- It might be a card grabber.
- Don't put real card details of course.
It wants you to put dummy details as fast as you can.
It is a game, but it might also be a card grabber.
I did not make this, and you're supposed to put dummy details there. Don't put actual credit card information.
Thanks man, my brain was short-circuited on Testcontainers so I couldn't write better. Also I am stealing the title.
I don't get it, how would a database container run your unit tests? And unless you know some secret option to stop the database after, say, it is idle for a few seconds, it will continue running.
The purpose is to test database dependent code by spinning up a real database and run your code against that.
I actually like this. This would allow reuse of all the infrastructure we have around XML. No more SQL injection and dealing with query parameters? Sign me up!
You have rust.
You get a horse and arrive at the castle within seconds but the horse is too old and doesn't work with the castle.
You remove the horse, destructure the castle and rescue the princess within seconds, but now you have no horse.
While you're finding a compatible horse and thinking whether you should write your own horse, Bowser recaptures the princess and moves her to another castle.
You're quite bold to assume that linux users haven't built their houses with doors instead of windows.
~~Remove the battery~~ Wait, you can't do that these days...
Everything seems to be way faster on Linux than on windows for some reason.
On one occasion I tested a build that took ~10 min on windows, in a Linux VM installed on the same machine, it finished in ~1min.
I have searched around for an answer for quite some time now, I could not find any definitive reason. Some say that process creation is slower on windows, some say IO is inefficient. Still struggling to explain 10x increase in throughput.
Here is a funny instance: https://emacs.stackexchange.com/questions/17783/why-does-emacs-take-longer-to-start-on-windows-than-on-linux