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21:17
Got it. \PHPUnit\DbUnit\DataSet\CompositeDataSet. They need to update their docs.
\o evening 11
it's quiet this Friday afternoon
On the chat or at your work?
both
Not always a bad thing
I just finally finished moving for the third time in a few months so I have not had a slow day
21:24
where'd you move to?
hey guys, any ideas which room i could get some help with sourceTree and Git please :)
fuck sourcetree
what's the problem with git, @KirstyMarks ?
North Carolina, back to my hometown!
It's finally a long-term solution though!
@tereško im trying to clone a repo (btw I am a complete newb when it comes to git) and its coming up with an error and i just wondered what could be the issue :)
i tried also command line but it didnt work that way
@KirstyMarks If you're not using the command line, what are you using?
21:28
it is saying git is not recognised as internal or external command, hence why i think i havent started git. :s
I was trying to repo it in Source Tree @Allenph
I don't know what you mean by "repo" it.
its not even finding the repo in my account even though im added to it
sorry, clone
apologies.
You need to install Git.
You need to have a git client on your computer, then you'll have access to the git command.
ah right ok. Makes sense thankyou
sorry this is new, ive only learnt part of this tonight
@tereško How do you test whether a set of objects came from the internal cache of a repository?
It seems that you'd literally have to put some kind of hook in there...
21:32
@KirstyMarks take this, you'll need it git-scm.com/book/en/v2
Wes
Wes
@KirstyMarks tools > options > git > use embedded git
if you don't have it, you need to click update embedded git
ok thankyou
all of you :)
@Wes CC on that repo question.
Wes
Wes
@Allenph why do you need that
I mean, that seems like a good behavior to test.
Wes
Wes
21:36
the purpose of repositories is hiding you that knowledge
so you are testing the repository?
Yeah, I'm testing it.
I'm not tying to do that in the actual code.
... I assume, @Wes, you learned the hard lesson of "test the behavior and not the implementation" the hard way :D
@tereško Is that what I'm doing?
I suspect you are
Wes
Wes
i actually was doing behavioral testing @tereško :\
21:38
That seems like a behavior to me.
Wes
Wes
i even tried to build a framework, it was called "behave" :B
@Wes you were writing a php parser to wrap if-conditions at one point :D
Wes
Wes
that was just for improving code coverage reliability?
hey guys, it says it cannot read from remote repository, what does that mean?
Wes
Wes
means the url is wrong probably
21:40
urgh, thats the URL that is in the readme.md file :s
@tereško See the hard part of this case is that the behavior is internal. By that I mean it definitely is a behavior that it chooses whether or not to use the cache, but the result of either case is (theoretically) exactly the same.
@KirstyMarks what happens when you try to run it from command line?
@Allenph "internal behavior" is also known as "implementation"
@tereško it says Fatal could not read from remote repository
182
Q: git: fatal: Could not read from remote repository

user61629I am trying to set git up with http://danielmiessler.com/study/git/#website to manage my site. I have gotten to the last step in the instructions: git push website +master:refs/heads/master I am working using the git ming32 command line in win7 $ git push website +master:refs/heads/master Bil...

