Well, what's the point of working so hard if you never stop and do anything?
I mean, unless working till June means "I'll just barely get by paying living expenses"
Then what good would it be to work real hard, and well, never stop working real hard? Usually, you work real hard so that afterwards, you get to take a more elaborate break or do something more expensive than usual I imagine. But I have a feeling your day off is one day in June, then you'll be back to work. :(
They don't want to share it, but instead set up the most hilarious setup I've ever seen for me to use their machines
I connect to a Windows Server 2012 AWS instance via Remote Desktop, which has a VM client that connects to a VM that needs a pincode, a onetime password, and a login password. The VM is a Windows 7 workstation that is on their VPN and then I have to login from there into ANOTHER workstation.
There's a CloudKit API I can use to get all changes since a certain point, based on a token. For your first request ever, the token you send is nil, and you get all changes ever, then a token. Your second request uses the token from the first request to get all changes since then, and so on.
My syncing model uses a server-trumps-local shingdig
So, that means that during my syncing process, I first request all changes - records changed and deleted since the last change fetch, then apply those to the local database.
Then I perform anything the local database needs to send up - deletions & saves.
The problem is, that now, the token I requested at the beginning of the sync operation is out-of-date, as we've just performed a batch of deletions and saves. Which means that the next sync will fetch the batch of deletions I just performed & saves again.
Which obviously causes some problems...
The only solution to this I can see is to try and get an up-to-date token, one for the changes after my to-server sync batch.
The problem is, this change fetch will also include any changes made to the server by another device during my last sync. Which means in order for my local database to be up to date, I'd need to initiate another sync.
Anyway, I was wondering if you could spot a flaw in my logic, or suggest some better way of doing things.
I've been trying to go for a syncing implementation that's lightweight and performs a minimal/efficient amount of requests, but that's looking harder...
What better to do than jam some WarThunder after working on labs and proofs all day. Ahhh. Oh wait, nope. Launcher crashes, no fix. Nobody heard of the error either. Guess I'll do nothing tonight.