Please visit https://asistencia.in/blogs/1-mysql-5-5-installation-guide
Thank you
| #!/bin/bash | |
| <<ABOUT_THIS_SCRIPT | |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Written by:William Smith | |
| Professional Services Engineer | |
| Jamf | |
| bill@talkingmoose.net | |
| https://gist.github.com/talkingmoose/9faf50deaaefafa9a147e48ba39bb4b0 |
Please visit https://asistencia.in/blogs/1-mysql-5-5-installation-guide
Thank you
| package examples.docs | |
| import com.atlassian.applinks.api.ApplicationLink | |
| import com.atlassian.applinks.api.ApplicationLinkService | |
| import com.atlassian.applinks.api.application.confluence.ConfluenceApplicationType | |
| import com.atlassian.jira.issue.Issue | |
| import com.atlassian.sal.api.component.ComponentLocator | |
| import com.atlassian.sal.api.net.Request | |
| import com.atlassian.sal.api.net.Response | |
| import com.atlassian.sal.api.net.ResponseException |
I've been using a lot of Ansible lately and while almost everything has been great, finding a clean way to implement ansible-vault wasn't immediately apparent.
What I decided on was the following: put your secret information into a vars file, reference that vars file from your task, and encrypt the whole vars file using ansible-vault encrypt.
Let's use an example: You're writing an Ansible role and want to encrypt the spoiler for the movie Aliens.