jenkins_url
+ /api/json?tree=jobs[name,color]
jenkins_url
+ /job/${job_name}/api/json?tree=builds[number,status,timestamp,id,result]
// First: go get github.com/golang/glog | |
// Then : go test -v -vmodule=*=3 -logtostderr netgrace_test.go | |
// This test package shows how to gracefully shutdown a net.Listener. | |
package netgrace | |
import ( | |
"bufio" | |
"fmt" | |
"github.com/golang/glog" |
curl --header 'Authorization: token INSERTACCESSTOKENHERE' \ | |
--header 'Accept: application/vnd.github.v3.raw' \ | |
--remote-name \ | |
--location https://api.github.com/repos/owner/repo/contents/path | |
# Example... | |
TOKEN="INSERTACCESSTOKENHERE" | |
OWNER="BBC-News" | |
REPO="responsive-news" |
(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
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
# Ubuntu
sudo apt-get install gpa seahorse
# MacOS with https://brew.sh/
create table books (tags varchar(1000)); | |
insert into books values | |
('A, B, C, D'), | |
('D, E'), | |
('F'), | |
('G, G, H') | |
; | |
select |
If you'd like to experiment with Terraform on macOS locally, a great provider for doing so is the Docker provider. You can get set up in a few simple steps, like so:
Install Docker for Mac if you have not already.
# This file is your Lambda function | |
import json | |
import boto3 | |
def save_to_bucket(event, context): | |
AWS_BUCKET_NAME = 'my-bucket-name' | |
s3 = boto3.resource('s3') | |
bucket = s3.Bucket(AWS_BUCKET_NAME) | |
path = 'my-path-name.txt' |
This is a step-by-step guide on how to enable auto-signing Git commits with GPG for every applications that don't support it natively (eg. GitHub Desktop, Eclipse, Git Tower, ...)