See how a minor change to your commit message style can make a difference.
Tip
Have a look at git-conventional-commits , a CLI util to ensure these conventions and generate verion and changelogs
# In order for gpg to find gpg-agent, gpg-agent must be running, and there must be an env | |
# variable pointing GPG to the gpg-agent socket. This little script, which must be sourced | |
# in your shell's init script (ie, .bash_profile, .zshrc, whatever), will either start | |
# gpg-agent or set up the GPG_AGENT_INFO variable if it's already running. | |
# Add the following to your shell init to set up gpg-agent automatically for every shell | |
if [ -f ~/.gnupg/.gpg-agent-info ] && [ -n "$(pgrep gpg-agent)" ]; then | |
source ~/.gnupg/.gpg-agent-info | |
export GPG_AGENT_INFO | |
else |
See how a minor change to your commit message style can make a difference.
Tip
Have a look at git-conventional-commits , a CLI util to ensure these conventions and generate verion and changelogs
I have a bit of good news and bad news. Friday, April 3, was my last day at Uber. Monday, April 6, was my first day at Agoric.
I started at Uber 5½ years ago, on the dispatch system. I joined Tom Croucher’s team, which focused on common frameworks for marketplace systems, with Jake Verbaten, Russ Frank, and spiritually Matthew Esch. When I arrived, the scaffolding and frameworks were in place. I wrote a tool for verifying that JSON schema evolution remained backward-compatible, did some weird stuff to automatically mix the middleware stack, and wrote a thing to balance load across Node.js processes more fairly than the Linux kernel. I don’t believe any of that work made it to production, really, but for those six months, I learned how to operate global dispatch while I was on-call for 24 hours once a month and developed a bald spot.
I then got on board a new Distributed Systems Group under Matt Ranney’s guidance and many of the folks I’ve been working with to this day. Matt had designed a DHT based on the S