We are a community of motherfucking programmers who have been humiliated by software development methodologies for years. We are tired of XP, Scrum, Kanban, Waterfall, Software Craftsmanship (aka XP-Lite) and anything else getting in the way of...Programming, Motherfucker.
AWS Elastic Beanstalk is an even easier way for developers to quickly deploy and manage applications in the AWS cloud without having to worry about the physical infrastructure or the resource configuration that accompanies setting up that infrastructure. You simply upload your application and AWS Elastic Beanstalk automatically handles the deployment details of capacity provisioning, load balancing, auto-scaling, and application health monitoring, while allowing you to change configuration settings and deploy new versions.
Node.js provides a its own assert module with some really useful functions for creating basic tests. However, the reporting and running of these assertions can become complicated, especially with asynchronous code. How can you be sure that all assertions ran? Or that they ran in the correct order? This is where nodeunit comes in, a tool for defining and running unit tests in the simplest way possible.
A simple Web server with only 200 lines of C source code. In this article, Nigel Griffiths provides a copy of this Web server and includes the source code as well. You can see exactly what it can and can't do.