The following guide will show you how to deploy a simple microservice written in JavaScript using 𝚫 now.
It uses Open Source tools that are widely available, tested and understood:
- Node.JS
- NPM
- Express
The following guide will show you how to deploy a simple microservice written in JavaScript using 𝚫 now.
It uses Open Source tools that are widely available, tested and understood:
{ | |
"AWSEBDockerrunVersion": "1", | |
"Image": { | |
"Name": "<AWS_ACCOUNT_ID>.dkr.ecr.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/<NAME>:<TAG>", | |
"Update": "true" | |
}, | |
"Ports": [ | |
{ | |
"ContainerPort": "443" | |
} |
function telefone_validation(telefone) { | |
//retira todos os caracteres menos os numeros | |
telefone = telefone.replace(/\D/g, ''); | |
//verifica se tem a qtde de numero correto | |
if (!(telefone.length >= 10 && telefone.length <= 11)) return false; | |
//Se tiver 11 caracteres, verificar se começa com 9 o celular | |
if (telefone.length == 11 && parseInt(telefone.substring(2, 3)) != 9) return false; |
class ParentComponent extends Component { | |
constructor() { | |
super(); | |
this.state = { | |
data : [ | |
{id : 1, date : "2014-04-18", total : 121.0, status : "Shipped", name : "A", points: 5, percent : 50}, | |
{id : 2, date : "2014-04-21", total : 121.0, status : "Not Shipped", name : "B", points: 10, percent: 60}, | |
{id : 3, date : "2014-08-09", total : 121.0, status : "Not Shipped", name : "C", points: 15, percent: 70}, | |
{id : 4, date : "2014-04-24", total : 121.0, status : "Shipped", name : "D", points: 20, percent : 80}, |
I really liked @tjvantoll article Handling Failed HTTP Responses With fetch(). The one thing I found annoying with it, though, is that response.statusText
always returns the generic error message associated with the error code. Most APIs, however, will generally return some kind of useful, more human friendly message in the body.
Here's a modification that will capture this message. The key is that rather than throwing an error, you just throw the response and then process it in the catch
block to extract the message in the body:
fetch("/api/foo")
.then( response => {
if (!response.ok) { throw response }
return response.json() //we only get here if there is no error
})
# Delete all containers
docker rm $(docker ps -aq)
# Delete all images
docker rmi $(docker images -q)
# Delete all untagged images
docker rmi $(docker images -q --filter "dangling=true")
References:
import config from '../config' | |
let components = {} | |
//For each component in the config fiel into an object | |
for (var i = config.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) { | |
components[config[i].name] = require(config[i].path).default | |
} | |
export default components |
<?php | |
namespace Bolt\Extension\DesignSpike\ExampleSearch; | |
use Bolt\Extension\SimpleExtension; | |
use Bolt\Routing\ControllerCollection; | |
use Doctrine\DBAL\Query\QueryBuilder; | |
use Silex\Application; | |
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Request; | |
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response; |
// Place this with the other middleware inclusion in routes/index.js | |
keystone.pre('admin', middleware.enforcePermissions); |