There is no documented flag for go test to set the LD_LIBRARY_PATH. From my
point of view there is also no need for it.
On Monday, June 19, 2017 at 6:36:24 AM UTC+2, lakshmi balachandran wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> Is there any flags which can be used? other than explicitly setting the
> env
Hello,
Is there any flags which can be used? other than explicitly setting the env
variable?
On Friday, 16 June 2017 18:08:24 UTC+5:30, messju mohr wrote:
>
> ... and a shell agnostic way would be:
>
> $ env LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/foo/bar go test
>
> (see the man page of env(1))
>
> regards
>
>
Could you list the 2 packages?
Glen
On Sunday, June 18, 2017 at 6:27:40 PM UTC-4, svj...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> Can someone with experience with the problem suggest a best package for
> building a production PDF to text conversion service in Go? I am working
> with Go and Google App Engine. A
If I understand correctly, you're describing a simplified version of
https://twistedmatrix.com/documents/current/web/howto/using-twistedweb.html
which
provides the concept of "path" by having a system that generates a graph of
resource nodes than can be rendered. Routing to any specific endpoint
Can someone with experience with the problem suggest a best package for
building a production PDF to text conversion service in Go? I am working
with Go and Google App Engine. A cursory Google search brings up two
packages, the first considerably more popular but with external
dependencies I
Thank you very much!
On Monday, July 21, 2014 at 11:19:46 PM UTC+4, Jason Hutchinson wrote:
>
> I put together a really simple pager here:
> http://play.golang.org/p/rM2cw-g2u7
>
> It implements one of my favorite pagination formats, which always shows
> the first and last pages, current pages,
Hey gophers,
in an attempt to rein in the HTTP router epidemic, I tried writing down a)
why I think *any* router/muxer might not be a good thing to use (much less
write) and b) what I consider good, practical advice on how to route
requests instead. It's not rocket science or especially novel,
You should be able to do that with:
http://damien.lespiau.name/2017/05/building-and-using-coverage.html
HTH,
--
Damien
On 18 June 2017 at 17:49, Jérôme LAFORGE wrote:
> Hello,
> Can I consider that no workaround?
> Thx
>
> Le dimanche 21 mai 2017 09:48:01 UTC+2,
2017-06-18 19:47 GMT+03:00 Vasiliy Tolstov :
> Hi. I'm writing vnc server implementation (mostly for proxy between
> client and real server).
> My first version can only raw encoding, but now i'm writing TightPng
> support and check results. As i see when i'm connect to my
Hello,
Can I consider that no workaround?
Thx
Le dimanche 21 mai 2017 09:48:01 UTC+2, Jérôme LAFORGE a écrit :
>
> Hello,
> I create a classic rest server with mongo database. Some of my tests are
> made like this :
> - at the begining of test, I launch mononDB into docker contener (thx to
>
Hi. I'm writing vnc server implementation (mostly for proxy between
client and real server).
My first version can only raw encoding, but now i'm writing TightPng
support and check results. As i see when i'm connect to my proxy from
noVNC (that supports TightPng encoding), my proxy use 400-500% CPU
Hi Dave,
this is what I did... and using a normal fd Read() to a "normal" file
pointer works, returning the proper size of the frame.
So I am not using libraries anymore I was just confused because when
you google, it seems the libraries I was using are "the" solution to the
problem
12 matches
Mail list logo