- git add -A
- git commit -m "commit message"
- git push
Regardless of what language you're coding in, you need to use some type of version control for any serious project. Personally, I like using the command line to push my code to a git repository (and if you're going to try to argue that your git GUI client is better- please, the command line is faster to use, lighter on your machine, and just gives you the most control). Although I love using git from the shell, I found myself repeatedly doing the same three commands over and over:
Originally, I was just looking for a way to at least combine the add and commit steps into just one command. I learned that you could add a "-a" flag onto the end of commit, but that's not quite the same as add -A. I even started this reddit thread about the subject, and it was from these answers that "git gg" was born.
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This is something I got wrong went I scaffolded out my first CodeStar AWS Lambda pipeline and went to add new environments. To make your project work with AWS CodeStar and CodePipeline you basically need a buildspec.yml and a template.yml file in the root of your project, but that's really it. Then when you connect your source code repository to CodePipeline it will look for these files (or whatever names you have configured for them in the AWS Codepipeline settings) to build and deploy your project.
Things like this are what make it difficult to argue that AWS isn't still the leader in serverless. When we say, "a Lambda function" then sure, we could just expose one function. With the nodejs package aws-serverless-express you can easily handle lots of different endpoints that may or may not have query parameters as well. To me this makes my lambda functions a lot more logically organized as routes.
I've recently been building web applications with front-end frameworks like React, Reagent, and Angular 2. I was recently working on an Angualr 2 project and thought, "man, this sure seems like a ton of lines of code", but had no concrete evidence to prove it. After a quick google search I came to this stack overflow question, and the awesome answer(s) therein.
Yep, this blog post is the result of yet another great discovery by yours truly! After making a few AWS Lambda services that automate Twitter activity I realized that I needed to deploy the same function many times, each as a scheduled event in AWS but with slightly different configurations (such as twitter access keys for the desired account, keywords for posts to like, etc). I wanted to keep the same core codebase of logic for each type of lambda function but somehow deploy multiple versions of it, and I wanted to be able to upload the code in one place and have all the places where it's used be updated without having to deploy to each one individually. Here's how I managed to do it!
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AuthorThe posts on this site are written and maintained by Jim Lynch. About Jim...
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