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
Sublime Text 2 ships with a CLI called subl (why not "sublime", go figure). This utility is hidden in the following folder (assuming you installed Sublime in /Applications
like normal folk. If this following line opens Sublime Text for you, then bingo, you're ready.
open /Applications/Sublime\ Text\ 2.app/Contents/SharedSupport/bin/subl
You can find more (official) details about subl here: http://www.sublimetext.com/docs/2/osx_command_line.html
package com.company.app.PlatformMethods; | |
import java.util.HashMap; | |
import java.util.Iterator; | |
import java.util.LinkedList; | |
import java.util.Queue; | |
import java.util.Set; | |
import android.app.PendingIntent; | |
import android.content.BroadcastReceiver; |
<!-- Declare the permission for body sensor --> | |
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.BODY_SENSORS" /> |
var AWS = require('aws-sdk'), | |
fs = require('fs'); | |
// http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSJavaScriptSDK/guide/node-configuring.html#Credentials_from_Disk | |
AWS.config.loadFromPath('./aws-config.json'); | |
// assume you already have the S3 Bucket created, and it is called ierg4210-shopxx-photos | |
var photoBucket = new AWS.S3({params: {Bucket: 'ierg4210-shopxx-photos'}}); | |
function uploadToS3(file, destFileName, callback) { |
// on error the server sends JSON | |
/* | |
{ "error": { "data": { "message":"A thing went wrong" } } } | |
*/ | |
// create model classes.. | |
public class ErrorResponse { | |
Error error; | |