| -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| -- statsd interface for nginx | |
| -- (c) 2014 Anton Tolchanov | |
| -- https://gist.github.com/knyar/8905045 | |
| -- | |
| -- Usage: | |
| -- 1. install nginx with ngx_lua; | |
| -- 2. put this file as statsd.lua somewhere (/var/lib/nginx/lua/ will do); | |
| -- 3. initialize stats in init_by_lua: | |
| -- http { |
| // ==UserScript== | |
| // @name 9gag.tv on chromecast | |
| // @namespace http://tiago.dalligna.co.uk/ | |
| // @version 0.1 | |
| // @description watch 9gag.tv in chromecast | |
| // @match http://9gag.tv/v/* | |
| // @require https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.10.2/jquery.min.js | |
| // @copyright 2013 Tiago | |
| // ==/UserScript== |
This setup aims to create a clean development environment, by keeping development tools and libraries in a virtual machine, separate from the host computer. Separation has several advantages: you can back up the virtual machine, move it to a different host, keep multiple environments around (e.g. for wokring on projects with wildly different dependencies, or upgrading the development toolchain without risking downtime), and base the development environment on a different OS (hello Linux!). Last but not least, it keeps the host machine clean.
The downside is that you're running code inside a VM. You need to log in (we'll use SSH), make sure the code is available and in sync (we'll set up NFS). There's also some I/O overhead, and you need to decide on how much memory, CPU and disk space you allocate to the VM. You can change your mind later, but it's a bit of a hassle to resize virtual disks and partitions.
We assume you're running MacOS and have VMware Fusion already installed
| <?php | |
| /** | |
| * Simple excel writer class with no external dependencies, drop it in and have fun | |
| * @author Matt Nowack | |
| * @link https://gist.github.com/ihumanable/929039/edit | |
| * @license Unlicensed | |
| * @version 1.0 | |
| */ | |
| class Excel { |