Hosting a private repo on S3 (Gradle tricks)
We want to keep our private artifacts private, making sure that only people with appropriate rights have an access to them. AWS S3 is a good candidate to consume and deploy such artifacts.
We want to keep our private artifacts private, making sure that only people with appropriate rights have an access to them. AWS S3 is a good candidate to consume and deploy such artifacts.
I started school when I was 6 years old, in 1996. I saw the very first computer in my life in 2002. I’ve managed to buy myself my own Pentium 3 in 2004, at the age of 14. In fact, I was one of the luckies back then in Armenia who had a personal computer. The internet connection with 100MB monthly limit gave me a chance to know about the amazing world of computer science, in fact that was the time I decided to become a programmer.
JDK9 is on its way. Meanwhile, the early access version is available for playing around and experimenting.
I guess we all have experienced a job change at least once. There might be different reasons to change the job; new opportunities, better salary, problems with coworkers and so on. I call it a trigger of a change. When it triggers, it’s hard to stop and there are two possible scenarios afterwards
One of the important design decisions while building a RESTful API is to decide which HTTP Status to return. In theory, this should be easy, because there is a clear specification which describes each and every HTTP Status, so all is needed is to go through the protocol and find a status appropriate for the specific resource.