Demo of multipart form/file uploading with hapi.js
.
npm install
npm run setup
npm run server
Then ...
#!/bin/bash | |
ALTERA_PATH=~/altera/13.1/ | |
sudo dpkg --add-architecture i386 | |
sudo apt-get update | |
sudo apt-get install gcc-multilib g++-multilib \ | |
lib32z1 lib32stdc++6 lib32gcc1 \ | |
expat:i386 fontconfig:i386 libfreetype6:i386 libexpat1:i386 libc6:i386 libgtk-3-0:i386 \ | |
libcanberra0:i386 libpng12-0:i386 libice6:i386 libsm6:i386 libncurses5:i386 zlib1g:i386 \ |
[Unit] | |
Description=Keeps a tunnel to 'remote.example.com' open | |
After=network.target | |
[Service] | |
User=autossh | |
# -p [PORT] | |
# -l [user] | |
# -M 0 --> no monitoring | |
# -N Just open the connection and do nothing (not interactive) |
$ brew install dnsmasq
...
$ cp /usr/local/opt/dnsmasq/dnsmasq.conf.example /usr/local/etc/dnsmasq.conf
/usr/local/etc/dnsmasq.conf
address=/local/127.0.0.1
#!/usr/bin/ruby | |
# Create display override file to force Mac OS X to use RGB mode for Display | |
# see http://embdev.net/topic/284710 | |
require 'base64' | |
data=`ioreg -l -d0 -w 0 -r -c AppleDisplay` | |
edids=data.scan(/IODisplayEDID.*?<([a-z0-9]+)>/i).flatten | |
vendorids=data.scan(/DisplayVendorID.*?([0-9]+)/i).flatten |
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
# vim: set fileencoding=utf-8 | |
# | |
# USAGE: | |
# Back up your tmux old config, run the script and redirect stdout to your conf | |
# file. Example: | |
# | |
# $ cp ~/.tmux.conf ~/.tmux.conf.orig | |
# $ python ./tmux-migrate-options.py ~/.tmux.conf.orig > ~/.tmux.conf | |
# |
Doing require extensions correctly is essential, because:
nyc
need it to reliably supply coverage information that takes into account sourcemaps from upstream transforms.let regex = `import | |
(?: | |
["'\s]* | |
([\w*{}\n, ]+) | |
from\s* | |
)? | |
["'\s]* | |
([@\w/_-]+) | |
["'\s]* | |
;? |
Only do this if you understand the consequences: all node programs will be able to bind on ports < 1024
sudo setcap 'cap_net_bind_service=+ep' /usr/local/bin/node
Important: your node location may vary. Use which node
to find it, or use it directly in the command:
The proposal you’re about to read is not just a proposal. We have a working implementation of almost everything we discussed here. We encourage you to checkout and build our branch: our fork, with the relevant branch selected. Building and using the implementation will give you a better understanding of what using it as a developer is like.
Our implementation ended up differing from the proposal on some minor points. As our last action item before making a PR, we’re writing documentation on what we did. While I loathe pointing to tests in lieu of documentation, they will be helpful until we complete writing docs: the unit tests.
This repo also contains a bundled version of npm that has a new command, asset
. You can read the documentation for and goals of that comma