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wjn / php.ini
Created April 18, 2012 01:26 — forked from bzerangue/php.ini
PHP.ini for Mac OS X Lion (running Litespeed)
[PHP]
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
; About php.ini ;
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
; If running Litespeed on Mac OS, the php.ini file should be placed in the /usr/local/lsws/lsphp5/lib directory.
; PHP's initialization file, generally called php.ini, is responsible for
; configuring many of the aspects of PHP's behavior.
@wjn
wjn / convert-number-to-word.rb
Created July 22, 2012 01:17 — forked from bzerangue/convert-number-to-word.rb
Convert Number to Word - Sass Function
require 'sass'
## install Linguistics gem, sudo install gem linguistics
require 'linguistics'
Linguistics::use( :en ) # extends Array, String, and Numeric
## this is the linguistics gem,
## instructions on how to use, http://deveiate.org/projects/Linguistics/wiki/English
## 5.en.numwords would output 'five'
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<xsl:stylesheet version="1.0"
xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"
xmlns:date="http://exslt.org/dates-and-times"
extension-element-prefixes="date">
<xsl:import href="get-schedule.xsl" />
<!--
Name: XSLT Calendar

Forms have been an integral part of any interactive site since the dawn of time, they promote interactivity and are usually the most common way users interact with a site. It's commonplace that when a form is submitted, the website will take 'action' and do something with the data and then provide a user with the result. Symphony provides this logic layer via Events.

This tutorial assumes you have a basic understanding of how Events work in Symphony (if not, this may be a good introduction) and are semi comfortable writing some PHP code. I'll be showing you some of the lesser known features of Symphony Events, including event priority, event chaining and a brief demonstration of how to write a custom Event. The difficulty level progresses as we go through, but with any luck you'll be able to learn a thing or two :)

Getting Started

The Scenario

Our client requires a form that allows a user to submit some details about their new car purchase. Th

{
"AL": "Alabama",
"AK": "Alaska",
"AS": "American Samoa",
"AZ": "Arizona",
"AR": "Arkansas",
"CA": "California",
"CO": "Colorado",
"CT": "Connecticut",
"DE": "Delaware",
{
"aar":
{
"int":["Afar"],
"native":["Afaraf"]
},
"aa":
{
"int":["Afar"],
"native":["Afaraf"]
@wjn
wjn / firewall.user
Created July 9, 2021 20:00 — forked from stokito/firewall.user
OpenWrt: Allow only CloudFlare to access HTTP 80 and HTTPS 443 ports. Use if your uhttpd is hidden behind CF. Put this file to /etc/firewall.user. NOTE: It uses HTTP to get the list of IPs because to wget via https we need to install ca-certs. This makes you vulnerable to MiTM attacks but that's ok to be protected from internet's hackers
# https://www.cloudflare.com/ips replace the ips-v4 with ips-v6 if needed
# https://blog.cloudflare.com/cloudflare-now-supporting-more-ports/
for ip in `wget -qO- http://www.cloudflare.com/ips-v4`; do
iptables -I INPUT -p tcp -m multiport --dports 80,443,8080,8443,2052,2053,2082,2083,2086,2087,2095,2096,8880 -s $ip -j ACCEPT
done