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@naholyr
naholyr / _service.md
Created December 13, 2012 09:39
Sample /etc/init.d script

Sample service script for debianoids

Look at LSB init scripts for more information.

Usage

Copy to /etc/init.d:

# replace "$YOUR_SERVICE_NAME" with your service's name (whenever it's not enough obvious)
@sogko
sogko / app.js
Last active November 8, 2022 12:31
gulp + expressjs + nodemon + browser-sync
'use strict';
// simple express server
var express = require('express');
var app = express();
var router = express.Router();
app.use(express.static('public'));
app.get('/', function(req, res) {
res.sendfile('./public/index.html');
@alexellis
alexellis / kvm_minikube.md
Last active July 26, 2024 01:47
Run multiple minikube Kubernetes clusters on Ubuntu Linux with KVM

Ramp up your Kubernetes development, CI-tooling or testing workflow by running multiple Kubernetes clusters on Ubuntu Linux with KVM and minikube.

In this tutorial we will combine the popular minikube tool with Linux's Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) support. It is a great way to re-purpose an old machine that you found on eBay or have gathering gust under your desk. An Intel NUC would also make a great host for this tutorial if you want to buy some new hardware. Another popular angle is to use a bare metal host in the cloud and I've provided some details on that below.

We'll set up all the tooling so that you can build one or many single-node Kubernetes clusters and then deploy applications to them such as OpenFaaS using familiar tooling like helm. I'll then show you how to access the Kubernetes clusters from a remote machine such as your laptop.

Pre-reqs

  • This tutorial uses Ubuntu 16.04 as a base installation, but other distributions are supported by KVM. You'll need to find out how to install