When you live in a command line, configurations are a deeply personal thing. They are often crafted over years of experience, battles lost, lessons learned, advice followed, and ingenuity rewarded. When you are away from your own configurations, you are an orphaned refugee in unfamiliar and hostile surroundings. You feel clumsy and out of sorts. You are filled with a sense of longing to be back in a place you know. A place you built. A place where all the short-cuts have been worn bare by your own travels. A place you proudly call… $HOME.
In this post, the Netflix Performance Engineering team will show you the first 60 seconds of an optimized performance investigation at the command line, using standard Linux tools.
I learned about socat a few years ago and am generally surprised more developers don’t know about it. Perhaps I appreciate it all the more since I saw it being used for the first time to fix a…
Thirty bash shell aliases tutorials and examples to improve your productivity under a RHEL, CentOS, Debian, MacOS X, *BSD, Ubuntu, and Unix like operating systems.
Here we will be creating a simple Angular application with the help of Angular CLI, This will be the building block to more robust applications with Angular