Scope | Description | User repo:read | User repo:write | User repo:admin |
---|---|---|---|---|
(no scope) | Access public information (read-only) | |||
user | Update all user data | |||
user:email | Access user email addresses (read-only) | |||
user:follow | Follow and unfollow users | |||
public_repo | Access public repositories | I | I | |
repo | Full control of private repositories | C | CI | CI |
repo_deployment | Access deployment status |
$ curl --help | |
Usage: curl [options...] <url> | |
--abstract-unix-socket <path> Connect via abstract Unix domain socket | |
--alt-svc <file name> Enable alt-svc with this cache file | |
--anyauth Pick any authentication method | |
-a, --append Append to target file when uploading | |
--basic Use HTTP Basic Authentication | |
--cacert <file> CA certificate to verify peer against | |
--capath <dir> CA directory to verify peer against | |
-E, --cert <certificate[:password]> Client certificate file and password |
Read data from a public bucket using gzip compression.
First bit of code opens a bucket and lists contents.
Next reads a gzip json file and deserializes it to an array. Please note not very efficient for a large array since the byte array is loaded into memory.
package main
import (
"compress/gzip"
// Ignore those pesky styles | |
require('ignore-styles'); | |
// Set up babel to do its thing... env for the latest toys, react-app for CRA | |
require('babel-register')({ | |
ignore: /\/(build|node_modules)\//, | |
presets: ['env', 'react-app'] | |
}); | |
// Now that the nonsense is over... load up the server entry point |
⚠ This post is fairly old. I don't keep it up to date. Be sure to see comments where some people have posted updates
What this will cover
- Host a static website at S3
- Redirect
www.website.com
towebsite.com
- Website can be an SPA (requiring all requests to return
index.html
) - Free AWS SSL certs
- Deployment with CDN invalidation
git checkout --orphan future-master
git add -A # Add all files and commit them
git commit
git branch -D master # Deletes the master branch
git branch -m master # Rename the current branch to master
git push -f origin master # Force push master branch to github
git gc --aggressive --prune=all # remove the old files
These are instructions for setting up git to authenticate with GitHub when you have 2-factor authentication set up. This authentication should be inherited by any GUI client you are using. These are intentionally brief instructions, with links to more detail in the appropriate places.
-
Download and install the git command-line client (if required).
-
Open the git bash window and introduce yourself to git (if required):
git config --global user.name 'Firstname Lastname' git config --global user.email '[email protected]'
Not all random values are created equal - for security-related code, you need a specific kind of random value.
A summary of this article, if you don't want to read the entire thing:
- Don't use
Math.random()
. There are extremely few cases whereMath.random()
is the right answer. Don't use it, unless you've read this entire article, and determined that it's necessary for your case. - Don't use
crypto.getRandomBytes
directly. While it's a CSPRNG, it's easy to bias the result when 'transforming' it, such that the output becomes more predictable. - If you want to generate random tokens or API keys: Use
uuid
, specifically theuuid.v4()
method. Avoidnode-uuid
- it's not the same package, and doesn't produce reliably secure random values. - If you want to generate random numbers in a range: Use
random-number-csprng
.
You should seriously consider reading the entire article, though - it's
Code is clean if it can be understood easily – by everyone on the team. Clean code can be read and enhanced by a developer other than its original author. With understandability comes readability, changeability, extensibility and maintainability.
- Follow standard conventions.
- Keep it simple stupid. Simpler is always better. Reduce complexity as much as possible.
- Boy scout rule. Leave the campground cleaner than you found it.
- Always find root cause. Always look for the root cause of a problem.