投稿時間:2020-09-08 00:45:29 RSSフィード2020-09-08 00:00 分まとめ(47件)

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AWS lambdaタグが付けられた新着投稿 - Qiita AWSLambda(Node.js)の入力パラメータチェック(バリデーション) https://qiita.com/shinka1235/items/6917433d38e9361539da 2020-09-07 23:24:21
js JavaScriptタグが付けられた新着投稿 - Qiita AWSLambda(Node.js)の入力パラメータチェック(バリデーション) https://qiita.com/shinka1235/items/6917433d38e9361539da 2020-09-07 23:24:21
js JavaScriptタグが付けられた新着投稿 - Qiita Reactでnpm startができなくなった話。 https://qiita.com/YuKiYa_FX/items/a520d8b16bf8a097d6ff 以下全削除のcommandfindnamenodemodulestypedpruneexecrmrfそして、createreactappで作ったアプリのディレクトリに戻って、npmstartを再度実行。 2020-09-07 23:14:58
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) pythonでインポートしたモジュールが見つからないエラー https://teratail.com/questions/290282?rss=all pythonでインポートしたモジュールが見つからないエラーpythonでインポートしたモジュールが使えない。 2020-09-07 23:59:45
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) extensionディレクトリの使い方 https://teratail.com/questions/290281?rss=all extension 2020-09-07 23:57:51
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) 年齢から生年月日を算出して入力したい https://teratail.com/questions/290280?rss=all 年齢から生年月日を算出して入力したい【実現したいこと】・年齢を入力したら生年月日を自動入力したい。 2020-09-07 23:50:32
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) GitHub Profile Summary Cardsで全てのカードが生成されない https://teratail.com/questions/290279?rss=all GitHubProfileSummaryCardsで全てのカードが生成されない実現したいことタイトル通り、GitHubnbspProfilenbspSummarynbspCardsを使用して自分のreadmeを装飾したいと思っています。 2020-09-07 23:42:48
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) Asterisk 外線接続 https://teratail.com/questions/290278?rss=all asterisk 2020-09-07 23:41:17
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) find_element_by_id メソッド エラー https://teratail.com/questions/290277?rss=all findelementbyidメソッドエラー以下のコードでつまづいてしまいました。 2020-09-07 23:36:44
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) node react環境でnpm startが起動しない。 https://teratail.com/questions/290276?rss=all nodereact環境でnpmstartが起動しない。 2020-09-07 23:36:35
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) Pandasで重複指定した行で条件付けした行を削除したい。 https://teratail.com/questions/290275?rss=all 例で言うとデータNoみかんのデータで、Noの現在種類Bがあるので、Noの更新種類の行を削除する。 2020-09-07 23:32:26
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) WordPress:CPT UIでのカスタム投稿の背景設定 https://teratail.com/questions/290274?rss=all cptnbspui 2020-09-07 23:30:39
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) map.getにから配列が入る理由がわかりません。 https://teratail.com/questions/290273?rss=all etaskdatetaskdatecomputed 2020-09-07 23:29:45
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) media query適応されない https://teratail.com/questions/290272?rss=all mediaquery適応されないメディアクエリを使いたくnbspdocumenttsxにmetaタグを追加しました。 2020-09-07 23:23:27
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) swiftのアップロード通知の「siren」のテスト確認方法 https://teratail.com/questions/290271?rss=all swiftのアップロード通知の「siren」のテスト確認方法swiftのアップロード通知の「siren」を使いたく下記の記事を参考に作成しましたがローカル環境での確認方法をどの様にすれば良いか分からず悩んでいますわかる方いれば教えていただければ幸いです。 2020-09-07 23:18:43
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) Githubのissueでコメントが書けない https://teratail.com/questions/290270?rss=all github 2020-09-07 23:13:09
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) 【Python】ttk.LabelFrameのフォント、枠について https://teratail.com/questions/290269?rss=all 【Python】ttkLabelFrameのフォント、枠について前提・実現したいことtkinterを用いてGUIの作成をしています。 2020-09-07 23:09:37
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) DataFrameのデータへのアクセスの仕方がわかりません https://teratail.com/questions/290268?rss=all dataframe 2020-09-07 23:07:46
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) BigQueryで最新日付のみ抽出するSQLについて https://teratail.com/questions/290267?rss=all BigQueryで最新日付のみ抽出するSQLについてBigQueryで最新日付のみ抽出するSQLについて質問です。 2020-09-07 23:02:37
Program [全てのタグ]の新着質問一覧|teratail(テラテイル) `Django Rest Auth`の登録画面にて、埋めているフィールドが埋まっていないと返ってくる。 https://teratail.com/questions/290266?rss=all DjangoRestAuthの登録画面にて、埋めているフィールドが埋まっていないと返ってくる。 2020-09-07 23:01:09
Ruby Rubyタグが付けられた新着投稿 - Qiita 【Rails】paranoia(gem)を使ってイベント終了機能(論理削除)を実装する https://qiita.com/tatuya44511336/items/8c4825f0e5cf44cd545f イベントが終われば当然、イベントのデータは削除されてイベント一覧では見れない様にするのですが僕が実装したかったのは一覧には表示されないけどユーザーのマイページで参加したイベントが見れるというもの。 2020-09-07 23:54:15
Ruby Rubyタグが付けられた新着投稿 - Qiita windows10,Ruby2.6.6でrails serverコマンドを実行して「cannot load such file -- sqlite3/sqlite3_native」がでた https://qiita.com/darumasan/items/f85a5f02ae579bfce53c 2020-09-07 23:10:36
AWS AWSタグが付けられた新着投稿 - Qiita AWSを使ったWordPress環境構築(単一構成) https://qiita.com/ygikrps_/items/f2b9fda53c1c4ac0c113 Yumリポジトリの情報のインストールsudoyumlocalinstallMySQLリポジトリを無効にし、MySQLリポジトリを有効にするsudoyumconfigmanagerdisablemysqlcommunitysudoyumconfigmanagerenablemysqlcommunity適用されているか確認catetcyumreposdmysqlcommunityrepoMySQLのインストール・起動sudoyuminstallymysqlcommunityserversudosystemctlstartmysqldMySQLの初期パスワードの確認sudocatvarlogmysqldloggreprootlocalhostNoteAtemporarypasswordisgeneratedforrootlocalhost桁の文字列MySQLのパスワード変更mysqladminurootppasswordEnterpassword古いパスワードNewpassword新しいパスワードConfirmnewpassword新しいパスワードWarnigがでても変更はできていますWarningSincepasswordwillbesenttoserverinplaintextusesslconnectiontoensurepasswordsafety※PasswordのポリシーについてWordPress用のDB・ユーザーを作成するmysqlurootpEnterpassword設定したパスワードWordPress用のユーザー作成mysqlgtCREATEUSERwordpresslocalhostIDENTIFIEDBYwordpressユーザーのパスワードWordPress用のDB作成mysqlgtCREATEDATABASEwordpressDB権限を作成したユーザーに付与mysqlgtGRANTALLPRIVILEGESONwordpressTOwordpresslocalhost設定反映mysqlgtFLUSHPRIVILEGESmysqlgtEXITPHPのインストールsudoyuminstallphpを実行すると、PHPがインストールされてしまします。 2020-09-07 23:53:52
GCP gcpタグが付けられた新着投稿 - Qiita Windows Server を監視する その2 https://qiita.com/kazumatsukazu/items/8022f21c564cc37308c0 件数が分あたりにになるから閾値より下になった、てことで間違ってはいないのだけど、、、ちなみにAlignerをcountに変えると、にならないのか、二度目以降にエラーを発生させてもメールが飛ばない、という事態に陥ったのでこの方法はやめました。 2020-09-07 23:56:17
Git Gitタグが付けられた新着投稿 - Qiita .gitignoreに指定した対象はコミットできないのか? https://qiita.com/yoneapp/items/4ddf13601f9b1df309ec gitignoreに指定したファイルをfforceで追加するのは、追加してはいけないと設定しているのに、でも強制的に追加しますみたいな感じなので、かなりの割合でやらないほうが良いです。 2020-09-07 23:03:56
