Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

View fernyb's full-sized avatar

Fernando Barajas fernyb

View GitHub Profile
/*
* Copyright (c) 2010 Tobias Schneider
* This script is freely distributable under the terms of the MIT license.
*/
(function(){
var UPC_SET = {
"3211": '0',
"2221": '1',
"2122": '2',
### Nginx upstart script
### source: http://serverfault.com/a/391737/70451
### /etc/init/nginx.conf
description "nginx http daemon"
start on (filesystem and net-device-up IFACE=lo)
stop on runlevel [!2345]
env DAEMON=/opt/nginx/sbin/nginx
# 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
@fernyb
fernyb / pf_and_dns.txt
Created October 26, 2015 20:24 — forked from ef2k/pf_and_dns.markdown
Port Forwarding and Domain Tricks (MAC OSX Yosemite)
In /etc/hosts, add:
127.0.0.1 foo.com
Create /etc/pf.anchors/foo.conf
$sudo vim /etc/pf.anchors/foo.conf
rdr pass on lo0 inet proto tcp from any to any port 80 -> 127.0.0.1 port 3000
Add this to /etc/pf.conf:
@fernyb
fernyb / Howto convert a PFX to a seperate .key & .crt file
Created August 1, 2018 21:32 — forked from TemporaryJam/Howto convert a PFX to a seperate .key & .crt file
How to convert a .pfx SSL certificate to .crt/key (pem) formats. Useful for NGINX
source: http://www.markbrilman.nl/2011/08/howto-convert-a-pfx-to-a-seperate-key-crt-file/
`openssl pkcs12 -in [yourfile.pfx] -nocerts -out [keyfile-encrypted.key]`
What this command does is extract the private key from the .pfx file. Once entered you need to type in the importpassword of the .pfx file. This is the password that you used to protect your keypair when you created your .pfx file. If you cannot remember it anymore you can just throw your .pfx file away, cause you won’t be able to import it again, anywhere!. Once you entered the import password OpenSSL requests you to type in another password, twice!. This new password will protect your .key file.
Now let’s extract the certificate:
`openssl pkcs12 -in [yourfile.pfx] -clcerts -nokeys -out [certificate.crt]`