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@jessfraz
jessfraz / proposal.md
Last active September 15, 2017 02:59

Self isolating binaries

This is a play proposal for a new wrapper around go build that would build your binary but wrap it in code that would prepare isolation around your binary on run.

A concept of this is in https://github.com/jfrazelle/binctr, in that it takes a docker image and embeds the contents into a final binary so you have a self-contained binary.

The binctr example is unnessesarily heavy for go binaries because all you need is a completely static binary.

@adamwiggins
adamwiggins / adams-heroku-values.md
Last active October 29, 2024 08:51
My Heroku values

Make it real

Ideas are cheap. Make a prototype, sketch a CLI session, draw a wireframe. Discuss around concrete examples, not hand-waving abstractions. Don't say you did something, provide a URL that proves it.

Ship it

Nothing is real until it's being used by a real user. This doesn't mean you make a prototype in the morning and blog about it in the evening. It means you find one person you believe your product will help and try to get them to use it.

Do it with style

@fnichol
fnichol / README.md
Created February 26, 2012 01:23
A Common .ruby-version File For Ruby Projects

A Common .ruby-version File For Ruby Projects

Background

I've been using this technique in most of my Ruby projects lately where Ruby versions are required:

  • Create .rbenv-version containing the target Ruby using a definition name defined in ruby-build (example below). These strings are a proper subset of RVM Ruby string names so far...
  • Create .rvmrc (with rvm --create --rvmrc "1.9.3@myapp") and edit the environment_id= line to fetch the Ruby version from .rbenv-version (example below).

Today I learned about another Ruby manager, rbfu, where the author is using a similar technique with .rbfu-version.