Ruby Railsタグが付けられた新着投稿 - Qiita 【Rails】paranoia(gem)を使ってイベント終了機能(論理削除)を実装する https://qiita.com/tatuya44511336/items/8c4825f0e5cf44cd545f イベントが終われば当然、イベントのデータは削除されてイベント一覧では見れない様にするのですが僕が実装したかったのは一覧には表示されないけどユーザーのマイページで参加したイベントが見れるというもの。 2020-09-07 23:54:15
Ruby Railsタグが付けられた新着投稿 - Qiita windows10,Ruby2.6.6でrails serverコマンドを実行して「cannot load such file -- sqlite3/sqlite3_native」がでた https://qiita.com/darumasan/items/f85a5f02ae579bfce53c 2020-09-07 23:10:36
Apple AppleInsider - Frontpage News How to get back 'Other' storage on the iPhone or iPad https://appleinsider.com/articles/20/09/07/how-to-get-back-other-storage-on-the-iphone-or-ipad How to get back x Other x storage on the iPhone or iPadApple has recently made changes to how iOS handles the mysterious other storage on iPhone and iPad but it s still not obvious how you can get back some of that space for yourself Here s how to do it The mysterious Other storage really contains temporary files such as cachesYou typically only even notice that there is a thing in iOS called Other storage when you re out of space When your iPhone or iPad says you ve no room to add an app or to store all your photos it s a fair bet that a lot of the storage is taken up with this Other Read more 2020-09-07 14:56:47
海外TECH Engadget ‘Fall Guys’ will use the same anti-cheat software as 'Fortnite' https://www.engadget.com/fall-guys-fortnite-anti-cheat-software-143101732.html Fall Guys will use the same anti cheat software as x Fortnite x The runaway hit Fall Guys Ultimate Knockout has attracted plenty of positive attention it s the most downloaded PS Plus game of all time and has seven million downloads on Steam Unfortunately it has also attracted lots of cheaters at least on 2020-09-07 14:31:01
海外TECH The Apache Software Foundation Blog Inside Infra: Daniel Gruno --Part I https://blogs.apache.org/foundation/entry/inside-infra-daniel-gruno-part Inside Infra Daniel Gruno Part IThe fourth interview in the quot Inside Infra quot series with members of the ASF Infrastructure team Meet Daniel Gruno who shares his experience with Sally Khudairi ASF VP Marketing amp Publicity quot companies are not the same as ASF They don t have different departments that all have their own little tools that they want working in their specific way And they want this to connect to that and that s connected to some other thing We are not afraid to create custom solutions we re not afraid to get our hands dirty and we re not afraid to make mistakes quot What is your name and how is it pronounced I have my official name and I have my user name and people usually ask about both of them My name is quot Dan yell Gkhroo no quot or I will accept quot Dan yell Groo no quot which is as you read it in English It s actually a Dutch name So you would pronounce it quot Hrooy no quot in Dutch which I m not even going to try to phoneticize that because that s well Dutch And my username is quot Humbedooh quot which is an onomatopoeia that I randomly made up in for a game called World of Warcraft where you need a username for this character that you create And I think I had just listened to quot New York New York quot where Frank Sinatra sings quot scooby doo bee doo quot and I was like quot hum be doo de doo quot and the name just came to me and it stuck ever since And so for the past years or years I ve been primarily quot Hum beh doo quot online By the way Frank Sinatra sings quot zoo bee doo bee doo quot not quot scooby doo bee doo quot in quot Strangers in the Night quot but I like your version better Okay Well today I learned that When and how did you get involved with the ASF That goes back to Again this beautifully tied us into World of Warcraft because in that game you can make modules add ons for the game that will do nifty things like add ons for a Web browser And this is written in a programming language called Lua L U A which is Portuguese for quot moon quot And so I started writing some programs for this game and I had great fun with it and programing is not my official trade I was educated in or studied human resource management at university actually But it was my hobby and I had great fun doing it And this Lua thing just got stuck in me And then five years later or so I started writing a program for the Apache Web server called mod pLua the best way to describe it as if PHP and Lua had a baby So it would be the same for people that know PHP It would be the same structure with the less than equal sign and a question mark and then the same thing to end it on the other end but with the Lua language instead of the PHP language So I wrote this program or interpreter for the Apache Web server And I didn t really think much of it Obviously it was mostly for my own edification if you will and for my own use But I had put this on a site called SourceForge which at that time had a community manager named Rich Bowen also Apache HTTP Server PMC Member who took a liking to this program or this module for the Web server because the Apache Web server community which he was a part of at that point have been doing something similar called mod lua or at that time mod wombat And that had stalled People have interests and then the interests wane and people would move on to new jobs and the person in charge of this mod lua had found other interests in life And so this module was just sitting there and not really being worked on And Rich said quot Why don t you come take a look at this program and maybe this is a place where we can collaborate quot And he also got ASF co founder and Apache HTTP Server PMC Member Jim Jagielski very interested in the work I was doing And so I slowly started on my path to becoming an ASF Committer initially by fixing what s called s which is basically a reference in a Webpage to a link or another page that doesn t exist Either it never existed or it doesn t exist anymore So I started fixing a bunch of those just