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Codebales holds an ever growing number of solutions to problems that we have experienced in our day to day code writing
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Andrew Fletcher
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Working through migration on a new Centos 7 server, the default mailbox size is 100MB. Yes a well organised account doesn't need more than 100MB. However, how to resolve this size for the outlier people with big mailboxes.
In one of our domains being migrated contains an account with 300MB plus and on another domain 400MB plus. To change the default size from 100MB run through shell the following command
plesk bin subscription_settings --update example.com...
Andrew Fletcher
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Running a common composer command, post an upgrade on the server to Centos 7 and...
Andrew Fletcher
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To connect to your CPanel hosted server via SSH OSX, please follow...
Andrew Fletcher
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I'm receiving a server not found when logging in to Plesk from shell or...
Andrew Fletcher
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This page shows a growing list of common commands for viewing and managing your...
Andrew Fletcher
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Whilst updating nodejs and npm on a Centos 6 or 7 server running Apache, I hit a few walls and as a matter of process found some commands that are handy to run before doing a deep dive in Google.
Cleaning the cache
sudo yum clean all
rm -rf /var/cache/yum/*
To make the cache
sudo yum clean all; sudo yum makecacheIf you want to run several commands use semi-colon as noted above.
Updating
When running an update command run
sudo yum -y...
Andrew Fletcher
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For what reason would you need to find the identity of the current user? You are...
Andrew Fletcher
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I started out with a simple task... install Tailwindcss. What unfolded is...
Andrew Fletcher
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Blocks are a great way to add pieces or chunks of content to your Drupal site....
Andrew Fletcher
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Images
For some time, when looking for images online for your app or site I have...
Andrew Fletcher
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Recently I had an error with a domain smtp server not recognising port 587. To begin to test what was happening I wanted to get some key information about the server. My tool of choice was the dig command. Using the dig command:
dig codebales.comUnderstanding a DNS look up results from Terminal using the dig command. This command causes dig to look up the A record for the domain name codebales.com or whatever you enter. To do this dig starts by...
Andrew Fletcher
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I had an issue where logging in from the app disconnected. The error that...
Andrew Fletcher
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At times while developing in October CMS, you will perform a step that kills the...
Andrew Fletcher
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Installing Laravel on an Apache server was going to be a no fuss process said no...
Andrew Fletcher
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As a process I apply patches locally first, then using git upload the update(s)...