I currently have a Ubuntu web server with Apache setup and running wonderfully, I want to do two things, I want to setup two more boxes which would be on the same WAN address but of course have separate local addresses.
So say I have www.example.com as the main server
I also want test.example.co...
yeh i think it's still going to be a bit of a trial and error thing
half tempted to setup a box that has domain controller, dns, and proxy on it
although I don't like the need for proxy here ... isn't it meant to be a bit ofa gateway that your route your traffic through so each packet would go through it
@HassanAlthaf the argument to FirstOrDefault is a delegate, which is a particular way of representing a function. Passing a delegate to a LINQ method usually means 'run this function for each element in the sequence, passing the element as the argument'
but being on my router ... it should according to the docs (if I set the dns name of the router in its control panel) handle all traffic on that domain
not sure how that works with port forwarding yet though
I manage some software that can send files to customers that are uploaded on our servers through an update client. I'd like to be able to delete files from our customers machine in a similar fashion so I can get rid of conflicting/old files remotely. I was thinking of just putting a file on our server that keeps track of what to delete and then the client would read it and act accordingly. What would be the best method and what are the dangers?
@juanvan Well, here's the deal. I'm dealing with a catalog of HVAC Equipment models. The software has about 1000 individual models from differing manufacturers, also it's an OLD catalog. (about 10 years old) So, some equipment isn't even made anymore, there are also some roundabout duplicates in there as well.
Being just me working with this software, it's impractical to eat up ALL of my time to try and clean this from top to bottom. My hoping was creating a system to where I could quickly make updates to things as I'm updating them anyway or in small bits of time where I'm waiting on something
Main reason I asked is because the notion of remote deleting gives me the heebeejeebees as well. But I was hoping that there was a sensible solution to that.
The only way I can currently think of is just give the user a prompt "Hey, we'd like to delete these crappy old models, can we?"
Hello, can someone who has used bower/grunt/gulp with an Asp.net 4.5.2 project please explain the process of the files that are generated/minified/moved/organised with grunt/gulp inclued in Visual Studio (Not having to Right click the folders and click include in project).
I'm having a really bad time with this stuff and I've been tasked on using bower to replace 3rd party libraries from NuGet
I've read various guides, followed various tutorials but neither covers this fundamental issue
So I want bower to download a bunch of libraries, I want the non-minified version organised in a useful file structure then I want visual studio to include the folders without me or other developers do it manually. I've asked a question but not even had a comment on it. stackoverflow.com/questions/40180442/…
Currently, we can give users the files no problem. When they start our add-in. It just says "Hey! These files are available to download" it will list the files and prompt the user to download.
Setup
VS 2015 (Update 3) / ASP.Net 4.5.2 (MVC 5)
Background
I'm new to npm/bower/gulp&grunt and struggling to swap to these newer methods of managing 3rd party libraries and moving away from NuGet limiting it for server side packages only.
I'm trying to use BundleConfig to include files ins...
knowing TFS, why would file not come over with a GET when grabbing a new project? My models for EF were not in the new download this time, it's like a few files are missed every time I refresh the project from my local pc and my work pc...