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create different ssh key according the article Mac Set-Up Git
$ ssh-keygen -t rsa -C "[email protected]"
I wanted to figure out the fastest way to load non-critical CSS so that the impact on initial page drawing is minimal.
TL;DR: Here's the solution I ended up with: https://github.com/filamentgroup/loadCSS/
For async JavaScript file requests, we have the async attribute to make this easy, but CSS file requests have no similar standard mechanism (at least, none that will still apply the CSS after loading - here are some async CSS loading conditions that do apply when CSS is inapplicable to media: https://gist.github.com/igrigorik/2935269#file-notes-md ).
Seems there are a couple ways to load and apply a CSS file in a non-blocking manner:
(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
| #user nobody; | |
| #Defines which Linux system user will own and run the Nginx server | |
| worker_processes 1; | |
| #Referes to single threaded process. Generally set to be equal to the number of CPUs or cores. | |
| #error_log logs/error.log; #error_log logs/error.log notice; | |
| #Specifies the file where server logs. |
This document details how I setup LE on my server. Firstly, install the client as described on http://letsencrypt.readthedocs.org/en/latest/using.html and make sure you can execute it. I put it in /root/letsencrypt.
As it is not possible to change the ports used for the standalone authenticator and I already have a nginx running on port 80/443, I opted to use the webroot method for each of my domains (note that LE does not issue wildcard certificates by design, so you probably want to get a cert for www.example.com and example.com).
For this, I placed config files into etc/letsencrypt/configs, named after <domain>.conf. The files are simple:
Prerequisites : the letsencrypt CLI tool
This method allows your to generate and renew your Lets Encrypt certificates with 1 command. This is easily automatable to renew each 60 days, as advised.
You need nginx to answer on port 80 on all the domains you want a certificate for. Then you need to serve the challenge used by letsencrypt on /.well-known/acme-challenge.
Then we invoke the letsencrypt command, telling the tool to write the challenge files in the directory we used as a root in the nginx configuration.
I redirect all HTTP requests on HTTPS, so my nginx config looks like :
server {
| import React from "react"; | |
| import { render } from "react-dom"; | |
| const ParentComponent = React.createClass({ | |
| getDefaultProps: function() { | |
| console.log("ParentComponent - getDefaultProps"); | |
| }, | |
| getInitialState: function() { | |
| console.log("ParentComponent - getInitialState"); | |
| return { text: "" }; |
| apply from: rootProject.file('gradle/install-git-hooks.gradle') |
| package demo; | |
| import java.io.Serializable; | |
| import java.security.Principal; | |
| import java.util.Collection; | |
| import java.util.Collections; | |
| import java.util.HashMap; | |
| import java.util.Map; | |
| import java.util.UUID; |