dnsmasq的配置文件由/etc/config/dhcp
决定
####禁用 dnsmasq 的 DNS 功能
在该文件 config dnsmasq
下添加
option port 54
如果你的 WAN 口是 PPPOE 等方式连接,而且系统日志中有
DHCP packet received on eth0.2 which has no address
就再添加
dnsmasq的配置文件由/etc/config/dhcp
决定
####禁用 dnsmasq 的 DNS 功能
在该文件 config dnsmasq
下添加
option port 54
如果你的 WAN 口是 PPPOE 等方式连接,而且系统日志中有
DHCP packet received on eth0.2 which has no address
就再添加
package mycompany.myappp.config; | |
import org.apache.commons.io.IOUtils; | |
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Configuration; | |
import org.springframework.http.HttpInputMessage; | |
import org.springframework.http.HttpOutputMessage; | |
import org.springframework.http.MediaType; | |
import org.springframework.http.converter.AbstractHttpMessageConverter; | |
import org.springframework.http.converter.HttpMessageConverter; | |
import org.springframework.http.converter.HttpMessageNotReadableException; |
This is a little trick I use to spin up the packages instalation on Debian/Ubuntu boxes in Vagrant.
I add a simple function that checks if a directory named something similar to ~/.vagrant.d/cache/apt/opscode-ubuntu-12.04/partial
(it may have another path in Windows or MacOS) and create the directory if it doesn't already exist.
def local_cache(basebox_name)
cache_dir = Vagrant::Environment.new.home_path.join('cache', 'apt', basebox_name)
partial_dir = cache_dir.join('partial')
partial_dir.mkdir unless partial_dir.exist?
cache_dir
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
# | |
# Converts any integer into a base [BASE] number. I have chosen 62 | |
# as it is meant to represent the integers using all the alphanumeric | |
# characters, [no special characters] = {0..9}, {A..Z}, {a..z} | |
# | |
# I plan on using this to shorten the representation of possibly long ids, | |
# a la url shortenters | |
# |
Git for Windows comes bundled with the "Git Bash" terminal which is incredibly handy for unix-like commands on a windows machine. It is missing a few standard linux utilities, but it is easy to add ones that have a windows binary available.
The basic idea is that C:\Program Files\Git\mingw64\
is your /
directory according to Git Bash (note: depending on how you installed it, the directory might be different. from the start menu, right click on the Git Bash icon and open file location. It might be something like C:\Users\name\AppData\Local\Programs\Git
, the mingw64
in this directory is your root. Find it by using pwd -W
).
If you go to that directory, you will find the typical linux root folder structure (bin
, etc
, lib
and so on).
If you are missing a utility, such as wget, track down a binary for windows and copy the files to the corresponding directories. Sometimes the windows binary have funny prefixes, so
Here are the simple steps needed to create a deployment from your local GIT repository to a server based on this in-depth tutorial.
You are developing in a working-copy on your local machine, lets say on the master branch. Most of the time, people would push code to a remote server like github.com or gitlab.com and pull or export it to a production server. Or you use a service like deepl.io to act upon a Web-Hook that's triggered that service.