- Open the Amazon Route 53 console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/route53/.
- If you are new to Amazon Route 53, you see a welcome page; choose Get Started Now for DNS Management. Otherwise, choose Hosted Zones in the navigation pane.
- Choose Create Hosted Zone.
- For Domain Name, type your domain name.
- Choose Create.
- Click the Hosted Zone, edit record set.
- In the value, add
ec2-54-152-134-146.compute-1.amazonaws.com.
- Change your DNS file to point to the IPv4 address (This would be in something like GoDaddy).
[ | |
{ | |
"country": "US", | |
"zip": 34034, | |
"city": "APO", | |
"FIELD4": "", | |
"state": "AA", | |
"state_name": "Dillon", | |
"code": 33, | |
"FIELD8": "", |
Inspired by dannyfritz/commit-message-emoji
See also gitmoji.
Commit type | Emoji |
---|---|
Initial commit | 🎉 :tada: |
Version tag | 🔖 :bookmark: |
New feature | ✨ :sparkles: |
Bugfix | 🐛 :bug: |
Interesting part (unmounting & API) is at the end if you're not interested in the rest =).
This animation proposal is just an attempt. In case it doesn't work out, I've gathered a few examples that can test the power of a future animation system.
-
Parent is an infinitely spinning ball, and has a child ball that is also spinning. Clicking on the parent causes child to reverse spinning direction. This tests the ability of the animation system to compose animation, not in the sense of applying multiple interpolations to one or more variables passed onto the child (this should be trivial), but in the sense that the parent's constantly updating at the same time as the child, and has to ensure that it passes the animation commands correctly to it. This also tests that we can still intercept these animations (the clicking) and immediately change their configuration instead of queueing them.
-
Typing letters and let them fly in concurrently. This tests concurrency, coordination of an array of ch
module.exports = { | |
get: function (req, res) { | |
res.sendfile(req.path.substr(1)); | |
}, | |
_config: { | |
rest: false, | |
shortcuts: false | |
} | |
}; |
https://github.com/djvirgen/virgen-acl Simple and elegant, create your own checks. No middleware?
https://github.com/OptimalBits/node_acl Use as middleware, create your own roles and access. Great choice.
https://github.com/tschaub/authorized Similar to connect roles... but a bit more robust? you can create roles and action, and associate many roles with that action
Prereq:
apt-get install zsh
apt-get install git-core
Getting zsh to work in ubuntu is weird, since sh
does not understand the source
command. So, you do this to install zsh
wget https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh/raw/master/tools/install.sh -O - | zsh