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@tomaszklim
tomaszklim / espeo-initial-server-analysis.sh
Last active October 26, 2023 09:43
Espeo Software initial server analysis script, for future customers
#!/bin/sh
# Espeo Software server analysis script
# Written by Tomasz Klim
# Version 1.2
#
# Run this script as root and send us the created TGZ package.
WD=`pwd`
path=$WD/analysis
mkdir -p $path/etc $path/log $path/ls $path/proc
@SteveSandersonMS
SteveSandersonMS / blazor-state-user-docs.md
Last active February 2, 2025 17:23
Preserving State in Server-Side Blazor applications

Preserving State in Server-Side Blazor applications

Server-side Blazor is a stateful application framework. Most of the time, your users will maintain an ongoing connection to the server, and their state will be held in the server's memory in what's known as a "circuit". Examples of state held for a user's circuit include:

  • The UI being rendered (i.e., the hierarchy of component instances and their most recent render output)
  • The values of any fields and properties in component instances
  • Data held in DI service instances that are scoped to the circuit

Occasionally, users may experience a temporary network connection loss, after which Blazor will attempt to reconnect them to their original circuit so they can continue.

@charveey
charveey / 75-noto-color-emoji.conf
Created June 29, 2019 07:14
How to better enable Color Emojis! Fontconfig ships with some config files that are simply not enough to enable color emojis globally (the 45-generic.conf and 60-generic.conf) and just by installing Noto Color Emoji font will also not enable colorful emojis on all websites or some apps. However, this can easily be configured by creating a config…
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE fontconfig SYSTEM "fonts.dtd">
<fontconfig>
<!-- Add generic family. -->
<match target="pattern">
<test qual="any" name="family"><string>emoji</string></test>
<edit name="family" mode="assign" binding="same"><string>Noto Color Emoji</string></edit>
</match>
@huntrar
huntrar / full-disk-encryption-arch-uefi.md
Last active May 1, 2025 17:58
Arch Linux Full-Disk Encryption Installation Guide [Encrypted Boot, UEFI, NVMe, Evil Maid]

Arch Linux Full-Disk Encryption Installation Guide

This guide provides instructions for an Arch Linux installation featuring full-disk encryption via LVM on LUKS and an encrypted boot partition (GRUB) for UEFI systems.

Following the main installation are further instructions to harden against Evil Maid attacks via UEFI Secure Boot custom key enrollment and self-signed kernel and bootloader.

Preface

You will find most of this information pulled from the Arch Wiki and other resources linked thereof.

Note: The system was installed on an NVMe SSD, substitute /dev/nvme0nX with /dev/sdX or your device as needed.

@joepie91
joepie91 / js-tooling.md
Last active September 4, 2024 16:00
An overview of Javascript tooling

Getting confused about the piles of development tools that people use for Javascript? Here's a quick index of what is used for what.

Keep in mind that you shouldn't add tools to your workflow for the sake of it. While you'll see many production systems using a wide range of tools, these tools are typically used because they solved a concrete problem for the developers working on it. You should not add tools to your project unless you have a concrete problem that they can solve; none of the tools here are required.

Start with nothing, and add tools as needed. This will keep you from getting lost in an incomprehensible pile of tooling.

Build/task runners

Typical examples: Gulp, Grunt

@joepie91
joepie91 / you-dont-need-a-blockchain.md
Last active May 7, 2024 11:54
You Don't Need A Blockchain

You don't need a blockchain.

If you're reading this, you probably suggested to somebody that a particular technical problem could be solved with a blockchain.

Blockchains aren't a desirable thing; they're defined by having trustless consensus, which necessarily has to involve some form of costly signaling to work; that's what prevents attacks like sybil attacks.

In other words: blockchains must be expensive to operate, to work effectively. This makes it a last-resort solution, when you truly have no other options available for solving your problem; in almost every case you want a cheaper and less complex solution than a blockchain.

In particular, if your usecase is commercial, then you do not need or want trustless consensus. This especially includes usecases like supply chain tracking, ticketing, and so on. The whole *p

Style Book

We're currently using the Chicago Manual of Style. It's imperfect, but it's better than the alternatives, so far.

Style Basics & Deviations From the Stylebook

  • We don't wrap article titles within text in quotes, but we do link to them on first usage
  • We don't italicize the names of publications in article text
  • We don't cap "The" in publication titles in article text, but we do in Organization entries
  • Commas and periods go inside closing quotation marks
@altbdoor
altbdoor / README.md
Last active June 10, 2023 01:37
Sublime Text 3 plugin to automatically close purchase pop up on save
@alejandro-martin
alejandro-martin / multiple-ssh-keys-git.adoc
Last active May 4, 2025 01:22
Configure multiple SSH Keys for Git

Use Multiple SSH Keys for Git host websites (Github, Gitlab)

This is guide about how to configure multiple SSH keys for some Git host websites such as Github, Gitlab, among others.

Creating SSH keys

  1. Create SSH directory:

@joepie91
joepie91 / wildcard-certificates.md
Last active July 2, 2024 11:59
Why you probably shouldn't use a wildcard certificate

Recently, Let's Encrypt launched free wildcard certificates. While this is good news in and of itself, as it removes one of the last remaining reasons for expensive commercial certificates, I've unfortunately seen a lot of people dangerously misunderstand what wildcard certificates are for.

Therefore, in this brief post I'll explain why you probably shouldn't use a wildcard certificate, as it will put your security at risk.

A brief explainer

It's generally pretty poorly understood (and documented!) how TLS ("SSL") works, so let's go through a brief explanation of the parts that are important here.

The general (simplified) idea behind how real-world TLS deployments work, is that you: