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<![endif] Twitter Search query Search Twitter Remove Verified account @ Suggested users Verified account @ Verified account @ Language: English Bahasa Indonesia Bahasa Melayu Čeština Dansk Deutsch EnglishUK Español Filipino français Italiano Magyar Nederlands Norsk Polski Português română Suomi Svenska Tiếng Việt Türkçe Русский Українська мова עִבְרִית العربية فارسی हिन्दी বাংলা ภาษาไทย 한국어 日本語 简体中文 繁體中文 Have an account? Log in New to Twitter? Join Today » Log in Phone, email or username Password Log in Remember me Forgot password? Already using Twitter via text message? Follow Following Unfollow Blocked Unblock Pending Cancel Gary Bernhardt @ garybernhardt 4m 4 minutes ago Programmers! Go to t...
Skip to content Sign up Sign in This repository Explore Features Enterprise Blog Star 171 Fork 19 github / backup-utils /.container /.repohead Code Issues Pull Requests Pulse Graphs HTTPS Subversion You can clone with HTTPS or Subversion . Download ZIP /.repository-sidebar Permalink blob contrib key: blob_contributors:v21:1478b001c8f9184786190ac4ec69a646 branch: master Switch branches/tags /.select-menu-header Branches Tags /.select-menu-tabs /.select-menu-filters delete-old-es-backups /.select-menu-item fix-vanished-files-warnings /.select-menu-item ghe-standby-control /.select-menu-item ghebuver2 /.select-menu-item master /.select-menu-item new-filesystem-layout-support /.select-menu-item stable /.select-...
Skip to content Sign up Sign in This repository Explore Features Enterprise Blog Star 171 Fork 19 github / backup-utils /.container /.repohead Code Issues Pull Requests Pulse Graphs HTTPS Subversion You can clone with HTTPS or Subversion . Download ZIP /.repository-sidebar GitHub Enterprise Backup Utilities 548 commits 8 branches 6 releases 13 contributors Shell 100% Shell branch: master Switch branches/tags /.select-menu-header Branches Tags /.select-menu-tabs /.select-menu-filters delete-old-es-backups /.select-menu-item fix-vanished-files-warnings /.select-menu-item ghe-standby-control /.select-menu-item ghebuver2 /.select-menu-item master /.select-menu-item new...
Skip to content Sign up Sign in This repository Explore Features Enterprise Blog A faster, more flexible GitHub Enterprise /.pagehead Featured All Posts New Features Engineering Enterprise Meetups New Hires Watercooler Subscribe November 11, 2014 mcolyer Enterprise Today, we’re releasing an all-new GitHub Enterprise designed to make it even easier for developers and businesses around the world to use GitHub at work. Since GitHub Enterprise launched in 2011 , AWS's popularity has grown. Many companies want to host code in their AWS-powered cloud and with good reason. Using AWS reduces hardware costs, provides immediate access to a highly scalable infrastructure, and addresses a wide variety of compliance standards, from healthcare's HIPAA standards to government's FedRAMP. And now you can run GitHub Enterprise on AWS too! We ...
home 16 Oct 2014 - By Karl Seguin I realized something recently: I know virtually nothing about UDP. Oh, I know it's connectionless, has no handshaking and thus doesn't provide any guarantees about delivery or ordering. But, in practice, what does that actually mean? I setup 5 VPS to send each other a few UDP packets over a 7 hour period. I didn't send much traffic (though that's certainly worth trying). Each server, every 9-11 second, randomly picked a target and sent 5-10 packets ranging from 16 to 1016 bytes. 2 servers were in the same data center in New Jersey. 1 each in LA, Amsterdam and Tokyo. The first thing I wanted to know was how unreliable UDP was. Are we talking about a delivery rate of 25%? 50%? 75%? Packets Received - click table to toggle % Receiver NJ 1 NJ 2 LA NLD JPN NJ 1 - 2981/2981 2888/2889 2964/2964 3053/3054 NJ 2 3016/3016 - 3100/310...
<![endif] Twitter Search query Search Twitter Remove Verified account @ Suggested users Verified account @ Verified account @ Language: English Bahasa Indonesia Bahasa Melayu Čeština Dansk Deutsch EnglishUK Español Filipino français Italiano Magyar Nederlands Norsk Polski Português română Suomi Svenska Tiếng Việt Türkçe Русский Українська мова עִבְרִית العربية فارسی हिन्दी বাংলা ภาษาไทย 한국어 日本語 简体中文 繁體中文 Have an account? Log in New to Twitter? Join Today » Log in Phone, email or username Password Log in Remember me Forgot password? Already using Twitter via text message? Follow Following Unfollow Blocked Unblock Pending Cancel Senator Ted Cruz Verified account @ SenTedCruz 9h 9 hours ago "Net ...
