In Git you can add a submodule to a repository. This is basically a repository embedded in your main repository. This can be very useful. A couple of usecases of submodules:
- Separate big codebases into multiple repositories.
brew doctor |
Centos 6.* comes with Python 2.6, but we can't just replace it with v2.7 because it's used by the OS internally (apparently) so you will need to install v2.7 (or 3.x, for that matter) along with it. Fortunately, CentOS made this quite painless with their Software Collections Repository
sudo yum update # update yum
sudo yum install centos-release-scl # install SCL
sudo yum install python27 # install Python 2.7
To use it, you essentially spawn another shell (or script) while enabling the newer version of Python:
NSoT engineers have built Vagrantfiles for you to deploy NSoT software in a multitude of linux environments. This tutorial will help you load a Macintonsh computer (OS X) with Vagrant, Virtual Box, and dependencies so that you can start virtual servers and test the software.
NSoT publishes complete installation instructions for linux distributions, branch versions, and Vagrantfiles in addition to, not an alternative for the pip install method:
$ pip-install nsot