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# Source: https://gist.github.com/vfarcic/78c1d2a87baf31512b87a2254194b11c
###############################################################
# How To Create A Complete Internal Developer Platform (IDP)? #
# https://youtu.be/Rg98GoEHBd4 #
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# Additional Info:
# - DevOps MUST Build Internal Developer Platform (IDP): https://youtu.be/j5i00z3QXyU
# - How To Create A "Proper" CLI With Shell And Charm Gum: https://youtu.be/U8zCHA-9VLA
@sts10
sts10 / rust-command-line-utilities.markdown
Last active July 27, 2024 18:00
A curated list of command-line utilities written in Rust

A curated list of command-line utilities written in Rust

Note: I have moved this list to a proper repository. I'll leave this gist up, but it won't be updated. To submit an idea, open a PR on the repo.

Note that I have not tried all of these personally, and cannot and do not vouch for all of the tools listed here. In most cases, the descriptions here are copied directly from their code repos. Some may have been abandoned. Investigate before installing/using.

The ones I use regularly include: bat, dust, fd, fend, hyperfine, miniserve, ripgrep, just, cargo-audit and cargo-wipe.

  • atuin: "Magical shell history"
  • bandwhich: Terminal bandwidth utilization tool
@piyueh
piyueh / GCP_Slurm_Terraform.md
Last active December 6, 2022 03:03
Scripts to create a Slurm cluster on GCP with Terraform

README

Steps

  1. Install Google Cloud SDK: to manipulate cloud resources

  2. Install Terraform: to create/destroy clusters from pre-defined specs

@rumansaleem
rumansaleem / clean-up-arch-linux.md
Created May 28, 2019 08:51
Instructions to clean up Arch Linux (Manjaro)

Contents

  • Clean pkg cache
  • Remove unused packages (orphans)
  • Clean cache in /home
  • remove old config files
  • Find and Remove
    • duplicates
    • empty files
    • empty directories
  • broken symlinks

This list is provided as a guide for tools engineers of all skill levels looking for jobs in the game industry. It's meant as a guide to topics that should be pursued broadly in order to be well spoken in an interview. I doubt any hiring manager requires deep knowedge across every topic, but an ideal candidate would be somewhat knowledgable (aware of its existence if asked directly) with all topics here.

Each list of bullets increases in difficulty, so later bullets are more applicable to senior (or even director) level candidates.

Good luck.

@gorlak

Math

@jswny
jswny / Flexible Dockerized Phoenix Deployments.md
Last active July 3, 2023 05:25
A guide to building and running zero-dependency Phoenix (Elixir) deployments with Docker. Works with Phoenix 1.2 and 1.3.

Prelude

I. Preface and Motivation

This guide was written because I don't particularly enjoy deploying Phoenix (or Elixir for that matter) applications. It's not easy. Primarily, I don't have a lot of money to spend on a nice, fancy VPS so compiling my Phoenix apps on my VPS often isn't an option. For that, we have Distillery releases. However, that requires me to either have a separate server for staging to use as a build server, or to keep a particular version of Erlang installed on my VPS, neither of which sound like great options to me and they all have the possibilities of version mismatches with ERTS. In addition to all this, theres a whole lot of configuration which needs to be done to setup a Phoenix app for deployment, and it's hard to remember.

For that reason, I wanted to use Docker so that all of my deployments would be automated and reproducable. In addition, Docker would allow me to have reproducable builds for my releases. I could build my releases on any machine that I wanted in a contai

@Geoyi
Geoyi / python_environment_setup.md
Created January 20, 2018 19:01 — forked from wronk/python_environment_setup.md
Setting up your python development environment (with pyenv, virtualenv, and virtualenvwrapper)

Overview

When you're working on multiple coding projects, you might want a couple different version of Python and/or modules installed. That way you can keep each project in its own sandbox instead of trying to juggle multiple projects (each with different dependencies) on your system's version of Python. This intermediate guide covers one way to handle multiple Python versions and Python environments on your own (i.e., without a package manager like conda). See the Using the workflow section to view the end result.

Use cases

  1. Working on 2+ projects that each have their own dependencies; e.g., a Python 2.7 project and a Python 3.6 project, or developing a module that needs to work across multiple versions of Python. It's not reasonable to uninstall/reinstall modules every time you want to switch environments.
  2. If you want to execute code on the cloud, you can set up a Python environment that mirrors the relevant
@umidjons
umidjons / youtube-dl-download-audio-only-on-best-quality.md
Last active March 9, 2024 07:54
Download Audio from YouTube with youtube-dl

Download Audio from YouTube

-i - ignore errors

-c - continue

-t - use video title as file name

--extract-audio - extract audio track

@ricjcosme
ricjcosme / dump-restore
Created September 13, 2017 17:33
DUMP / RESTORE PostgreSQL Kubernetes
DUMP
// pod-name name of the postgres pod
// postgres-user database user that is able to access the database
// database-name name of the database
kubectl exec [pod-name] -- bash -c "pg_dump -U [postgres-user] [database-name]" > database.sql
RESTORE
// pod-name name of the postgres pod
// postgres-user database user that is able to access the database
// database-name name of the database
@dschep
dschep / raspbian-python3.6.rst
Last active October 24, 2023 14:57 — forked from BMeu/raspbian-python3.5.rst
Installing Python 3.6 on Raspbian

Installing Python 3.6 on Raspbian

As of January 2018, Raspbian does not yet include the latest Python release, Python 3.6. This means we will have to build it ourselves, and here is how to do it. There is also an ansible role attached that automates it all for you.

  1. Install the required build-tools (some might already be installed on your system).