to get on their good side and hopefully they would take me seriously And I didn t have high hopes but I think I was probably the fastest person to get committership at the Apache Web Server Project perhaps the fastest in the years preceding when I got it probably within a week They had a vote going and I was voted in and…Within a week Within a week Unheard of I was pretty much on the path to becoming a Committer I couldn t believe it Part of me wanted to believe it because it was a very big validation for me Because I had been using the Apache Web Server since and it always been a project that I looked up to and it had been this mythical quot Father of the Web program And so to actually be a part of it and get your name on the page that says these are the Committers that actually have a say in the project and can commit code to it that was I was quite a feat for me especially at that time where I had stopped my studies at university and I didn t know what am I going to do now Because as happens with a lot of people that study something they eventually found out that while okay this was interesting but it s probably not what I want to be doing if I m honest Because what I had fun with was programming So while it was nice knowing a lot of stuff about statistics and economic models and psychology and so forth it had started to get a little boring for me I knew these things what now And so to get this validation to get an avenue of sorts where I could use my creativity in a new way that I hadn t studied for but it naturally just came to me this programming inspiration that was really nice to use a very vague word It was a tremendous opportunity for me And then that s how I got started with Apache Fantastic You re not only a Member of the ASF and an Infra team member What other quot hats quot do you wear at the ASF I have a couple of hats I m also the Vice President of the Apache Web Server Project which is a great honor And it s still to this day three years in fun to do People think of it as this is a dictator role or you get to decide but it s more of a glorified secretary really where you keep tabs with everything or most of the things that are going on in the project And you relay that information in a concise way to the Board of directors whose job it is to look at these reports and say quot Are the projects doing okay Do they need any help from us Are they in trouble quot So basically VP is the watchdog in these COVID days I guess you can say it s a pulse oximeter of the project And if you want to know if a project is still healthy and stable and progressing the VP is the one to ask because that s basically their job to know As VP I don t get to decide who gets in or who gets kicked out or what direction we take in the project I am just the person that ensures that the Board knows that the project is in good health Do you wear any other hats or is it just the VP of Apache HTTP Server I m also VP of Apache STeVe As I said I have two VP ships and STeVe is a whole other beast Let s say it s very stable in that we have a code base that works and we don t really do much about it we maintain it In the Apache Web server we have around to people actively contributing code every single quarter And in Apache STeVe we are basically twiddling our thumbs waiting for something bad to happen And it never happens We have a program that works the way we like it And we don t see the need for any large changes And as long as there is sufficient oversight in a project then the Board doesn t come in and say quot Hey can you make this cool feature quot Because that s not the Board s job The Board s job is just to help us as projects And so if the project doesn t have anything that it feels it wants to add but it s still there and the people are alive and well then the Board will say quot You got it We ll see you next quarter quot And so two projects are very different and it also makes for very different reports OK Let s drill into Infra as that s the focus of our interview series How long have you been a member of the Infrastructure team How did you get there I am not sure I think I ve been a member of the Infrastructure Team since You can probably figure out when exactly I got my membership in the email archives It started because the Apache Web server project needed a commenting system Because we had been eyeballing the PHP project and they had a system where you could on the documentation pages you can enter I have a comment about this documentation bit or you could add some code snippets or ask a question and get an answer And the only thing we had was send an email and get a reply and then the next person comes along and doesn t know that that email existed and sends the exact same question and gets the exact same reply and that can get tiresome in the long run So we wanted someplace inside the documentation itself where you could go in and see okay I have an issue with this documentation have other people encountered the same problem or are there some smart solutions that I can find here And this type of software doesn t write itself unfortunately So I set about in writing that using the mod lua that I had now invested a great deal of time in because A we needed a comments system and B this was a good excuse to show off mod lua in a production system This could really do something it s not only fast but it s got a lot of features and it s got a lot of flexibility to it And so I asked the Infra Team which at that point was very daunting for me because they were let s say our image has improved over time at Apache Infra it was much more a well basically an operator from hell vibe you got back in the early s or early s from the Infra Team especially when you re someone of a more timid nature like I am So anyway I asked if I could get a place to set up a machine or borrow a Web server basically and put this commenting system on that I had been