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Wonderful repurposing. It's all inscrutable command-line shite, so why not?
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Apparently, the cacodemons move really slowly, so they're easier to kill.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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I guess that Linux and teletype would be a perfect match.
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I watched about 1min 22 seconds of that. Am I the winner? No one else watched more than that did they?
I believe Kent owes me an Official No-Prize as the World Champion Watched-the-most-of-that-video Winner! I'll look for it in the mail.
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Sorry, I watched the whole thing, so you owe me a noprize
TTFN - Kent
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Kent Sharkey wrote: so you owe me a noprize
You deserve it!
****************************
** Official No-Prize ******
** from the Office of ******
** Useless Garbage (OUG) ***
****************************
** Be it known that K. *****
** Sharkey has all the *****
** rights, privileges, *****
** honor that any recipient*
** of any other useless ****
** non-prize has afforded **
** to them. ****************
****************************
This No-Prize has no
expiration date and can be
redeemed at any time for a
value equal to it's Fair
Market Value:
Estimate -0.01c USD
or less, whichever is the
greater value.
****************************
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Unfortunately, no-prizes that aren't signed by Stan Lee are not valid
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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No, in that time I could hook up that thing to the old Elf. It has such an interface, which can be rejumpered and then be used as the bit banged RS232 interface.
I have lived with several Zen masters - all of them were cats.
His last invention was an evil Lasagna. It didn't kill anyone, and it actually tasted pretty good.
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Hi all, in an effort to keep myself amused during this lockdown ( UK in my case ) I've been playing with building a NET Core webapi service, this is I've done. I have it running as a daemon on a Linux box on my LAN with NGInx setup as a reverse proxy. All is working ok. Am I doing this the correct way ? ( I'm not all that clued up with web stuff ) I thought a Web server such as Apache could be used to host the service not just as a reverse proxy but to host it entirely. What I'm trying to say is, when I've written WCF services to be hosted in a Windows environment in the past, I hosted them in IIS ( using WAS ) which took care of starting and stopping the whole caboodle, is this possible with Net core api services ( on Linux in this case ) ? As I say I'm not that clued up on the web side of things.
"We can't stop here - this is bat country" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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Hi, this is pretty much how I have mine setup - so am I right in thinking, you have to either start the service manually ( or via a script ) or run it as a daemon ?
"We can't stop here - this is bat country" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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No other way on Linux...
"The only place where Success comes before Work is in the dictionary." Vidal Sassoon, 1928 - 2012
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Thank you very much for clarifying
"We can't stop here - this is bat country" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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My Entire production setup at www.digital-solutions.me.uk all uses Nginx
Well Mostly... uses Nginx
First up I have a wildcard domain, so *.digital-solutions.me.uk will ALWAYS hit my public IP address same with my personal domain too.
My Firewall has exactly ONE port forward on port 80 and that hit's a VM running on hyper-v, the VM is a linux server install, that runs only Nginx nothing else.
In the config for Nginx I list all my subdomains as virtual servers, and then in those virtual servers I proxy the connection to other servers,desktops,IoT devices, containers and VM's some of which run dotnet core apps, some which run Apache, and some which serve classic .NET apps from an IIS instance.
The first VM to be hit is responsible for routing to the correct destination machine, I find that Nginx works perfectly and it can handle traffic through put really well too.
It's routes to Windows, Linux, Bsd all manner of target systems, even Solaris
Anything that's not in the Nginx config for the frontend VM just get's blackholed and a reply is never sent for it.
Those VMs that DO run dotnet core services on them, I keep the services running using SupervisorD: Supervisor: A Process Control System — Supervisor 4.1.0 documentation
Shawty
Still Crazy.... Best and ONLY way to be.
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Thanks for this could I see your nginx.conf - I'm keen to learn this stuff
"We can't stop here - this is bat country" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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Yes sure, but for obvious reasons I'm not posting it publicly.
Hunt me down on twitter I'm @shawty_ds
We'll take it from there.
I'm off to cook evening meal for the family right now, but I'll be back at my PC either in a few hours (Or tomorrow if I end up watching TV with the wife and drinking beer .... )
You can also find me on gmail as "shawty.d.ds"
Regards
Shawty
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I don't use twitter have you an email address I can use ?
"We can't stop here - this is bat country" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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As I said in my last post
Im shawty.d.ds on gmail
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Didn't see an email from you yet.... just making sure
shawty.d.ds at gmail
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If you are using WebHostBuilder with UseKestrel() you don't need NGinx.
To make sure it starts automatically or restarts on a crash on most Linux systems you would use systemd.
Manage Kestrel process with systemd
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That may be, but all the advice I've seen to date, even the official MS stuff, states that you should NEVER place a dotnet core app directly on a public facing IP as kestrel is not built to take the onslaught that more mature web servers are.
It's always been best advice to proxy the inbound traffic to a dotnet core app, allowing you to take advantage of all sorts of things that kestrel doesn't do, such as virtual hosting and the many battle hardened security features these server apps have built into them.
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Hi Peter, thanks for the stuff you sent me although it's largely over my head - did you see my question in the General Programming C# category regarding asking how to expose my locally hosted service to remote clients ?
"We can't stop here - this is bat country" - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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It's easy once you know how
RE: Question, nope... you wanna spin me a link?
Shawty
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