From pradeep at keshavconsulting.com Wed Mar 6 03:04:18 2013 From: pradeep at keshavconsulting.com (Pradeep Palreddy (Ph: 252-268-2549) ) Date: Tue, 5 Mar 2013 22:04:18 -0500 Subject: [triangle.rb] [JOB] QA Engineer; DevOps; Sr Back end Developer; Web UI Developer RTP, NC Message-ID: Hi Rubyists, Below positions are all full time perm direct hire jobs with our client. Senior Automated QA / Test Engineer (Raleigh, NC) Senior Automated QA / Test Engineer City: Research Triangle Park (Raleigh, NC area) State: North Carolina Salary Range for a Sr QA Tools engineer / QA Strategy role is $80 to $108K where as a regular 3 to 5 years QA role would be in the range of $65 to $85K As we build out and staff our new development center (centrally located in the Triangle in Morrisville, near the airport), you'll enjoy some of the perks you often dream of but rarely find in today's job market, including: Challenging problems to solve A team of talented co-workers who can help you solve them Private offices for every team member Freedom to choose your own computing platform (OS, tools, etc.) Competitive salary/benefits This role won't be right for just anyone. For this role, the right candidate will be: A solid developer. You understand how good software gets built and you leverage that knowledge when creating a test plan and building tests that will exercise, validate, and break that software. You are capable of writing production code but you choose not to because you are passionate about QA. A proven producer. You can point to major websites and talk about how you helped make them bullet-proof. You can also look at web-based applications that you didn't test and immediately suggest a dozen aspects of their app that you would test with thoughts about how you'd do it. Knowledgeable of existing technologies, passionate about new technologies, and experienced to know when to recommend which ones for which jobs. The world of automated testing is changing daily. You know what you did yesterday and why you'd do something different today -- or why the same approach is still valid. An effective generalist across technologies outside your specific domain of expertise, including databases, mobile apps, interfacing with legacy technologies, cross-browser support, etc. Comfortable working in a start-up-like environment. We're building the team while we're building our product -- and we like it that way. Responsibilities: Ensure product quality of the entire platform from UI through back-end services including scalability and reliability. ? Understand the testing requirements of the feature/system/service you are testing and document the test plans/cases you will ultimately build/execute. ? Facilitate test-driven development, not only of the automated tests that you will build, but as an approach that all developers on the team should embrace ? Implement automated testing wherever practical and appropriate. ? Follow Agile testing principles and continuously review, implement and communicate process improvements and quality metrics to the team. ? Ability to dive deep on technical issues with developers. ? Ability to create and drive the test plans/team from the ground up. ? Recommend automated testing frameworks as needed and appropriate, driven by the testing requirements that the project suggests. ? Provide input and vision for testing needs as the company grows. Requirements: WE ARE LOOKING FOR A PASSIONATE DEVELOPER WHO IS NOW PASSIONATE ABOUT QA TESTING. A QA ENGINEER WHO HAS LINUX ADMINISTRATION EXPERIENCE IS A MUST. At least 5 years experience testing web applications and technologies (HTML, CSS, Javascript, XML, etc.) from browser through back-end to database. ? Knowledge of multiple programming languages appropriate for automated test environments (e.g., Perl, Python, Java, vendor-specific scripting languages, bash, etc.) ? Experience testing and deploying automated testing in virtualized and load-balanced environments. ? Experience with testing technologies deployed in the cloud, including testing from within the cloud and testing from outside the cloud. ? Experience with multiple defect tracking systems (e.g., Bugzilla, Jira, Trac, etc.) and use of automation and product-specific APIs to interact with them programmatically ? Experience with test case management/execution tools and an understanding of how those tools are used in an automated testing environment ? Familiarity with best practices in software QA and ability to champion those best practices throughout the development organization ? Experience with both SQL and NoSQL databases, including validation of data at rest as well as testing of services dependent on back-end databases. Experience with DynamoDB and at least one of CouchDB, Redis, or MongoDB preferred. ? Experience performance testing and benchmarking web applications using various approaches. ? Experience with automated testing frameworks, differences amongst them, and ability to recommend a testing framework that meets the needs of our project(s). ? A passion for creating a replicable, structured approach to testing that new team members can understand and extend independently. ? Experience with web performance and load testing tools (e.g., Loadrunner, JMeter, WebLOAD, Grinder, HttpRider, etc.) ? Selenium experience strongly desired. ? Good verbal and written communication skills. ? Bachelor's degree strongly desired. **************************************************************************DevOps Engineers, including possible Senior & Lead Engineer roles (Morrisville, NC ) DevOps Engineer/Sr. Eng/Lead Eng City: Research Triangle Park State: North Carolina Description We are seeking multiple DevOps Engineers, including possible Senior & Lead Engineer roles, to join our team to ensure the availability and performance of our next-generation cloud-based telephony and call center services. These engineers will be part of our newly-formed DevOps team in our new cloud services development center in the heart of the Triangle area and will build out operational capabilities to complement our secure, scalable, fault-tolerant, cloud-based web architecture that will serve as the underpinning for a new generation of products and services. As we build out and staff our new development center (centrally located in the Triangle in Morrisville, near the airport), you'll enjoy some of the perks you often dream of but rarely find in today's job market, including: Challenging problems to solve A team of talented co-workers who can help you solve them A variety of workspaces which cater to your changing needs and personal preferences, including walled offices, open desks, pair programming stations, workgroup clusters, collaboration rooms, etc. Freedom to choose your own computing platform (OS, tools, etc.) Competitive salary/benefits This role won't be right for just anyone. For this