Ensure you have
PSQLinstalled
Connecting to your DB
psql --host=localhost --port=5432 --username=developer --dbname=dummyDb --password
Once connected,
To show list of PID on a port:
lsof -t -i :YOUR_PORT_NUMBERtop command will show a list of all running processes and various statistics about each process. It’s usually most helpful to sort by processor usage or memory usage, and to do that you’ll want to use the -o flag
top -o cpu | grep :YOUR_PORT_NUMBER shows details of the respective pidTo kill a process by PID:
kill :YOUR_PORT_NUMBERSources
console.log(module.exports); //-> {}
exports.apple = 'apple';
console.log(module.exports); //-> { apple: 'apple'}
module.exports['pear'] = 'pear';
console.log(module.exports); //-> { apple: 'apple', pear: 'pear'}
module.exports = 'uhoh';
console.log(module.exports); //-> uhohThis is just learning journal for myself and I welcome any help from the public to improve my understanding.
Whether a globally or locally installed module, eventually it will reside within a node_modules directory. The contents of this gist is scopped within the local node_modules of an application's directory. Now within the local node_modules there should always exist a .bin folder that houses all the excutable files.
What I've gathered thus far:
chmod 755 or 777 permissions to run as scripts.#!/usr/bin/env node on the very first line.Syntax: YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SSZ+HH:MM eg:2018-10-19T03:00:00.000Z
This consists 4 parts:
YYYY-MM-DD: Standard Gregorian calendar dateT: Date-time delimiter, it seperates the date from the timeHH:MM:SS:SSS: Standard time representation in 24hr format. Seconds SS and milliseconds SSS may be ommited for brevityHere're my learnings from Redux Docs on Middlewares. If you haven't read through the docs yet, please do so first.
Middlewares work with the beauty of Currying.
The concept of using a Higher Order Function to generate a new function with the partial application or all of its arguments.
The only way I've succeeded so far is to employ SSH.
Assuming you are new to this like me, first I'd like to share with you that your Mac has a SSH config file in a .ssh directory. The config file is where you draw relations of your SSH keys to each GitHub (or Bitbucket) account, and all your SSH keys generated are saved into .ssh directory by default. You can navigate to it by running cd ~/.ssh within your terminal, open the config file with any editor, and it should look something like this:
Host * AddKeysToAgent yes
> UseKeyChain yes