Please see: https://github.com/kevinSuttle/html-meta-tags, thanks for the idea @dandv!
Copied from http://code.lancepollard.com/complete-list-of-html-meta-tags/
GitHub supports several lightweight markup languages for documentation; the most popular ones (generally, not just at GitHub) are Markdown and reStructuredText. Markdown is sometimes considered easier to use, and is often preferred when the purpose is simply to generate HTML. On the other hand, reStructuredText is more extensible and powerful, with native support (not just embedded HTML) for tables, as well as things like automatic generation of tables of contents.
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
import os | |
import re | |
import subprocess | |
import sys | |
modified = re.compile('^[MA]\s+(?P<name>.*)$') | |
CHECKS = [ |
# Ubuntu upstart file at /etc/init/yourservice.conf | |
pre-start script | |
mkdir -p /var/log/yourcompany/ | |
end script | |
respawn | |
respawn limit 15 5 | |
start on runlevel [2345] |
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,
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.
// Sample custom iterator. | |
// By perfectly.insane (http://www.dreamincode.net/forums/index.php?showuser=76558) | |
// From: http://www.dreamincode.net/forums/index.php?showtopic=58468 | |
#include <iostream> | |
#include <vector> | |
#include <algorithm> | |
#include <iterator> | |
#include <cassert> |