<?php | |
/************************************************************************* | |
* Get File Information | |
*/ | |
// Assuming these come from some data source in your app | |
$s3FileKey = 's3/key/path/to/file.ext'; | |
$fileName = 'file.ext'; |
# This is a template .gitignore file for git-managed WordPress projects. | |
# | |
# Fact: you don't want WordPress core files, or your server-specific | |
# configuration files etc., in your project's repository. You just don't. | |
# | |
# Solution: stick this file up your repository root (which it assumes is | |
# also the WordPress root directory) and add exceptions for any plugins, | |
# themes, and other directories that should be under version control. | |
# | |
# See the comments below for more info on how to add exceptions for your |
#Laravel 5 Simple ACL manager
Protect your routes with user roles. Simply add a 'role_id' to the User model, install the roles table and seed if you need some example roles to get going.
If the user has a 'Root' role, then they can perform any actions.
Simply copy the files across into the appropriate directories, and register the middleware in App\Http\Kernel.php
{ | |
// http://eslint.org/docs/rules/ | |
"ecmaFeatures": { | |
"binaryLiterals": false, // enable binary literals | |
"blockBindings": false, // enable let and const (aka block bindings) | |
"defaultParams": false, // enable default function parameters | |
"forOf": false, // enable for-of loops | |
"generators": false, // enable generators | |
"objectLiteralComputedProperties": false, // enable computed object literal property names |
This document details how I setup LE on my server. Firstly, install the client as described on http://letsencrypt.readthedocs.org/en/latest/using.html and make sure you can execute it. I put it in /root/letsencrypt
.
As it is not possible to change the ports used for the standalone
authenticator and I already have a nginx running on port 80/443, I opted to use the webroot
method for each of my domains (note that LE does not issue wildcard certificates by design, so you probably want to get a cert for www.example.com
and example.com
).
For this, I placed config files into etc/letsencrypt/configs
, named after <domain>.conf
. The files are simple:
/** | |
* Sort array of objects based on another array | |
*/ | |
function mapOrder (array, order, key) { | |
array.sort( function (a, b) { | |
var A = a[key], B = b[key]; | |
commands: | |
01_add_blackfire_repo: | |
command: "sudo yum install -y pygpgme && wget -O - 'http://packages.blackfire.io/fedora/blackfire.repo' | sudo tee /etc/yum.repos.d/blackfire.repo" |
if (!Array.prototype.find) { | |
Array.prototype.find = function(predicate) { | |
if (this == null) { | |
throw new TypeError('Array.prototype.find called on null or undefined'); | |
} | |
if (typeof predicate !== 'function') { | |
throw new TypeError('predicate must be a function'); | |
} | |
var list = Object(this); | |
var length = list.length >>> 0; |
/** | |
* Simple localStorage with Cookie Fallback | |
* v.1.0.0 | |
* | |
* USAGE: | |
* ---------------------------------------- | |
* Set New / Modify: | |
* store('my_key', 'some_value'); | |
* | |
* Retrieve: |