Feature branch feature1
is cut from development
:
---o---o---o <-- development
\
A---B---C <-- feature1
{ | |
"parser": "@typescript-eslint/parser", | |
"parserOptions": { | |
"project": "./tsconfig.json", | |
"tsconfigRootDir": "." | |
}, | |
"env": { | |
"browser": true, | |
"jest/globals": true | |
}, |
/* | |
This example was built using standard create-react-app out of the box with no modifications or ejections | |
to the underlying scripts. | |
In this example, i'm using Google as a social provider configured within the Cognito User Pool. | |
Each step also represents a file, so you can see how I've chosen to organize stuff...you can do it however | |
you'd like so long as you follow the basic flow (which may or may not be the official way....but its what I found that works. | |
The docs are pretty horrible) | |
Say we have a prop.users of the shape:
const users = [
{username: 'bob', age: 30, tags: [{name: 'work', id: 1}, {name: 'boring', id: 2}]},
{username: 'jim', age: 25, tags: [{name: 'home', id: 3}, {name: 'fun', id: 4}]},
{username: 'jane', age: 30, tags: [{name: 'vacation', id: 5}, {name: 'fun', id: 4}]}
];
Just documenting docs, articles, and discussion related to gRPC and load balancing.
https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/master/doc/load-balancing.md
Seems gRPC prefers thin client-side load balancing where a client gets a list of connected clients and a load balancing policy from a "load balancer" and then performs client-side load balancing based on the information. However, this could be useful for traditional load banaling approaches in clound deployments.
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/grpc-io/8s7UHY_Q1po
gRPC "works" in AWS. That is, you can run gRPC services on EC2 nodes and have them connect to other nodes, and everything is fine. If you are using AWS for easy access to hardware then all is fine. What doesn't work is ELB (aka CLB), and ALBs. Neither of these support HTTP/2 (h2c) in a way that gRPC needs.
bash -c 'while [[ "$(curl -s -o /dev/null -w ''%{http_code}'' localhost:9000)" != "200" ]]; do sleep 5; done' | |
# also check https://gist.github.com/rgl/c2ba64b7e2a5a04d1eb65983995dce76 |
# lazyload nvm | |
# all props goes to http://broken-by.me/lazy-load-nvm/ | |
# grabbed from reddit @ https://www.reddit.com/r/node/comments/4tg5jg/lazy_load_nvm_for_faster_shell_start/ | |
lazynvm() { | |
unset -f nvm node npm npx | |
export NVM_DIR=~/.nvm | |
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" ] && . "$NVM_DIR/nvm.sh" # This loads nvm | |
if [ -f "$NVM_DIR/bash_completion" ]; then | |
[ -s "$NVM_DIR/bash_completion" ] && \. "$NVM_DIR/bash_completion" # This loads nvm bash_completion |
#!/usr/bin/env python3 | |
# Copyright 2014 Brett Slatkin, Pearson Education Inc. | |
# | |
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); | |
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. | |
# You may obtain a copy of the License at | |
# | |
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 | |
# |
package main | |
import ( | |
"fmt" | |
"github.com/codegangsta/negroni" | |
"github.com/gorilla/mux" | |
"log" | |
"net/http" | |
) |