writing as a hobby And they pretty much said quot Sure quot Which was surprising to me because normally when you go and ask for something at a company and it s very difficult you can ask for meetings and meetings and meetings but if you ask for actual resources you will usually have to file a form J B in triplicates and whatnot And here they were just “well it looks like he wants to help the project just give him what he wants And so I got started on this commenting system And other projects became aware of it and they wanted to use it as well And then I became the comments guy basically And I started maintaining this system for I think it was seven different Apache projects at the time using it And since you can t really maintain anything at the ASF without somehow being an infrastructure person I was made an infrastructure person and generally if you re a given something you get a taste for it and you want more And so I started volunteering for more and more infrastructure tasks And then I became what is called infrastructure root This was about two years later down the road Which is a point where the Infrastructure Team says we have complete trust in what you do Here are basically the keys to the kingdom Do whatever you like except don t do that But you could do whatever you wanted to And that was almost as awesome as becoming a member which I had become just about a month prior It needs to be said that at that point you could not become infrastructure root unless you were also an ASF member because needless to say when you have root access to an organization as wide and important as to the ASF you get to be privy to a lot of information that you should keep to yourself And so the logic at the time was if you are an ASF member you will already have access to most of this information because of your membership and so we can allow you to become an infrastructure root person This has changed since then we have cast a wider net when looking for new infrastructure people this also includes a more thorough vetting process that we have now So we feel more secure and not just requiring you got to be an Apache member before you come and help us So we are able to look for a broader set of requirements that might not have been found within the at that time and something members that were in the Foundation What are you responsible for in ASF Infrastructure Oh God As with most infrastructure members it s almost easier to see what are you not in charge of which I usually say “Jenkins with a big smile because that s things that are I know this is going to sound silly to a lot of people reading the article but things that are Java I tend to shun like a vampire and sunlight Any particular reason Yes I m not accustomed to the way the output and stack traces and core dumps And the thing about Java is it s very verbose you can write lines of code and you ll have a print Hello And it doesn t appeal to me So yeah when things don t appeal to me immediately this is one of my weaknesses I try to not really understand it because it s easier not to Fortunately we have some very talented people at the Infrastructure Team that knows pretty much everything there is about Jenkins and JIRA and Confluence and all the other big Java powered mod lists we have at the Foundation so I can spend my time elsewhere What I mostly do at the Foundation day to day work aside because we all have basic maintenance tasks and disasters that can crop up from time to time is product development of the glue that binds The Apache Software Foundation together and its software infrastructure And I ll tell you about a new thing that we ve been doing which is something called PyPubSub I can spell it it s P Y P U B S U B so it s a Python publisher subscriber service for the ASF You can basically think of it as a newspaper where you have a publisher you have an audience you have the readers and then you have topics of interest Some might want the sports section or the funnies or someone might want the financial news And then you have of course the writers or journalists that make up the contents in these sections And at ASF these sections they would be Subversion commit or Git commit or a new email being written or someone got added as a Committer or someone filed a pull request someone filed a new bug or issue or some are discussing an issue And the writers and journalists would be all these systems where you send an email to or you open up a new ticket or you commit some code to it The readers will then be either users or there will be a lot of different software components that rely on these messages in order to operate themselves and do what they re supposed to do So in essence PyPubSub is again some glue that binds the majority of our services together And it does so by dispatching events to basically whomever wants to read about them We actually have something called a Pub Sub Explorer in real time shows every single event that happens at the ASF technology wise So if someone sends an email to us if someone commits something if someone opens the poll request if someone comments on a discussion it all shows up in this Explorer that will update in real time And it s very cool ASF Infrastructure Administrator Greg Stein was saying that you do things that are uniquely different from other team members In addition to the PyPubSub what other things are you working on Currently one of the main things we manage is called technical debt which is basically the longer you don t maintain and upgrade a system the more expensive it s going to become once you finally have to do it And so I m dealing with some technical debt that is moving the service that we have called GitBox from an old pretty ancient set up to a brand spanking new machine and software which also means moving from Python to Python for every single component that is in the service called GitBox And that is a lot of components