On 8/14/2010 10:40 AM, Rob Allen wrote:
On 13 Aug 2010, at 17:55, Paul wrote:
On 8/13/2010 5:55 AM, Rob Allen wrote:
On 11 Aug 2010, at 14:32, Paul wrote:
I thought about this, and this can be done. But it is also nice to
be able to help another developer quickly, by actually viewing
I've setup internal DNS servers that just handle the local domains,
and put them higher up in preference on the machines. On windows
there's a little gui in the networking - tcp/ip tab, I think you
could do the same on mac/linux by editing the resolve.conf file ...
been a while though since I did
Hi Paul,
We work with our developers in India. We have a QA and lead developer in the
US.
We use shared server as well as local developer.
We provide developers with apache/mysql/php/zf zip files that they install
on their pc. These versions correspond to our shared server application
On 13 Aug 2010, at 17:55, Paul wrote:
On 8/13/2010 5:55 AM, Rob Allen wrote:
On 11 Aug 2010, at 14:32, Paul wrote:
I thought about this, and this can be done. But it is also nice to be able
to help another developer quickly, by actually viewing the site in a
browser, especially
On 8/14/2010 10:40 AM, Rob Allen wrote:
On 13 Aug 2010, at 17:55, Paul wrote:
On 8/13/2010 5:55 AM, Rob Allen wrote:
On 11 Aug 2010, at 14:32, Paul wrote:
I thought about this, and this can be done. But it is also nice to
be able to help another developer quickly, by actually viewing
On 11 Aug 2010, at 14:32, Paul wrote:
I thought about this, and this can be done. But it is also nice to be able
to help another developer quickly, by actually viewing the site in a browser,
especially when they are having an issue with frontend code.
All my devs have their own
On 8/13/2010 5:55 AM, Rob Allen wrote:
On 11 Aug 2010, at 14:32, Paul wrote:
I thought about this, and this can be done. But it is also nice to
be able to help another developer quickly, by actually viewing the
site in a browser, especially when they are having an issue with
frontend code.
One more thing I thought of, was accessing a developers local environment.
Currently, since we have everything on a shared dev server, I can easily
look at the the teams code (great for the junior developers), and I can
access their local copy of the site on a domain (site.paul.dev).
If every developer have its own branch, he can commit to his branch, so you
can diff with trunk, and see cnahges.
Regards,
Saša Stamenković
On Wed, Aug 11, 2010 at 3:20 PM, Paul z...@zooluserver.com wrote:
One more thing I thought of, was accessing a developers local environment.
Currently,
Yeah exactly it does seem like too much work just to look at a small
bug. I use svn to deploy a lot of my sites to servers, it's super easy
if you have command line access, and if you have control of your
dns/domains it's easy to setup a bunch of various dev environments
whether it's per
On 8/11/2010 11:27 AM, Mark Steudel wrote:
Yeah exactly it does seem like too much work just to look at a small
bug. I use svn to deploy a lot of my sites to servers, it's super easy
if you have command line access, and if you have control of your
dns/domains it's easy to setup a bunch of
On 10 August 2010 01:09, Paul z...@zooluserver.com wrote:
Thanks Keith this is great! So for local dev, you let the developer choose
their own environment. Or do most of your developers have the same setup
(ie. all developer have a mac)?
Thats right, we allow any environment and allow the
Thanks Keith this is great! So for local dev, you let the developer
choose their own environment. Or do most of your developers have the
same setup (ie. all developer have a mac)?
On 8/8/2010 4:36 PM, keith Pope wrote:
Hi,
We use the following setup:
Local dev setup (Development)
Hi,
We use the following setup:
Local dev setup (Development)
Developers can use any IDE/Editor they like and can have their own
LAMP etc setup.
Ant - Used locally to configure, build and test the application
(checks for dependencies etc)
Data - Mysql weekly dump, sensitive data scrambled.
weierophinney wrote:
That said, I also have some colleagues and friends who work on teams that
use VM environments, and swear by it.
My team goes the VM route as well. We each have a VM w/ an Ubuntu bare
minimum install. There is a baseline image that we all use; however, we've
documented
Hi,
Wil Moore III wrote:
weierophinney wrote:
That said, I also have some colleagues and friends who work on teams
that use VM environments, and swear by it.
My team goes the VM route as well. We each have a VM w/ an Ubuntu bare
minimum install. There is a baseline image that we all use;
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