Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

View codykrieger's full-sized avatar
🇺🇦

Cody Krieger codykrieger

🇺🇦
View GitHub Profile
@lukeredpath
lukeredpath / ExampleClass.m
Created June 30, 2011 22:18
Macro for creating your "shared instance" using GCD
@implementation MySharedThing
+ (id)sharedInstance
{
DEFINE_SHARED_INSTANCE_USING_BLOCK(^{
return [[self alloc] init];
});
}
@end
@holman
holman / SAFE-RUBY.rb
Created February 16, 2011 05:38
This shows some of my favorite ways to ensure robust, high-security Ruby Applications.
require 'net/https'
module SecurityModule
class HighSecurity
class ReallyHighSecurity
def self.turn_on_safe_connections
OpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_NONE
end
end
end
@timblair
timblair / caveatPatchor.js
Created February 15, 2011 10:27 — forked from protocool/caveatPatchor.js
Sample caveatPatchor.js file for use in Propane 1.1.2 and above: pulls avatars from Gravatar
/*
As of version 1.1.2, Propane will load and execute the contents of
~Library/Application Support/Propane/unsupported/caveatPatchor.js
immediately following the execution of its own enhancer.js file.
You can use this mechanism to add your own customizations to Campfire
in Propane.
Below you'll find two customization examples.
@uasi
uasi / vim.rb
Created November 30, 2010 16:46
Vim formula for Homebrew (EDIT: recent versions of official Homebrew distribution includes one)
require 'formula'
class Vim < Formula
homepage 'http://www.vim.org/'
url 'ftp://ftp.vim.org/pub/vim/unix/vim-7.3.tar.bz2'
head 'https://vim.googlecode.com/hg/'
sha256 '5c5d5d6e07f1bbc49b6fe3906ff8a7e39b049928b68195b38e3e3d347100221d'
version '7.3.682'
def features; %w(tiny small normal big huge) end
@joemccann
joemccann / nginx + node setup.md
Created October 25, 2010 02:06
Set up nginx as a reverse proxy to node.js.

The idea is to have nginx installed and node installed. I will extend this gist to include how to install those as well, but at the moment, the following assumes you have nginx 0.7.62 and node 0.2.3 installed on a Linux distro (I used Ubuntu).

In a nutshell,

  1. nginx is used to serve static files (css, js, images, etc.)
  2. node serves all the "dynamic" stuff.

So for example, www.foo.com request comes and your css, js, and images get served thru nginx while everything else (the request for say index.html or "/") gets served through node.

  1. nginx listens on port 80.