Please note, this information was copied from vbseo.com, now showing a database error. This is posted for reference since vbSEO seems to be going out of business:
If you ever need to uninstall vBSEO , you can use the following instructions. Make sure you carefully follow each step.
Login... (37 Replies)
Recently i found this for give to docker a "personal" ip
ip addr del 10.1.1.133/24 dev eth0
ip link add link eth0 dev eth0m type macvlan mode bridge
ip link set eth0m up
ip addr add 10.1.1.133/24 dev eth0m
route add default gw 10.1.1.1On container i did
... (0 Replies)
I'm New to AIX / VIOS
We're doing a FC switch cutover on an ibm device, connected via SAN.
How do I tell if one path to my remote disk is lost? (aix lvm)
How do I tell when my link is down on my HBA port?
Appreciate your help, very much! (4 Replies)
Actually I was facing the following issue while building my Yocto SDK on Docker container
sudo docker build --tag="akash/eclipse-che:6.5.0-1" --tag="akash/eclipse-che:latest" /home/akash/dockerimage.yocto.support/
Sending build context to Docker daemon 26.93MB
Step 1/5 : FROM eclipse/cpp_gcc
... (3 Replies)
I don't know why, but the rendering of my code mucks up the spacing and indentation, despite being correct in the original file. I'm having issues getting the following script to run (specifically the nested script at the end of the docker command near the end of the script; I think I'm not passing... (2 Replies)
Hello All,
I had recently learnt a bit of Docker(which provides containerization process).
Here are some of my learning points from it.
Let us start first with very basic question:
What is Docker:
Docker is a platform for sysadmins and developers to DEPLOY, DEVELOP and RUN applications ... (7 Replies)
Dear All,
After being active on the Node-RED forum for the last few weeks, I have been very impressed with Discourse, and my eyes have been opened.
https://www.discourse.org/
but not the paid /hosted offering, but using the open distribution:
https://github.com/discourse/discourse
... (52 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
52 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
dbd::gofer::policy::base
DBD::Gofer::Policy::Base(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation DBD::Gofer::Policy::Base(3)NAME
DBD::Gofer::Policy::Base - Base class for DBD::Gofer policies
SYNOPSIS
$dbh = DBI->connect("dbi:Gofer:transport=...;policy=...", ...)
DESCRIPTION
DBD::Gofer can be configured via a 'policy' mechanism that allows you to fine-tune the number of round-trips to the Gofer server. The
policies are grouped into classes (which may be subclassed) and referenced by the name of the class.
The DBD::Gofer::Policy::Base class is the base class for all the policy classes and describes all the individual policy items.
The Base policy is not used directly. You should use a policy class derived from it.
POLICY CLASSES
Three policy classes are supplied with DBD::Gofer:
DBD::Gofer::Policy::pedantic is most 'transparent' but slowest because it makes more round-trips to the Gofer server.
DBD::Gofer::Policy::classic is a reasonable compromise - it's the default policy.
DBD::Gofer::Policy::rush is fastest, but may require code changes in your applications.
Generally the default "classic" policy is fine. When first testing an existing application with Gofer it is a good idea to start with the
"pedantic" policy first and then switch to "classic" or a custom policy, for final testing.
POLICY ITEMS
These are temporary docs: See the source code for list of policies and their defaults.
In a future version the policies and their defaults will be defined in the pod and parsed out at load-time.
See the source code to this module for more details.
POLICY CUSTOMIZATION
XXX This area of DBD::Gofer is subject to change.
There are three ways to customize policies:
Policy classes are designed to influence the overall behaviour of DBD::Gofer with existing, unaltered programs, so they work in a
reasonably optimal way without requiring code changes. You can implement new policy classes as subclasses of existing policies.
In many cases individual policy items can be overridden on a case-by-case basis within your application code. You do this by passing a
corresponding "<go_<policy_name">> attribute into DBI methods by your application code. This let's you fine-tune the behaviour for special
cases.
The policy items are implemented as methods. In many cases the methods are passed parameters relating to the DBD::Gofer code being
executed. This means the policy can implement dynamic behaviour that varies depending on the particular circumstances, such as the
particular statement being executed.
AUTHOR
Tim Bunce, <http://www.tim.bunce.name>
LICENCE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2007, Tim Bunce, Ireland. All rights reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See perlartistic.
perl v5.12.1 2007-10-16 DBD::Gofer::Policy::Base(3)