apt-get install python-pip
pip install shadowsocks
sudo ssserver -p 443 -k password -m aes-256-cfb --user nobody -d start
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<?php | |
/** | |
* Download a large distant file to a local destination. | |
* | |
* This method is very memory efficient :-) | |
* The file can be huge, PHP doesn't load it in memory. | |
* | |
* /!\ Warning, the return value is always true, you must use === to test the response type too. | |
* | |
* @author dalexandre |
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<?php | |
function runCommand () | |
{ | |
$command = 'php artisan queue:listen > /dev/null & echo $!'; | |
$number = exec($command); | |
file_put_contents(__DIR__ . '/queue.pid', $number); | |
} | |
if (file_exists(__DIR__ . '/queue.pid')) { |
Go to the egghead website, i.e. Building a React.js App
run
$.each($('h4 a'), function(index, video){
console.log(video.href);
});
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<?php | |
namespace App\Providers; | |
use Illuminate\Support\ServiceProvider; | |
use Log; | |
use Config; | |
class AppServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider | |
{ |
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# most people include something like this. don't. | |
# check your default nginx.conf, it's already covered in a much better way. | |
#gzip_disable "MSIE [1-6]\.(?!.*SV1)"; | |
# compress proxied requests too. | |
# it doesn't actually matter if the request is proxied, we still want it compressed. | |
gzip_proxied any; | |
# a pretty comprehensive list of content mime types that we want to compress | |
# there's a lot of repetition here because different applications might use different |
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# Sample Nginx config with sane caching settings for modern web development | |
# | |
# Motivation: | |
# Modern web development often happens with developer tools open, e. g. the Chrome Dev Tools. | |
# These tools automatically deactivate all sorts of caching for you, so you always have a fresh | |
# and juicy version of your assets available. | |
# At some point, however, you want to show your work to testers, your boss or your client. | |
# After you implemented and deployed their feedback, they reload the testing page – and report | |
# the exact same issues as before! What happened? Of course, they did not have developer tools | |
# open, and of course, they did not empty their caches before navigating to your site. |
Code is clean if it can be understood easily – by everyone on the team. Clean code can be read and enhanced by a developer other than its original author. With understandability comes readability, changeability, extensibility and maintainability.
- Follow standard conventions.
- Keep it simple stupid. Simpler is always better. Reduce complexity as much as possible.
- Boy scout rule. Leave the campground cleaner than you found it.
- Always find root cause. Always look for the root cause of a problem.
A collection of links to the "Master the JavaScript Interview" series of medium stories by Eric Elliott.
A collection of links to the excellent "Composing Software" series of medium stories by Eric Elliott.
Edit: I see that each post in the series now has index, previous and next links. However, they don't follow a linear flow through all the articles with some pointing back to previous posts effectively locking you in a loop.
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