default['sshd']['sshd_config']['AuthenticationMethods'] = 'publickey,keyboard-interactive:pam' | |
default['sshd']['sshd_config']['ChallengeResponseAuthentication'] = 'yes' | |
default['sshd']['sshd_config']['PasswordAuthentication'] = 'no' |
- View: Also called a "template", a file that contains markup (like HTML) and optionally additional instructions on how to generate snippets of HTML, such as text interpolation, loops, conditionals, includes, and so on.
- View engine: Also called a "template library" or "templater", ie. a library that implements view functionality, and potentially also a custom language for specifying it (like Pug does).
- HTML templater: A template library that's designed specifically for generating HTML. It understands document structure and thus can provide useful advanced tools like mixins, as well as more secure output escaping (since it can determine the right escaping approach from the context in which a value is used), but it also means that the templater is not useful for anything other than HTML.
- String-based templater: A template library that implements templating logic, but that has no understanding of the content it is generating - it simply concatenates together strings, potenti
Following line does't have /products.*
page. This tells Nginx to cache all product pages by default.
Idea is fast loading product pages will improve scalability of a store and also conversion.
A more complete example (with rewriting cookie domains/paths) can be found at http://blog.haproxy.com/2014/04/28/howto-write-apache-proxypass-rules-in-haproxy/
We will try something roughly equivalent to the following ProxyPass
directives in Apache2:
ServerName www.example.com
...
ProxyPass /foo/ http://foo.local
ProxyPassReverse /foo/ http://foo.local
In haproxy.cfg
we define a backend, say foo, to reverse-proxy to foo.local
backend server.
This is a set up for projects which want to check in only their source files, but have their gh-pages branch automatically updated with some compiled output every time they push.
A file below this one contains the steps for doing this with Travis CI. However, these days I recommend GitHub Actions, for the following reasons:
- It is much easier and requires less steps, because you are already authenticated with GitHub, so you don't need to share secret keys across services like you do when coordinate Travis CI and GitHub.
- It is free, with no quotas.
- Anecdotally, builds are much faster with GitHub Actions than with Travis CI, especially in terms of time spent waiting for a builder.
#!/bin/bash | |
if [ -z "$1" ]; then | |
echo | |
echo usage: $0 network-interface | |
echo | |
echo e.g. $0 eth0 | |
echo | |
echo shows packets-per-second |
HANDY ONE-LINE SCRIPTS FOR AWK 30 April 2008 | |
Compiled by Eric Pement - eric [at] pement.org version 0.27 | |
Latest version of this file (in English) is usually at: | |
http://www.pement.org/awk/awk1line.txt | |
This file will also be available in other languages: | |
Chinese - http://ximix.org/translation/awk1line_zh-CN.txt | |
USAGE: |