This plugin adds completion for the Kubernetes cluster manager, as well as some aliases for common kubectl commands.
To use it, add kubectl
to the plugins array in your zshrc file:
plugins=(... kubectl)
module.exports = { | |
config: { | |
// default font size in pixels for all tabs | |
fontSize: 12, | |
// font family with optional fallbacks | |
fontFamily: 'Menlo, "DejaVu Sans Mono", Consolas, "Lucida Console", monospace', | |
// terminal cursor background color and opacity (hex, rgb, hsl, hsv, hwb or cmyk) | |
cursorColor: 'rgba(248,28,229,0.8)', |
This plugin adds completion for the Kubernetes cluster manager, as well as some aliases for common kubectl commands.
To use it, add kubectl
to the plugins array in your zshrc file:
plugins=(... kubectl)
Edit: This list is now maintained in the rust-anthology repo.
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
# https://developers.supportbee.com/blog/setting-up-cucumber-to-run-with-Chrome-on-Linux/ | |
# https://gist.github.com/curtismcmullan/7be1a8c1c841a9d8db2c | |
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/10792403/how-do-i-get-chrome-working-with-selenium-using-php-webdriver | |
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/26133486/how-to-specify-binary-path-for-remote-chromedriver-in-codeception | |
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/40262682/how-to-run-selenium-3-x-with-chrome-driver-through-terminal | |
# https://askubuntu.com/questions/760085/how-do-you-install-google-chrome-on-ubuntu-16-04 | |
# Versions | |
CHROME_DRIVER_VERSION=`curl -sS https://chromedriver.storage.googleapis.com/LATEST_RELEASE` |
import { v4 as uuid } from 'uuid'; | |
export function generateId() { | |
return uuid(); | |
} | |
const v4 = new RegExp(/^[0-9A-F]{8}-[0-9A-F]{4}-4[0-9A-F]{3}-[89AB][0-9A-F]{3}-[0-9A-F]{12}$/i); | |
console.log(generateId().match(v4)); | |
//console.log(generateId().length) |
'use strict'; | |
const crypto = require('crypto'); | |
const ENCRYPTION_KEY = process.env.ENCRYPTION_KEY; // Must be 256 bits (32 characters) | |
const IV_LENGTH = 16; // For AES, this is always 16 | |
function encrypt(text) { | |
let iv = crypto.randomBytes(IV_LENGTH); | |
let cipher = crypto.createCipheriv('aes-256-cbc', Buffer.from(ENCRYPTION_KEY), iv); |
node { | |
echo 'Results included as an inline comment exactly how they are returned as of Jenkins 2.121, with $BUILD_NUMBER = 1' | |
echo 'No quotes, pipeline command in single quotes' | |
sh 'echo $BUILD_NUMBER' // 1 | |
echo 'Double quotes are silently dropped' | |
sh 'echo "$BUILD_NUMBER"' // 1 | |
echo 'Even escaped with a single backslash they are dropped' | |
sh 'echo \"$BUILD_NUMBER\"' // 1 | |
echo 'Using two backslashes, the quotes are preserved' | |
sh 'echo \\"$BUILD_NUMBER\\"' // "1" |
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
# r u s t f m t - C O N F I G | |
# ================================================================================== | |
# | |
# Version: 0.7.1 | |
# Author : Robbepop <robbepop@web.de> | |
# | |
# A predefined .rustfmt.toml file with all configuration options and their | |
# associated description, possible values and default values for use in other | |
# projects. |
use futures::StreamExt; | |
use std::error::Error; | |
use tokio; | |
use tokio::macros::support::Pin; | |
use tokio::prelude::*; | |
use tokio::time::{Duration, Instant}; | |
pub fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> { | |
let mut multi_threaded_runtime = tokio::runtime::Builder::new() | |
.threaded_scheduler() |
I recently ran into a classic case of "our code is using way more memory than it should". So I took my first dive into memory profiling Rust code. I read several posts about this, including the following