GitBox is the ASF side of where a committer would commit code to if a project uses the Git version control system The other side would then be GitHub if a project chooses to use GitHub And GitBox and GitHub they kind of talk together and figure out okay someone pushed to me I m going to synchronize this with you And I m also going to make sure that everyone gets an email on the mailing list saying quot something just happened quot It s rather unique in that you can choose to either use a GitHub account or you can choose to say quot I m not going to use GitHub I ll just use my Apache credentials on the Apache server instead Not a lot very very few in fact organizations have this kind of interconnectivity between GitHub and a locally hosted git server And what we have done very neatly is we have managed to link our LDAP directory of all ourcommitters to GitHub Meaning that if you go in and say quot This is me on GitHub We automatically figured out okay that means you get wide access to this and this and this repository And that is updated in real time How did these out of the box projects come about I remember when you first approached me about five years ago with these fantastic stats just before I was going to publish the Annual Report I d never seen anything like that at the ASF It s difficult to explain It s like asking a painter Where do you get your inspiration from It just happens A lot of time I will tell a little secret a lot of the time that I spend in my day to day work is not spent actually typing code or reading up on new fun things A lot of it is spent what you would call idling And by that I mean not particularly engaged in any specific task but kind of just all over the place casually Like how and I hope not to cause any offense here but how a standard office worker would spend a lot of time on Facebook catching up on friends and family I ll just spend mine to see whatever I m interested in the moment that has to do with programming or mathematics or psychology And in the back of my mind there s always how can I take this information that I m reading about and apply it in a software world My mind has a tendency to see structures that may or may not be there And I think almost exclusively in structures Whenever I see something I want to understand not just how does it work but how is it basically designed And can I replicate that And so a lot of my day to day work is I see something cool it might not be anything that has to do with software or the internet or anything It might just be a cool gadget or a painting or a chart in a newspaper And I ll be like What can I use that for that would benefit the foundation Or whatever hobby project that I m working on And then you get these aha moments where you re like This I can actually use this way to fix a problem that we are having or that problem that we could have Sometimes you just make up problems that will potentially happen in the future just so you can have an excuse to get started on something And for some strange reason these fictitious problems very often tend to be not so fictitious at all And once you show three or four people hey I thought of this thing that s not actually a problem And I thought of a solution They ll be like That is actually a problem for us And suddenly you have a solution to a problem that you didn t think existed in real life but it actually does So a lot of the things I do are “for the fun of that But there s always a work related starting point in that is this something that can be used within the software world Or within the managerial world of software Which is where I primarily tend to focus my energy In terms of your day to day work with the Infra team you said that you re hands on not necessarily coding specific tactical solutions but solving other problems do you participate with the firefighting as do the other team members You often respond to my queries about mailing lists is that your specialty Chris and Drew shared that everyone specializes in at least one thing What do you specialize in My focus is primarily and there s this kind of a self made problem My focus is all the programs and services that I unfortunately created You create it you own it Yes There are a lot of services at Apache Infrastructure that either I made from scratch or they have a very big thumbprint of mine on them And so when I started at Infrastructure the Infrastructure team it was expected that we do our fair bit of firefighting We do a fair bit of the tasks that every single member of the infrastructure team knows how to complete And I will go through tickets and I find tickets that I find manageable and complete those I will participate in firefighting I will do whatever I feel needs to be done right away If there s something important or if there s something where I feel like this should have been dealt with by now I will do that But it was also the expectation that I come in and help develop and maintain a lot of new features we were looking at creating for the committers and for the end users of Apache software Simply to make for a better user experience and an easier workflow for our committers and contributors So a lot of what I do is maintaining and assisting with services that I have either initially authored or helped expand upon Tell us about the structure of the Infra team how did your work come about in a formal way You were saying that you re creating these tools and then they just kind of got integrated But were they looking for your sort of skill set Or was it more of “hey we need another Java guy What clicked there Your background is really different Your expertise is different Your insight is different It s an unusual scenario to have a traditional department embrace someone like you and say Hey we re going to have a whole new type of services offered based on this one guy s vision That s very unusual Can you elaborate on that a bit I don