role, the right candidate will be: A solid developer. You understand how good software gets built and you leverage that knowledge when delivering provisioning, configuring, and monitoring services. You are capable of writing production code but you choose not to because you are passionate about DevOps. A proven producer. You can point to active websites, online web applications and/or large hosting operations and talk about how you helped make them highly available and resilient in the face of environmental outages. Knowledgeable of existing tools/technologies, passionate about new technologies, and experienced to know when to recommend which ones for which jobs. The world of DevOps is new, emerging and is changing almost daily. You know what you did yesterday and why you'd do something different today -- or why the same approach is still valid. An effective generalist across technologies outside your specific domain of expertise, including databases, mobile apps, interfacing with legacy technologies, cross-browser support, etc. Comfortable working in a start-up-like environment. We're building the team while we're building our product -- and we like it that way. Major Responsibilities/Activities (in order of importance) Deliver the necessary tools, processes and automation to deliver cloud-based services at 99.999% availability, 7x24x365 Work with other members of the Cloud Applications team to understand management and monitoring requirements for our cloud-based services Recommend solutions / approaches / architectures / technologies to address our DevOps needs, including continuous deployment, instance provisioning, service-level agreement adherence, system/application/network monitoring, etc. Work with members of the Cloud Applications QA team to identify opportunities to leverage existing automated QA tests in the production network Work with members of the Cloud Applications development team to understand requirements for development, staging, pre-production, and production environments and assist in getting them deployed Work with off-the-shelf/open source DevOps tools to deliver our services reliably, with high availability and resiliency in the face of unexpected loads/behaviors, including tools like Puppet, Chef, Hudson/Jenkins, scripting languages, automation tools, monitoring tools, etc. MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS (technical and soft-skills) Solid knowledge of and demonstrable capability in scripting, including a minimum of 2 years experience in writing bash/Python/Perl/Ruby/similar scripts 2 years experience with network/systems/application monitoring tools such as Nagios, OpenNMS, OpenView, Tivoli, CA, or similar 1 year experience working with configuration management tool (including Puppet, Chef, or other similar capabilities developed as in-house tools) 2 year experience in and demonstrable knowledge of Linux system administration Experience installing, configuring, and troubleshooting application platforms, with a preference for experience in working with Java web application platforms (e.g., Tomcat, WebSphere, WebLogic, JBoss, etc.) Troubleshooting skills Ability to actively listen and learn Ability to multi-task, prioritize and be detail-oriented Ability to work in a team environment Ability to take initiative and be proactive Ability to work independently and be resourceful Inductive and deductive reasoning Flexible and adaptable Ability to present complex information in a clear, concise manner Bachelor's degree or equivalent in work experience Ability to legally work in the United States Additionally, the ideal candidate will be familiar with and/or comfortable using most of the following technologies/areas: Amazon Web Services & EC2 syslog, logrotate, logstash Network administration System hardening Intrusion detection/prevention Access auditing Graphical displays of performance monitoring data Sr. DevOps Engineers must fulfill all of the requirements of the DevOps Engineer role, plus these additional requirements: Minimum 3 years scripting experience Minimum 3 years experience deploying, configuring and using monitoring tools Minimum 2 years experience using configuration management tools, scripts, and/or automation Minimum 2 years experience in Linux/Unix system administration Multiple years experience working in both development and operational environments Must enjoy providing mentorship to less experienced members of the team, including interns Experience participating in strategic planning efforts, especially team technology and process strategy Comfortable creating and maintaining process documentation Able to train new employees Lead DevOps Engineers MUST fulfill all the requirements of the DevOps Engineer and Sr. DevOps Engineer roles as well as these additional requirements: Minimum 5 years scripting experience Minimum 5 years experience deploying, configuring and using monitoring tools Minimum 3 years experience using configuration management tools, scripts, and/or automation Minimum 3 years experience in Linux/Unix system administration Minimum of 3 years in a Sr. or Lead DevOps Engineer role (or equivalent) Led technology strategy efforts for operations in cloud/online/hosted SaaS environments Defined and documented operational processes for team responsible for highly-available services ******************************************************************************************** Senior Back End Web Developer (Raleigh, NC) Location: Morrisville, NC This role won't be right for just anyone. For this role, the right candidate will be: A stand-out developer. You are the person that everyone else is always asking for help/advice. A proven producer. You can give us a list of URLs that are big websites that you had a hand in building to scale. Knowledgeable of existing technologies, passionate about new technologies, and experienced to know when to recommend which ones for which jobs. An effective generalist across technologies outside your specific domain of expertise, including databases, mobile apps, interfacing with legacy technologies, cross-browser support, or other appropriate, adjacent areas. RESPONSIBILITIES: Design & implementation of rock-solid and performant web applications Understand, use and champion development best practices Stay current with industry developments and new trends Recommend new technologies as components of a solution, when appropriate Taking ownership of features beginning to end, from design documents and reviews to acceptance testing and deployment REQUIREMENTS: 3 years of software engineering experience in Java with most recent year in server-side development Demonstrable understanding of scalability/availability in distributed systems Familiarity with HTML-serving technologies (any two or more of Web MVC frameworks, JSPs, RESTful interfaces, templating libraries, or related