I'm actually quite happy with mkdocs. It's a lot less work than sphinx, and I appreciate the philosophy of moving away a bit from docstrings-only and a mix of user guides and sphinx-style api docs.
I'm having a hard time disproving it. That's a lot of code that seems definitely to pertain to the actual functionality. Also, his employees absolutely hate him, so if he followed through with his promise (he did say it would be open-sourced) then it's not inconceivable to me that they would deliberately let it through and then signpost it to everyone when they removed it. He wouldn't know beforehand. Still, maybe I've fallen victim to it
Much confuse. Such wow. I don't know what to think about it. I guess it would have to have been released before 1st April for news outlets to pick up on it, but the major ones don't seem to be running it
this one started from a "first commit" dated 5 hours before the current "first commit"
oldest fork is dated 18:44 UTC March 31
anyone looking for a nerd snipe (or being pranked) could pull github.com/bryantson/the-algorithm/commit/… and diff it against the current "first commit" to see what they cleaned up
It just confuses me how they were supposed to act productively each day is all. I don't want people fired for sure, but there's little chance of knowing the impact of each change. Just interesting to look into the workings of such big companies
If they had that many people, it's unclear why it couldn't be documented
This article bothers me from this question. It makes a bold statement that asyncio just dodges the GIL and I don't know a generous way for that to be true
I know that CPython automatically becomes slower if you start a new thread (even if that thread does nothing), so maybe if you're feeling generous you can say that asyncio bypasses this slowdown. But I'm also pretty sure that every asyncio event loop has a thread pool running in the background, so it still slows down your program just by existing
Or I guess you could interpret it as "The GIL doesn't prevent multiple asyncio tasks from running at the same time", which is technically true
@Aran-Fey That's actually an interesting point. I'm not sure the thread pool scales down when it has no work – I'm afraid it doesn't and can thus have a noticeable performance impact.
@Aran-Fey That's the part where I think they're being disingenuous at best. They're still bound by one core and there is still a GIL. That's totally different to actually just throwing the GIL in the bin and (no GIL) and spreading the work across multiple cores, which is a thing
I want to be able to deploy it on a shared host. I don't know what WSGI server is used. The main problem is I want to be able to reboot the server from code regardless of what server is used.
Well you're now talking about people actively developing your app, no?
FWIW I did what I think you're asking (in the past). I used to detect the OS and, if was Windows, I knew I was in dev mode and I configured it around that, because deployment was on Debian. I can't stand by that approach, though
I don't understand how any of this is related. If you're serving your flask app through gunicorn, just restart the service via sudo supervisorctl restart my_flask_server and be done with it. flask doesn't know you did that
@Dante Install how? We're talking SaaS at best here
@AndrasDeak--СлаваУкраїні yeah, mkdocs kind of force me to though because when I first used it the mkdocstrings plugin was so bad that I had to add prose if I wanted to have anything even remotely nice
it is a bit of a backhanded compliment for mkdocs, but I still feel that my docs are now better overall
@Dante it happens that I'm thinking a lot about SaaS atm but you're not really being forthcoming with examples/anecdotes/direction on where you're going. You just want to know how your flask app is being run and then I get flat answers
Distributing the flask code sounds like a really bad idea to me, though. And that's the only reason you wouldn't be in control of the environment variables (that I can see). The part where you're trying to determine how it's being run... if it was on your side, you know that and you could set the env vars
It is kinda SaaS, but it is not at the same time. It is much like WordPress with installable plugins. And I need to restart the app when the user install a plugin.
So that's easier. You need to manage the access through a static flask app
Now you just need to add someone into your DB to the auth list and they get access to something that existed all along. You don't need to restart the server
You can't restart the server as general course, which is what you originally asked. Could you imagine if SO went down every time someone signed up for Teams, just because they rebooted the server? (I mean, that might be quite rare, but anyway)