t think they were looking for someone like me But I think they got someone like me and it was completely happenstance The Infrastructure team at that point that was early They were looking to expand with one more staffing spot This was a part time job And this was probably about a year and a half after I started doing things for the Infrastructure team And they had a very narrow list of candidates at the time because it was a very closed circle And kind of still is because when you re a staffer you get the keys to a very mighty kingdom And so they had a few people that they could consider but I was probably by far the one putting in the most hours And I will gladly admit that at that time I did not have a job So I was able to put in a lot of hours This was when Sam Ruby was VP infrastructure When Sam initially took me aside and said Hey we are looking for this part time opening are you interested I was like No this surely you re not you can t be serious There s got to be someone that s actually qualified for this job I didn t consider myself qualified at all And But you were doing the work I was doing the work I just didn t have any confidence in the work I was doing You can be creative you can do a lot of interesting things and still have this incredible imposter syndrome going on at the back of your head saying Someone else is doing this work It s not you So I politely turned him down and said Thank you but I m not insisted because you ll just find out I m a fraud It actually took two other Infrastructure at that point current staffers two other sector members to yank me aside and say What are you doing We want you for this job And they had actually pretty much all internally independently been rooting for me and trying to position me to become this new member of the team to my great surprise After I think it was after a very long talk with former Infra team member Joe Schaeffer I was finally convinced maybe I should give it a shot And I m very glad that he convinced me I m very glad that the other people at that time also convinced me because it s now been to this month seven years since I started And it s not been fun every day because there can be such a thing as too much firefighting going on But it s been interesting every single day You re never bored and you never think I need to find a new job Because you are respected for what you do You are rewarded in more ways than money honestly and you can probably agree with this at The Apache Software Foundation you get a very unique sense of loyalty Not to the Board of Directors or to the specific projects or anything else but to the community as a whole To the mission that we re doing So I am honestly very content being where I am I m very happy that these people ganged up on me and basically forced me to get a job that was It was kind of silly in hindsight because it s a well paying job it s part time So you don t have to spend nine hours a day on it You can work whenever you want to and There were no setbacks except for this nagging doubt that people are going to find out the real me Which as I discovered myself it turned out the real me was actually kind of awesome at this job It s interesting because the Apache community tends to not want someone if they re not good So it s testament to your skill set and who you are as a person you re liked You re very well liked Thank you very much And you re right The Apache community seems to be very good at finding talent and also very good at rewarding it in ways that make that talent stick and make them interested and continue working within the ASF community I think that s a thing that you don t see in all software communities We learned from Infra team members Chris Thistlethwaite Drew Foulks and Greg Stein about the scope of the work that Infra does How is the ASF different from other Open Source foundations from an Infra perspective are there other people doing what you do or how our group performs or the services that our group provides Is this common in other Open Source foundations It is not common in other foundations We are different in that the breadth of the amount of services that we provide for each project And especially at the budget that we provide it at I think we did a count back in and it was something around different distinct unique services that we had that we were running for all projects to use And in between these there are possibly more than machines each running some of them running the same thing on machines And then you have another machines that are running different things This is all handled by what A team of what seven people now Six people actually five of us and Greg Stein Greg is a bit of an übermensch so yeah That s amazing in terms of the workload It can get hectic and I will not deny that but we have a very very strong cohesion I don t want to say we finish each other s sentences but when someone has a problem the others know when to step in and help when to back off and what to do while someone else is doing their thing We compliment each other really well And we have a nice set of tools to help us with managing things making sure that everything is up and running diagnosing when something goes wrong We have a lot of again by the hand of me a lot of custom tiny services that you never even hear of or see if you re not within the infrastructure team But that goes on automatically Let s say you re abusing someone in a ticket multiple times or you re spamming whatever We have a lot of microprocesses that go in and detect abusive behavior both in terms of spam but also what you would call technical hardware abuse where someone is repeatedly using all of our bandwidth for example or causing the CPU to spike We can go and detect that automatically and pull a systemwide ban on you which it s very custom but it saves us a lot of money I will say that we ve saved a lot of money at the Foundation by being