Thanks and credit to mattn and ferreus on GitHub.
Also check out Developing on WSL and/or wslpath
(Windows 10 Build 17046 or later) if you're using the Windows Subsystem for Linux.
Thanks and credit to mattn and ferreus on GitHub.
Also check out Developing on WSL and/or wslpath
(Windows 10 Build 17046 or later) if you're using the Windows Subsystem for Linux.
When hosting our web applications, we often have one public IP
address (i.e., an IP address visible to the outside world)
using which we want to host multiple web apps. For example, one
may wants to host three different web apps respectively for
example1.com
, example2.com
, and example1.com/images
on
the same machine using a single IP address.
How can we do that? Well, the good news is Internet browsers
{ | |
"AL": "Alabama", | |
"AK": "Alaska", | |
"AS": "American Samoa", | |
"AZ": "Arizona", | |
"AR": "Arkansas", | |
"CA": "California", | |
"CO": "Colorado", | |
"CT": "Connecticut", | |
"DE": "Delaware", |
# Install Bash 4 using homebrew | |
brew install bash | |
# Or build it from source... | |
curl -O http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/bash/bash-4.2.tar.gz | |
tar xzf bash-4.2.tar.gz | |
cd bash-4.2 | |
./configure --prefix=/usr/local/bin && make && sudo make install | |
# Add the new shell to the list of legit shells |