Let's look at some basic kubectl output options.
Our intention is to list nodes (with their AWS InstanceId) and Pods (sorted by node).
We can start with:
kubectl get no
#user nobody; | |
#Defines which Linux system user will own and run the Nginx server | |
worker_processes 1; | |
#Referes to single threaded process. Generally set to be equal to the number of CPUs or cores. | |
#error_log logs/error.log; #error_log logs/error.log notice; | |
#Specifies the file where server logs. |
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
# Clear out all previous attempts | |
rm -rf "/tmp/source-git/" | |
# Get the dependencies for git, then get openssl | |
sudo apt-get install build-essential fakeroot dpkg-dev -y | |
sudo apt-get build-dep git -y | |
sudo apt-get install libcurl4-openssl-dev -y | |
mkdir -p "/tmp/source-git/" |
console.log(`%c ________________________________________ | |
< mooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo > | |
---------------------------------------- | |
\\ ^__^ | |
\\ (oo)\\_______ | |
(__)\\ )\\/\\ | |
||----w | | |
|| ||`, "font-family:monospace") |
To send a request via the sandbox, you can use pm.sendRequest.
pm.test("Status code is 200", function () {
pm.sendRequest('https://postman-echo.com/get', function (err, res) {
pm.expect(err).to.not.be.ok;
pm.expect(res).to.have.property('code', 200);
pm.expect(res).to.have.property('status', 'OK');
});
});
Note:
When this guide is more complete, the plan is to move it into Prepack documentation.
For now I put it out as a gist to gather initial feedback.
If you're building JavaScript apps, you might already be familiar with some tools that compile JavaScript code to equivalent JavaScript code:
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
CWD=$(pwd) | |
docker run --rm -it -v ${CWD}:/${CWD} ubuntu:18.04 /bin/bash -c "cd ${CWD} && tar ${1} ${2} ${@:3} && chmod 006 ${2}" |
--- | |
apiVersion: v1 | |
kind: ConfigMap | |
metadata: | |
name: express | |
data: | |
index.js: | | |
const express = require('express') | |
const app = express(); | |
const port = 3000; |