smart about what we do and not being afraid of making a few mistakes while we make new things Because a lot of what we do is custom based custom made Because there is not unless you re talking about something big like Kubernetes or something at that scale it s often very difficult to find the tools that do what we want them to do with the problem that we have Because other companies especially companies are not the same as ASF They don t have different departments that all have their own little tools that they want working in their specific way And they want this to connect to that and that s connected to some other thing We are not afraid to create custom solutions we re not afraid to get our hands dirty and we re not afraid to make mistakes That doesn t mean we make mistakes all the time or that we re okay with all sorts of risks How do you interact with the team How do you stay motivated I stay motivated by interacting with my team I would say Interaction is mostly on Slack which is for those that either don t know it or pretend they don t know it is an instant messaging platform We have an account for the Foundation we have our staff channel where everything gets discussed whether that be the mail servers are a big backlog or this prime rib I just sous vide ed at Fahrenheit four or five hours is awesome I think one of the tricks or keys to success for teams like us is to really mix up the subjects and not be all business and not be all fun because you don t want it to be too boring you don t want it to be too relaxed I think we ve somehow managed to hit a pretty good ratio of fun and serious items that we discuss on a day to day basis So it s fun talking to your colleagues about real life stuff that isn t work but it s also rewarding talking about work and learning from them and their experiences and you being able to give them some work experiences and wisdom from your many years of being a sysadmin or infrastructure architect I think we ve hit a really good ratio there It s an interesting perspective with that because everyone I ve interviewed thus far has given the same answer Can you describe your typical workday now I know some people don t have an exact schedule some people do What s a day like in Daniel Gruno s life My typical workday is very atypical for a worker I don t have a set schedule I don t have a set time I don t have a minimum amount of hours I work I don t have unfortunately a maximum amount of hours I work It all depends on the day and what happens during that day As said earlier a lot of what I do is developing new services for the Foundation As such I spend a lot of time getting inspiration and that s done through various means of From idling I can be working at noon and then I ll be like I should watch a movie And then I ll go watch a movie My significant other will tell you that s a lie I don t watch movies But that was just an example I can t sit through two hours I get too fidgety And that s actually the real truth about me I can t sit still and do something for a specific amount of hours unless I m in a really inspired mood So my typical workday is finding things to do that don t take more than half an hour to do in between suddenly getting the greatest inspiration from up high I ll be looking at tickets that are easy for me not absolutely speaking easy to fix but tickets that I know how to fix and I ll go in and fix those I ll catch up on every single email that I receive which is thousands of emails every single day I have a mania about inbox zero If there s an email I have to read it and sort it Otherwise I can t get past the inbox I can t even close down the mail client unless I know that there is nothing in my inbox Yeah it s the same with Slack and IRC and all that If there s a message pending for me I have to check it But that s beside the point It gives me something to multitask between Because there will always be a new email there will always be someone saying something on Slack So a lot of my time is spent just multitasking between that between reading up on news And then at some point the inspiration that I need for that day will hit me and then comes the manic in a few hours where I just code like crazy because I have the inspiration I tend to form fully thought out ideas which is terrible because if you have a fully formed idea in your head you know it s going to take eight hours to complete it But you also know that if you stop you might forget that fully formed thought Sometimes a work hour day can be four or five hours and sometimes it can be hours because my muse has sung to me and the inspiration just has to be translated through the keyboard and into some sort of code or what page or documentation or just a specification for a new idea Having said that though don t pity me because I work hours a day and don t be jealous because I work five hours a day Because it adds up to a lot of hours on average per month But I m also happy to do it because it brings me joy With this constant flow of concepts and code and inspiration how do you keep your workload organized You might be hammering away on a solution and imaging and envisioning something to develop there s a lot of things happening simultaneously A lot of people have a hard time multitasking or focusing on one thing and managing the thousands of emails coming into the mailbox et cetera How do you manage that I would say I don t manage it but luckily I have family that helps manage it I have a boss that helps manage it I m a very I m on the autism spectrum and some would say that I probably have ADD as well So I get very easily distracted and can lose focus but I am surrounded by people that are very good at a knowing that I lose focus very easily and b guiding me back to the right path for that day I think in terms of my boss Greg s point of view I think it s a win win because I get guided back on my path and I get to actually do