This manual is about setting up an automatic deploy workflow using nodejs, PM2, nginx and GitLab CI. It is tested on:
- Target server: Ubuntu 16.04 x64. This is suitable for Ubuntu 14.x.
- Windows 10 on my PC to work.
| /** | |
| * Major modifications from V1: | |
| * 1. Changed architecture to class-based | |
| * 2. Added support for multiple mints | |
| * 3. Added native SOL support | |
| * 4. Handled 0 pre-balance token accounts | |
| * 5. Handled optional accounts for Raydium's swap instructions | |
| */ | |
| class AmmInstructionProcessor { |
Hola is a free browser extension and a Windows program that has 10 million users. It was created in 2012 and I did a review of it (that post has been taken down after I learned the dark truth). Initially I liked it, because I could watch Hulu and CBS online for free and legally (well, mostly legally anyways).
However, quickly the extension became bad. It started injecting ads into pages and that was when I disabled it. I was considering starting a similar paid service, a "startup" as some would call it, and was very curious about how it worked.
I reverse engineered their code and have gotten a list of proxies and the username and password that I have published HERE for all the people to see, use and abuse.
Now the dirty secret: Hola Networks Limited, that created Hola.org, runs a company called Luminati, that charges $20/GB for their premium VPN service. Okay, that’s not that bad, a little bit greedy but nothing sinister, you’re thinking? Well, it gets w