gitflow | git |
---|---|
git flow init |
git init |
git commit --allow-empty -m "Initial commit" |
|
git checkout -b develop master |
{ | |
"AWSTemplateFormatVersion": "2010-09-09", | |
"Description": "An etcd cluster based off an auto scaling group", | |
"Mappings" : { | |
"RegionMap" : { | |
"eu-central-1" : { | |
"AMI" : "ami-840a0899" | |
}, | |
"ap-northeast-1" : { | |
"AMI" : "ami-6c5ac56c" |
Hi, I'm Lorna and I don't use a mouse. I have had RSI issues since a bad workstation setup at work in 2006. I've tried a number of extra hardware modifications but what works best for me is to use the keyboard and only the keyboard, so I'm in a good position and never reaching for anything else (except my coffee cup!). I rather unwisely took a job which required me to use a mac (I've been a linux user until now and also had the ability to choose my tools carefully) so here is my cheatsheet of the apps, tricks and keyboard shortcuts I'm using, mostly for my own reference. Since keyboard-only use is also great for productivity, you may also find some of these ideas useful, in which case at least something good has come of this :)
There's more detail on a few of these apps but here is a quick overview of the tools I've installed and found helpful
Tool | Link | Comments |
---|
# Add this snippet to the top of your playbook. | |
# It will install python2 if missing (but checks first so no expensive repeated apt updates) | |
# gwillem@gmail.com | |
- hosts: all | |
gather_facts: False | |
tasks: | |
- name: install python 2 | |
raw: test -e /usr/bin/python || (apt -y update && apt install -y python-minimal) |
Here's the simplest example showing how to do functional options in Golang.
They're a great way to enable users to set options and ease adding new options later.
package main
import (
"flag"
"fmt"
This list has moved to a GitHub repo for easier tracking: https://github.com/coreos/awesome-kubernetes-extensions
Please comment below if you are using Kubernetes Third-Party Resources and I will add you to the list.
Known Users:
Suppose you have weird taste and you absolutely want:
- your visual selection to always have a green background and black foreground,
- your active statusline to always have a white background and red foreground,
- your very own deep blue background.
The absolute requirement is that these must be binaries that could go into /usr/bin one day. No python, ruby or js stuff. Not that dynamic languages are bad/evil, but I think system utilities should be binaries. I also think it's interesting that people are writing replacements in Go/Rust/Other that rethink some unix legacy. Replacement doesn't mean better in all cases. I just think it's an interesting time but also a good measure of what these compiled languages can handle/tackle/address. Will we see larger and more impressive CLIs? Or will the feature sets be about the same but the quality/stability/safety be better?
It's going to be reductive to explain some of these tools in one line.