I've been trying to understand how to setup systems from
the ground up on Ubuntu. I just installed redis
onto
the box and here's how I did it and some things to look
out for.
To install:
// http://paulirish.com/2011/requestanimationframe-for-smart-animating/ | |
// http://my.opera.com/emoller/blog/2011/12/20/requestanimationframe-for-smart-er-animating | |
// requestAnimationFrame polyfill by Erik Möller. fixes from Paul Irish and Tino Zijdel | |
// MIT license | |
(function() { | |
var lastTime = 0; | |
var vendors = ['ms', 'moz', 'webkit', 'o']; |
"\e[1~": beginning-of-line | |
"\e[4~": end-of-line | |
"\e[5~": history-search-backward | |
"\e[6~": history-search-forward | |
"\e[3~": delete-char | |
"\e[2~": quoted-insert | |
"\e[5C": forward-word | |
"\e[5D": backward-word | |
"\e\e[C": forward-word | |
"\e\e[D": backward-word |
L.GeoJSON.include({ | |
identify: function(latlng) { | |
var features = new L.FeatureGroup(), | |
geopoint = { | |
type: 'Point', | |
coordinates: [latlng.lng, latlng.lat] | |
}; | |
this.eachLayer(function (layer) { | |
if (gju.pointInPolygon(geopoint, layer.feature.geometry)) { | |
features.addLayer(layer); |
# | |
# Acts as a nginx HTTPS proxy server | |
# enabling CORS only to domains matched by regex | |
# /https?://.*\.mckinsey\.com(:[0-9]+)?)/ | |
# | |
# Based on: | |
# * http://blog.themillhousegroup.com/2013/05/nginx-as-cors-enabled-https-proxy.html | |
# * http://enable-cors.org/server_nginx.html | |
# | |
server { |
// Create Base64 Object | |
var Base64={_keyStr:"ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz0123456789+/=",encode:function(e){var t="";var n,r,i,s,o,u,a;var f=0;e=Base64._utf8_encode(e);while(f<e.length){n=e.charCodeAt(f++);r=e.charCodeAt(f++);i=e.charCodeAt(f++);s=n>>2;o=(n&3)<<4|r>>4;u=(r&15)<<2|i>>6;a=i&63;if(isNaN(r)){u=a=64}else if(isNaN(i)){a=64}t=t+this._keyStr.charAt(s)+this._keyStr.charAt(o)+this._keyStr.charAt(u)+this._keyStr.charAt(a)}return t},decode:function(e){var t="";var n,r,i;var s,o,u,a;var f=0;e=e.replace(/[^A-Za-z0-9\+\/\=]/g,"");while(f<e.length){s=this._keyStr.indexOf(e.charAt(f++));o=this._keyStr.indexOf(e.charAt(f++));u=this._keyStr.indexOf(e.charAt(f++));a=this._keyStr.indexOf(e.charAt(f++));n=s<<2|o>>4;r=(o&15)<<4|u>>2;i=(u&3)<<6|a;t=t+String.fromCharCode(n);if(u!=64){t=t+String.fromCharCode(r)}if(a!=64){t=t+String.fromCharCode(i)}}t=Base64._utf8_decode(t);return t},_utf8_encode:function(e){e=e.replace(/\r\n/g,"\n");var t="";for(var n=0;n<e.length;n++){var r=e.charCodeAt(n);if(r |
The MIT License (MIT) | |
Copyright (c) 2014 Tomas Kafka | |
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy | |
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal | |
in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights | |
to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell | |
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is | |
furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: |
I've heard this before:
What I really get frustrated by is that I cannot wrap
console.*
and preserve line numbers
We enabled this in Chrome DevTools via blackboxing a bit ago.
If you blackbox the script file the contains the console log wrapper, the script location shown in the console will be corrected to the original source file and line number. Click, and the full source is looking longingly into your eyes.
{ | |
"env": { | |
"browser": true, | |
"node": true, | |
"es6": true | |
}, | |
"plugins": ["react"], | |
"ecmaFeatures": { |
#!/bin/bash | |
if [ "$GIT_SSH_KEY" != "" ]; then | |
echo "Cleaning up SSH config" >&1 | |
echo "" >&1 | |
# Now that npm has finished running, | |
# we shouldn't need the ssh key/config anymore. | |
# Remove the files that we created. | |
rm -f ~/.ssh/config | |
rm -f ~/.ssh/deploy_key |