technologies) Familiarity with back-end services (any two or more of SOA, RESTful interfaces, NoSQL, RDBMS, or related technologies) Familiarity with Publish/Subscribe message brokers Reference-able skills in tiered application development Reference-able skills in selecting, deploying, configuring and using Java app servers (any of Tomcat, WAS, WebLogic, or similar) Experience in Linux operating environments Good verbal and written communication skills Bachelor's degree in Computer Science or related discipline. In addition to the above requirements, candidates for the Senior Web Back-End Developer role will also meet the following REQUIREMENTS: Proven and demonstrable experience architecting, designing & implementing web-scale, high volume, high availability systems Experience in cloud-environments (AWS, OpenStack, etc.) Familiarity with NoSQL technologies (e.g., Hadoop, Couchbase, Redis, etc.). Previous experience is preferred. Experience in enabling mobile platforms and design (iOS, Android, etc.) desired Comfortable and confident in leading meetings and organizing work for distribution across other members of the team Able to take high-level business requirements from product management and generate design documents for the resulting feature. Experience working with product management and engineering management to better understand requirements and appropriate trade-offs in designs Capable of leading team design reviews on features that you have designed, including organizing the meeting & participants, communicating the design, incorporating feedback, gaining buy-in from other team members, and receiving approval to implement the design. Experience in mentoring less experienced team members ******************************************************************* Web UI Developer (Raleigh, NC)THIS IS A FULL TIME PERM JOB. Web UI Developer Location: RTP, NC (Raleigh, NC) Salary: $62 to $85K, more $ available for more senior candidates/candidates with more skills. This role won't be right for just anyone. For this role, the right candidate will be: ? A solid, proven developer. You know your stuff and your peers know that you know your stuff. ? A user-centric designer. You can give us a list of URLs that present user interfaces that you built and take pride in. Your UIs are recognizable by their straight-forward approaches and elegant designs. You understand the tasks and workflows that users are trying to accomplish when using your interfaces and you make difficult decisions on their behalf. ? Knowledgeable of existing technologies, passionate about new technologies, and experienced to know when to use the right tool for the job. ? An effective generalist across technologies outside your specific domain of expertise, including databases, mobile apps, interfacing with legacy technologies, etc. Responsibilities: ? Work with Product Managers and UX Designers/Architects to establish the requirements for your user interface, often working from wireframes, mock-ups, or prototypes. ? Analyze UI requirements for completeness, unexpected impacts, and potential user-impacting concerns. ? Drive UI requirements through to an implementation-ready specification, complete with accurate sizing estimates and task breakdowns ? Work closely with QA / Test team members to help them understand the implications of your UI implementation, how best they can test it, and what areas may require specific focus ? Build UIs with anticipation of automated testing leveraging tools like Selenium, etc. ? Work closely with UI/UX and web architecture teams to enable performant, near-real-time updates to the browser with responsive rendering to the end user ? Own given features/pages beginning to end, from mockups & design documents/reviews to acceptance testing and deployment REQUIREMENTS: ? 3 years of software engineering experience with 2 most recent years building web-based UIs. 5 years experience preferred. ? Intimate understanding of HTML & CSS, with recent experience in HTML5 and CSS3. ? Demonstrable experience in Javascript & JQuery required. ? Experience in one or more Javascript frameworks (e.g., Ember, SproutCore, Cappuccino, Angular, etc.) desired. ? Familiarity with back-end technologies, including SOA, RESTful interfaces, tiered application development, Java app servers (JBoss, Tomcat, etc.), SQL, NoSQL (CouchDB, MongoDB, Redis, etc.) desired. ? Familiar with push-based notification architectures. ? Understanding of performance trade-offs in web applications and how the distribution of the "V" in "MVC" can impact performance. ? Comfortable with multiple server-side technologies (e.g., JSP/Servlets, PHP, Ruby on Rails, Python, etc.) ? Experience in Linux operating environments desired. ? Experience in cloud-environments (AWS, OpenStack, etc., with an initial preference for AWS) preferred. ? Good verbal and written communication skills ? Experience in building hybrid HTML5 UIs for mobile platforms (iOS, Android, etc.) desired ? Experience working in a start-up (or similar) environment strongly desired ? Bachelor's degree in Computer Science or related discipline. ********************************************************************************** Best Regards, Pradeep Palreddy, CEO Keshav Consulting Solutions *Direct Phone: 919-341-4635; **Mobile : 252-268-2549* *E-Mail : pradeep at keshavconsulting.com * LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/pradeeppalreddy -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mmzyk at programmersparadox.com Wed Mar 6 16:22:06 2013 From: mmzyk at programmersparadox.com (Mark Mzyk) Date: Wed, 06 Mar 2013 11:22:06 -0500 Subject: [triangle.rb] Michael Nygard Speaking Locally Message-ID: <51376D2E.9020109@programmersparadox.com> Hey Everyone, It's been a while since I've been to a raleigh.rb, but it's great to see the group rocking recently. I thought I'd do a cross group promotion, since I think this topic might be of interest here. Michael Nygard, author of the bookRelease It! is speaking to the Triangle DevOps group on Wednesday March 20th, 7pm at Bronto in the American Tobacco District in Durham. He'll be covering a topic from his book on failure and how to design systems to avoid it. I encourage anyone who wants to attend to join the group and rsvp, since we'll be serving pizza before Michael speaks. http://www.meetup.com/Triangle-DevOps/events/105370252/ You're also welcome to hang out in our IRC channel if you want: #triangledevops on Freenode. The more people the merrier. And one last thing: if you want to order Release It! from Pragprog , you can get 25% off the book/ebook/both through the end of March with this coupon: TriangleDevOps Hope to see some of you at the meetup. Feel free to hit me up with any questions you might have, on or off the list. - Mark Mzyk -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jareds.lists at gmail.com