Let's say you want to host domains first.com and second.com.
Create folders for their files:
| (function(){ | |
| var i = 0; | |
| var count = $('.Album.unavailable,.Album.preview').length; | |
| console.log('Found ' + count + ' albums to remove'); | |
| var timeout = 0; | |
| $('.Album.unavailable,.Album.preview').each(function(){ | |
| var instance_i = i++; | |
| var album = $(this); | |
| album.trigger('mouseover').mouseenter(); | |
| album.find('a,div,span,image').trigger('mouseover').mouseenter(); |
| <?php | |
| /** | |
| * This function looks for the directory that "wp-config.php" resides in | |
| * and then looks for a file named ".revision", the content of which is a | |
| * single integer set by Beanstalk upon deployment. | |
| * | |
| * The purpose is to version static resources so that browsers will | |
| * re-download any cached, outdated versions with the newer version. | |
| * |
| | { | |
| || {| | |
| | |;| | |
| }| | |
| | | |
| } | |
| ||| | |
| | |