Github.com ui .currently does not natively supoport search for multiple topic tags as of now. However their api allows you to query multiple tags. Below is a simple example to query github.com with ecs and go topic tags. | |
curl -H "Accept: application/vnd.github.mercy-preview+json" \ | |
https://api.github.com/search/repositories?q=topic:ecs+topic:go | |
Response from the github can be rather verbose so lets filter only relavant info such repo url and description. | |
curl -H "Accept: application/vnd.github.mercy-preview+json" \ | |
https://api.github.com/search/repositories\?q\=topic:ecs+topic:go | jq '.items[] | {url:.url, description:.description}' |
// Website you intended to retrieve for users. | |
//const upstream = 'www.google.com' | |
const upstream = '5a1eddaec0e1.ngrok.io' | |
// Custom pathname for the upstream website. | |
const upstream_path = '/' | |
// Website you intended to retrieve for users using mobile devices. | |
//const upstream_mobile = 'www.google.com' | |
const upstream_mobile = '5a1eddaec0e1.ngrok.io' |
Selfhosting is the process of locally hosting and managing applications instead of renting from SaaS providers.
This is a list of Free Software network services and web applications which can be hosted locally. Non-Free software is listed on the Non-Free page.
See Contributing.
export class ResourceService<T extends Resource> { | |
constructor( | |
private httpClient: HttpClient, | |
private url: string, | |
private endpoint: string, | |
private serializer: Serializer) {} | |
public create(item: T): Observable<T> { | |
return this.httpClient | |
.post<T>(`${this.url}/${this.endpoint}`, this.serializer.toJson(item)) |
#include <stdio.h> | |
void deviceQuery () | |
{ | |
cudaDeviceProp prop; | |
int nDevices=0, i; | |
cudaError_t ierr; | |
ierr = cudaGetDeviceCount(&nDevices); |
body { | |
text-align: justify; | |
} | |
code, pre { | |
font-family: "DejaVuSansMono", monospace; | |
} | |
h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 { | |
text-align: left; |
Follow the simple steps in the order mentioned below to have your USB drive mounted on your Raspberry Pi every time you boot it.
These steps are required especially if your are setting up a Samba share, or a 24x7 torrent downloader, or alike where your Raspberry Pi must have your external storage already mounted and ready for access by the services / daemons.
Step 0. Plug in your USB HDD / Drive to Raspberry Pi If you are using a NTFS formatted drive, install the following