Wed Mar 6 18:58:08 2013 From: jareds.lists at gmail.com (Jared Richardson) Date: Wed, 6 Mar 2013 13:58:08 -0500 Subject: [triangle.rb] Michael Nygard Speaking Locally In-Reply-To: <51376D2E.9020109@programmersparadox.com> References: <51376D2E.9020109@programmersparadox.com> Message-ID: +1 to this. I've heard Michael speak a few times and he's top notch. On Wed, Mar 6, 2013 at 11:22 AM, Mark Mzyk wrote: > Hey Everyone, > > It's been a while since I've been to a raleigh.rb, but it's great to see > the group rocking recently. I thought I'd do a cross group promotion, since > I think this topic might be of interest here. > > Michael Nygard, author of the book Release It!is speaking to the Triangle DevOps group > on Wednesday March 20th, 7pm at Bronto in the American Tobacco District > in Durham. He'll be covering a topic from his book on failure and how to > design systems to avoid it. > > I encourage anyone who wants to attend to join the group and rsvp, since > we'll be serving pizza before Michael speaks. > > http://www.meetup.com/Triangle-DevOps/events/105370252/ > > You're also welcome to hang out in our IRC channel if you want: > #triangledevops on Freenode. The more people the merrier. > > And one last thing: if you want to order Release It! from Pragprog, > you can get 25% off the book/ebook/both through the end of March with > this coupon: TriangleDevOps > > Hope to see some of you at the meetup. > > Feel free to hit me up with any questions you might have, on or off the > list. > > - Mark Mzyk > > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members > -- Jared Richardson http://AgileArtisans.com http://RoleModelSoftware.com http://twitter.com/JaredRichardson (919)760-79085 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mtstalker at gmail.com Tue Mar 12 12:14:46 2013 From: mtstalker at gmail.com (Michael Stalker) Date: Tue, 12 Mar 2013 08:14:46 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Pre-meeting dinner Message-ID: Anyone want to suggest a place to meet for dinner before Triangle.rb tonight? As always, a contingent of us will be heading over to Sammy'safter the meeting. -Michael -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From nathaniel at talbott.ws Tue Mar 12 15:14:20 2013 From: nathaniel at talbott.ws (Nathaniel Talbott) Date: Tue, 12 Mar 2013 11:14:20 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Pre-meeting dinner In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: How about D.P. Doughs again? I'll be there around 5:30. On Tue, Mar 12, 2013 at 8:14 AM, Michael Stalker wrote: > Anyone want to suggest a place to meet for dinner before Triangle.rb > tonight? > > As always, a contingent of us will be heading over to Sammy'safter the meeting. > > -Michael > > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members > -- Nathaniel Talbott <:((>< -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From caleb.wright at gmail.com Tue Mar 12 17:40:44 2013 From: caleb.wright at gmail.com (Caleb Wright) Date: Tue, 12 Mar 2013 13:40:44 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Pre-meeting dinner In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <181C7795-C706-449D-8129-F4EFC2334186@gmail.com> I'd be up for that. On Mar 12, 2013, at 11:14 AM, Nathaniel Talbott wrote: > How about D.P. Doughs again? I'll be there around 5:30. > > > On Tue, Mar 12, 2013 at 8:14 AM, Michael Stalker wrote: >> Anyone want to suggest a place to meet for dinner before Triangle.rb tonight? >> >> As always, a contingent of us will be heading over to Sammy's after the meeting. >> >> -Michael >> >> _______________________________________________ >> raleigh-rb-members mailing list >> raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org >> http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members > > > > -- > Nathaniel Talbott > <:((>< > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sdball at gmail.com Tue Mar 12 18:17:46 2013 From: sdball at gmail.com (Stephen Ball) Date: Tue, 12 Mar 2013 14:17:46 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Pre-meeting dinner In-Reply-To: <181C7795-C706-449D-8129-F4EFC2334186@gmail.com> References: <181C7795-C706-449D-8129-F4EFC2334186@gmail.com> Message-ID: <501EAA42-6DB3-4130-A0FF-5D112C7E6FE2@gmail.com> Sounds good to me! -- Stephen (http://rakeroutes.com) On Mar 12, 2013, at 1:40 PM, Caleb Wright wrote: > I'd be up for that. > > > On Mar 12, 2013, at 11:14 AM, Nathaniel Talbott wrote: > >> How about D.P. Doughs again? I'll be there around 5:30. >> >> >> On Tue, Mar 12, 2013 at 8:14 AM, Michael Stalker wrote: >> Anyone want to suggest a place to meet for dinner before Triangle.rb tonight? >> >> As always, a contingent of us will be heading over to Sammy's after the meeting. >> >> -Michael >> >> _______________________________________________ >> raleigh-rb-members mailing list >> raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org >> http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members >> >> >> >> -- >> Nathaniel Talbott >> <:((>< >> _______________________________________________ >> raleigh-rb-members mailing list >> raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org >> http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ericksonsm at aol.com Wed Mar 13 20:24:13 2013 From: ericksonsm at aol.com (ericksonsm at aol.com) Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2013 16:24:13 -0400 (EDT) Subject: [triangle.rb] Migrating Rails application from Heroku to AWS Message-ID: <8CFEE3FDC4088DB-1894-146B1@webmail-m178.sysops.aol.com> My name is Eric. I have a Ruby on Rails web application hosted on Heroku that needs to be migrated to AWS to scale up. I managed to set it up on Heroku on my own, but there seem to be so many options on AWS that I don't know where to start. I don't know anything about setting up databases and servers. I am wondering if anyone who has set up on AWS before would be willing to help me get started. I already have an AWS account. The application isn't overly complicated: Rails 2.3.16, Ruby 1.9.2 4-8 workers 1 web server for now 3 daemon processes Postgres 9.0.8 database (60 GB, should probably be migrated to AWS) Redis database (500 MB right now, might need more) I think it might be best to work one-on-one so I can learn everything for myself. Does that interest anyone? Thanks. