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Muhammad Al-Syrwan

How to set up your own private Git server on Linux | Bradley Wright - 0 views

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    ssh myserver.com sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install git-core …and that's it. Adding a user If you intend to share these repositories with any collaborators, at this point you'll either: Want to install something like Gitosis (outside the scope of this article, but this is a good, if old, tutorial); or Add a "shared" Git user. We'll be following the latter option. So, add a Git user: sudo adduser git Now you'll need to add your public key to the Git user's authorized_keys: sudo mkdir /home/git/.ssh sudo cp ~/.ssh/authorized_keys /home/git/.ssh/ sudo chown -R git:git /home/git/.ssh sudo chmod 700 !$ sudo chmod 600 /home/git/.ssh/* Now you'll be able to authenticate as the Git user via SSH. Test it out: ssh git@myserver.com Add your repositories If you were to not share the repositories, and just wanted to access them for yourself (like I did, since I have no collaborators), you'd do the following as yourself. Otherwise, do it as the Git user we added above. If using the Git user, log in as them: login git Now we can create our repositories: mkdir myrepo.git cd !$ git --bare init The last steps creates an empty repository. We're assuming you already have a local repository that you just want to push to a remote server. Repeat that last step for each remote Git repository you want. Log out of the server as the remaining operations will be completed on your local machine. Configure your development machine First, we add the remotes to your local machine. If you've already defined a remote named origin (for example, if you followed GitHub's instructions), you'll want to delete the remote first: git remote rm origin Now we can add our new remote: git remote add origin git@server.com:myrepo.git git push origin master And that's it. You'll probably also want to make sure you add a default merge and remote: git config branch.master.remote origin && git config branch.master.merge refs/heads/master And that's all. Now you
al-Amjad Tawfiq Isstaif

maccman/juggernaut - 0 views

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    "Juggernaut gives you a realtime connection between your servers and client browsers. You can literally push data to clients using your web application, which lets you do awesome things like multiplayer gaming, chat, group collaboration and more. "
al-Amjad Tawfiq Isstaif

Tower.js - Full Stack Web Framework for Node.js and the Browser - 0 views

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    Built on top of Node's Connect and Express, modeled after Ruby on Rails. Built for the client and server from the ground up.
al-Amjad Tawfiq Isstaif

Welcome to Capistrano. · capistrano/capistrano Wiki - 0 views

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    Capistrano is a developer tool for deploying web applications. It is typically installed on a workstation, and used to deploy code from your source code management (SCM) to one, or more servers.
al-Amjad Tawfiq Isstaif

Parakey: And Emerging WebOS Ideas - 1 views

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    Spectrum Online reports that Blake Ross and Joe Hewitt are working on a system called "Parakey", which essentially will be a downloaded application that turns your PC into a local server, and allows you to seamlessly drag web content (photos, text, movies, calendars, bookmarks, RSS feeds, etc) into you Parakey "site", and easily control who can and cannot view it with a color coded "key" system.
al-Amjad Tawfiq Isstaif

Open Cobalt - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • This makes replicated computation as easily as replicating data - and makes synchronization of all events across multiple peers a fundamental property of the system.
    • al-Amjad Tawfiq Isstaif
       
      شيء مذهل في الحقيقة
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    Open Cobalt is a free and open source software platform for constructing, accessing, and sharing virtual world both on local area networks or across the Internet, without any requirement for centralized servers.
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