I hereby claim:
- I am elocke on github.
- I am elocke (https://keybase.io/elocke) on keybase.
- I have a public key whose fingerprint is 8B39 B6F0 6098 AAB4 2DE5 4923 26CB CB4D 61CE D6BF
To claim this, I am signing this object:
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
I'm just jotting down a quick idea I had for this project. | |
I use ArgoCD and kustomize to manage different environments of microservices. I've been thinking of using this CRD to create an ApplicationSet of my entire stack (in my case 2 namespaces of services) via the git directory generator. | |
``` | |
apps/ | |
serviceA/ | |
argoCD-app.yaml | |
base/ | |
kustomization.yaml |
{ | |
"$schema": "https://json.schemastore.org/resume", | |
"basics": { | |
"name": "Evan Locke", | |
"label": "Senior Software Engineer at onXmaps, Inc.", | |
"image": "", | |
"email": "evan.locke@gmail.com", | |
"phone": "720-295-1644", | |
"url": "", | |
"summary": "When I was a a young kid, my dad came home one day with a brand new desktop computer. It was the early 90's and computers were still very expensive and underpowered. Later that night, I took the opportunity to begin disassembling every screw I could find. After a stern reprimand from my parents, they determined that it will be broken forever. Determined to repair my mistake and reconcile with my family and after a few weeks of trial and error, I reassembled it and it finally powered on! My father then taught me: \"Failure is simply the opportunity to begin again, this time more intelligently.\" \n\nThat experience has taught me many lessons. The foremost was that there is always a solution. No matter how difficult the problem is, it can be solved b |
{ | |
"$schema": "https://json.schemastore.org/resume", | |
"basics": { | |
"name": "Evan Locke", | |
"label": "Senior Software Engineer at onXmaps, Inc.", | |
"image": "", | |
"email": "evan.locke@gmail.com", | |
"phone": "720-295-1644", | |
"url": "", | |
"summary": "When I was a a young kid, my dad came home one day with a brand new desktop computer. It was the early 90's and computers were still very expensive and underpowered. Later that night, I took the opportunity to begin disassembling every screw I could find. After a stern reprimand from my parents, they determined that it will be broken forever. Determined to repair my mistake and reconcile with my family and after a few weeks of trial and error, I reassembled it and it finally powered on! My father then taught me: \"Failure is simply the opportunity to begin again, this time more intelligently.\" \n\nThat experience has taught me many lessons. The foremost was that there is always a solution. No matter how difficult the problem is, it can be solved b |