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From info at lojic.com Wed Mar 13 20:37:39 2013 From: info at lojic.com (Brian Adkins) Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2013 16:37:39 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Migrating Rails application from Heroku to AWS In-Reply-To: <8CFEE3FDC4088DB-1894-146B1@webmail-m178.sysops.aol.com> References: <8CFEE3FDC4088DB-1894-146B1@webmail-m178.sysops.aol.com> Message-ID: I have a script I use to setup new Ubuntu servers for Rails apps - edit a few config values and then let it run: https://github.com/lojic/sysadmin_tools/blob/master/cloud-setup.bash It's open source, so feel free to send a pull request for anything else you need. Even if you don't use the script directly, you should be able to see how to install/configure most of what you need. Redis is not included yet. Brian -- Brian Adkins Lojic Technologies, LLC http://lojic.com/ On Mar 13, 2013, at 4:24 PM, ericksonsm at aol.com wrote: > > My name is Eric. I have a Ruby on Rails web application hosted on Heroku that needs to be migrated to AWS to scale up. I managed to set it up on Heroku on my own, but there seem to be so many options on AWS that I don't know where to start. I don't know anything about setting up databases and servers. > > > I am wondering if anyone who has set up on AWS before would be willing to help me get started. I already have an AWS account. The application isn't overly complicated: > > > Rails 2.3.16, Ruby 1.9.2 > 4-8 workers > 1 web server for now > 3 daemon processes > Postgres 9.0.8 database (60 GB, should probably be migrated to AWS) > Redis database (500 MB right now, might need more) > > > I think it might be best to work one-on-one so I can learn everything for myself. Does that interest anyone? Thanks. > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members From jimmy at jimmythrasher.com Wed Mar 13 20:50:23 2013 From: jimmy at jimmythrasher.com (Jimmy Thrasher) Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2013 16:50:23 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Migrating Rails application from Heroku to AWS In-Reply-To: References: <8CFEE3FDC4088DB-1894-146B1@webmail-m178.sysops.aol.com> Message-ID: Be sure to disable the emacs install flag. On Wed, Mar 13, 2013 at 4:37 PM, Brian Adkins wrote: > I have a script I use to setup new Ubuntu servers for Rails apps - edit a > few config values and then let it run: > > https://github.com/lojic/sysadmin_tools/blob/master/cloud-setup.bash > > It's open source, so feel free to send a pull request for anything else > you need. Even if you don't use the script directly, you should be able to > see how to install/configure most of what you need. Redis is not included > yet. > > Brian > > -- > Brian Adkins > Lojic Technologies, LLC > http://lojic.com/ > > > > > On Mar 13, 2013, at 4:24 PM, ericksonsm at aol.com wrote: > > > > > My name is Eric. I have a Ruby on Rails web application hosted on Heroku > that needs to be migrated to AWS to scale up. I managed to set it up on > Heroku on my own, but there seem to be so many options on AWS that I don't > know where to start. I don't know anything about setting up databases and > servers. > > > > > > I am wondering if anyone who has set up on AWS before would be willing > to help me get started. I already have an AWS account. The application > isn't overly complicated: > > > > > > Rails 2.3.16, Ruby 1.9.2 > > 4-8 workers > > 1 web server for now > > 3 daemon processes > > Postgres 9.0.8 database (60 GB, should probably be migrated to AWS) > > Redis database (500 MB right now, might need more) > > > > > > I think it might be best to work one-on-one so I can learn everything > for myself. Does that interest anyone? Thanks. > > _______________________________________________ > > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members > > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members > -- +1-919-627-7546 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From kjp at brightleafsoftware.com Wed Mar 13 20:51:49 2013 From: kjp at brightleafsoftware.com (Kevin Poorman) Date: Wed, 13 Mar 2013 16:51:49 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Migrating Rails application from Heroku to AWS In-Reply-To: References: <8CFEE3FDC4088DB-1894-146B1@webmail-m178.sysops.aol.com> Message-ID: <691A4F02-3F69-48E0-BBDE-E01642F35371@brightleafsoftware.com> I use teleport (ruby gem) to setup aws Ubuntu hosts. it's kind of a lightweight puppet/chef. https://github.com/gurgeous/teleport additionally, if your interested, I can help you setup high(er)-throughput EBS arrays for postgres. On Mar 13, 2013, at 4:37 PM, Brian Adkins wrote: > I have a script I use to setup new Ubuntu servers for Rails apps - edit a few config values and then let it run: > > https://github.com/lojic/sysadmin_tools/blob/master/cloud-setup.bash > > It's open source, so feel free to send a pull request for anything else you need. Even if you don't use the script directly, you should be able to see how to install/configure most of what you need. Redis is not included yet. > > Brian > > -- > Brian Adkins > Lojic Technologies, LLC > http://lojic.com/ > > > > > On Mar 13, 2013, at 4:24 PM, ericksonsm at aol.com wrote: > >> >> My name is Eric. I have a Ruby on Rails web application hosted on Heroku that needs to be migrated to AWS to scale up. I managed to set it up on Heroku on my own, but there seem to be so many options on AWS that I don't know where to start. I don't know anything about setting up databases and servers. >> >> >> I am wondering if anyone who has set up on AWS before would be willing to help me get started. I already have an AWS account. The application isn't overly complicated: >> >> >> Rails 2.3.16, Ruby 1.9.2 >> 4-8 workers >> 1 web server for now >> 3 daemon processes >> Postgres 9.0.8 database (60 GB, should probably be migrated to AWS) >> Redis database (500 MB right now, might need more) >> >> >> I think it might be best to work one-on-one so I can learn everything for myself. Does that interest anyone? Thanks. >> _______________________________________________ >> raleigh-rb-members mailing list >> raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org >> http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members > > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: smime.p7s Type: application/pkcs7-signature Size: 4160 bytes Desc: not available URL: From marsha at iwestudio.net Fri Mar 15 02:09:50 2013 From: marsha at iwestudio.net (Marsha Lawson) Date: Thu, 14 Mar 2013 19:09:50 -0700 Subject: [triangle.rb] Developers Wanted - Free Codeathon - March 23 - 24, Durham Message-ID: Good afternoon Raleigh RB Members, I am reaching out to the developer communities in the Durham area regarding an upcoming Free Codeathon being held in the Durham Convention Center, March 23 - 24th. Our weekend brings educators and developers together in a joint inBloom Camp and Codeathon event. During the weekend the top 3 applications created will win: *o 1st Place: $2000 cash prize and $1000 in Amazon Web Services and 4 hours with an AWS Solution Architect. * *o 2nd Place: $1000 cash prize and $500 in Amazon Web Services and 1 hour with an AWS Solution Architect. * *o 3rd Place: $500 cash prize and $500 in Amazon Web Services and 1 hour with an AWS Solution Architect.