« first day (347 days earlier)      last day (2417 days later) » 

jg.
jg.
00:00
without having to specify the .get/.post and urls to match.
for every restful url in your site?
are you having to specify all the routes in the main js file?
or is there a more pragmatic way that i'm missing?
I specify it in the routes file
jg.
jg.
where do you put the code that does the work?
in the same file?
with the routes?
how do you organize your code in separate files?
// routes/resource.js
module.exports = {
  boot: function () {
    this.app.on("creation", this.routes)
  },
  routes: function (app) {
    app.get("/resource", this.index)
    app.post("/resource", this.create)
    app.put("/resource/:id", this.update)
    ...
  },
  create: function () {},
  update: function () {},
  index: function () {}
}
jg.
jg.
or do you just write the whole app in 1 file?
@jg whole app in one file ._. are you serious?
jg.
jg.
00:02
ha. yes.
You organize code by using multiple files -.-
jg.
jg.
yes. i do.
Do you know how to write programs with multiple files?
jg.
jg.
yes.
jg.
jg.
00:03
which one should i look at?
reverse? with or without?
without is plain express
with ncore is express done with ncore
reverse is express with ncore but more events
jg.
jg.
sorry for the noob question, what's core?
ncore?
so home.js is 1 resource and if i want to define another, just create another file that mimics home.js?
cool. thanks for the pointers. i really appreciate it.
Yeah hopefully you can see how you can expand the without example across multiple files :P
jg.
jg.
i think so. it looks like i can just start creating more "resources" files that mimic home.js
this is exactly what i was looking for. thanks again.
i need to go digest it now...
I also recommend you use the with ncore version because its better ;)
jg.
jg.
00:31
will do.
i'm reading your server architecture article now.
jg.
jg.
did you ever get to refactoring your blog app?
Yeah
I did it a bunch
it needs another round of refactoring
with ncore this time
jg.
jg.
is this how you really feel?
jquery sucks?
...
Of course I do.
jQuery sucks
jg.
jg.
00:42
ha. you don't know how much that makes me laugh...
Do you think jQuery is a "good" library?
In the sense that it allows me to do a lot of really awesome things easily, yes I personally do... I've not spent any time looking at the way it is developed or architected, but I know that many criticize the hell out of it. However, as long as it does what I want without issues, I am not concerned about that.
Maybe "good enough" is what it is... You like to chase the ideal, and that's fine, but not everyone is so picky.
Well to be honest, its a good "lesser of evils"
i wouldnt call it good enough, that implies its not absolutely shit.
00:58
It's not..... get over yourself. :)
And to be honest, unless your catering to oldIE you dont need jquery :)
jquery is absolutely shit
I just have higher standards then you
jg.
jg.
01:39
this is a religious argument. i think jquery is a great DOM query utility.
i ask for a DOM element by class name or id, and it gives it to me.
So as far as that goes, it does what's intended.
But I think there's an unintended problem. I've noticed that some people think jQuery IS javascript.
A buddy of mine said, "oh, there's so much more to REAL javascript" referring to him learning javascript and having used jQuery before.
I think it's important to learn javascript, not just use jQuery.
unless of course, you're making money with the app you built with jQuery. in that case, there may be no reason to learn javascript...
But I do think it's funny how EVERYONE seems to just LOVE jQuery. Raynos, you're the first I've ever heard publicly say that you don't like it.
I agree with the point that it's typically good practice to write decoupled code and follow the single responsibility principle; which is one of the points I got from that post. jQuery puts everything onto the $ object which doesn't allow a programmer to pick and choose what facility they want to use. But, I don't think the jQuery mission included that idea. jQuery devs wanted people to be able to "write less, do more".
So nothing about "write decoupled code, follow single responsibility" and other well known programming best practices.
I think it's good to have a dissenting voice. jQuery gets a lot of love, but we should critique it too; to get better; to write better.
 
2 hours later…
03:28
gist: Why you don't need jQuery, 2012-01-14 22:44:26Z
# Why the jQuery Abstraction isn't needed.

(One needs some form of browser normalization so that modern features works, no-one is doubting that).