21:42
@PaulCrovella You do see what I mean though, right?
And yeah, that was a dumb thing to say.
tried this, @KirstyMarks ?
thanks teresko :)
i will try now
Wes
Wes
i need to spend this weekend well and possibly finish something
@Wes like what? Skyrim?
Wes
Wes
lol no
21:43
@tereško does look like something to do with SSH yes, the URL does have this in
Wes
Wes
let the coffee stream begins
@KirstyMarks could be that your ssh keys are not set up correctly
oh right ok, i will contact the people who have set it up then :s
@KirstyMarks do you have you prove key set up already for accessing that repository server?
is not, you should generate the key pair and sent the public key to those people
erm, not a clue. :S
21:46
... someone's out of his depth
yikes i need to research this. Thanks for the help.
@Allenph To reframe it as behavior - what you care about is asking for Foo twice only causes your repository to ask its source once. That's something you can do with a mock source. You don't care whether it uses a cache or derives an equation to build Foo itself on the fly, you care how it interacts with things around it.
Wes
Wes
name a language that has maintainers funnier than this twitter.com/SaraMG/status/972227343392657408
@Wes intentionally funnier?
Wes
Wes
lol, or not also
21:55
@PaulCrovella I see. So in this case it would be a simple matter of creating a mock of my data mapper (the source) and then having the mock define the method I expect to be called with $mapper->expects($this->once()) or something of the sort.
Thanks. That's an awesome solution.
@Wes well .. that's what twitter was meant for .. not discussing politics
@Allenph basically yes, that;s what I tend to do
Wes
Wes
@Danack ahahaha
22:01
@Allenph you're welcome
Is doing this what people online keep calling spys?
Wes
Wes
@Danack lol desperate attempt
I'm starting to see why you should model entity collections as objects rather than arrays. A bunch of reasons actually.
@tereško to be fair, it's taken me about a year to grasp SSH keys well enough to get by
@Tiffany it probably about the same as it was for me ... but I started playing around with it when I was still in uni
22:14
I've probably generated three or four keypairs on my work computer until it finally clicked
I had the luxury to slowly get a handle on the whole thing
I'd say earlier this week I finally understood it well enough to have some idea of what I'm doing
@Tiffany isn't that basically how all the "computer stuff" works ?
@Tiffany so.. what are they? :)
@tereško I'm not the only one that's recreated a linux VM like eight times in one year?
@FlorianMargaine nice try
22:16
when I teach people basics about computers, the first lesson is: don't be afraid to make a disaster
one of my public keys is on github already
I've created hundreds of linux VMs the past month
@FlorianMargaine created and deleted and created again?
and again and again and again
I'd set up a Linux VM, work on it for like two weeks, get bored for six weeks, come back to it and scrap everything and start over again.
22:17
I even made a tool to easily create VM images :)
pretty much my entire year last year
VM are not good for gaming
@Tiffany that was just a question to confirm your knowledge
(for yourself)
@FlorianMargaine I figured as much
@FlorianMargaine I mean, there's this, obviously
@Tiffany yes, that's the basis. Do you know what the authorized_keys file is?
22:20
~/.ssh
yes. What does it do? How does it work?
authorized_keys file? if it's a server I want to authenticate to, I paste the public key into authorized_keys. my private key is in my .ssh folder from my host machine.
I did have my .ssh folder in OneDrive, thought that might be unwise, and moved it to Documents. I've specified it to be attached to this work machine only.
I R English good
sounds good
I was having trouble because I had another keypair on a server that was used to access a vendor's git server, and I was getting mixed up on how I should juggle the keypair on the local server, and my own keypair. After working through that, it all clicked.
ah
do you know about SSH agent forwarding?
22:25
I don't believe so
do you know about SSH agent, to begin with?
reading through it now on github, and nope
but just reminded me, I ought to add some comments to my authorized_keys file
@Tiffany ok. I supposed your key is in ~/.ssh/id_rsa right now, right?
err, can I use # to add a comment into authorized_keys?
yes
what if you want to use different keys to connect to different servers?
you could use ssh -i ~/.ssh/other_key other@server
but that's tedious
what if your ssh key is protected by a passphrase, too?
you have to enter the password every time you want to use it
it's annoying
so there's a program named "SSH agent"
22:28
I've never created a key without a passphrase :S
it loads your key, asks for your password only once, then you can use it many times without asking for password again. You can also load other keys in this agent, so you can connect to all the servers without thinking about it.
eval $(ssh-agent) to start it.
then you can use ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa to add the key (it will ask for the passphrase if you have one.)
and ssh-add -l to confirm that the key is loaded by your agent
another cool feature this enables is "SSH agent forwarding"
neat
that is, if you do ssh -A some@server, then your SSH agent follows you. So if you want to connect to server C through server B, you can ssh -A B and then ssh C from B. It will work with your local ssh key, if C accepts it.
that sounds handy
I'll have to set it up on my computer next week. Closing time now and I wanna go home. I've spent about half the day learning Swift and it keeps blowing my mind with its syntactic sugar.
Though I'm also afraid it will encourage code smells with some features.
Those repos can get pretty complicated pretty fast, huh?
22:49
ehh ... I will just spam this here again:
warning: the video itself is slightly NSFW
I just love how it starts out like a and ordinary made-for-radio melody .. and at one moment you realize, that you have actually listening to something in the genre of "metal" :D
Wes
Wes
you just like the lady, admit it
oh the girl is pretty, there is no denying it
Wes
Wes
modern music sounds to me that is lacking instruments lol
where the hell is the electric guitar? can't hear it
We live in an impossibly stupid time
I hate the internet
Wes
Wes
23:09
ahaha
user1592671
23:25
any one here have a solid understanding of laravel notification !!!

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