developer resources
Codebales holds an ever growing number of solutions to problems that we have experienced in our day to day code writing
Selected filter
81
results
Andrew Fletcher
•
Managing large directories, especially those filled with a diverse mix of media such as documents and images, can quickly become cumbersome. In my latest project, dealing with a directory that totals a whopping 87GB, the need for efficient file compression and selective archiving became apparent. How can we streamline this process using the zip command, particularly when we want to exclude non-essential files and directories?
The routine of zipping files in Linux
In Linux, zipping files...
Andrew Fletcher
•
Recently I came across this piece of gold when dealing with databases,...
Andrew Fletcher
•
In the realm of system administration and monitoring, understanding memory usage...
Andrew Fletcher
•
A growing list of commands I've used and what they do in no specific order
sudo...
Andrew Fletcher
•
The red flag was when I saw the server disk space is showing a site is taking up...
Andrew Fletcher
•
When Solr is displaying results on the site, first step is to log in the server and check its status
● solr.service - LSB: Controls Apache Solr as a Service
Loaded: loaded (/etc/init.d/solr; generated)
Active: failed (Result: exit-code) since Wed 2024-04-17 23:22:52 UTC; 6h ago
Docs: man:systemd-sysv-generator(8)
Apr 17 23:22:50 FRDC-Drupal-PROD systemd[1]: Starting LSB: Controls Apache Solr as a Service...
Apr 17 23:22:51 FRDC-Drupal-PROD su[750]: (to solr) root on none
Apr 17...
Andrew Fletcher
•
Continuing on from the Drupal 9 to Drupal 10 upgrade outline written...
Andrew Fletcher
•
To run a SQL command using Drush, use the following sql-query command
drush...
Andrew Fletcher
•
To resolve the CVE-2022-48624 vulnerability on Ubuntu using Nginx, it's crucial...
Andrew Fletcher
•
Drush open_basedir restriction error
PHP Warning: include(): open_basedir...
Andrew Fletcher
•
To determine the size of a directory using the terminal, you can use the du (disk usage) command. The syntax for this command can vary slightly depending on the operating system you are using, but a common way to use it is as follows:
For Linux and macOS
du -sh /path/to/directory
du
Disk usage
-s
Summarise the total size of the directory and do not include the size of each individual file within the directory
-h
Human-readable format, making the size easier to understand (e.g.,...
Andrew Fletcher
•
In many terminal text editors, you use find command as reference in Terminal...
Andrew Fletcher
•
In an environment that is running
Ubuntu 20.02
Nginx
Solr
The default...
Andrew Fletcher
•
You can perform the following steps:
Check Apache Modules
Apache Struts 2 is...
Andrew Fletcher
•
These steps are for Drupal 8 and 9.
Export your database
Order here is...