/* | |
* node-ws - pure Javascript WebSockets server | |
* Copyright Bradley Wright <brad@intranation.com> | |
*/ | |
// Use strict compilation rules - we're not animals | |
'use strict'; | |
var net = require('net'), | |
crypto = require('crypto'); |
I use Namecheap.com as a registrar, and they resale SSL Certs from a number of other companies, including Comodo.
These are the steps I went through to set up an SSL cert.
Cython has two major benefits:
- Making python code faster, particularly things that can't be done in scipy/numpy
- Wrapping/interfacing with C/C++ code
Cython gains most of it's benefit from statically typing arguments. However, statically typing is not required, in fact, regular python code is valid cython (but don't expect much of a speed up). By incrementally adding more type information, the code can speed up by several factors. This gist just provides a very basic usage of cython.
Full blog post can be found here: http://pnommensen.com/2014/09/07/high-performance-ghost-configuration-with-nginx/
Ghost is an open source platform for blogging founded by John O'Nolan and Hannah Wolfe. It's a node.js application and therefore works great in conjunction with nginx. This guide will will help you create a high performance nginx virtual host configuration for Ghost.
"Don't use #nodejs for static content" - @trevnorris. If #nginx isn't sitting in front of your node server, you're probably doing it wrong.
— Bryan Hughes (@nebrius) August 30, 2014
<script async src="//platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
The node.js application runs on a port on your server
{ | |
// 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 |
Once in a while, you may need to cleanup resources (containers, volumes, images, networks) ...
// see: https://github.com/chadoe/docker-cleanup-volumes
$ docker volume rm $(docker volume ls -qf dangling=true)
$ docker volume ls -qf dangling=true | xargs -r docker volume rm