This is a guide for setting up rdio in ubuntu. Specifically via gnome-shell as an application.
Install Google Chrome on linux
Download Rdio's icon. Place it in ~/.local/share/icons/rdio.png
.
// Load the TCP Library | |
net = require('net'); | |
// Keep track of the chat clients | |
var clients = []; | |
// Start a TCP Server | |
net.createServer(function (socket) { | |
// Identify this client |
(* | |
* New-iTerm-Window.scpt | |
* | |
* Intended for use with QuickSilver | |
* I mapped option-y to running this script to create | |
* a new iTerm window on the current workspace | |
* | |
* Based on much Googling - very little "original" code here | |
* Comments/Suggestions to brad.lhotsky@gmail.com | |
*) |
This is a guide for setting up rdio in ubuntu. Specifically via gnome-shell as an application.
Install Google Chrome on linux
Download Rdio's icon. Place it in ~/.local/share/icons/rdio.png
.
# Initial setup | |
git clone -o framework -b develop https://github.com/laravel/laravel.git project-name | |
cd project-name | |
git checkout --orphan master | |
git commit -m "Initial commit" | |
# Pulling changes | |
git fetch framework | |
git merge --squash -m "Upgrade Laravel" framework/develop | |
# Fix merge conflicts if any and commit |
/* gcc -o tmp `pkg-config --libs --cflags glib-2.0` tmp.c | |
* | |
* # modprobe ec_sys | |
* | |
* # watch -n 0.1 hexdump -C /sys/kernel/debug/ec/ec0/io | |
* | |
* 00000000 a7 05 a0 e2 00 86 05 00 00 00 47 00 00 03 00 10 |..........G.....| | |
* 00000000 a7 05 a0 e2 00 86 05 00 00 00 47 00 00 43 00 10 |..........G..C..| | |
* 00000000 a7 05 a0 e2 00 86 05 00 00 00 47 00 00 83 00 10 |..........G.....| |
There are a lot of ways to serve a Go HTTP application. The best choices depend on each use case. Currently nginx looks to be the standard web server for every new project even though there are other great web servers as well. However, how much is the overhead of serving a Go application behind an nginx server? Do we need some nginx features (vhosts, load balancing, cache, etc) or can you serve directly from Go? If you need nginx, what is the fastest connection mechanism? This are the kind of questions I'm intended to answer here. The purpose of this benchmark is not to tell that Go is faster or slower than nginx. That would be stupid.
So, these are the different settings we are going to compare:
Key-Type: 1 | |
Key-Length: 2048 | |
Subkey-Type: 1 | |
Subkey-Length: 2048 | |
Name-Real: Root Superuser | |
Name-Email: root@handbook.westarete.com | |
Expire-Date: 0 |
{ | |
"title": "Apache logs", | |
"services": { | |
"query": { | |
"list": { | |
"0": { | |
"query": "*", | |
"alias": "", | |
"color": "#7EB26D", | |
"id": 0, |