As configured in my dotfiles.
start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
As configured in my dotfiles.
start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
#!/bin/bash | |
usage() | |
{ | |
cat << EOF | |
usage: $0 options | |
This script set ownership for all table, sequence and views for a given database | |
Credit: Based on http://stackoverflow.com/a/2686185/305019 by Alex Soto |
# | |
# STL GDB evaluators/views/utilities - 1.03 | |
# | |
# The new GDB commands: | |
# are entirely non instrumental | |
# do not depend on any "inline"(s) - e.g. size(), [], etc | |
# are extremely tolerant to debugger settings | |
# | |
# This file should be "included" in .gdbinit as following: | |
# source stl-views.gdb or just paste it into your .gdbinit file |
For this configuration you can use web server you like, i decided, because i work mostly with it to use nginx.
Generally, properly configured nginx can handle up to 400K to 500K requests per second (clustered), most what i saw is 50K to 80K (non-clustered) requests per second and 30% CPU load, course, this was 2 x Intel Xeon
with HyperThreading enabled, but it can work without problem on slower machines.
You must understand that this config is used in testing environment and not in production so you will need to find a way to implement most of those features best possible for your servers.
This simple script will take a picture of a whiteboard and use parts of the ImageMagick library with sane defaults to clean it up tremendously.
The script is here:
#!/bin/bash
convert "$1" -morphology Convolve DoG:15,100,0 -negate -normalize -blur 0x1 -channel RBG -level 60%,91%,0.1 "$2"
This is a set up for projects which want to check in only their source files, but have their gh-pages branch automatically updated with some compiled output every time they push.
A file below this one contains the steps for doing this with Travis CI. However, these days I recommend GitHub Actions, for the following reasons:
[Unit] | |
Description=High-performance, schema-free document-oriented database | |
Documentation=man:mongod(1) | |
After=network.target | |
[Service] | |
Type=forking | |
User=mongodb | |
Group=mongodb |
// Tarantool quick test | |
// Copyright, Dennis Anikin 2016 | |
// | |
// Quick disclaimer: | |
// | |
// This test shows 500K-1000K transactions per second on one CPU core | |
// and 600K-1600K queries per second on one CPU core. | |
// | |
// Based on the $6.57 per-month-price for the AWS t2.micro instance we can afford the tremendous number of 630bln queries for just $1 | |
// |
This is a compiled list of falsehoods programmers tend to believe about working with time.
Don't re-invent a date time library yourself. If you think you understand everything about time, you're probably doing it wrong.
From FastAPI Gitter: | |
dmontagu @dmontagu 00:14 | |
@wshayes @intrepidOlivia here is a fully self-contained working implementation of a wrapped response | |
https://gist.github.com/dmontagu/9abbeb86fd53556e2c3d9bf8908f81bb | |
you can set context data and errors on the starlette Request and they get added to the response at the end | |
(@intrepidOlivia if you save the contents of that gist to main.py it should be possible to run via uvicorn main:app --reload) | |
if the endpoint failed in an expected way and you want to return a StandardResponse with no data field, you provide the type of StandardResponse you want to return instead of an instance |