Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

View jbreiding's full-sized avatar
🐢

Jeremy jbreiding

🐢
View GitHub Profile
// Tailscale Frontend: It uses tailscale-as-a-library to
// listen on a port, independently from the operating system network, i.e. you
// can run an nginx server on :80 and :443 without impacting the frontend.
//
// set up DNS, e.g.:
// prometheus.ts.zekjur.net A 100.117.6.125
//
// frontend% TAILSCALE_USE_WIP_CODE=true tailscalefrontend -hostname=srv.example.net -allowed_user=michael@example.net
//
// (first login requires running with TS_LOGIN=1 environment variable to print link for the browser)
@toricls
toricls / lima-on-m1-mac-installation-guide.md
Last active April 25, 2024 15:30
Using Lima to run containers with containerd and nerdctl (without Docker Desktop) on M1 Macs

Lima (Linux virtual machines, on macOS) installation guide for M1 Mac.

Sep. 27th 2021 UPDATED

Now we can install patched version of QEMU via Homebrew (thank you everyone for the info!). Here is the updated instruction with it:

Used M1 Mac mini 2020 with macOS Big Sur Version 11.6.

1. Install QEMU & Lima

@akihikodaki
akihikodaki / README.en.md
Last active June 27, 2024 11:50
Linux Desktop on Apple Silicon in Practice

Linux Desktop on Apple Silicon in Practice

I bought M1 MacBook Air. It is the fastest computer I have, and I have been a GNOME/GNU/Linux user for long time. It is obvious conclusion that I need practical Linux desktop environment on Apple Silicon.

Fortunately, Linux already works on Apple Silicon/M1. But how practical is it?

  • Two native ports exist.
@vegard
vegard / kernel-dev.md
Last active June 26, 2024 09:41
Getting started with Linux kernel development

Getting started with Linux kernel development

Prerequisites

The Linux kernel is written in C, so you should have at least a basic understanding of C before diving into kernel work. You don't need expert level C knowledge, since you can always pick some things up underway, but it certainly helps to know the language and to have written some userspace C programs already.

It will also help to be a Linux user. If you have never used Linux before, it's probably a good idea to download a distro and get comfortable with it before you start doing kernel work.

Lastly, knowing git is not actually required, but can really help you (since you can dig through changelogs and search for information you'll need). At a minimum you should probably be able to clone the git repository to a local directory.

@dsyme
dsyme / rant.md
Last active December 31, 2022 05:54
@ChristopherA
ChristopherA / brew-bundle-brewfile-tips.md
Last active June 22, 2024 03:19
Brew Bundle Brewfile Tips

Brew Bundle Brewfile Tips

Copyright & License

Unless otherwise noted (either in this file or in a file's copyright section) the contents of this gist are Copyright ©️2020 by Christopher Allen, and are shared under spdx:Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 International (CC-BY-SA-4.) open-source license.

Sponsor

If you more tips and advice like these, you can become a monthly patron on my GitHub Sponsor Page for as little as $5 a month; and your contributions will be multipled, as GitHub is matching the first $5,000! This gist is all about Homebrew, so if you like it you can support it by donating to them or becoming one of their Github Sponsors.

@slok
slok / pprof.md
Last active June 29, 2024 00:12
Go pprof cheat sheet

Enable profiling

Default http server

import (
    _ "net/http/pprof"
    "net/http"
)

How to setup a practically free CDN using Backblaze B2 and Cloudflare

⚠️ Note 2023-01-21
Some things have changed since I originally wrote this in 2016. I have updated a few minor details, and the advice is still broadly the same, but there are some new Cloudflare features you can (and should) take advantage of. In particular, pay attention to Trevor Stevens' comment here from 22 January 2022, and Matt Stenson's useful caching advice. In addition, Backblaze, with whom Cloudflare are a Bandwidth Alliance partner, have published their own guide detailing how to use Cloudflare's Web Workers to cache content from B2 private buckets. That is worth reading,