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Locate the section for your github remote in the .git/config file. It looks like this:

[remote "origin"]
	fetch = +refs/heads/*:refs/remotes/origin/*
	url = [email protected]:joyent/node.git

Now add the line fetch = +refs/pull/*/head:refs/remotes/origin/pr/* to this section. Obviously, change the github url to match your project's URL. It ends up looking like this:

The idea is to have nginx installed and node installed. I will extend this gist to include how to install those as well, but at the moment, the following assumes you have nginx 0.7.62 and node 0.2.3 installed on a Linux distro (I used Ubuntu).

In a nutshell,

  1. nginx is used to serve static files (css, js, images, etc.)
  2. node serves all the "dynamic" stuff.

So for example, www.foo.com request comes and your css, js, and images get served thru nginx while everything else (the request for say index.html or "/") gets served through node.

  1. nginx listens on port 80.

Google Drive File Picker Example

This is an example of how to use the Google Drive file picker and Google Drive API to retrieve files from Google Drive using pure JavaScript. At the time of writing (14th July 2013), Google have good examples for using these two APIs separately, but no documentation on using them together.

Note that this is just sample code, designed to be concise to demonstrate the API. In a production environment, you should include more error handling.

See a demo at http://stuff.dan.cx/js/filepicker/google/

/*global angular: true, google: true, _ : true */
'use strict';
angular.module('geocoder', ['ngStorage']).factory('Geocoder', function ($localStorage, $q, $timeout) {
var locations = $localStorage.locations ? JSON.parse($localStorage.locations) : {};
var queue = [];
// Amount of time (in milliseconds) to pause between each trip to the
(function () {
var scriptName = "embed.js"; //name of this script, used to get reference to own tag
var jQuery; //noconflict reference to jquery
var jqueryPath = "http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.8.3/jquery.min.js";
var jqueryVersion = "1.8.3";
var scriptTag; //reference to the html script tag
/******** Get reference to self (scriptTag) *********/
var allScripts = document.getElementsByTagName('script');
(function() {
var CSSCriticalPath = function(w, d, opts) {
var opt = opts || {};
var css = {};
var pushCSS = function(r) {
if(!!css[r.selectorText] === false) css[r.selectorText] = {};
var styles = r.style.cssText.split(/;(?![A-Za-z0-9])/);
for(var i = 0; i < styles.length; i++) {
if(!!styles[i] === false) continue;
var pair = styles[i].split(": ");
@lotsofcode
lotsofcode / s3.sh
Last active August 29, 2015 14:20 — forked from chrismdp/s3.sh
# You don't need Fog in Ruby or some other library to upload to S3 -- shell works perfectly fine
# This is how I upload my new Sol Trader builds (http://soltrader.net)
# Based on a modified script from here: http://tmont.com/blargh/2014/1/uploading-to-s3-in-bash
S3KEY="my aws key"
S3SECRET="my aws secret" # pass these in
function putS3
{
path=$1