$ curl -fsSL get.docker.com -o get-docker.sh && sh get-docker.sh
$ curl -fsSL get.docker.com -o get-docker.sh && sh get-docker.sh && sudo docker run -d --restart=unless-stopped -p 8080:8080 rancher/server
// | |
// Regular Expression for URL validation | |
// | |
// Author: Diego Perini | |
// Created: 2010/12/05 | |
// Updated: 2018/09/12 | |
// License: MIT | |
// | |
// Copyright (c) 2010-2018 Diego Perini (http://www.iport.it) | |
// |
This playbook has been removed as it is now very outdated. |
kind: Pod | |
apiVersion: v1 | |
metadata: | |
name: apple-app | |
labels: | |
app: apple | |
spec: | |
containers: | |
- name: apple-app | |
image: hashicorp/http-echo |
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
""" | |
<Program Name> | |
say_lte.py | |
<Authors> | |
Lukas Puehringer <luk.puehringer@gmail.com> | |
James White <james@jmwhite.co.uk> | |
<Purpose> |
Ansible has various ways of looking up data from outside sources, including plain text password files, CSV files and INI files. But it doesn't seem to have a lookup for .env files, as used in Laravel projects, also available for PHP, Ruby, Node.js, Python and others.
One option is to launch Ansible with the Ruby dotenv
command line script... But that requires Ruby, which seems like overkill to me.
So here is a simpler solution that I use. It consists of:
.env
file itself.env
file into environment variables - ansible-playbook.sh
#!/bin/bash | |
function terraform-install() { | |
[[ -f ${HOME}/bin/terraform ]] && echo "`${HOME}/bin/terraform version` already installed at ${HOME}/bin/terraform" && return 0 | |
LATEST_URL=$(curl -sL https://releases.hashicorp.com/terraform/index.json | jq -r '.versions[].builds[].url' | sort -t. -k 1,1n -k 2,2n -k 3,3n -k 4,4n | egrep -v 'rc|beta' | egrep 'linux.*amd64' |tail -1) | |
curl ${LATEST_URL} > /tmp/terraform.zip | |
mkdir -p ${HOME}/bin | |
(cd ${HOME}/bin && unzip /tmp/terraform.zip) | |
if [[ -z $(grep 'export PATH=${HOME}/bin:${PATH}' ~/.bashrc) ]]; then | |
echo 'export PATH=${HOME}/bin:${PATH}' >> ~/.bashrc |
:: | |
:: This script installs wormhole (https://github.com/warner/magic-wormhole) and | |
:: its prerequisites. Run this as an administrator. | |
:: | |
:: Install chocolatey. | |
@"%SystemRoot%\System32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe" -NoProfile -InputFormat None -ExecutionPolicy Bypass -Command "iex ((New-Object System.Net.WebClient).DownloadString('https://chocolatey.org/install.ps1'))" && SET "PATH=%PATH%;%ALLUSERSPROFILE%\chocolatey\bin" | |
:: Install Python 3. | |
choco install -y python |
const Eleventy = require("@11ty/eleventy"); | |
(async function() { | |
let inst = new Eleventy(); | |
await inst.init(); | |
await inst.write(); | |
})(); |
::
is the list prepend operator in Elm.
3 :: 2 :: 1 :: []
is equivalent to