#Discord ip grabber 2021 how to
I have also read how to update a fork, but it isn't quite what I am looking for. I did the sync process again without officially committing, for sanity, but there's now no changes to show for second time around, which makes sense since the changes do in fact exist in the origin master. I was wondering if anyone had more experience with this, and could give advice on what I might have done wrong, or if I did something that was generally bad practice. This is my first time with syncing changes from upstream to a fork. However at the top of the repo it continues to say that it is 2 commits behind the upstream master, but they are the same 2 commits. After reviewing, everything merged( I used "Squash and merge" specifically) smoothly, and you can see the changes reflected in origin:master, and in the commit history. I opted for the separate branch, because I wanted to formally see the changes, and add people for awareness of what I was doing. After doing so, and fixing the conflicts, it asked if I wanted to merge the changes right away into origin:master, or open up a separate branch. On my forked repo, it has a button, "Fetch upstream" that will allow you to open a pull request with the upstream changes (for clarity because I had conflicts my only option was the "Open pull request"). There were specifically two commits on the upstream master, and at the top of the forked repo it said the following: This branch is 3 commits ahead, 2 commits behind /ABC:master. Someone created some changes to the upstream master that I wanted to sync with. I created a fork from repo ABC, and made some commits to the origin:master.
JackR Asks: synced fork with upstream master, but still says it needs to still be synced But then how do you know how many workers? I am just trying to understand strategy wise how one would evaluate how much memory is needed for something specific like nginx. ) and also a quora post How much disk space and how much RAM does nginx / ncache need when running as a reverse HTTP proxy? that both suggest that you would need at minimum 128 ram, but then 100-300 mb per worker. I am new to allocating resources - how does one go about determining how much vCP, memory, and ephemeral storage? I did some googling of course and found a stack overflow post (.If this nginx server will need to be used hypothetically 24/7 (but mostly during business hours) does fargate make sense to use (from a cost perspective)?.Does a task or flow constitute each individual request? How do I determine how many tasks are running per minute (or day)? For context: Currently we have a load balancer that routes traffic to ec2 instances with nginx on them and this nlb has roughly 200,000 active flow count per day.Here are the questions / mental blocks that I am stuck on: I am trying to evaluate the cost difference, but I am having a hard time doing that because I don't really understand how to use the pricing tool. My goal is to set up a reverse proxy using nginx on fargate or eks. I am trying to estimate the cost of fargate. Sarah Ganci Asks: Fargate tasks for nginx? data returned from getStaticProps in "/categories"." The error I continue to get is "SerializableError: Error serializing. For Firebase JS SDK v7.20.0 and later, measurementId is optionalĪpiKey: "AIzaSyDrrHKenRbeiyfUO58v88TSJEdtWumWZjk",ĪuthDomain: "", TODO: Add SDKs for Firebase products that you want to use Time = datetime.now().strftime("%H:%M %p")