This tutorial uses the "Sample hapi.js REST API" project.
Take a look at: https://github.com/agendor/sample-hapi-rest-api/
##Topics
- Introduction
- Installing Node.js
- Installing MySQL
- Setting-up the project
| # Sample implementation of quicksort and mergesort in ruby | |
| # Both algorithm sort in O(n * lg(n)) time | |
| # Quicksort works inplace, where mergesort works in a new array | |
| def quicksort(array, from=0, to=nil) | |
| if to == nil | |
| # Sort the whole array, by default | |
| to = array.count - 1 | |
| end |
This tutorial uses the "Sample hapi.js REST API" project.
Take a look at: https://github.com/agendor/sample-hapi-rest-api/
##Topics
| #!/bin/sh | |
| # Make sure to: | |
| # 1) Name this file `backup.sh` and place it in /home/ubuntu | |
| # 2) Run sudo apt-get install awscli to install the AWSCLI | |
| # 3) Run aws configure (enter s3-authorized IAM user and specify region) | |
| # 4) Fill in DB host + name | |
| # 5) Create S3 bucket for the backups and fill it in below (set a lifecycle rule to expire files older than X days in the bucket) | |
| # 6) Run chmod +x backup.sh | |
| # 7) Test it out via ./backup.sh |
This document contains excerpts from my web server logs collected over a period of 7 years that shows various kinds of recon and attack vectors.
There were a total of 37.2 million lines of logs out of which 1.1 million unique HTTP requests (Method + URI) were found.
$ sed 's/^.* - - \[.*\] "\(.*\) HTTP\/.*" .*/\1/' access.log > requests.txt