My general thumb of rule to download a new tool is to wait until I Google a tool to solve a problem, and then integrate it into my workflow. So download the tools which you think are useful to your workflow.
# Clone llama.cpp | |
git clone https://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp.git | |
cd llama.cpp | |
# Build it | |
make clean | |
LLAMA_METAL=1 make | |
# Download model | |
export MODEL=llama-2-13b-chat.ggmlv3.q4_0.bin |
version: 2.1 | |
setup: true | |
orbs: | |
path-filtering: circleci/path-filtering@0.0.2 | |
workflows: | |
setup-workflow: | |
jobs: |
This is inspired by A half-hour to learn Rust and Zig in 30 minutes.
Your first Go program as a classical "Hello World" is pretty simple:
First we create a workspace for our project:
PlantUML is a really awesome way to create diagrams by writing code instead of drawing and dragging visual elements. Markdown is a really nice documentation tool.
Here's how I combine the two, to create docs with embedded diagrams.
Get the command-line PlantUML from the download page or your relevant package manager.
# Javascript Node CircleCI 2.0 configuration file | |
# | |
# Check https://circleci.com/docs/2.0/language-javascript/ for more details | |
# | |
version: 2 | |
jobs: | |
build: | |
docker: | |
- image: circleci/node:7.10 |
The default formula use by AWS RDS to calculate the max_connections
parameter is: LEAST({DBInstanceClassMemory/9531392},5000)
But It's hard to find the exact value of DBInstanceClassMemory
.
So, here are the values I got when I ran the SQL commmand: show max_connections;
in some RDS instances:
Instance type | RAM (GB) | max_connections |
---|---|---|
db.t2.small | 2 | 198 |
db.t2.medium | 4 | 413 |
- http://stackoverflow.com/questions/804115 (
rebase
vsmerge
). - https://www.atlassian.com/git/tutorials/merging-vs-rebasing (
rebase
vsmerge
) - https://www.atlassian.com/git/tutorials/undoing-changes/ (
reset
vscheckout
vsrevert
) - http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2221658 (HEAD^ vs HEAD~) (See
git rev-parse
) - http://stackoverflow.com/questions/292357 (
pull
vsfetch
) - http://stackoverflow.com/questions/39651 (
stash
vsbranch
) - http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8358035 (
reset
vscheckout
vsrevert
)
# best practice: linux | |
nano ~/.pgpass | |
*:5432:*:username:password | |
chmod 0600 ~/.pgpass | |
# best practice: windows | |
edit %APPDATA%\postgresql\pgpass.conf | |
*:5432:*:username:password | |
# linux |