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Deploying a Phoenix app to Fly.io is a breeze...is what everyone kept telling me. In fairness, I imagine the process would have been breezier had I just used postgres, but all the sqlite and litestreamtalk has been far too intriguing to ignore. "Wait", you say. "It is just a flat file. How much harder can it be?"
It is easy to make something harder than it should be. It is hard to take something complex and make it truly simple. flyctl launch does an amazing job at providing a simple interface to the utterly complex task of generating deployment resources, especially now that we are living in a containerd (erm, firecracker) world.
This gist is for anyone who, like me, thinks they know better than to read all of the documentation and therefore necessari
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HOWTO: Use WSL and its Git in a mixed development environment
How to setup a development environment where Git from WSL integrates with native Windows applications, using the Windows home folder as the WSL home and using Git from WSL for all tools.
Note if using Git for Windows, or any tool on the Windows side that does not use Git from WSL then there will likely be problems with file permissions if using those files from inside WSL.
Tools
These are the tools I use:
git (wsl) - Command line git from within WSL.
Fork (windows) - Git GUI (must be used with wslgit)
wslgit - Makes git from WSL available for Windows applications.
Important! Follow the installation instructions and do (at least) the first optional step and then the Usage in Fork instructions.