Note
to active Office without crack, just follow https://github.com/WindowsAddict/IDM-Activation-Script,
you wiil only need to run
irm https://massgrave.dev/ias | iex
Note
to active Office without crack, just follow https://github.com/WindowsAddict/IDM-Activation-Script,
you wiil only need to run
irm https://massgrave.dev/ias | iex
kubectl get pods --all-namespaces | grep Evicted | awk '{print $2 " --namespace=" $1}' | xargs kubectl delete pod |
RUN apt update | |
RUN apt upgrade -y | |
RUN apt install -y apt-utils | |
RUN a2enmod rewrite | |
RUN apt install -y libmcrypt-dev | |
RUN docker-php-ext-install mcrypt | |
RUN apt install -y libicu-dev | |
RUN docker-php-ext-install -j$(nproc) intl | |
RUN apt-get install -y libfreetype6-dev libjpeg62-turbo-dev libpng12-dev | |
RUN docker-php-ext-configure gd --with-freetype-dir=/usr/include/ --with-jpeg-dir=/usr/include/ |
Create file /etc/systemd/system/[email protected]
. SystemD calling binaries using an absolute path. In my case is prefixed by /usr/local/bin
, you should use paths specific for your environment.
[Unit]
Description=%i service with docker compose
PartOf=docker.service
After=docker.service
#cloud-config | |
# Upgrade the instance on first boot | |
# (ie run apt-get upgrade) | |
# | |
# Default: false | |
# Aliases: apt_upgrade | |
package_upgrade: true | |
# Install additional packages on first boot |
-- | |
-- GEOIP IN POSTGRESQL | |
-- | |
-- We use two approaches. First using PostgreSQL inet and cidr types and indexing (PostgreSQL 9.4 and later), | |
-- and then using ip4r (https://github.com/RhodiumToad/ip4r). | |
-- The performance of ip4r indexes is significantly better than PostgreSQL's own index. | |
-- An operation that took 42s using ip4r took 47 minutes using PostgreSQL's cidr index. | |
-- |
#!/bin/bash | |
# compiled from https://docs.docker.com/engine/installation/linux/debian/#/debian-jessie-80-64-bit | |
sudo apt-get update | |
sudo apt-get dist-upgrade -y | |
sudo apt-get install apt-transport-https ca-certificates -y | |
sudo sh -c "echo deb https://apt.dockerproject.org/repo debian-jessie main > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/docker.list" | |
sudo apt-key adv --keyserver hkp://p80.pool.sks-keyservers.net:80 --recv-keys 58118E89F3A912897C070ADBF76221572C52609D |
#!/usr/bin/env ruby | |
require 'open-uri' | |
require 'pathname' | |
require 'json' | |
def strip_hash(f) | |
ext = f.extname | |
if ext.include?("?") |
{ | |
"AWSEBDockerrunVersion": "1", | |
"Image": { | |
"Name": "<AWS_ACCOUNT_ID>.dkr.ecr.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/<NAME>:<TAG>", | |
"Update": "true" | |
}, | |
"Ports": [ | |
{ | |
"ContainerPort": "443" | |
} |
A quick guide to write a very very simple "ECHO" style module to redis and load it. It's not really useful of course, but the idea is to illustrate how little boilerplate it takes.
Step 1: open your favorite editor and write/paste the following code in a file called module.c
#include "redismodule.h"
/* ECHO <string> - Echo back a string sent from the client */
int EchoCommand(RedisModuleCtx *ctx, RedisModuleString **argv, int argc) {