git clone [email protected]:YOUR-USERNAME/YOUR-FORKED-REPO.git
cd into/cloned/fork-repo
git remote add upstream git://github.com/ORIGINAL-DEV-USERNAME/REPO-YOU-FORKED-FROM.git
git fetch upstream
git clone [email protected]:YOUR-USERNAME/YOUR-FORKED-REPO.git
cd into/cloned/fork-repo
git remote add upstream git://github.com/ORIGINAL-DEV-USERNAME/REPO-YOU-FORKED-FROM.git
git fetch upstream
Each existing unread and subsequent new emails after the script is started are | |
passed as Mail objects to "process_email" function.Function header is provided | |
but processing implementation is left to the user. Error logs are currently sent | |
to a rotating log file (in the same directory as the script) and to STDOUT. | |
Instead of polling or checking the server for new emails every now and then, | |
IMAP IDLE check is utilized. Ensure that the IMAP server supports IDLE command | |
and allows at least 5 minutes of idling*** and uses the default ports for this | |
script to work. Tested to work with Gmail and default installations of MS | |
Exchange Server. |
Many mobile apps have back-end API servers. They usually rely on the API replies to determine whether certain information is supposed to be shown. If the API responses could be manipulated on the fly, we may easily fool an unmodified app to expose some private data.
This manual guides you to set up nginx as non-transparent SSL proxy, which just subsitutes strings in the server responses (i.e. man-in-the-middle attack ourself). For both server-side (their API servers) and client-side (your device), the whole process is almost transparent.
When hosting our web applications, we often have one public IP
address (i.e., an IP address visible to the outside world)
using which we want to host multiple web apps. For example, one
may wants to host three different web apps respectively for
example1.com
, example2.com
, and example1.com/images
on
the same machine using a single IP address.
How can we do that? Well, the good news is Internet browsers
// This is a sample MPI program in Go. | |
// | |
// To build and run it, we need to install MPI. I downloaded and built | |
// Open MPI 1.8.8: | |
// | |
// wget https://www.open-mpi.org/software/ompi/v1.8/downloads/openmpi-1.8.8.tar.bz2 | |
// tar xjf openmpi-1.8.8.tar.bz2 | |
// cd openmpi-1.8.8 | |
// ./configure --prefix=/home/yi/openmpi | |
// make -j2 install |
By: @BTroncone
Also check out my lesson @ngrx/store in 10 minutes on egghead.io!
Update: Non-middleware examples have been updated to ngrx/store v2. More coming soon!
Table of Contents
git remote add upstream https://github.com/whoever/whatever.git
git fetch upstream
def dot_product(x, kernel): | |
""" | |
Wrapper for dot product operation, in order to be compatible with both | |
Theano and Tensorflow | |
Args: | |
x (): input | |
kernel (): weights | |
Returns: | |
""" | |
if K.backend() == 'tensorflow': |
To improve collaboration this guide is now available on GitHub.