* For information and registration details, please check out http://inbloomcampraleigh-outreach.eventbrite.com You will want to bring your laptop, power cord, and a passion to revolutionize education! We will provide inspiration and expertise (as well as T-shirts and food). Please invite your peers and colleagues. Thanks for your time. I hope you are able to come - we are so excited about the talented developers in the area joining us! Marsha -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From benjie at thoughtworks.com Tue Mar 19 19:07:35 2013 From: benjie at thoughtworks.com (Benjie Davis) Date: Tue, 19 Mar 2013 15:07:35 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Fwd: XSS Vulnerability in the `sanitize` helper of Ruby on Rails In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Sending this along to this fine group of rubyists. -- Benjie Davis ThoughtWorks benjie at thoughtworks.com cell: 773-749-0245 yahoo: benjie_davis_tw skype: benjiedavis about.me/benjie Please be advised... XSS Vulnerability in the `sanitize` helper of Ruby on Rails There is an XSS vulnerability in the sanitize helper in Ruby on Rails. This vulnerability has been assigned the CVE identifier CVE-2013-1857. Versions Affected: All. Not affected: None. Fixed Versions: 3.2.13, 3.1.12, 2.3.18 Impact ------ The sanitize helper in Ruby on Rails is designed to filter HTML and remove all tags and attributes which could be malicious. The code which ensured that URLs only contain supported protocols contained several bugs which could allow an attacker to embed a tag containing a URL which executes arbitrary javascript code. All users running an affected release should either upgrade or use one of the work arounds immediately. Releases -------- The 3.2.13 and 3.1.12 releases are available at the normal locations. Workarounds ----------- If you are unable to upgrade, you can place the following code into a file in config/initializers and it will replace the method with the correct implementation. module HTML class WhiteListSanitizer self.protocol_separator = /:|(�*58)|(p)|(�*3a)|(%|%)3A/i def contains_bad_protocols?(attr_name, value) uri_attributes.include?(attr_name) && (value =~ /(^[^\/:]*):|(�*58)|(p)|(�*3a)|(%|%)3A/i && !allowed_protocols.include?(value.split(protocol_separator).first.downcase. strip)) end end end Patches ------- To aid users who aren't able to upgrade immediately we have provided patches for the two supported release series. They are in git-am format and consist of a single changeset. * 3-2-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 3.2 series * 3-1-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 3.1 series * 3-0-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 3.0 series * 2-3-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 2.3 series Please note that only the 3.1.x and 3.2.x series are supported at present. Users of earlier unsupported releases are advised to upgrade as soon as possible as we cannot guarantee the continued availability of security fixes for unsupported releases. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From nathaniel at talbott.ws Tue Mar 19 19:59:07 2013 From: nathaniel at talbott.ws (Nathaniel Talbott) Date: Tue, 19 Mar 2013 15:59:07 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Fwd: XSS Vulnerability in the `sanitize` helper of Ruby on Rails In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: I'll also use this as an opportunity to remind my fellow Rails-using Rubyists that there's no excuse: you MUST subscribe to the Rails Security list. It is only posted to when there is an actual security issue for Rails that needs to be dealt with; this is an announce-only list, not a discussion list: https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/rubyonrails-security Not subscribed? Go. Do. It. Now. Right now. Stop procrastinating. Seriously, what are you waiting for? On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 3:07 PM, Benjie Davis wrote: > Sending this along to this fine group of rubyists. > > -- > Benjie Davis > ThoughtWorks > > benjie at thoughtworks.com > cell: 773-749-0245 > yahoo: benjie_davis_tw > skype: benjiedavis > about.me/benjie > > Please be advised... > > XSS Vulnerability in the `sanitize` helper of Ruby on Rails > > There is an XSS vulnerability in the sanitize helper in Ruby on Rails. > This vulnerability has been assigned the CVE identifier CVE-2013-1857. > > Versions Affected: All. > Not affected: None. > Fixed Versions: 3.2.13, 3.1.12, 2.3.18 > > Impact > ------ > The sanitize helper in Ruby on Rails is designed to filter HTML and remove > all tags and attributes which could be malicious. The code which ensured > that URLs only contain supported protocols contained several bugs which > could allow an attacker to embed a tag containing a URL which executes > arbitrary javascript code. > > All users running an affected release should either upgrade or use one of > the work arounds immediately. > > Releases > -------- > The 3.2.13 and 3.1.12 releases are available at the normal locations. > > Workarounds > ----------- > If you are unable to upgrade, you can place the following code into a file > in config/initializers and it will replace the method with the correct > implementation. > > module HTML > class WhiteListSanitizer > self.protocol_separator = /:|(�*58)|(p)|(�*3a)| > (%|%)3A/i > > def contains_bad_protocols?(attr_name, value) > uri_attributes.include?(attr_name) && > (value =~ /(^[^\/:]*):|(�*58)|(p)|(�*3a)|(%|%)3A/i > && !allowed_protocols.include?(value.split(protocol_ > separator).first.downcase.strip)) > end > end > end > > > > Patches > ------- > To aid users who aren't able to upgrade immediately we have provided > patches for the two supported release series. They are in git-am format > and consist of a single changeset. > > * 3-2-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 3.2 series > * 3-1-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 3.1 series > * 3-0-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 3.0 series > * 2-3-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 2.3 series > > Please note that only the 3.1.x and 3.2.x series are supported at present. > Users of earlier unsupported releases are advised to upgrade as soon as > possible as we cannot guarantee the continued availability of security > fixes for unsupported releases. > > > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members > -- Nathaniel Talbott <:((>< -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mark at imbriaco.com Tue Mar 19 20:20:29 2013 From: mark at imbriaco.com (Mark Imbriaco) Date: Tue, 19 Mar 2013 16:20:29 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Fwd: XSS Vulnerability in the `sanitize` helper of Ruby on Rails In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: It's also worth noting for folks on the 3.2.x train that 3.2.13 is _not_ just security patches for the recent CVEs and