non-FastCGI backends (using proxy in lieu of fastcgi in the terminal Caddyfile stanza).
Quickstart: Use your own naked and canonical domain names instead of example.com and www.example.com and customize the Caddyfile and VCL provided in this gist to your preferences!
These instructions target Varnish Cache 4.1, PHP-FPM 7.0, and Caddy 0.10. (I'm using MariaDB 10.1 as well, but that's not relevant to this guide.)
| # Credit http://stackoverflow.com/a/2514279 | |
| for branch in `git branch -r | grep -v HEAD`;do echo -e `git show --format="%ci %cr" $branch | head -n 1` \\t$branch; done | sort -r |
This guide assumes that you recently run brew upgrade postgresql and discovered to your dismay that you accidentally bumped from one major version to another: say 9.3.x to 9.4.x. Yes, that is a major version bump in PG land.
First let's check something.
brew info postgresqlThe top of what gets printed as a result is the most important:
| /** | |
| * Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) response status codes. | |
| * | |
| * @see {@link https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_HTTP_status_codes} | |
| */ | |
| export enum HttpStatusCode { | |
| /** | |
| * The server has received the request headers and the client should proceed to send the request body | |
| * (in the case of a request for which a body needs to be sent; for example, a POST request). |
| import ast | |
| import datetime | |
| import json | |
| import sys | |
| import requests | |
| import urllib | |
| from tabulate import tabulate | |
| url = "https://www.whatruns.com/api/v1/get_site_apps" | |
| data = {"data": {"hostname": sys.argv[1], "url": sys.argv[1], |

