Update: 2023/11/30 Bruce Momjian's take on things: https://momjian.us/main/blogs/pgblog/2023.html#November_22_2023
Given a table...
CREATE TABLE foo (
id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
created_at TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE DEFAULT NOW(),
...
);
Update: 2023/11/30 Bruce Momjian's take on things: https://momjian.us/main/blogs/pgblog/2023.html#November_22_2023
Given a table...
CREATE TABLE foo (
id SERIAL PRIMARY KEY,
created_at TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE DEFAULT NOW(),
...
);
function getFnName(fn) { | |
fn = Object(fn) | |
var F = typeof fn == 'function' | |
var N = fn.name | |
var S = F && ((N && ['', N]) || fn.toString().match(/function ([^\(]+)/)) | |
return (!F && 'not a function') || (S && S[1] || 'anonymous'); | |
} | |
console.log(getFnName(String)); // 'String' | |
console.log(getFnName(function test(){})); // 'test' |
NOTE: Easier way is the X86 way, described on https://www.genymotion.com/help/desktop/faq/#google-play-services | |
Download the following ZIPs: | |
ARM Translation Installer v1.1 (http://www.mirrorcreator.com/files/0ZIO8PME/Genymotion-ARM-Translation_v1.1.zip_links) | |
Download the correct GApps for your Android version: | |
Google Apps for Android 6.0 (https://www.androidfilehost.com/?fid=24052804347835438 - benzo-gapps-M-20151011-signed-chroma-r3.zip) | |
Google Apps for Android 5.1 (https://www.androidfilehost.com/?fid=96042739161891406 - gapps-L-4-21-15.zip) | |
Google Apps for Android 5.0 (https://www.androidfilehost.com/?fid=95784891001614559 - gapps-lp-20141109-signed.zip) |
httpClient.DefaultRequestHeaders.Authorization = | |
new AuthenticationHeaderValue( | |
"Basic", | |
Convert.ToBase64String( | |
System.Text.ASCIIEncoding.ASCII.GetBytes( | |
string.Format("{0}:{1}", username, password)))); |
(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
- Game: http://54.77.31.219/ | |
- Last version video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5H3Pu4WFZD4 | |
- Community: https://plus.google.com/u/1/communities/105437932515232469714 |
User sessions in J2EE and LAMP stacks have traditionally been handled in memory by the application server handling the user request. Because of that, load balancers have been configured to use sticky sessions. By sticky sessions we mean that once the user has visited the site, they will be assigned an app server and will return to that server for subsequent requests. The load balancers typically handle that by referencing the users session cookie.
Elastic cloud environments differ from traditional server configurations in that they have a variable number of servers based on traffic loads whereas traditional configurations had a fixed number of servers. When traffic volumes decline it is necessary to vaporize servers. In doing so, we would lose user sessions (essentially forcing a logout) unless we come up with a new strategy for session management.
After much research, it is clear that the best
I'm going to walk you through the steps for setting up a AWS Lambda to talk to the internet and a VPC. Let's dive in.
So it might be really unintuitive at first but lambda functions have three states.