Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@plentz
plentz / nginx.conf
Last active May 17, 2024 09:08
Best nginx configuration for improved security(and performance)
# to generate your dhparam.pem file, run in the terminal
openssl dhparam -out /etc/nginx/ssl/dhparam.pem 2048
@isaacs
isaacs / node-and-npm-in-30-seconds.sh
Last active May 16, 2024 16:51
Use one of these techniques to install node and npm without having to sudo. Discussed in more detail at http://joyeur.com/2010/12/10/installing-node-and-npm/ Note: npm >=0.3 is *safer* when using sudo.
echo 'export PATH=$HOME/local/bin:$PATH' >> ~/.bashrc
. ~/.bashrc
mkdir ~/local
mkdir ~/node-latest-install
cd ~/node-latest-install
curl http://nodejs.org/dist/node-latest.tar.gz | tar xz --strip-components=1
./configure --prefix=~/local
make install # ok, fine, this step probably takes more than 30 seconds...
curl https://www.npmjs.org/install.sh | sh
@Stanback
Stanback / nginx.conf
Last active May 10, 2024 12:07 — forked from michiel/cors-nginx.conf
Example Nginx configuration for adding cross-origin resource sharing (CORS) support to reverse proxied APIs
#
# CORS header support
#
# One way to use this is by placing it into a file called "cors_support"
# under your Nginx configuration directory and placing the following
# statement inside your **location** block(s):
#
# include cors_support;
#
# As of Nginx 1.7.5, add_header supports an "always" parameter which
@marktheunissen
marktheunissen / pedantically_commented_playbook.yml
Last active April 26, 2024 23:26 — forked from phred/pedantically_commented_playbook.yml
Insanely complete Ansible playbook, showing off all the options
This playbook has been removed as it is now very outdated.
@trcarden
trcarden / gist:3295935
Created August 8, 2012 15:28
Rails 3.2.7 SSL Localhost (no red warnings, no apache config)
# SSL self signed localhost for rails start to finish, no red warnings.
# 1) Create your private key (any password will do, we remove it below)
$ openssl genrsa -des3 -out server.orig.key 2048
# 2) Remove the password
$ openssl rsa -in server.orig.key -out server.key
@danielrw7
danielrw7 / replify
Last active October 24, 2023 12:03
replify - Create a REPL for any command
#!/bin/sh
command="${*}"
printf "Initialized REPL for `%s`\n" "$command"
printf "%s> " "$command"
read -r input
while [ "$input" != "" ];
do
eval "$command $input"
printf "%s> " "$command"
@blaix
blaix / service-objects.md
Created June 12, 2013 11:04
Martin Fowler on Service Objects via the Ruby Rogues Parley mailing list

On Tue, Mar 12, 2013 at 1:26 PM, Martin Fowler martinfowlercom@gmail.com wrote:

The term pops up in some different places, so it's hard to know what it means without some context. In PoEAA I use the pattern Service Layer to represent a domain-oriented layer of behaviors that provide an API for the domain layer. This may or may not sit on top of a Domain Model. In DDD Eric Evans uses the term Service Object to refer to objects that represent processes (as opposed to Entities and Values). DDD Service Objects are often useful to factor out behavior that would otherwise bloat Entities, it's also a useful step to patterns like Strategy and Command.

It sounds like the DDD sense is the sense I'm encountering most often. I really need to read that book.

The conceptual problem I run into in a lot of codebases is that rather than representing a process, the "service objects" represent "a thing that does the process". Which sounds like a nitpicky difference, but it seems to have a real impact on how people us

@christhekeele
christhekeele / ALLOWABLE.md
Last active May 16, 2023 10:27
Allowable: A Ruby gem DSL for compound conditionals.

Allowable

A micro-gem DSL for compound conditionals.

Allowable lets you decompose large/long conditional chains into readable, testable, and inspectable segments with Ruby blocks.

Installation

@friggeri
friggeri / haiku
Created October 6, 2011 07:30
random heroku-like name generator
haiku = ->
adjs = [
"autumn", "hidden", "bitter", "misty", "silent", "empty", "dry", "dark",
"summer", "icy", "delicate", "quiet", "white", "cool", "spring", "winter",
"patient", "twilight", "dawn", "crimson", "wispy", "weathered", "blue",
"billowing", "broken", "cold", "damp", "falling", "frosty", "green",
"long", "late", "lingering", "bold", "little", "morning", "muddy", "old",
"red", "rough", "still", "small", "sparkling", "throbbing", "shy",
"wandering", "withered", "wild", "black", "young", "holy", "solitary",
"fragrant", "aged", "snowy", "proud", "floral", "restless", "divine",
@pauln
pauln / README.md
Last active January 25, 2023 18:29
ember-simple-auth oauth2 implicit grant authenticator

oauth2 Implicit Grant authenticator for ember-simple-auth

This is a sample ember-simple-auth authenticator implementation for the oauth2 Implicit Grant which implements "silent reauthentication" (fetching a new token from the IDP via the prompt=none flow). It also uses ember-master-tab to run the refresh process in only a single tab (if the application is open in multiple tabs); at time of writing, it's necessary to use the master branch rather than the version published to npm as it makes use of a recent change to try to recover from the master tab crashing (as opposed to being closed cleanly).

This implementation also expects the token to be a JWT; you may need to adjust the token-related parts if you're not using JWTs.

So how do I use this?

This gist is not a fully developed, drop-in, ready-to-use implementation. It's intended as a starting point for your own implementation, so you'll need to do some work yourself to use it -