**Related:** [jQuery library critique][2]

## Abstractions that aren't needed

### Selectors

QSA works (shim=sizzle). Besides selectors are generally bad practice. Favour node traversal, gEBI, gEBTN and gEBCN. (shim=domShim)

### Attributes

The DOM attribute API works. Besides one rarely touches attributes and one rarely touches innerHTML. Generally one manipulates properties

### Data

properties work, weakmaps work (shim=weakmap-shim)

### Deferred Object

Promises, deferreds, futures, etc aren't that useful. Favour managing callbacks and using flow control techniques.

### Events

DOM2 events work (shim=domshim). You don't need anything else.

### Forms

The HTML form element is more useful. Doesn't give any useful abstraction

### Manipulation, Traversing

The DOM works (shim=domShim). If you want set like behaviour you can use [NodeComposite][1]

### Utilities

ES5 works (shim=ES5shim)

## Abstractions that are still needed

### Ajax

XHR doesn't have a good shim yet, we still need an abstraction.

**Todo:** Write an XHR2 shim

### CSS, Dimensions, Offset

I havn't seen any good CSS normalization shims. One propably needs some form of abstraction to handle CSS nicely.

**Todo:** Write an CSSOMView shim and a CSSOM shim.

### Effects

Animations, Don't know of a good CSS3 shim, so we still need a browser abstraction.

**Todo:** Find an elegant standards compliant polyfill / shim solution to programmatic animations.

  [1]: https://github.com/Raynos/NodeComposite
  [2]: https://gist.github.com/1417030
@jg jQuery devs dont want to "write less, do more" they want to "know less, load more"
The biggest problem with jQuery is that it stops you learning the native host environments. It breeds ignorance.
04:25
Cry more.
04:37
hey... actually having problems with git with my node app on nodester (similar to heroku). I did a force push to nodester, and I believe it merged my server.js file with the starter server.js file, resulting in an error on the <<<<<HEAD line git adds.
tried git push --force nodester master a few times, along with git pull nodester master, and git fetch nodester master
What's more, when I do git fetch nodester master, I get:
* branch master -> FETCH_HEAD
 
2 hours later…
06:53
@FlorianMargaine hi
@FlorianMargaine Can you help me please? :)
uh, maybe
do you have a question on SO? :p
I have an application in the following address: 31.21.44.11:3000, I want to redirect the application to domain: domain.eu.
07:08
you mean you want to redirect domain.eu to 31.21.44.11 ?
you have to set the port 80 if you want to have domain.eu instead of domain.eu:3000
yes, for node, it means running the app as root
there are some quirks though if it really matters to you
Do I must be logged in as root?
you can run with sudo
ok, thank you :)
 
5 hours later…
12:43
Hi, Anyone using limestone Node.js module to connect sphinx server and query sphinx data?
Or Any Node module available to connect and query Sphinx data?
13:32
@Fosco its not about crying, its about ...
14:24
15:09
:D
you should build stuff with knockout - signalR - Asp.net - EF
It's the MS-way :)
15:27
...
ಠ_ಠ
ever heard of signalR?
15:53
26 mins ago, by Raynos
ಠ_ಠ
Why do you recommend signalR
that was just sarcasm :s
I'm a C# developer doing some node.js / socket.io on the side
Most C# developers only know about SignalR :p
Most C# developers only know about webforms
true :p
16:05
Dem C#
talking about MS ever tried RxJS? reactive extensions?
god no
they look horrible
 
2 hours later…
Tom
Tom
17:53
Hello
Is it a good idea to somehow make all traffic to port 80 go to 8080 as well, or even instead of? That'd allow me to bind to port 80 without having to add my production server's application account to the sudoers file.
Tom
Tom
18:05
In other words, to forward traffic from port 80 to 8080 (inward) and from 8080 to 80 (outward) using iptables.
sudo iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 80 -j REDIRECT --to-port 8080
@Tom I do
I use iptables
Tom
Tom
@Raynos which command did you use to set it up appropriately? I have seen 5 people do the same thing with 5 different iptables commands.
18:35
I use the gist one
gist: How I Got Node.js Talking on EC2's Port 80 , 2011-01-12 18:04:02Z
THE PROBLEM:

Standard practices say no non-root process gets to talk to the Internet on a port less than 1024.  How, then, could I get Node talking on port 80 on EC2?  (I wanted it to go as fast as possible and use the smallest possible share of my teeny tiny little micro-instance's resources, so proxying through nginx or Apache seemed suboptimal.)  


