no Homebrew required
$ cd /usr/local/src
$ curl -OL http://nginx.org/download/nginx-1.12.2.tar.gz
$ tar -xvzf nginx-1.12.2.tar.gz && rm nginx-1.12.2.tar.gz
This example connects to an imap server and retrieves emails
npm install imap mailparser
Security - the elephant in the room. Everyone agrees that it is very important but few takes it seriously. We at RisingStack want you to do it right - this is why we have put together this checklist to help you guide through the must have security checks before your application is enabled to thousands of users/customers. | |
Most of these items are general and applies to all languages and frameworks not just Node.js - however some of the tools presented are Node.js specific. You should also check our introductory Node.js security blogpost. | |
Configuration Management | |
Security HTTP Headers | |
There are some security-related HTTP headers that your site should set. These headers are: |
// Run this from the commandline: | |
// phantomjs runner.js | ffmpeg -y -c:v png -f image2pipe -r 24 -t 10 -i - -c:v libx264 -pix_fmt yuv420p -movflags +faststart output.mp4 | |
var page = require('webpage').create(), | |
address = 'http://s.codepen.io/phanan/fullembedgrid/YPLewm?type=embed&safe=true&_t=1424767252279', | |
duration = 3, // duration of the video, in seconds | |
framerate = 24, // number of frames per second. 24 is a good value. | |
counter = 0, | |
width = 500, | |
height = 500; |
{ | |
// The plugin looks for a .jsbeautifyrc file in the same directory as the | |
// source file you're prettifying (or any directory above if it doesn't exist, | |
// or in your home folder if everything else fails) and uses those options | |
// along the default ones. | |
// Details: https://github.com/victorporof/Sublime-HTMLPrettify#using-your-own-jsbeautifyrc-options | |
// Documentation: https://github.com/einars/js-beautify/ | |
"html": { | |
"allowed_file_extensions": ["htm", "html", "xhtml", "shtml", "xml", "svg"], |
#!/bin/bash | |
PHANTOM_JS="phantomjs-1.9.8-linux-x86_64" | |
if [[ $EUID -ne 0 ]]; then | |
echo "You must be a root user" 2>&1 | |
exit 1 | |
else | |
apt-get update | |
apt-get install -y build-essential chrpath libssl-dev libxft-dev | |
apt-get install -y libfreetype6 libfreetype6-dev | |
apt-get install -y libfontconfig1 libfontconfig1-dev |
These instructions will guide you through the process of setting up local, trusted websites on your own computer.
These instructions are intended to be used on macOS Sierra, but they have been known to work in El Capitan, Yosemite, Mavericks, and Mountain Lion.
NOTE: You may substitute the edit
command for nano
, vim
, or whatever the editor of your choice is. Personally, I forward the edit
command to Sublime Text:
alias edit="/Applications/Sublime\ Text.app/Contents/SharedSupport/bin/subl"
(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
I wanted to figure out the fastest way to load non-critical CSS so that the impact on initial page drawing is minimal.
TL;DR: Here's the solution I ended up with: https://github.com/filamentgroup/loadCSS/
For async JavaScript file requests, we have the async
attribute to make this easy, but CSS file requests have no similar standard mechanism (at least, none that will still apply the CSS after loading - here are some async CSS loading conditions that do apply when CSS is inapplicable to media: https://gist.github.com/igrigorik/2935269#file-notes-md ).
Seems there are a couple ways to load and apply a CSS file in a non-blocking manner: