Make your Arch fonts beautiful easily! This is what I do when I install Arch Linux to improve the fonts.
You may consider the following settings to improve your fonts for system-wide usage without installing a patched font library packages (eg. Infinality):
Install some fonts, for example:
sudo pacman -S ttf-dejavu ttf-liberation noto-fonts
A Evolução de Profilers e Tracers na Netflix - Martin Spier - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgtfkoUH_Hk
analysis tools for Linux ftrace and perf_events - https://github.com/brendangregg/perf-tools
Open source on-host performance monitoring framework - https://github.com/Netflix/vector
Webinar: PHP Profiling with Xdebug - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V5MYWBBAMA4
Fundamentals of Performance Profiling - https://smartbear.com/learn/code-profiling/fundamentals-of-performance-profiling/
Sampling profiler for PHP - https://github.com/nikic/sample_prof
phpspy - https://github.com/adsr/phpspy
Introduction to Software Engineering/Testing/Profiling - https://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Introduction_to_Software_Engineering/Testing/Profiling
Profiling (computer programming) - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Profiling_(computer_programming)
What Is Deterministic Profiling? - https://docs.python.org/3.5/library/profile.html#what-is-deterministic-profiling
So you want to commit changes generated by a GitHub Actions workflow back to your repo, and have that commit signed automatically?
Here's one way this is possible, using the REST API, the auto-generated GITHUB_TOKEN
, and the GitHub CLI, gh
, which is pre-installed on GitHub's hosted Actions runners.
You don't have to configure the git
client, just add a step like the one below... Be sure to edit FILE_TO_COMMIT
and DESTINATION_BRANCH
to suit your needs.
#!/bin/bash | |
### | |
### my-script — does one thing well | |
### | |
### Usage: | |
### my-script <input> <output> | |
### | |
### Options: | |
### <input> Input file to read. | |
### <output> Output file to write. Use '-' for stdout. |
⚠️ Note 2023-01-21
Some things have changed since I originally wrote this in 2016. I have updated a few minor details, and the advice is still broadly the same, but there are some new Cloudflare features you can (and should) take advantage of. In particular, pay attention to Trevor Stevens' comment here from 22 January 2022, and Matt Stenson's useful caching advice. In addition, Backblaze, with whom Cloudflare are a Bandwidth Alliance partner, have published their own guide detailing how to use Cloudflare's Web Workers to cache content from B2 private buckets. That is worth reading,
This document contains excerpts from my web server logs collected over a period of 7 years that shows various kinds of recon and attack vectors.
There were a total of 37.2 million lines of logs out of which 1.1 million unique HTTP requests (Method + URI) were found.
$ sed 's/^.* - - \[.*\] "\(.*\) HTTP\/.*" .*/\1/' access.log > requests.txt
from __future__ import division | |
from random import random | |
import numpy as np | |
import pandas as pd | |
''' | |
Use regret-matching algorithm to play Scissors-Rock-Paper. | |
''' | |
class RPS: |
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> | |
<opml version="1.0"> | |
<head> | |
<title>Subscriptions - freek@spatie.be</title> | |
</head> | |
<body> | |
<outline text="PHP" title="PHP"> | |
<outline htmlUrl="http://frederickvanbrabant.com" title="frederickvanbrabant.com" xmlUrl="http://frederickvanbrabant.com/feed.xml" type="rss" text="frederickvanbrabant.com"/> | |
<outline htmlUrl="http://mattallan.org" title="mattallan.org" xmlUrl="http://mattallan.org/feed.xml" type="rss" text="mattallan.org"/> | |
<outline title="asked.io" xmlUrl="https://asked.io/rss" type="rss" text="asked.io"/> |
Assuming PHP is compiled with debug enabled.
$ gdb /usr/sbin/php-fpm
Then:
r --nodaemonize --fpm-config /etc/php7/fpm/php-fpm.conf