This document has now been incorporated into the uWSGI documentation:
http://uwsgi-docs.readthedocs.org/en/latest/tutorials/Django_and_nginx.html
Steps with explanations to set up a server using:
# How to sign your custom RPM package with GPG key | |
# Step: 1 | |
# Generate gpg key pair (public key and private key) | |
# | |
# You will be prompted with a series of questions about encryption. | |
# Simply select the default values presented. You will also be asked | |
# to create a Real Name, Email Address and Comment (comment optional). | |
# | |
# If you get the following response: |
# Makefile template for a shared library in C | |
# https://www.topbug.net/blog/2019/10/28/makefile-template-for-a-shared-library-in-c-with-explanations/ | |
CC = gcc # C compiler | |
CFLAGS = -fPIC -Wall -Wextra -O2 -g # C flags | |
LDFLAGS = -shared # linking flags | |
RM = rm -f # rm command | |
TARGET_LIB = libtarget.so # target lib | |
SRCS = main.c src1.c src2.c # source files |
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
""" | |
Very simple HTTP server in python (Updated for Python 3.7) | |
Usage: | |
./dummy-web-server.py -h | |
./dummy-web-server.py -l localhost -p 8000 | |
Send a GET request: |
When hosting our web applications, we often have one public IP
address (i.e., an IP address visible to the outside world)
using which we want to host multiple web apps. For example, one
may wants to host three different web apps respectively for
example1.com
, example2.com
, and example1.com/images
on
the same machine using a single IP address.
How can we do that? Well, the good news is Internet browsers
/* | |
* A simple example of json string parsing with json-c. | |
* | |
* clang -Wall -g -I/usr/include/json-c/ -o json_parser json_parser.c -ljson-c | |
*/ | |
#include <json.h> | |
#include <stdio.h> | |
int main() { | |
struct json_object *jobj; |
'''This script goes along the blog post | |
"Building powerful image classification models using very little data" | |
from blog.keras.io. | |
It uses data that can be downloaded at: | |
https://www.kaggle.com/c/dogs-vs-cats/data | |
In our setup, we: | |
- created a data/ folder | |
- created train/ and validation/ subfolders inside data/ | |
- created cats/ and dogs/ subfolders inside train/ and validation/ | |
- put the cat pictures index 0-999 in data/train/cats |
With the release of Vivaldi 2.2, this page is now obsolete and unmaintained. Widevine is fetched automatically on post install of our official packages. The information below and the script are left for historical reasons but will not be updated.
If you are using something newer than Vivaldi 2.2, you should not be using this script as there is simply no need. Any need you think you have for it would be a bug IMHO and thus should be logged in a bug report. Before you do so however, you should also checkout the Vivaldi help page on Widevine, on Linux
A bunch of people asked how they could use this script with pure Chromium on Ubuntu. The following is a quick guide. Though I still suggest you at least try Vivaldi. Who knows, you might like it. Worried about proprietary componants? Remember that libwidevinecdm.so is a b
#!/bin/sh | |
aria2c --dir=./ --input-file=urls.txt --max-concurrent-downloads=1 --connect-timeout=60 --max-connection-per-server=16 --split=16 --min-split-size=1M --human-readable=true --download-result=full --file-allocation=none | |
date | |
# Now create this file in the same directory and paste all urls in it: urls.txt | |
You would think it would be easy to find this information, but none of the Github or Gandi documentation is clear so I have recorded the required steps here.
Create the following A records:
@ 1800 IN A 185.199.108.153
@ 1800 IN A 185.199.109.153
@ 1800 IN A 185.199.110.153