start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
tmux new -s myname
========================================== ========================================== | |
TMUX COMMAND WINDOW (TAB) | |
========================================== ========================================== | |
List tmux ls List ^b w | |
New new -s <session> Create ^b c | |
Attach att -t <session> Rename ^b , <name> | |
Rename rename-session -t <old> <new> Last ^b l (lower-L) | |
Kill kill-session -t <session> Close ^b & |
Latency Comparison Numbers (~2012) | |
---------------------------------- | |
L1 cache reference 0.5 ns | |
Branch mispredict 5 ns | |
L2 cache reference 7 ns 14x L1 cache | |
Mutex lock/unlock 25 ns | |
Main memory reference 100 ns 20x L2 cache, 200x L1 cache | |
Compress 1K bytes with Zippy 3,000 ns 3 us | |
Send 1K bytes over 1 Gbps network 10,000 ns 10 us | |
Read 4K randomly from SSD* 150,000 ns 150 us ~1GB/sec SSD |
I have always struggled with getting all the various share buttons from Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus, Pinterest, etc to align correctly and to not look like a tacky explosion of buttons. Seeing a number of sites rolling their own share buttons with counts, for example The Next Web I decided to look into the various APIs on how to simply return the share count.
If you want to roll up all of these into a single jQuery plugin check out Sharrre
Many of these API calls and methods are undocumented, so anticipate that they will change in the future. Also, if you are planning on rolling these out across a site I would recommend creating a simple endpoint that periodically caches results from all of the APIs so that you are not overloading the services will requests.
### | |
CoffeeScript | |
marker = null; | |
require(["ace/range"], (range) -> | |
marker = editor.getSession().addMarker(new range.Range(7, 0, 7, 2000), "warning", "line", true); | |
) | |
setTimeout(-> |
; Sample supervisor config file. | |
[unix_http_server] | |
file=/tmp/supervisor.sock ; (the path to the socket file) | |
;chmod=0700 ; sockef file mode (default 0700) | |
;chown=nobody:nogroup ; socket file uid:gid owner | |
;username=user ; (default is no username (open server)) | |
;password=123 ; (default is no password (open server)) | |
;[inet_http_server] ; inet (TCP) server disabled by default |
package main | |
import ( | |
"bytes" | |
"encoding/hex" | |
"flag" | |
"fmt" | |
"io" | |
"log" | |
"net" |
license: gpl-3.0 | |
redirect: https://observablehq.com/@mbostock/mobile-patent-suits |
# Ubuntu upstart file at /etc/init/yourservice.conf | |
pre-start script | |
mkdir -p /var/log/yourcompany/ | |
end script | |
respawn | |
respawn limit 15 5 | |
start on runlevel [2345] |
There is a long standing issue in Ruby where the net/http library by default does not check the validity of an SSL certificate during a TLS handshake. Rather than deal with the underlying problem (a missing certificate authority, a self-signed certificate, etc.) one tends to see bad hacks everywhere. This can lead to problems down the road.
From what I can see the OpenSSL library that Rails Installer delivers has no certificate authorities defined. So, let's go fetch some from the curl website. And since this is for ruby, why don't we download and install the file with a ruby script?