Download the following files from Oracle. You'll to login (it's free to register) to download the files.
Create a directory /usr/lib/share/oracle
export ORACLE_HOME=/usr/lib/share/oracle
export VERSION=11.2.0.3.0
export ARCH=x86_64
// The tests go here |
module.exports = (robot) => { | |
robot.on('pull_request.closed', async context => { | |
const {github, payload} = context | |
const self = payload.pull_request | |
const owner = payload.repository.owner.login | |
const repo = payload.repository.name | |
const base = self.head.ref | |
const state = 'open' | |
const per_page = 100 |
import paramiko, socks | |
# PySocks recommends using no arguments, | |
# because it only supports the defaults anyway. | |
sock = socks.socksocket() | |
host, port = '127.0.0.1', 1234 | |
# Set up your proxy information for this socket | |
sock.set_proxy( |
Download the following files from Oracle. You'll to login (it's free to register) to download the files.
Create a directory /usr/lib/share/oracle
export ORACLE_HOME=/usr/lib/share/oracle
export VERSION=11.2.0.3.0
export ARCH=x86_64
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
Right now, HTTP has a problem. This problem isn't unique to HTTP, but it is most aggrevous in HTTP. The problem is Secure URIs.
WARNING: I don't really know the history of the problem. I'm making up a nice story. The points are still valid.
In the beggining, there was HTTP. And the whole world saw that it was VERY GOOD. They designated a protocol scheme name for it: http://
, so that it would go in a URI like this: http://example.com
.