TODO: Write a project description
TODO: Describe the installation process
#!/bin/bash | |
# SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT | |
## Copyright (C) 2009 Przemyslaw Pawelczyk <[email protected]> | |
## | |
## This script is licensed under the terms of the MIT license. | |
## https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT | |
# | |
# Lockable script boilerplate | |
#301 Redirects for .htaccess | |
#Redirect a single page: | |
Redirect 301 /pagename.php http://www.domain.com/pagename.html | |
#Redirect an entire site: | |
Redirect 301 / http://www.domain.com/ | |
#Redirect an entire site to a sub folder | |
Redirect 301 / http://www.domain.com/subfolder/ |
#!/bin/sh | |
## backup each mysql db into a different file, rather than one big file | |
## as with --all-databases. This will make restores easier. | |
## To backup a single database simply add the db name as a parameter (or multiple dbs) | |
## Putting the script in /var/backups/mysql seems sensible... on a debian machine that is | |
## Create the user and directories | |
# mkdir -p /var/backups/mysql/databases | |
# useradd --home-dir /var/backups/mysql --gid backup --no-create-home mysql-backup | |
## Remember to make the script executable, and unreadable by others |
Other people's projects:
My projects (tutorials are on my blog at http://maxoffsky.com):
<div class="form-group {{ $errors->has(':name') ? 'has-error' : '' }}"> | |
{{ Form::label(':name', ':label', ['class'=>'control-label']) }} | |
{{ Form::select(':name', $options, $default, ['class'=>'form-control']) }} | |
{{ $errors->first(':name', '<span class="help-block">:message</span>') }} | |
</div> |
# Backup | |
docker exec CONTAINER /usr/bin/mysqldump -u root --password=root DATABASE > backup.sql | |
# Restore | |
cat backup.sql | docker exec -i CONTAINER /usr/bin/mysql -u root --password=root DATABASE | |
I recently had the need to write a small url shortening application. I am aware that this problem has been solved quite a few times before, but what is being a developer if not reinventing the wheel just for the heck of it? Custom CMS anyone?
Knowing that this was going to be a tiny RESTful API and also knowing that Laravel 5.2 had API rate limiting built in, I was eager to give it a try. Taylor Otwell being Taylor Otwell shipped 5.2 with the rate limiting defaults set up out of the box and I had my application building out short url's in a matter of minutes. The problem for me came when I wanted to start associating those short urls with a user.
Typically my applications have a UI and authentication is done through a simple login page. Obviously for a RESTful API, having a login page isn't ideal. Instead, my hope was to have users append an api_token
to the end of their query string and use that to auth
# -*- mode: ruby -*- | |
# vi: set ft=ruby : | |
# All Vagrant configuration is done below. The "2" in Vagrant.configure | |
# configures the configuration version (we support older styles for | |
# backwards compatibility). Please don't change it unless you know what | |
# you're doing. | |
Vagrant.configure("2") do |config| | |
# The most common configuration options are documented and commented below. | |
# For a complete reference, please see the online documentation at |
<?php | |
# Fill our vars and run on cli | |
# $ php -f db-connect-test.php | |
$dbname = 'name'; | |
$dbuser = 'user'; | |
$dbpass = 'pass'; | |
$dbhost = 'host'; | |
$connect = mysqli_connect($dbhost, $dbuser, $dbpass) or die("Unable to Connect to '$dbhost'"); |