Find the proper driver at the NVidia website.
Note: Make sure to select "Linux 64-bit" as your OS
Hit the "Search" button.
Find the proper driver at the NVidia website.
Note: Make sure to select "Linux 64-bit" as your OS
Hit the "Search" button.
Only do this if you understand the consequences: all node programs will be able to bind on ports < 1024
sudo setcap 'cap_net_bind_service=+ep' /usr/local/bin/node
Important: your node location may vary. Use which node
to find it, or use it directly in the command:
I had a bit of trouble trying to configure permissions to upload files from my Google Compute Engine instance to my Google Cloud Storage bucket. The process isn't as intuitive as you think. There are a few permissions issues that need to be configured before this can happen. Here are the steps I took to get things working.
Let's say you want to upload yourfile.txt
to a GCS bucket from your virtual machine.
You can use the gsutil
command line tool that comes installed on all GCE instances.
If you've never used the gcloud
or gsutil
command line tools on this machine before, you will need to initialize them with a service account.
Install nvidia driver | |
Mar 27, 2022 | |
I had many driver installed I my virtual machine , so It was actually the reason why I was having the error. | |
To fix it I had first to remove all driver I have installed before using : | |
sudo apt-get purge nvidia-* | |
sudo apt-get update |
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -N '' -C "[email protected]" -f ~/.ssh/id_rsa | |
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -N '' -C "[email protected]" -f ~/.ssh/github_rsa | |
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -N '' -C "[email protected]" -f ~/.ssh/mozilla_rsa |
import { v4 as uuid } from 'uuid'; | |
export function generateId() { | |
return uuid(); | |
} | |
const v4 = new RegExp(/^[0-9A-F]{8}-[0-9A-F]{4}-4[0-9A-F]{3}-[89AB][0-9A-F]{3}-[0-9A-F]{12}$/i); | |
console.log(generateId().match(v4)); | |
//console.log(generateId().length) |
sudo su - | |
su postgres | |
psql |
I had a lot of trouble trying to get one of my Rails apps to accomplish this common task. For one thing, my dev box runs Windows 7, which notoriously does not play nicely with Ruby on Rails. Another thing... all the instructions/tutorials/document for the gem I'm using, Wicked PDF, were either incomplete or, for some reason or another, didn't work for me.
That's all to say, here are the steps I took, and I hope they will help someone.
I used the Wicked PDF gem. Ryan Bates over at RailsCasts goes over using PDFKit, but this writeup will be all about Wicked PDF.
These next steps I got straight from the instructions on the GitHub page:
class AddRecordUuidToActiveStorageAttachments < ActiveRecord::Migration[5.2] | |
def change | |
# After applying this migration, you'll need to manually go through your | |
# attachments and populate the new `record_uuid` column. | |
# If you're unable to do this, you'll probably have to delete all your attachments. | |
# You've pretty much got useless garbage data if that's the case :( | |
add_column :active_storage_attachments, :record_uuid, :uuid | |
end | |
end |