Most of programs will not accept an email using just @localhost as domain.
So, edit /etc/hosts
file to make the domain localhost.com point to your machine, including this content to the file:
127.0.0.1 localhost.com
cd ~ | |
sudo yum update | |
sudo yum install java-1.7.0-openjdk.i686 -y | |
wget https://github.com/downloads/elasticsearch/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-0.19.9.tar.gz -O elasticsearch.tar.gz | |
tar -xf elasticsearch.tar.gz | |
rm elasticsearch.tar.gz | |
mv elasticsearch-* elasticsearch | |
sudo mv elasticsearch /usr/local/share |
Most of programs will not accept an email using just @localhost as domain.
So, edit /etc/hosts
file to make the domain localhost.com point to your machine, including this content to the file:
127.0.0.1 localhost.com
# install missing libraries (if any) | |
cd ~ | |
sudo yum update | |
yum install java-1.7.0-openjdk.x86_64 | |
yum install unzip | |
yum install mc | |
yum install wget | |
yum install curl | |
# get and unpack elasticsearch zip file |
These are my notes basically. At first i created this gist just as a reminder for myself. But feel free to use this for your project as a starting point. If you have questions you can find me on twitter @thomasf https://twitter.com/thomasf This is how i used it on a Debian Wheezy testing (https://www.debian.org/releases/testing/)
Discuss, ask questions, etc. here https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=7445545
I liked the way Grokking the coding interview organized problems into learnable patterns. However, the course is expensive and the majority of the time the problems are copy-pasted from leetcode. As the explanations on leetcode are usually just as good, the course really boils down to being a glorified curated list of leetcode problems.
So below I made a list of leetcode problems that are as close to grokking problems as possible.