VMWare Fusion 13 is now released. Read Vagrant and VMWare Fusion 13 Player on Apple M1 Pro for the latest.
This document summarizes notes taken while to make the VMWare Tech preview work on Apple M1 Pro, it originated
VMWare Fusion 13 is now released. Read Vagrant and VMWare Fusion 13 Player on Apple M1 Pro for the latest.
This document summarizes notes taken while to make the VMWare Tech preview work on Apple M1 Pro, it originated
Lima (Linux virtual machines, on macOS) installation guide for M1 Mac.
Sep. 27th 2021 UPDATED
Now we can install patched version of QEMU via Homebrew (thank you everyone for the info!). Here is the updated instruction with it:
Used M1 Mac mini 2020 with macOS Big Sur Version 11.6.
Go to the Resources tab and in the Add-ons section type Heroku Redis in the search field. It will appear in the search list. Click on it and a modal will show up to install it, click in the Provision button to start the installation.
# ~/.config/starship.toml | |
[battery] | |
full_symbol = "🔋" | |
charging_symbol = "🔌" | |
discharging_symbol = "⚡" | |
[[battery.display]] | |
threshold = 30 | |
style = "bold red" |
default['sshd']['sshd_config']['AuthenticationMethods'] = 'publickey,keyboard-interactive:pam' | |
default['sshd']['sshd_config']['ChallengeResponseAuthentication'] = 'yes' | |
default['sshd']['sshd_config']['PasswordAuthentication'] = 'no' |
sudo amazon-linux-extras install epel -y | |
sudo yum install stress -y |
This guide has moved to a GitHub repository to enable collaboration and community input via pull-requests.
https://github.com/alexellis/k8s-on-raspbian
Alex
Granted, this is little more than an obfuscated way of having a publicly writable S3 bucket, but if you don’t have a server which can pre-sign URLs for you, this might be an acceptable solution.
For this to work, you take the following steps:
CouchDB is a NoSQL database for storing JSON documents. It comes with a REST API out of the box so your client applications can persist data while requiring you to write little or no server-side code. CouchDB's killer feature is its ability to easily replicate, which allows for horizontal scaling, easy backup, and for client adapters to synchronize documents. This is perfect if you want to write an application that is offline-first. It's become my go-to database when creating new
#!/bin/bash | |
# source: https://gist.github.com/atward/7a2eb1b4a78fbaebe585 | |
# here be dragons: this is as dangerous as it looks | |
## terraform variable defaults | |
# takes *.tf and assigns env=default (if any) | |
# - map not supported (obvious reasons) | |
# - Tested on Darwin sed(1) only | |
function source_tfdefaults() { | |
eval "$( |