Simply to say, i can not find the Parse Data Browser and really don't know what is it. is it a link of parse site or a software or ... ?
I've tried google for that and a couple of youtube videos about that but i think anybody knows what it is and how to find it except me.
Parse.com is down now, you can see this but you can have your own parse server because parse is open source
Install your parse-server and set-up your parse-dashboard
All documentation is available here
If you want to start quickly you can host your parse-server on Heroku or use back4app
If you are looking for an alternative solution you can use Firebase
If you're running your own parse-server, you just have to add the parse-dashboard module. It's pretty easy to set up. https://github.com/parse-community/parse-dashboard#local-installation
You can mount it right on the same app your parse-server is hosted from, or keep it separate and just run it locally.
Related
I wanted to use my json-server for my heroku application and can you tell me if this is posible and if it is can you tell me how should I deploy my json-server in my heroku application
Yes you can. There's a guide by jesperorb here: https://github.com/jesperorb/json-server-heroku
You can clone that repo and use the package/server.json files or combine them with your current set-up. Might take some fiddling to get it working.
In my experience so far, it is working great to read from, but I have had some problems when POSTing to it. Hope that helps.
I wasn't able to find solid information on this and I wanted to ask developers who use Parse Dashboard:
What are the pros/cons of Parse Dashboard local installation vs deployment?
I currently run the Parse Dashboard on local installation, but I know that deployment to Heroku is also an option (my app is deployed on Heroku). I wanted to gather some information before deploying/not deploying.
Thank you!
I also have it running locally and I think for security reasons it's best to do so. If you setup the dashboard on the same server on which Parse is running, then you will have to take security measure to protect access to the dashboard and the config file which includes your masterkey and all that. This definitely outweighs the arguments to host it locally, which in my opinion only is that it's easier to access the dashboard.
If you really want to setup a dashboard on a server at least do it on a separate server.
I've migrated my parse app on a IBM Bluemix hosting using this node js app https://github.com/ukmadlz/parse-on-bluemix
Despite the parse server is now installed only on my hosting environment I'm trying to remove the very annoying limit of 30 requests per sec.
Does anybody know how to that? I've tried looking into parse server source code but I couldn't spot it..
Thanks
It's was already removed in parse server open source.
Does anyone know if it's possible to deploy to Parse.com hosting from CloudBees, Travis, or circle?
I'm aware of the commandline tool but I'm not sure how to integrate it with CI or if there is any other way.
I've found a solution that have worked well for me. Using travis-ci.com you can set it up to work with parse.com and github. Users commit to master branch and the code is auto deployed to Parse.com. Basically your credentials are encrypted using Travis's Ruby script (which can be found here: http://docs.travis-ci.com/user/encryption-keys/ . Once you're keys are made, you setup a .yml config file that, on travis downloads the parse sdk in a virtual environment, uses the hashed credentials to login to parse and then runs the parse deploy function resulting in a push to parse.
I am trying to install cloudant on my vulcan based app.
However when I try to add the free version of cloudant through the heroku addons I get the following error:
Could not communicate with vendor, please try again later
Want to confirm if this is a temporary vendor issue or is it something with my app?
I contacted Heroku support and was told Heroku is in the process of removing the add-on. I don't know any further details, but it looks like in order to have Cloudant work on Heroku you'll need to set the account up yourself.
This sounds like an error in the brokering between Heroku and Cloudant. If you can file a ticket with support#cloudant.com (including account information and time of the failure) we can track it down on our side and see if there's action we can take. Alternatively, you can always signup directly at cloudant.com as a short-term work around.