configure {
# Copyright 2017 The Kubernetes Authors. | |
# | |
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); | |
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. | |
# You may obtain a copy of the License at | |
# | |
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 | |
# | |
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software | |
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
{ | |
"Version": "2012-10-17", | |
"Statement": [ | |
{ | |
"Sid": "VisualEditor0", | |
"Effect": "Allow", | |
"Action": [ | |
"cloudformation:CreateUploadBucket", | |
"cloudformation:CancelUpdateStack", | |
"cloudformation:CreateStack", |
# The goal: create a list of maps of subnet mappings so we don't have to statically hard-code them in aws_lb | |
# https://www.terraform.io/docs/providers/aws/r/lb.html#subnet_mapping | |
locals { | |
# These represent dynamic data we fetch from somewhere, such as subnet IDs and EIPs from a VPC module | |
subnet_ids = ["subnet-1", "subnet-2", "subnet-3"] | |
eips = ["eip-1", "eip-2", "eip-3"] | |
} | |
# Here's the hack! The null_resource has a map called triggers that we can set to arbitrary values. | |
# We can also use count to create a list of null_resources. By accessing the triggers map inside of |
Currently, only data within the last 90 days is available via the OpenAQ API. However, there is much more data available on OpenAQ and a variety of different access mechanisms. Note also that there is work under way to bring back to the API a mechanism to access the data older than 90 days, details here.
If you're looking to query across all the data or even easily export the data (or a subset of it), the easiest way to do that currently is using a service like Amazon Athena. I'll provide some directions on how to do that below, but at a high level, this will let you make any query of the entire dataset that you'd like (written in SQL). I'll also provide some sample queries so you can see what's possible.
On to the directions!
- You will need to create an AWS account if you don't currently have one, you can start this process at htt
https://www.getpostman.com/ | |
First part from https://blog.bluematador.com/posts/postman-how-to-install-on-ubuntu-1604/ | |
wget https://dl.pstmn.io/download/latest/linux64 -O postman.tar.gz | |
sudo tar -xzf postman.tar.gz -C /opt | |
rm postman.tar.gz | |
sudo ln -s /opt/Postman/Postman /usr/bin/postman | |
But when launching postman from command prompt got an error: |
⚠ This post is fairly old. I don't keep it up to date. Be sure to see comments where some people have posted updates
What this will cover
- Host a static website at S3
- Redirect
www.website.com
towebsite.com
- Website can be an SPA (requiring all requests to return
index.html
) - Free AWS SSL certs
- Deployment with CDN invalidation
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
- Open a webpage that uses the CA with Firefox
- Click the lock-icon in the addressbar -> show information -> show certificate
- the certificate viewer will open
- click details and choose the certificate of the certificate-chain, you want to import to CentOS
- click "Export..." and save it as .crt file
- Copy the .crt file to
/etc/pki/ca-trust/source/anchors
on your CentOS machine - run
update-ca-trust extract
- test it with
wget https://thewebsite.org
version: '2' | |
services: | |
myapp: | |
build: . | |
container_name: "myapp" | |
image: debian/latest | |
environment: | |
- NODE_ENV=development | |
- FOO=bar | |
volumes: |