I implemented Parse Dashboard on Heroku server using this article: http://blog.parse.com/announcements/introducing-the-parse-server-dashboard/
http://localhost:4040 and it ran perfectly the first time. The problem now i restarted the computer and i tried to access it again from the same link but i cannot reach the website? So i was wondering how to solve that. Thank you
I found out that i have to run "npm run dashboard" each time i open the URL.
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I am facing a critical issue in my application, it is developed in Laravel and Angular. The issue is I am getting the old email templates on live site and on local server I am getting the latest updated one. The process to deloy the code is automatic, I just to commit the code in BitBucket and after that Bitbucket Pipleline push the code to AWS server directly.
I have already run the cache cammands for Laravel and restarted the jobs but still i am getting the same issue. If anyone have expirienced the same issue or have knowledge of the same to resolve, Please guide!
I think you can try one of the following ways to overcome the issue, I faced a similar issue and resolved it by following ways -
Try deleting the cache files manually from Laravel from storage/framework/views
Upload the code directly into AWS for particular module without using the pipeline way
restart your server
This will surely resolve your issue!
Since you are using Laravel and angular application deployed on AWS,
I assume that bit bucket is pushing code and build commands are fired on every push
there are few things which can help you.
Try to build the angular side on every push, since angular builds hashes all the files in the dist folder
Try to delete the Laravel cached files which are stored in storage/framework/views
Check that on that your server is pointing to the right project folder
If any of the points from 1 or 2 works you can automate the process by passing CLI command after every push,
Point 1 and 2 are achievable by passing CLI commands.
I just created my first heroku app and pushed my code through it onto heroku. While testing it however, it showed that one of the templates didnot exist when it infact does when I test it from my laptop directly on the local server. Please do guide if you have any ideas!(ps.: I am using Windows hence please do keep take that into consideration when helping out!)
I want to setup a Nextcloud on my personal VPS. To do the first time setup, I have to access the webserver via my browser and it says I should do it over http://localhost/nextcloud/ (Nextcloud Installation Wizard (Right in the beginning), but this does not work for my because the VPS is not my local machine. So I have to open up the setup website to the public web and everybody who would know the IP of my VPS could do it first time setup.
I read other tutorials from web applications (for example Confluence Confluence Installation Documentation (Point 4.2)) where this is the common way of setting things up the first time.
Is there another secure way to do this in general for setting up an webapp for the first time? Firewall? VPN? How do you guys do it?
Thank you for your help
Yes - this is the common way on how to set it up. In the unlikely case that somebody else sets it up in the short time between placing the files and running the installer, you could also remove the config/config.php and do the setup again.
If you want to not do the web based setup you could use the CLI tool to run the installation. It also asks in an interactive way to set up Nextcloud or all the parameters can be provided via CLI options.
See https://docs.nextcloud.com/server/12/admin_manual/installation/command_line_installation.html for more details on the CLI installation method.
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.
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.