Twelve Go Best Practices
Francesc Campoy Flores Gopher at Google @francesc http://campoy.cat/+
- Best practices
| // Based on Glacier's example: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSJavaScriptSDK/guide/examples.html#Amazon_Glacier__Multi-part_Upload | |
| var fs = require('fs'); | |
| var AWS = require('aws-sdk'); | |
| AWS.config.loadFromPath('./aws-config.json'); | |
| var s3 = new AWS.S3(); | |
| // File | |
| var fileName = '5.pdf'; | |
| var filePath = './' + fileName; | |
| var fileKey = fileName; |
Twelve Go Best Practices
Francesc Campoy Flores Gopher at Google @francesc http://campoy.cat/+
| import javax.crypto.Cipher; | |
| class Test { | |
| public static void main(String[] args) { | |
| try { | |
| System.out.println("Hello World!"); | |
| int maxKeyLen = Cipher.getMaxAllowedKeyLength("AES"); | |
| System.out.println(maxKeyLen); | |
| } catch (Exception e){ | |
| System.out.println("Sad world :("); |
| Title | Description
This is a slightly modified update to Daniel Kornev's excellent post which goes into more detail about why building from source is necessary on 18.04. His post was missing a few dependencies that I didn't have installed namely cmake, opencv and pkg-config. The following steps should get you a working build of openalpr on a fresh install of Ubuntu 18.04.
$ sudo apt update #fetch list of available updates
$ sudo apt upgrade #install updates – does not remove packages