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Tiandong Qiu EastLord

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@aoudiamoncef
aoudiamoncef / README.md
Last active November 30, 2025 20:44
Spring Boot Logback Async Logging

Spring Boot Logback Async Logging

Overview

This gist demonstrates configuring asynchronous logging with Logback in a Spring Boot application. This approach provides improved performance, reduced latency, scalability, and fault tolerance.

By leveraging existing Spring logging configuration properties, we can customize the logging behavior according to your application's requirements seamlessly based on the envirement variables declared in defaults.xml. See Custom log configuration

Important

Contrary to the default configuration, file logging (ASYNC_FILE) is enabled even if logging.file.name or logging.file.path are not used.

@n1snt
n1snt / Oh my ZSH with zsh-autosuggestions zsh-syntax-highlighting zsh-fast-syntax-highlighting and zsh-autocomplete.md
Last active June 24, 2026 03:41
Oh my ZSH with zsh-autosuggestions zsh-syntax-highlighting zsh-fast-syntax-highlighting and zsh-autocomplete.md
@Chaser324
Chaser324 / GitHub-Forking.md
Last active June 3, 2026 12:57
GitHub Standard Fork & Pull Request Workflow

Whether you're trying to give back to the open source community or collaborating on your own projects, knowing how to properly fork and generate pull requests is essential. Unfortunately, it's quite easy to make mistakes or not know what you should do when you're initially learning the process. I know that I certainly had considerable initial trouble with it, and I found a lot of the information on GitHub and around the internet to be rather piecemeal and incomplete - part of the process described here, another there, common hangups in a different place, and so on.

In an attempt to coallate this information for myself and others, this short tutorial is what I've found to be fairly standard procedure for creating a fork, doing your work, issuing a pull request, and merging that pull request back into the original project.

Creating a Fork

Just head over to the GitHub page and click the "Fork" button. It's just that simple. Once you've done that, you can use your favorite git client to clone your repo or j

@gitaarik
gitaarik / git_submodules.md
Last active June 12, 2026 06:43
Git Submodules basic explanation

Git Submodules - Basic Explanation

Why submodules?

In Git you can add a submodule to a repository. This is basically a sub-repository embedded in your main repository. This can be very useful. A couple of usecases of submodules:

  • Separate big codebases into multiple repositories.