<![endif] Twitter Search query Search Twitter Remove Verified account @ Suggested users Verified account @ Verified account @ Language: English Bahasa Indonesia Bahasa Melayu Čeština Dansk Deutsch EnglishUK Español Filipino français Italiano Magyar Nederlands Norsk Polski Português română Suomi Svenska Tiếng Việt Türkçe Русский Українська мова עִבְרִית العربية فارسی हिन्दी বাংলা ภาษาไทย 한국어 日本語 简体中文 繁體中文 Have an account? Log in New to Twitter? Join Today » Log in Phone, email or username Password Log in Remember me Forgot password? Already using Twitter via text message? Follow Following Unfollow Blocked Unblock Pending Cancel Gary Bernhardt @ garybernhardt 1m 1 minute ago Tim Berners-Lee loved...
Home About Install Documentation Community Contributing nanoc is a static site generator , fit for building anything from a small personal blog to a large corporate web site. The current release is 3.7.3, released on August 31st, 2014. Check out the release notes for details. Install nanoc A simple gem install nanoc will get you going, but we’ve provided detailed instructions for those who are unfamiliar with Ruby. Take the tutorial This short tutorial will show you how nanoc works, and teach you the basics — enough to get a small web site up and running. Learn more nanoc comes with vast amounts of documentation, covering everything from basic usage to extending nanoc with custom filters, data sources and more. nanoc is, and always will be, provided free of charge. Development is voluntary and happens entirely in free time. If you use nanoc and like it, please consider showin...
Skip to content Sign up Sign in This repository Explore Features Enterprise Blog Star 22 Fork 3 stef / utterson /.container /.repohead Code Issues Pull Requests Wiki Pulse Graphs HTTPS Subversion You can clone with HTTPS or Subversion . Download ZIP /.repository-sidebar a minimal static blog generator written using old-school unix tools (make, ksh, m4, awk, procmail and a pinch of elisp) 90 commits 1 branch 0 releases 1 contributor branch: master Switch branches/tags /.select-menu-header Branches Tags /.select-menu-tabs /.select-menu-filters master /.select-menu-item Nothing to show /.select-menu-list Nothing to show /.select-menu-list /.select-menu-modal /.select-menu-modal-holder ...
Home Doc s umentation News Help View on GitHub Jekyll Home Doc s umentation News Help View on GitHub Transform your plain text into static websites and blogs. No more databases, comment moderation, or pesky updates to install—just your content . How Jekyll works → Markdown (or Textile ), Liquid , HTML & CSS go in. Static sites come out ready for deployment. Jekyll template guide → Permalinks, categories, pages, posts, and custom layouts are all first-class citizens here. Migrate your blog → in seconds Quick-start Instructions ~ $ gem install jekyll ~ $ jekyll new my-awesome-site ~ $ cd my-awesome-site ~/my-awesome-site $ jekyll serve # => Now browse to http://localhost:4000 Free hosting Sick of dealing with hosting companies? GitHub Pages are powered by Jekyll , so you can easil...
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Confreaks Expert recording services for conferences, seminars, and workshops. Home Events Presenters Blog Search Login Sign Up RailsConf 2014 Place this tag where you want the +1 button to render. Place this tag after the last +1 button tag. Tweet All the Little Things Sandi Metz This presentation, by Sandi Metz , is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 Theory tells us to build applications out of small, interchangeable objects but reality often supplies the exact opposite. Many apps contain huge classes of long methods and hair-raising conditionals; they're hard to understand, difficult to reuse and costly to change. This talk takes an ugly section of conditional code and converts it into a few simple objects. It bridges the gap between OO theory and practice and teaches straightforward strategies that all can ...
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Any section element inside of this container is displayed as a slide Avishai Ish-Shalom (@nukemberg) CTO @ Fewbytes Chroot, namespaces cgroups Layered FS, layered images Container API Configuration management Scalability Security * Full process isolation Build, Ship and Run Any App, Anywhere Many apps use IPC and weird network protocols Unix domain sockets Marker/metadata files (JVM tools) Random ports for data channel (e.g. RMI) Hostname as universal ID (erlang) docker exec (since 1.3) nsenter Bridge networking Assign hostname Connect via local or remote JMX Local mode use hsperf files JMX uses RMI by default Use JMXMP instead of RMI Java 7u4 adds -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.rmi.port (and NAT the port) Use internal IP ( icc=true ) mount /tmp as shared volume EPMD (port mapper) requires consistent hostnames Docker assigns autogener...
Seth Vargo Ruby, Chef, Rants and Pants Ruby Testing Unit Testing Correctly Posted on January 12, 2013 . Featured Ruby Testing Unit Testing Correctly Posted on January 12, 2013 . Let's talk about testing. Testing is fun, it's awesome, and if you want to be agile, it's a necessity. But chances are, you're doing it wrong. Before we dive into Chef, let's look at a small Ruby example. Consider a class writes a downloads an HTML page from a website and writes the contents to a file: require 'net/http' class Scraper attr_reader :webpage def initialize ( webpage = 'http://sethvargo.com' ) @webpage = URI . parse ( webpage ) write Net :: HTTP . get ( @webpage ) end def write ( contents ) File . open ( " #{ @webpage . host } .html" , 'w' ) do | file | file . write ( contents ) end end end Scraper . new This class should download s...