|
You are here |
akaptur.github.com | ||
| | | | |
blog.nuculabs.de
|
|
| | | | | I've been playing recently with ASP.Net Core and I'm developing a small Web API project in order to teach myself the framework. In still article I'll explain how to use a Postgres database with Docker, in order to make your development experience much more enjoyable. Before moving on, please make sure that you've installed: Docker Docker-Compose First, create the docker-compose.yml file in your root directory of the project, the file should contain: | |
| | | | |
nocolumnname.blog
|
|
| | | | | What happens when nothing changes, sp_send_dbmail gets given sysadmin, and you still can't get emails. | |
| | | | |
blog.nootch.net
|
|
| | | | | I like to host my own stuff. And it's not a recent phenomenon - I've been running my own mail-server for a few years now (thanks, mailcow-dockerized!), and I run a personal wiki. Even this blog is hosted on a Vultr server. With the (not anymore) recent PRISM revelations, my gut feeling has been reinforced. Since I work on personal projects, I need source hosting, error tracking and a build runner at the very least to have a "professional" developer experience, and in total control of the infrastructure. | |
| | | | |
blog.stevensanderson.com
|
|
| | | Steve Sanderson's Blog | ||