ror, scala, jetty, erlang, thrift, mongrel, comet server, my-sql, memchached, varnish, kestrel(mq), starling, gizzard, cassandra, hadoop, vertica, munin, nagios, awstats
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# to generate your dhparam.pem file, run in the terminal | |
openssl dhparam -out /etc/nginx/ssl/dhparam.pem 2048 |
I'm having trouble understanding the benefit of require.js. Can you help me out? I imagine other developers have a similar interest.
From Require.js - Why AMD:
The AMD format comes from wanting a module format that was better than today's "write a bunch of script tags with implicit dependencies that you have to manually order"
I don't quite understand why this methodology is so bad. The difficult part is that you have to manually order dependencies. But the benefit is that you don't have an additional layer of abstraction.
CSS AMD plugins
curl/plugin/link: https://github.com/unscriptable/curl/blob/master/src/curl/plugin/link.js
- the link! plugin is ultra-simple, but doesn't wait for the stylesheet to be applied
- should work with any AMD loader, including RequireJS
curl/plugin/css: https://github.com/unscriptable/curl/blob/master/src/curl/plugin/css.js
- loads and waits for CSS
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from fabric.api import * | |
""" | |
Base configuration | |
""" | |
env.project_name = '$(project)' | |
env.database_password = '$(db_password)' | |
env.site_media_prefix = "site_media" | |
env.admin_media_prefix = "admin_media" | |
env.newsapps_media_prefix = "na_media" |