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sadikaya / tutorial.md
Created July 17, 2018 07:09 — forked from swalkinshaw/tutorial.md
Designing a GraphQL API

Tutorial: Designing a GraphQL API

This tutorial was created by Shopify for internal purposes. We've created a public version of it since we think it's useful to anyone creating a GraphQL API.

It's based on lessons learned from creating and evolving production schemas at Shopify over almost 3 years. The tutorial has evolved and will continue to change in the future so nothing is set in stone.

@sadikaya
sadikaya / nginx-on-digitalocean.sh
Last active January 6, 2022 08:27 — forked from AlexZeitler/nginxondigitalcoean.sh
DigitalOcean snippets
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install nginx
# default website
@sadikaya
sadikaya / deploy.js
Created March 12, 2018 11:38 — forked from maciejkorsan/deploy.js
deploy.js script for CircleCI GitHub - FTP upload
var FtpDeploy = require('ftp-deploy');
var ftpDeploy = new FtpDeploy();
var config = {
username: process.env.FTPUSERNAME,
password: process.env.FTPPASS,
host: process.env.FTPHOST,
port: 21,
localRoot: __dirname + "/../dist/",
remoteRoot: "/",
@sadikaya
sadikaya / PowerShell Customization.md
Created January 8, 2018 13:24 — forked from jchandra74/PowerShell Customization.md
PowerShell, Cmder / ConEmu, Posh-Git, Oh-My-Posh, Powerline Customization

Pimping Up Your PowerShell & Cmder with Posh-Git, Oh-My-Posh, & Powerline Fonts

Backstory (TLDR)

I work as a full-stack developer at work. We are a Windows & Azure shop, so we are using Windows as our development platform, hence this customization.

For my console needs, I am using Cmder which is based on ConEmu with PowerShell as my shell of choice.

Yes, yes, I know nowadays you can use the Linux subsystem on Windows 10 which allow you to run Ubuntu on Windows. If you are looking for customization of the Ubuntu bash shell, check out this article by Scott Hanselman.

@sadikaya
sadikaya / Howto convert a PFX to a seperate .key & .crt file
Created November 27, 2017 07:56 — forked from TemporaryJam/Howto convert a PFX to a seperate .key & .crt file
How to convert a .pfx SSL certificate to .crt/key (pem) formats. Useful for NGINX
source: http://www.markbrilman.nl/2011/08/howto-convert-a-pfx-to-a-seperate-key-crt-file/
`openssl pkcs12 -in [yourfile.pfx] -nocerts -out [keyfile-encrypted.key]`
What this command does is extract the private key from the .pfx file. Once entered you need to type in the importpassword of the .pfx file. This is the password that you used to protect your keypair when you created your .pfx file. If you cannot remember it anymore you can just throw your .pfx file away, cause you won’t be able to import it again, anywhere!. Once you entered the import password OpenSSL requests you to type in another password, twice!. This new password will protect your .key file.
Now let’s extract the certificate:
`openssl pkcs12 -in [yourfile.pfx] -clcerts -nokeys -out [certificate.crt]`
@sadikaya
sadikaya / README.md
Created September 12, 2017 11:18 — forked from christianc1/README.md
SFTP Deploys for Pressed with Circle CI

Simple SFTP Deploy when better methods are unavailable by host

Installation

  • npm install --save-dev ftps
  • Add deploy.js to theme/plugin root
  • Add deploy.config.js to theme/plugin root
  • Modify config.

Usage

  • Set up Circle CI with SFTP_HOST SFTP_PASS SFTP_USER environmental variables