You can either discard it (if you don't need the file yourself), or add something to your .gitignore to ignore that file. If you do the latter you have to stage the gitignore in its own commit before the rest otherwise the changes won't apply
@Shad a simple delete and commit would do the trick. if you want to avoid excluding this kind of file in the future, .gitignore it. (I basically rephrase Captain Obvious here though)
TFW you are in the middle of doing a production deployment & the server you are updating says that it'll be restarting in 15 minutes to do windows update
if someone isn't getting angry that you didn't turn off the update service, then someone is getting angry that you did and that you didn't turn it back on again afterwards
@AvnerShahar-Kashtan in an ideal world, this would have been better planned, and it isn't the fault of the updaters but the system administrators
I'm convinced there are two types of system administrators.. the ones which absolutely must have control over everything and the ones which do literally as little as feasibly possible
and the worst part is, they paid us for support, and when it stops working because, say, the disk space is entirely occupied.. we ourselves have to check for such problems
On the cloud, it's much cheaper to have standbys than it was in the old days, when you needed a physical machine doing nothing in your server room. Now you can just provision a new VM or whatever and simply pay on demand.
Though still, for really high availability, you'd still want a hot standby already provisioned and standing by. Provisioning a new VM for your app, for instance, might be a matter of 5-10 minutes on a busy cloud region. That might not be the availability SLA you want.
If your customers are willing to pay for that high availability, you can and should charge them for it, and then turn around and ensure you have proper redundant infrastructures.
@CaptainSquirrel Sure there's an excuse. If your app, for instance, lets customers file their monthly expense reports, having a 1-2 hour downtime on crash might not be a problem for them.
it's a tradeoff like any other, but it's like the tradeoff nowadays with performance vs memory.. unless you're consuming massive amounts of memory, nobody thinks twice nowadays.. performance is key
once upon a time, it was a perfectly acceptable thing to let it be slower and reserve memory space
the risk is just as high as it has always been, but the cost has reduced