In this article, I will share some of my experience on installing NVIDIA driver and CUDA on Linux OS. Here I mainly use Ubuntu as example. Comments for CentOS/Fedora are also provided as much as I can.
# -*- mode: ruby -*- | |
# vi: set ft=ruby : | |
# Vagrantfile API/syntax version. Don't touch unless you know what you're doing! | |
VAGRANTFILE_API_VERSION = "2" | |
Vagrant.configure(VAGRANTFILE_API_VERSION) do |config| | |
# Every Vagrant virtual environment requires a box to build off of. | |
# Named boxes, like this one, don't need a URL, since the are looked up |
A checklist for designing and developing internet scale services, inspired by James Hamilton's 2007 paper "On Desgining and Deploying Internet-Scale Services."
- Does the design expect failures to happen regularly and handle them gracefully?
- Have we kept things as simple as possible?
FROM alpine | |
COPY configure-node.sh configure-node.sh | |
CMD ["/bin/sh", "configure-node.sh"] |
The Ruby on Rails Windows Troubleshooting tips & Survival Guide is a random catalogue of issues I faced working with Ruby on Rails on Windows (Windows 7 specifically). This guide is not exhaustive, but covers many of the challenges that causes Windows Ruby developers to jump ship to Linux or Mac. If you're reading this guide then you're probably new to Ruby/Rails, so also included is more general beginner advice to help you get going.
Before you follow this guide, I strongly recommend you consider using Linux or Mac OS X for Ruby Development instead. Looking to prove a point as a challenge, I ignored this strongly given advice while learning Ruby/Rails. While I eventually did succeed in getting Ruby on Rails to work in Windows, it was not easy, and I easily lost 40+ hours on StackOverFlow to Windows/Ruby configuration issues--time I could have devoted to learning more about th