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@marktheunissen
marktheunissen / pedantically_commented_playbook.yml
Last active June 5, 2024 22:16 — forked from phred/pedantically_commented_playbook.yml
Insanely complete Ansible playbook, showing off all the options
This playbook has been removed as it is now very outdated.
@mildmojo
mildmojo / rotate_desktop.sh
Created June 18, 2014 06:47
Script to rotate the screen and touch devices on modern Linux desktops. Great for convertible laptops.
#!/bin/bash
#
# rotate_desktop.sh
#
# Rotates modern Linux desktop screen and input devices to match. Handy for
# convertible notebooks. Call this script from panel launchers, keyboard
# shortcuts, or touch gesture bindings (xSwipe, touchegg, etc.).
#
# Using transformation matrix bits taken from:
# https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/InputCoordinateTransformation
@revett
revett / README.md
Last active November 7, 2016 11:36
Tutum Zero Downtime Re-deploy

Tutum Zero Downtime Re-deploy

cats.jpg

I tweeted Tutum last night asking if they're looking at implementing zero downtime re-deploys for a given service. Slightly surprised by their response as it seems like a critical feature if you want to use the service for a production environment.

"not a top priority, but by Spring :)"

As Tutum currently doesn't support graceful termination of containers within a service, I was experiencing a 5-10 second window of 503 errors, so decided to use the following hack (code below) until the feature is officially implemented.

@mikefaille
mikefaille / System Design.md
Created April 18, 2016 11:17 — forked from vasanthk/System Design.md
System Design Cheatsheet

#System Design Cheatsheet

Picking the right architecture = Picking the right battles + Managing trade-offs

##Basic Steps

  1. Clarify and agree on the scope of the system
  • User cases (description of sequences of events that, taken together, lead to a system doing something useful)
    • Who is going to use it?
    • How are they going to use it?
@so0k
so0k / kubectl.md
Last active April 25, 2024 12:40
Playing with kubectl output

Kubectl output options

Let's look at some basic kubectl output options.

Our intention is to list nodes (with their AWS InstanceId) and Pods (sorted by node).

We can start with:

kubectl get no