Here is the looks and feel of your terminal once the tutorial has been applied on your system:
Using Homebrew:
#!/bin/sh | |
# | |
# redis - this script starts and stops the redis-server daemon | |
# | |
# chkconfig: - 85 15 | |
# description: Redis is a persistent key-value database | |
# processname: redis-server | |
# config: /etc/redis/redis.conf | |
# config: /etc/sysconfig/redis | |
# pidfile: /var/run/redis.pid |
Here is the looks and feel of your terminal once the tutorial has been applied on your system:
Using Homebrew:
php artisan --help OR -h | |
php artisan --quiet OR -q | |
php artisan --version OR -V | |
php artisan --no-interaction OR -n | |
php artisan --ansi | |
php artisan --no-ansi | |
php artisan --env | |
// -v|vv|vvv Increase the verbosity of messages: 1 for normal output, 2 for more verbose output and 3 for debug | |
php artisan --verbose |
<?php | |
namespace App\Http\Middleware; | |
use Closure; | |
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\ParameterBag; | |
/** | |
* @author https://github.com/Stunext | |
* |
# If "Disk Utility" can't erase a demaged disk and throw errors, like these: | |
# a) "-69888: Couldn't unmount disk"; | |
# b) "Couldn't modify partition map". | |
# You can repair disk (if it is damaged partially, just by a program error, while changing partition map of a disk in) by | |
# FULL ERASING OF A DISK - you can do that ONLY in A COMMAND LINE, using "diskutil" command (on OS X) | |
# 1. Firstly you must get path of a drive in a system, like this: | |
diskutil list | |
# Than complete erasing of a disk: | |
diskutil eraseDisk free EMPTY /dev/disk4 |
Supervisor is a client/server system that allows its users to monitor and control a number of processes on UNIX-like operating systems. Supervisor provides you with one place to start, stop, and monitor your processes. Processes can be controlled individually or in groups. You can configure Supervisor to provide a local or remote command line and web interface.
The supervisor is a process manager which Laravel suggests to use as a process monitor for queue workers. It will automatically start the queue worker in the background, even after the system has booted and will automatically restart the worker if the worker exits unexpectedly.