<Additional information about your API call. Try to use verbs that match both request type (fetching vs modifying) and plurality (one vs multiple).>
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URL
<The URL Structure (path only, no root url)>
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Method:
#!/bin/sh | |
TABLE_SCHEMA=$1 | |
TABLE_NAME=$2 | |
mytime=`date '+%y%m%d%H%M'` | |
hostname=`hostname | tr 'A-Z' 'a-z'` | |
file_prefix="trimax$TABLE_NAME$mytime$TABLE_SCHEMA" | |
bucket_name=$file_prefix | |
splitat="4000000000" | |
bulkfiles=200 |
This is a set up for projects which want to check in only their source files, but have their gh-pages branch automatically updated with some compiled output every time they push.
A file below this one contains the steps for doing this with Travis CI. However, these days I recommend GitHub Actions, for the following reasons:
#!/usr/bin/env python3 | |
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- | |
import os | |
import sys | |
import argparse | |
import datetime | |
def main(): | |
console_prefix = "$ " |
Here's how I configured a GitHub Action so that a new version issued by GitHub's release interface will build a Dockerfile, tag it with the version number and upload it to Google Artifact Registry.
Before you attempt the steps below, you need the following: