JavaScript

Topic: Anything JavaScript, ECMAScript including Node, React, ...
Jun 27, 2017 20:09
I don't have any specific issues yet, I just have architectural questions.
Jun 27, 2017 20:09
*?
Jun 27, 2017 20:09
Is StackOverflow suitable then/
Jun 27, 2017 20:08
Sorry for being in the wrong room but, what's the most appropriate StackExchange site to ask about scaling websites?
Feb 21, 2016 20:20
Is writing an interpreter in Javascript using Node.js too slow?
 

PHP

Support group for those afflicted with PHP. Don't ask to ask, ...
Sep 2, 2016 15:17
@DaveRandom Thanks anyway!
Sep 2, 2016 15:07
@DaveRandom Also, slightly off-track but here goes anyway. If I'm using SSL with Cloudflare that secures the connection between the user and Cloudflare, but there is no SSL between Cloudflare and my server, is that as bad as having no SSL at all? Or is that enough to prevent Man-In-The-Middle attacks? Also thanks for your help!
Sep 2, 2016 15:05
I've never actually looked at the cookies Google stores, I just presume they don't keep the one cookie forever without changing it behind the scenes.
Sep 2, 2016 15:04
@DaveRandom I'm ok with forcing people to log out after a certain amount of time, but I'd prefer not to
Sep 2, 2016 15:04
@DaveRandom Do you have any ideas how Google,YouTube and the like get away with it?
Sep 2, 2016 15:00
@DaveRandom At the moment my application doesn't force tokens to expire because that would log people out. Are there any secure ways of generating a new token for the user while they are logged in?
Sep 2, 2016 14:56
@DaveRandom do sessions make you less at risk of CSRF compared to cookies
Sep 2, 2016 14:55
I use bin2hex(openssl_random_pseudo_bytes(64, true)) to generate the raw token, then I hash it using SHA1 before I send it to the database.
Sep 2, 2016 14:49
I read sessions are preferable to cookies for logging a user in. I'm using cookies at the moment. The cookie stores a token and this token is stored in the database in a hashed form (using SHA1). If the raw cookie token and the hashed token in the database don't match the user is logged out. Is this secure? Should I be using sessions instead? I can manually log people out by deleting the hashed cookie from the database, I read that is an advantage of sessions.
Nov 17, 2015 19:15
@RizwanAhmed No problem :)
Nov 17, 2015 19:15
@iroegbu I looked at Discourse but I want the forum to run off of a cPanel server because I'd like to make it open source and I'd like it to be as accessible as possible. :)
Nov 17, 2015 19:13
@RizwanAhmed Thanks for your opinion :) But PHPBB etc ... all require Apache to do extra work with each request. I want the fastest forum possible. Does my idea sound insecure?
Nov 17, 2015 19:11
I want to minimise the amount of PHP / MySQL requests so that I could upload the static pages to AWS Cloudfront for example.
Nov 17, 2015 19:11
Custom forum software
Nov 17, 2015 19:10
I'm planning on writing a forum and I want it to be as fast as possible. Would it be a good idea to use static pages and then add the dynamic features using PHP and Javascript? Specifically user login-registration, should I generate a token when they login and keep the token for 10 mins then make them generate a new one for security? The token would be stored as a cookie that is passed as an argument in each AJAX request. Is this insecure?
Nov 17, 2015 19:08
Web application architecture question ...
 

Lounge<C++>

Today we're daydreaming about C++26 reflection
Feb 21, 2016 20:36
I don't worry about it anyway, probably means I'll end up with a crapy interpreter
Feb 21, 2016 20:34
Javascript means you don't have to worry about any of that crap
Feb 21, 2016 20:33
Don't get interfaces
Feb 21, 2016 20:33
I think Go and Haskell are hard too
Feb 21, 2016 20:32
It's easier to use than C++
Feb 21, 2016 20:31
Is it possible that an interpreter in Node.js could be fast after the initial startup time due to Node.js using a JIT?
Feb 21, 2016 20:29
Am I right in thinking that Node.js is slow to start up but is quick once it's going?
Feb 21, 2016 20:28
I thought about using Javascript because it makes writing the interpreter easier, not really for any other reasons
Feb 21, 2016 20:28
I tested it's speed using the time command in the terminal, so it's not really scientific
Feb 21, 2016 20:27
@Zoidberg would an interpreter in Node.js be useful though because of the speed difference?
Feb 21, 2016 20:26
I'm writing an interpreter using Javascript and Node.js and in my primitive tests it seems to be a lot slower than even Python. Would Node.js be a good choice for writing an interpreter in or should I use C++?
Feb 21, 2016 20:24
Does anyone know anything about writing interpreters?