There is a plugin on Strapi Marketplace that do this response transforming stuffs in a more configurable way. Checkout this if you are interested.
files: | |
# If this file is edited, it must be removed from EC2 instance prior to deploy. | |
"/opt/elasticbeanstalk/hooks/appdeploy/pre/09_yarn_install.sh" : | |
mode: "000775" | |
owner: root | |
group: users | |
content: | | |
#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
set -xe |
This is about documenting getting Linux running on the late 2016 and mid 2017 MPB's; the focus is mostly on the MacBookPro13,3 and MacBookPro14,3 (15inch models), but I try to make it relevant and provide information for MacBookPro13,1, MacBookPro13,2, MacBookPro14,1, and MacBookPro14,2 (13inch models) too. I'm currently using Fedora 27, but most the things should be valid for other recent distros even if the details differ. The kernel version is 4.14.x (after latest update).
The state of linux on the MBP (with particular focus on MacBookPro13,2) is also being tracked on https://github.com/Dunedan/mbp-2016-linux . And for Ubuntu users there are a couple tutorials (here and here) focused on that distro and the MacBook.
Note: For those who have followed these instructions ealier, and in particular for those who have had problems with the custom DSDT, modifying the DSDT is not necessary anymore - se
TL;DR
Install Postgres 9.6, and then:
sudo pg_dropcluster 9.6 main --stop
sudo pg_upgradecluster 9.5 main
sudo pg_dropcluster 9.5 main
# Assumes the database container is named 'db' | |
DOCKER_DB_NAME="$(docker-compose ps -q db)" | |
DB_HOSTNAME=db | |
DB_USER=postgres | |
LOCAL_DUMP_PATH="path/to/local.dump" | |
docker-compose up -d db | |
docker exec -i "${DOCKER_DB_NAME}" pg_restore -C --clean --no-acl --no-owner -U "${DB_USER}" -d "${DB_HOSTNAME}" < "${LOCAL_DUMP_PATH}" | |
docker-compose stop db |
# see https://www.topbug.net/blog/2013/04/14/install-and-use-gnu-command-line-tools-in-mac-os-x/ | |
# core | |
brew install coreutils | |
# key commands | |
brew install binutils | |
brew install diffutils | |
brew install ed --default-names | |
brew install findutils --with-default-names |
- Code: https://github.com/applegrain/oauth-example
- OAuth Protocol: http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6749#section-1.2
- Omniauth: https://github.com/intridea/omniauth
-
Create an app on github (make sure the callback url is http://localhost:3000/auth/github/callback)
-
Add an initializer, config/initializers/omniauth.rb
Tmux is a "terminal multiplexer", it enables a number of terminals to be accessed and controlled from a single terminal. | |
If you use Debian/Ubuntu, you can just run apt-get install tmux, and voila. | |
Since the title was about centos 7, then do the following step to install tmux. | |
(1). tmux has a library dependency on libevent which, of course, isn’t installed by default. | |
$ wget https://github.com/downloads/libevent/libevent/libevent-2.0.21-stable.tar.gz | |
$ tar xzvf libevent-2.0.21-stable.tar.gz | |
$ cd libevent-2.0.21-stable | |
$ ./configure && make |