brew uninstall --ignore-dependencies node icu4c
brew install node
git log --graph --pretty=format:'%Cred%h%Creset -%C(yellow)%d%Creset %s %Cgreen(%cr)%Creset' --abbrev-commit --date=relative master..develop |
sed -E -f solver.sed input
where input
is a file containing the maze.
For best results, resize your terminal to match the height of the maze. To disable animations, delete the lines containing p
.
The solver assumes the following:
- The maze only contains the characters
# \nSE
- Every line has the same number of characters
- There is only one start (
S
) and end (E
)
import sys | |
def j(lineno): | |
frame = sys._getframe().f_back | |
called_from = frame | |
def hook(frame, event, arg): | |
if event == 'line' and frame == called_from: | |
try: | |
frame.f_lineno = lineno |
This query is to find geolocation of an IP address including latitude, longitude, city and country.
Legacy SQL doesn't support range conditions such as BETWEEN
when using JOIN
, so we need to filter data by WHERE
.
This means if IP address does not match any of the data inside geolite_city_bq_b2b
, records will not be able to receive.
Use Standard SQL if you want to receive records no matter you succeed to find geolocation or not.
Please refer to the following post for more detail.
https://cloudplatform.googleblog.com/2014/03/geoip-geolocation-with-google-bigquery.html
kubectl get pods | grep Evicted | awk '{print $1}' | xargs kubectl delete pod |
Generating a self-signed certificate is a common task and the command to generate one with openssl
is well known and well documented. Generating a certificate that includes subjectAltName is not so straght forward however. The following example demonstrates how to generate a SAN certificate without making a permanent change to the openssl configuration.
$ export SAN="DNS:www.domain.localdomain,DNS:domain.localdomain"