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@todgru
todgru / elasticsearch-setup-apple-macbook-pro-m1.md
Created February 9, 2023 23:52
Install Elasticsearch 7.x on Apple Macbook Pro M1 Ventura 13.2

Elasticsearch Setup Apple MacBook Pro M1

Apple MacBook Pro M1, 32 GB, Ventura 13.2

Documentation based on comments in this Github Elasticsearch issue.

Install Homebrew

@Zekfad
Zekfad / conventional-commits.md
Last active July 22, 2024 15:38
Conventional Commits Cheatsheet

Quick examples

  • feat: new feature
  • fix(scope): bug in scope
  • feat!: breaking change / feat(scope)!: rework API
  • chore(deps): update dependencies

Commit types

  • build: Changes that affect the build system or external dependencies (example scopes: gulp, broccoli, npm)
  • ci: Changes to CI configuration files and scripts (example scopes: Travis, Circle, BrowserStack, SauceLabs)
  • chore: Changes which doesn't change source code or tests e.g. changes to the build process, auxiliary tools, libraries
@garyharan
garyharan / uncommit_and_stash.sh
Created February 7, 2019 16:02
How to stash your unpushed commits
$ git status
5 commits pending
$ git reset --soft HEAD~5 # where 5 is the number of commits you saw in the `git status`
$ git stash
@nepsilon
nepsilon / how-to-use-mac-keychain-to-store-github-repos-credentials.md
Created July 18, 2017 06:50
How to use Mac KeyChain to store GitHub repos credentials? — First published in fullweb.io issue #108

How to use Mac KeyChain to store GitHub repos credentials?

You know the pain, you cloned a repo over HTTPS, and now Git asks you for your password each time you want to push or pull.

Chances are you already have the git credential-osxkeychain command installed. If not, just install Git with brew: brew install git.

Once installed, just tell Git to use the KeyChain to store your credentials:

git config --global credential.helper osxkeychain
@marek-saji
marek-saji / dev-tld.md
Last active February 26, 2024 16:12
Configure local DNS server to serve #dev #TLD #ubuntu #linux

Configure local wildcard DNS server

  1. Install Dnsmasq: sudo apt-get install dnsmasq
  2. Since Ubuntu's NetworkManager uses dnsmasq, and since that messes things up a little for us, open up /etc/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.conf and comment out (#) the line that reads dns=dnsmasq. Restart NetworkManager afterwards: sudo restart network-manager.
  3. Make sure Dnsmasq listens to local DNS queries by editing /etc/dnsmasq.conf, and adding the line listen-address=127.0.0.1.
  4. Create a new file in /etc/dnsmasq.d (eg. /etc/dnsmasq.d/dev), and add the line address=/dev/127.0.0.1 to have dnsmasq resolve requests for *.dev domains. Restart Dnsmasq: sudo /etc/init.d/dnsmasq restart.

source: http://brunodbo.be/blog/2013/04/setting-up-wildcard-apache-virtual-host-wildcard-dns