THE TEMPTINGLY EASY BUT TOTALLY WRONG SOLUTION:

Alter the port the script talks to from 8000 to 80:

}).listen(80);

.. and run it as root:

sudo /usr/local/bin/node foo.js

This is a Bad Idea, for all the standard reasons.  (Here's one:  if Node has access to the filesystem for any reason, you're hosed.)


ONE POSSIBLE RIGHT WAY:

Add a port forwarding rule via iptables. 


OH DEAR FAMILIAR FEELING YOU ARE A TOTAL N00B AND KNOW NOT ONE THING ABOUT IPTABLES. 

First, I listed the rules currently running on the NAT (Network Address Translation) table:

[ec2-user@ip-XX-XXX-XX-X ~]$ sudo iptables -t nat -L

Chain INPUT (policy ACCEPT)
target     prot opt source               destination         

Chain FORWARD (policy ACCEPT)
target     prot opt source               destination         

Chain OUTPUT (policy ACCEPT)
target     prot opt source               destination

I saw nothing, so I felt free to add a rule forwarding packets sent to external port 80 to internal port 8000:

[ec2-user@ip-XX-XXX-XX-X ~]$ sudo iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 80 -j REDIRECT --to-ports 8000

When I listed again, I saw a new PREROUTING chain:

[ec2-user@ip-XX-XXX-XX-X ~]$ sudo iptables -t nat -L

Chain PREROUTING (policy ACCEPT)
target     prot opt source               destination         
REDIRECT   tcp  --  anywhere             anywhere            tcp dpt:http redir ports 8000 

Chain OUTPUT (policy ACCEPT)
target     prot opt source               destination         

Chain POSTROUTING (policy ACCEPT)
target     prot opt source               destination         
[ec2-user@ip-10-205-14-7 ~]$ sudo iptables -t nat -L
Chain PREROUTING (policy ACCEPT)
target     prot opt source               destination         
REDIRECT   tcp  --  anywhere             anywhere            tcp dpt:http redir ports 8000 

Chain OUTPUT (policy ACCEPT)
target     prot opt source               destination         

Chain POSTROUTING (policy ACCEPT)
target     prot opt source               destination         

I checked my Node script, which was running on port 8000, and (yes!) it was responding on port 80. 

During my early fumbling I screwed up a bunch of times. I removed busted rules by specifying the right table, the right chain, and the right line number, like so:

[ec2-user@ip-XX-XXX-XX-X ~]$ sudo iptables -t nat -D PREROUTING 1

This removed the first line from the PREROUTING chain in my nat table.


FINAL NOTE: I DID NOT DO THIS MYSELF BUT I HAVE A VERY STRONG FEELING I SHOULD BE VERY CAREFUL NOT TO SCREW UP PORT 22, WHICH IS MY ONLY WAY IN.


Thanks to @rckenned, @jrconlin, and @spullara ... see also http://iptables.rlworkman.net/chunkyhtml for a pretty definitive-looking iptables tutorial from @frozentux.


Tom
Tom
@Raynos should there not also be an outward rule?
from port 8080 to 80?
dont know
works for me :D
Tom
Tom
hah right
@Raynos did you also remove the prerouting line?
Tom
Tom
18:58
@Raynos its not working for me
Tom
Tom
19:14
@Raynos so what did you do exactly?
that command
Tom
Tom
@Raynos well you must have done more than that one command, for example iptables-save
iptables:
        sudo iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 80 -j REDIRECT --to-ports 8000
Tom
Tom
yeah, that's the one command from the gist
it has no effect without iptables-save
probably you forgot that you did execute that, or maybe you rebooted
anyway even if I do save it, it does not work for me
@Raynos did you ever test it on your local machine?

« first day (347 days earlier)      last day (2417 days later) »