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@palewire
palewire / README.md
Last active June 5, 2025 02:37
How to push tagged Docker releases to Google Artifact Registry with a GitHub Action

How to push tagged Docker releases to Google Artifact Registry with a GitHub Action

Here's how I configured a GitHub Action so that a new version issued by GitHub's release interface will build a Dockerfile, tag it with the version number and upload it to Google Artifact Registry.

Before you attempt the steps below, you need the following:

  • A GitHub repository that contains a working Dockerfile
  • The Google Cloud SDK tool gcloud installed and authenticated

Create a Workload Identity Federation

@karlvr
karlvr / migrate-nexus-to-github-packages.md
Last active June 14, 2025 01:39
A small bash script to migrate Maven packages from Sonatype Nexus to GitHub Packages

Migrate Maven packages from Sonatype Nexus to GitHub Packages

This gist describes the process we've used to migrate our Maven package repository from Sonatype Nexus to GitHub Packages. The same process could be used for migrating any Maven package repo that is in the standard layout.

We created a special repository on GitHub to hold all of our Maven packages. You might decide to migrate packages to different repositories, in which case invoke the script multiple times.

The script uses find to look for all of the folders containing poms and upload them. You specify the folder

@craigmurray1120
craigmurray1120 / rest-api-code-generator-list.md
Last active November 18, 2022 09:54
List of REST API code generator
@giuliocalzolari
giuliocalzolari / sg-query.py
Created February 6, 2018 17:03
AWS SG Query
import boto3
def find_public_addresses(ec2):
public_instances = {}
instance_public_ips = {}
instance_private_ips = {}
instance_ident = {}
instances = ec2.instances.filter(Filters=[{'Name': 'instance-state-name', 'Values': ['running'] }])
# Ranges that you define as public subnets in AWS go here.
@posener
posener / go-table-driven-tests-parallel.md
Last active April 24, 2025 20:46
Be Careful with Table Driven Tests and t.Parallel()

Be Careful with Table Driven Tests and t.Parallel()

We Gophers, love table-driven-tests, it makes our unittesting structured, and makes it easy to add different test cases with ease.

Let’s create our table driven test, for convenience, I chose to use t.Log as the test function. Notice that we don't have any assertion in this test, it is not needed to for the demonstration.

func TestTLog(t *testing.T) {
	t.Parallel()
@posener
posener / go-shebang-story.md
Last active July 28, 2025 07:58
Story: Writing Scripts with Go

Story: Writing Scripts with Go

This is a story about how I tried to use Go for scripting. In this story, I’ll discuss the need for a Go script, how we would expect it to behave and the possible implementations; During the discussion I’ll deep dive to scripts, shells, and shebangs. Finally, we’ll discuss solutions that will make Go scripts work.

Why Go is good for scripting?

While python and bash are popular scripting languages, C, C++ and Java are not used for scripts at all, and some languages are somewhere in between.

@nepsilon
nepsilon / how-to-use-mac-keychain-to-store-github-repos-credentials.md
Created July 18, 2017 06:50
How to use Mac KeyChain to store GitHub repos credentials? — First published in fullweb.io issue #108

How to use Mac KeyChain to store GitHub repos credentials?

You know the pain, you cloned a repo over HTTPS, and now Git asks you for your password each time you want to push or pull.

Chances are you already have the git credential-osxkeychain command installed. If not, just install Git with brew: brew install git.

Once installed, just tell Git to use the KeyChain to store your credentials:

git config --global credential.helper osxkeychain
@croxton
croxton / SSL-certs-OSX.md
Last active June 3, 2025 17:42 — forked from leevigraham/Generate ssl certificates with Subject Alt Names on OSX.md
Generate ssl certificates with Subject Alt Names

Generate ssl certificates with Subject Alt Names on OSX

Open ssl.conf in a text editor.

Edit the domain(s) listed under the [alt_names] section so that they match the local domain name you want to use for your project, e.g.

DNS.1   = my-project.dev

Additional FQDNs can be added if required: