- Make sure the domain you picked points at the IP of your Redash server.
- Switch to the
root
user (sudo su
). - Create a folder named
nginx
in/opt/redash
. - Create in the nginx folder two additional folders:
certs
andcerts-data
. - Create the file
/opt/redash/nginx/nginx.conf
and place the following in it: (replaceexample.redashapp.com
with your domain name)upstream redash { server redash:5000; }
gunicorn run:app --workers=9
gunicorn run:app --workers=9 --worker-class=meinheld.gmeinheld.MeinheldWorker
Macbook Pro 2015 Python 3.7
Framework | Server | Req/s | Max latency | +/- Stdev |
---|
Thoughts on habits + practices for giving/receiving feedback effectively, as well as creating systems that get better at this with time
- Company Blogs
- Sandya Sankarram
- Michael Lynch
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I get asked pretty regularly what my opinion is on merge commits vs rebasing vs squashing. I've typed up this response so many times that I've decided to just put it in a gist so I can reference it whenever it comes up again.
I use merge, squash, rebase all situationally. I believe they all have their merits but their usage depends on the context. I think anyone who says any particular strategy is the right answer 100% of the time is wrong, but I think there is considerable acceptable leeway in when you use each. What follows is my personal and professional opinion:
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