A super simple bash script to check the status of a GitLab CI pipeline.
$ git push
...
$ git pipeline-status
Status of last pipeline for user/project on gitlab/master:
"pending"
...
$ git pipeline-status
A super simple bash script to check the status of a GitLab CI pipeline.
$ git push
...
$ git pipeline-status
Status of last pipeline for user/project on gitlab/master:
"pending"
...
$ git pipeline-status
Past August 2024, Authy stopped supported the desktop version of their apps:
See Authy is shutting down its desktop app | The 2FA app Authy will only be available on Android and iOS starting in August for details.
And indeed, after a while, Authy changed something in their backend which now prevents the old desktop app from logging in. If you are already logged in, then you are in luck, and you can follow the instructions below to export your tokens.
If you are not logged in anymore, but can find a backup of the necessary files, then restore those files, and re-install Authy 2.2.3 following the instructions below, and it should work as expected.
<?php | |
$local_file = 'file_path'; //path to a local file on your server | |
$post_fields = array( | |
'name' => 'value', | |
); | |
$boundary = wp_generate_password( 24 ); | |
$headers = array( | |
'content-type' => 'multipart/form-data; boundary=' . $boundary, | |
); |
// Lazy (=on-demand) zip() | |
for (const [i, x] of zip(naturalNumbers(), naturalNumbers())) { | |
console.log(i, x); | |
if (i >= 2) break; | |
} | |
// Output: | |
// 0 0 | |
// 1 1 | |
// 2 2 |
b=0;$=x=>(p,i="_"+b++,u=($[i]=q=>eval(i).innerHTML=x(p,$[q],u),z=>($[++b]=z,`$.${i}(${b})`)))=>`<c id=${i}>${x(p,[]._,u)}</c>` |
I recently had several days of extremely frustrating experiences with service workers. Here are a few things I've since learned which would have made my life much easier but which isn't particularly obvious from most of the blog posts and videos I've seen.
I'll add to this list over time – suggested additions welcome in the comments or via twitter.com/rich_harris.
Chrome 51 has some pretty wild behaviour related to console.log
in service workers. Canary doesn't, and it has a load of really good service worker related stuff in devtools.
# Add this snippet to the top of your playbook. | |
# It will install python2 if missing (but checks first so no expensive repeated apt updates) | |
# [email protected] | |
- hosts: all | |
gather_facts: False | |
tasks: | |
- name: install python 2 | |
raw: test -e /usr/bin/python || (apt -y update && apt install -y python-minimal) |
Elastic Load Balancer, CloudFront and Let's Encrypt |
/* | |
This script attempts to identify all CSS classes mentioned in HTML but not defined in the stylesheets. | |
In order to use it, just run it in the DevTools console (or add it to DevTools Snippets and run it from there). | |
Note that this script requires browser to support `fetch` and some ES6 features (fat arrow, Promises, Array.from, Set). You can transpile it to ES5 here: https://babeljs.io/repl/ . | |
Known limitations: | |
- it won't be able to take into account some external stylesheets (if CORS isn't set up) | |
- it will produce false negatives for classes that are mentioned in the comments. |
import argpase | |
import fileinput | |
if __name__ == '__main__': | |
parser = ArgumentParser() | |
parser.add_argument('--dummy', help='dummy argument') | |
parser.add_argument('files', metavar='FILE', nargs='*', help='files to read, if empty, stdin is used') | |
args = parser.parse_args() | |
# If you would call fileinput.input() without files it would try to process all arguments. |