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we have a high traffic website with the 500K daily sessions and at least 6 million contents ( and our growth is 1 million monthly), we're using goo.gl shortener system, but we've decided to setup ours,( in-house shortener system).
I've searched for shortener opensource systems and also I'd worked with YOURLS.ORG in the small and medium project but I'm not sure it could work with high scale/traffic website, So What do you suggest us?
FYI: our website is based on PHP + MYSQL (but we could treat it as a micoro service in our system and it could be written in any language)
Consider this application.
snaker. This application is based on django2 and python3.
I used this application using for more than 500K users with loadbalancer and 2 instances on EC2.
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Are there any standards/technologies/examples of public facing API's which would exhibit similar patterns to an AMQP/STOMP/MQTT server?
RabbitMQ fits almost perfectly in this setup apart from one big shortcoming, that is its not hardened for public facing. (user/pass or IP authentication the port can still be hammered, etc. There is no ability to set per-user throttling.)
Broadly speaking an API standard or design which would behave similar to SMPP, where by a payload can be sent by a client, it can be processed, then the client would also be able to stream responses from the same server either immediately or batched for later retrieval. Also scalable to 1000+ requests / second.
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Please suggest some good tool / software / application for managing test cases for an internet software product. Requirements:
should not be too expensive
should preferably be on an online platform (but desktop app too is okay!)
should support custom fields to classify / categorize test cases according to various dimensions like product module, persona etc.
It can be something that you use(d) in your organization or something you know of.
We are using informUp which is a test case management. we are using it as hosed solution but you can install the server on your site. it is simple but yet powerfull and allow customzied the fields. we are using it for bugs as well but you can use it only for tests cases. we are very satisfied with it
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I have developed apps for 3 years and am now looking to build an app that uses TFL (transport for london) api calls. I was reading their guidelines and read the following:
"Distribution
Developers consuming TfL data and providing public services built on it are expected
to provide the hosting capacity necessary to serve those public consumers. You
should take our data and proxy it, you shouldn’t allow all your clients to hit our service
driectly. This is intended to reduce TfL’s cost liability for hosting and content delivery."
While I have done a lot of app development, I have never hosted my own proxy receiving responses from an api. I have searched the internet for tutorials on this (ideally specific to TFL, but general ones would be awesome too), but can't find any that help.
Does anyone know of any?
Spoke to TFL about the Bus Times and it turns out you don't need to run this data via a database and can instead have users making direct calls to the API via your iPhone app. Great news :-)
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1.server-client architecture. all users sync(submit or checkout) documents from one local server(linux server, not windows).
2.with windows and linux client. the client will save all documents synced from the server locally. So when the users goe to places where they can not connect to the server, they still can view and edit their own copy of documents.
users commit their changes, the dms solve the conflicts like "git" or "svn". but great and complicated version control system is not needed.
client should have fulltext search features.
At last, i wonder what document management system do those system administrators use.
Thanks
Finally, i determine to use mailing list to store documents.
(1)we all members of our team can sync docs from server.
(2)we can keep docs in series, so easy to maintain
(3)we can find all clients all though those platforms, like linux,windows,mac os x etc
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Does anyone know of a public API for historical traffic data?
Some quick googling pulls up an API from Yahoo which offers real-time data, but I'd be curious if anyone hosts a service for historical data - i.e., what was the "severity" (one of the attributes the Yahoo API returns) for a given location at a given date and time.
(I'm going to guess that such a thing doesn't exist today, or at least no public options, as this would be an immense amount of data to store, but it never hurts to ask...)
While yahoo has shut down its traffic apis, there are a number of companies providing traffic information.
HERE from Nokia
Traffic API from Microsoft
Traffic API from MapQuest
Predictive Traffic API from INRIX
These guys certainly have the data, but I don't know how easy it is to get access to the API: http://inrix.com/developers