instead contains hundreds of commits since 3.2.12. There are at least a few regressions, notably in ARel. Be careful when upgrading and make sure you have decent good coverage. It sort of has me rethinking my "don't test the framework" stance, sadly. On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 3:59 PM, Nathaniel Talbott wrote: > I'll also use this as an opportunity to remind my fellow Rails-using > Rubyists that there's no excuse: you MUST subscribe to the Rails Security > list. It is only posted to when there is an actual security issue for Rails > that needs to be dealt with; this is an announce-only list, not a > discussion list: > > https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/rubyonrails-security > > Not subscribed? Go. Do. It. Now. > > Right now. > > Stop procrastinating. > > Seriously, what are you waiting for? > > > On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 3:07 PM, Benjie Davis wrote: > >> Sending this along to this fine group of rubyists. >> >> -- >> Benjie Davis >> ThoughtWorks >> >> benjie at thoughtworks.com >> cell: 773-749-0245 >> yahoo: benjie_davis_tw >> skype: benjiedavis >> about.me/benjie >> >> Please be advised... >> >> XSS Vulnerability in the `sanitize` helper of Ruby on Rails >> >> There is an XSS vulnerability in the sanitize helper in Ruby on Rails. >> This vulnerability has been assigned the CVE identifier CVE-2013-1857. >> >> Versions Affected: All. >> Not affected: None. >> Fixed Versions: 3.2.13, 3.1.12, 2.3.18 >> >> Impact >> ------ >> The sanitize helper in Ruby on Rails is designed to filter HTML and >> remove all tags and attributes which could be malicious. The code which >> ensured that URLs only contain supported protocols contained several bugs >> which could allow an attacker to embed a tag containing a URL which >> executes arbitrary javascript code. >> >> All users running an affected release should either upgrade or use one of >> the work arounds immediately. >> >> Releases >> -------- >> The 3.2.13 and 3.1.12 releases are available at the normal locations. >> >> Workarounds >> ----------- >> If you are unable to upgrade, you can place the following code into a >> file in config/initializers and it will replace the method with the correct >> implementation. >> >> module HTML >> class WhiteListSanitizer >> self.protocol_separator = /:|(�*58)|(p)|(�*3a)| >> (%|%)3A/i >> >> def contains_bad_protocols?(attr_name, value) >> uri_attributes.include?(attr_name) && >> (value =~ /(^[^\/:]*):|(�*58)|(p)|(�*3a)|(%|%)3A/i >> && !allowed_protocols.include?(value.split(protocol_ >> separator).first.downcase.strip)) >> end >> end >> end >> >> >> >> Patches >> ------- >> To aid users who aren't able to upgrade immediately we have provided >> patches for the two supported release series. They are in git-am format >> and consist of a single changeset. >> >> * 3-2-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 3.2 series >> * 3-1-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 3.1 series >> * 3-0-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 3.0 series >> * 2-3-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 2.3 series >> >> Please note that only the 3.1.x and 3.2.x series are supported at >> present. Users of earlier unsupported releases are advised to upgrade as >> soon as possible as we cannot guarantee the continued availability of >> security fixes for unsupported releases. >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> raleigh-rb-members mailing list >> raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org >> http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members >> > > > > -- > Nathaniel Talbott > <:((>< > > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jeff at ijeff.com Tue Mar 19 20:35:50 2013 From: jeff at ijeff.com (Jeff Price) Date: Tue, 19 Mar 2013 16:35:50 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Fwd: XSS Vulnerability in the `sanitize` helper of Ruby on Rails In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Thanks Nathaniel! Subscribed. On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 3:59 PM, Nathaniel Talbott wrote: > I'll also use this as an opportunity to remind my fellow Rails-using > Rubyists that there's no excuse: you MUST subscribe to the Rails Security > list. It is only posted to when there is an actual security issue for Rails > that needs to be dealt with; this is an announce-only list, not a > discussion list: > > https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups#!forum/rubyonrails-security > > Not subscribed? Go. Do. It. Now. > > Right now. > > Stop procrastinating. > > Seriously, what are you waiting for? > > > On Tue, Mar 19, 2013 at 3:07 PM, Benjie Davis wrote: > >> Sending this along to this fine group of rubyists. >> >> -- >> Benjie Davis >> ThoughtWorks >> >> benjie at thoughtworks.com >> cell: 773-749-0245 >> yahoo: benjie_davis_tw >> skype: benjiedavis >> about.me/benjie >> >> Please be advised... >> >> XSS Vulnerability in the `sanitize` helper of Ruby on Rails >> >> There is an XSS vulnerability in the sanitize helper in Ruby on Rails. >> This vulnerability has been assigned the CVE identifier CVE-2013-1857. >> >> Versions Affected: All. >> Not affected: None. >> Fixed Versions: 3.2.13, 3.1.12, 2.3.18 >> >> Impact >> ------ >> The sanitize helper in Ruby on Rails is designed to filter HTML and >> remove all tags and attributes which could be malicious. The code which >> ensured that URLs only contain supported protocols contained several bugs >> which could allow an attacker to embed a tag containing a URL which >> executes arbitrary javascript code. >> >> All users running an affected release should either upgrade or use one of >> the work arounds immediately. >> >> Releases >> -------- >> The 3.2.13 and 3.1.12 releases are available at the normal locations. >> >> Workarounds >> ----------- >> If you are unable to upgrade, you can place the following code into a >> file in config/initializers and it will replace the method with the correct >> implementation. >> >> module HTML >> class WhiteListSanitizer >> self.protocol_separator = /:|(�*58)|(p)|(�*3a)| >> (%|%)3A/i >> >> def contains_bad_protocols?(attr_name, value) >> uri_attributes.include?(attr_name) && >> (value =~ /(^[^\/:]*):|(�*58)|(p)|(�*3a)|(%|%)3A/i >> && !allowed_protocols.include?