something useful and not just unfinished projects And he gets some services that are working and are improving the use of experience of the people that we are there to support the committers So serving Apache projects initiatives and their communities like how busy are you How many requests do you receive a day How do you prioritize these requests How do you do this Greg Drew and Chris talked to me about JIRA systems et cetera Your work as I understand it is not necessarily responding to user requests How do you fit the creativity in with this process How do you mitigate that How do you fit everything in I do respond to users to keep me busy because if I am I don t want to say stalling but if I am really idling then I lose interest so I have to always keep busy with something So I will grab a lot of tickets just to keep busy with that That s the thing that I had to teach myself how to do And I don t have the recipe for it and yet I have somehow taught myself The thing where you have to not click on every single new ticket that opens up And not read every single Well you can read email you just don t have to write a reply to every single email It took a few years I think for me to stop doing every single ticket that came in within five minutes of it coming in Because at that point if you do that plus you have different projects on the side you get burnout very quickly And I ve had a few burnouts where I ve been unproductive and doing nothing for the next week because I d lost all hope in humanity because of the amount of tickets and angry users So a lot of it just letting go and knowing that there are team members who know just as well as you do what this is about and how to solve it And if they don t then they will ask you and you can help them then So a lot of managing the workload is learning to let go of the workload And if someone creates a ticket saying quot My forwarding address doesn t work quot It s probably okay to wait more than five minutes before you fix that if you re in the middle of something I used to be of the not opinion but yeah I used to be of the opinion that this must be fixed right away The minute I saw someone had a problem I wanted to help them But there comes a point where the more you try to help someone the less you re actually helping them in the end because of the overhead of dealing with too many tasks and being burned out I think some of it is Stefano…Mazzocchi Yeah Right The Mazzocchi equilibrium There is a certain point where in the effort you put in and the effort comes out of that starts to not align anymore And so if you re not good at holding back and letting things slide just a bit then you cross that threshold and you end up putting in maybe I don t know hours of work And really what you are doing is five hours of work or four hours or one hour of work because you re so not interested in what you are doing I know that some of my colleagues use Trello or If This Then That or other tools to organize their day but I want to say that s not for me I don t think it factors in the creativity that is needed in the role I have I think without any scientific evidence whatsoever that if your job is to think up new ideas and think of new ways to do something These tools they don t necessarily account for where creativity comes in because you can t put in your calendar step one “be creative or at “be creative Creativity is something that just happens I ve found that it happens for me when I am idling when I am doing a lot of non work related things switching between and then switching back to work And then switching back to non work items and switching back to work And then suddenly a link appears between these two things and they re like yeah this idea could actually be used for work But the things I am doing are not something that you can put into plan because you don t know I mean if I knew how to be creative if I knew to just go to this Website then I would be a millionaire by now So I don t know how to be creative I know that I can be creative and I know it happens when I let it happen You have to make space for that to happen right You have to allow for that to happen It s great that you have flexibility to be able to do that in your job that part of your work is to be able to conceptualize and visualize and come up with things It takes a while because sometimes you re not going to know the problem unless you re in the middle of it quot so oh this is an issue …here s an opportunity for us to come up with something that ll help quot It s great And it s especially great because I think honestly if I was stuck and let s say I was doing human resource management or whatever that I studied for if I was stuck doing Excel spreadsheets for example all day long Not that that s a bad thing but when creativity suddenly hits me I have to get it down on paper or it s going to haunt me to an extent where I just can t stand myself So I m very fortunate to have a job where I can fire fighting aside I can say quot Boom I have this inspiration suddenly I need to focus on that quot And then I can go and focus on that And I have a boss and I have a boss s boss and I have my colleagues that are understanding so that suddenly quot Oh Daniel got inspired He s probably going to manic for the next eight hours just working on this idea he s got quot It s really wonderful being given that space to be creative because I think no matter what job I have there would be an urge to be creative and to think up ideas And again when I think of an idea it forms itself completely in my head Some people will start with half an idea or a fingertip of an idea For me it s mostly been the entire idea presents itself to me right away and I have to get as much of that as possible down on paper before it s lost To have that opportunity is really wonderful END OF PART ONE 2020-09-07 14:47:21
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