(value.split(protocol_ >> separator).first.downcase.strip)) >> end >> end >> end >> >> >> >> Patches >> ------- >> To aid users who aren't able to upgrade immediately we have provided >> patches for the two supported release series. They are in git-am format >> and consist of a single changeset. >> >> * 3-2-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 3.2 series >> * 3-1-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 3.1 series >> * 3-0-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 3.0 series >> * 2-3-sanitize_protocol.patch - Patch for 2.3 series >> >> Please note that only the 3.1.x and 3.2.x series are supported at >> present. Users of earlier unsupported releases are advised to upgrade as >> soon as possible as we cannot guarantee the continued availability of >> security fixes for unsupported releases. >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> raleigh-rb-members mailing list >> raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org >> http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members >> > > > > -- > Nathaniel Talbott > <:((>< > > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pelargir at gmail.com Tue Mar 26 00:36:57 2013 From: pelargir at gmail.com (Matthew Bass) Date: Mon, 25 Mar 2013 20:36:57 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Unable to install Ruby 2 via RVM Message-ID: Anyone else having trouble installing Ruby 2.0.0-p0 via RVM? $ rvm install 2.0.0 Searching for binary rubies, this might take some time. No binary rubies available for: osx/10.8/x86_64/ruby-2.0.0-p0. Continuing with compilation. Please read 'rvm mount' to get more information on binary rubies. Installing requirements for osx, might require sudo password. Skipping `brew update` make sure your formulas are up to date. Cowardly refusing to continue, please read 'rvm autolibs'. Already tried "rvm get head" and "brew update" to grab the latest stuff. No love. Matt From thomas at ravinggenius.com Tue Mar 26 01:04:16 2013 From: thomas at ravinggenius.com (Thomas Ingram) Date: Mon, 25 Mar 2013 21:04:16 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Unable to install Ruby 2 via RVM In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Sounds like a good time to switch to rbenv! Ruby 2.0 was available the day after release. On Mar 25, 2013 8:43 PM, "Matthew Bass" wrote: > Anyone else having trouble installing Ruby 2.0.0-p0 via RVM? > > $ rvm install 2.0.0 > Searching for binary rubies, this might take some time. > No binary rubies available for: osx/10.8/x86_64/ruby-2.0.0-p0. > Continuing with compilation. Please read 'rvm mount' to get more > information on binary rubies. > Installing requirements for osx, might require sudo password. > Skipping `brew update` make sure your formulas are up to date. > Cowardly refusing to continue, please read 'rvm autolibs'. > > Already tried "rvm get head" and "brew update" to grab the latest stuff. > No love. > > Matt > > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From fred at medl.in Tue Mar 26 01:14:58 2013 From: fred at medl.in (Fred Medlin) Date: Mon, 25 Mar 2013 21:14:58 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Unable to install Ruby 2 via RVM In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: I had a few issues and generally followed some of these stepsto get things working, but I can't remember specifics. On Mon, Mar 25, 2013 at 8:36 PM, Matthew Bass wrote: > Anyone else having trouble installing Ruby 2.0.0-p0 via RVM? > > $ rvm install 2.0.0 > Searching for binary rubies, this might take some time. > No binary rubies available for: osx/10.8/x86_64/ruby-2.0.0-p0. > Continuing with compilation. Please read 'rvm mount' to get more > information on binary rubies. > Installing requirements for osx, might require sudo password. > Skipping `brew update` make sure your formulas are up to date. > Cowardly refusing to continue, please read 'rvm autolibs'. > > Already tried "rvm get head" and "brew update" to grab the latest stuff. > No love. > > Matt > > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pelargir at gmail.com Tue Mar 26 02:22:23 2013 From: pelargir at gmail.com (Matthew Bass) Date: Mon, 25 Mar 2013 22:22:23 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Unable to install Ruby 2 via RVM In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: On Mar 25, 2013, at 9:14 PM, Fred Medlin wrote: > I had a few issues and generally followed some of these steps to get things working, but I can't remember specifics. Thanks, I got it working. Had to set rvm autolibs 3 to get it to install whatever libraries it was failing on. It wasn't printing a helpful error message about missing libraries initially. Matt -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From john.toups at medaxion.com Tue Mar 26 16:57:01 2013 From: john.toups at medaxion.com (John Toups) Date: Tue, 26 Mar 2013 12:57:01 -0400 Subject: [triangle.rb] Unable to install Ruby 2 via RVM In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: 'rvm autolibs packages' is what made it work for me (this is equivalent to autolibs 3 as referenced by mbass..). typing that before 'rvm install 2.0.0' let everything autoupdate and configure... John Toups | CTO | Medaxion, LLC o) 615.537.5504 c) 919.260.0023 On Mar 25, 2013, at 10:22 PM, Matthew Bass wrote: > > On Mar 25, 2013, at 9:14 PM, Fred Medlin wrote: > >> I had a few issues and generally followed some of these steps to get things working, but I can't remember specifics. > > > Thanks, I got it working. Had to set rvm autolibs 3 to get it to install whatever libraries it was failing on. It wasn't printing a helpful error message about missing libraries initially. > > Matt > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From nathaniel at talbott.ws Tue Mar 26 19:38:37 2013 From: nathaniel at talbott.ws (Nathaniel Talbott) Date: Tue, 26 Mar 2013 14:38:37 -0500 Subject: [triangle.rb] Unable to install Ruby 2 via RVM In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Gotta throw my hat in the ring for rbenv; switched a while back and have been super happy with the simpler approach. On Mon, Mar 25, 2013 at 8:04 PM, Thomas Ingram wrote: > Sounds like a good time to switch to rbenv! Ruby 2.0 was available the day > after release. > On Mar 25, 2013 8:43 PM, "Matthew Bass" wrote: > >> Anyone else having trouble installing Ruby 2.0.0-p0 via RVM? >> >> $ rvm install 2.0.0 >> Searching for binary rubies, this might take some time. >> No binary rubies available for: osx/10.8/x86_64/ruby-2.0.0-p0. >> Continuing with compilation. Please read 'rvm mount' to get more >> information on binary rubies. >> Installing requirements for osx, might require sudo password. >> Skipping `brew update` make sure your formulas are up to date. >> Cowardly refusing to continue, please read 'rvm autolibs'. >> >> Already tried "rvm get head" and "brew update" to grab the latest stuff. >> No love. >> >> Matt >> >> _______________________________________________ >> raleigh-rb-members mailing list >> raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org >> http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members >> > > _______________________________________________ > raleigh-rb-members mailing list > raleigh-rb-members at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/raleigh-rb-members > -- Nathaniel Talbott <:((>< -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: