►
From YouTube: 5min Production App
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
A
If
you
declare,
because
redis
is
not
completely
free
free
only
for
limited
amount
of
time
right,
like
some
water
trial
version,
so
we
put
it
under
the
flag
now.
So
if
you
defined
the
redis
node
type
variable,
the
redis
cluster
will
be
provisioned
for
your
application
and
then
a
set
of
variables
will
be
exposed
to
your
application.
A
Now,
if
we
look
at
my
rails
application
here,
it
has
redis
node
type
defined
as
a
cache
to
micro
and
this
application
uses.
A
A
For
for
cache,
storage
and
also
four
sessions,
and
it
basically
uses
default
rails,
configuration
using
environment,
radius,
url
and
environment
variables,
radius
url
is
provided
to
you
by
five
minute
production
app.
If
you
do
after
you
define
redis
node
type.
A
So
if
you
look
at
our
application
running,
we
can
see
that
it
runs
the
active
support.
Radius
cache
store.
So
this
is
the
first
good
scene
now,
because
I've
worked
a
lot
with
rails
in
this
project
and
rails,
has
some
difference
between
environments
and
have
this
also
school
features
like
active
storage
and
everything.
I
created
a
separate
section
in
examples
explaining
how
to
achieve
different
results
if
you're
trying
to
deploy
ruby
on
rails
application
with
five-minute
production
app.
So
this
mentions
master
key
for
decrypt
credentials.
It
mentions
how
your
dbmigrade
command
should
be
different.
A
So
it
appears
that
using
active
storage
with
this
five-minute
production
app
is
just
a
matter
of
following
the
rails,
documentation
and,
after
that,
simply
adding
this
section
to
the
config
storage
yaml,
which
basically
said
like
hey,
use
this
environmental
variables
that
five
minute
production
apps
give
you
for
yeah
for
s3
and
the
demo.
I
have
run
here
yeah
it
uses
actually
active
storage
amazon,
so
use
s3
that
yeah
that
is
deployed
by
five
minute
production
app.
A
So
this
app
using
rails,
active
storage
feature
and
additional
to
that
I
added
few
more
screenshots.
I
figured
that,
like
okay,
the
usage
in
three
steps
is
nice,
but
I
feel
like
there
is
like
so
much
better
to
see
screenshot
for
what
what
the
end
result
should
be.
So
I
added
like
a
few
screenshots
of
how
your
variable
section
should
look
like
where
how
you
actually
applied
this
five
minute.
A
Yep,
thank
you
for
feedback
yeah.
I
think
that's!
That's
it
on
my
side
for
today.
So
let's
follow
what
next
on
the
agenda.
B
A
So
yeah
it's
it's
a
relatively
new
scene.
It's
like
starting
with
rails
5.2,
if
I'm
not
mistaken
so
now
they
you
want
to
push
your
credentials
encrypted
to
the
repository
right.
You
don't
want
to
expose
your
credentials,
so
your
credentials
are
encrypted
on
your
machine
locally
and
then
push
to
the
repository
and
then.
B
Why
would
we
have
any
credentials
locally?
Why
don't
we
just
put
them
in
gitlab
environmental
variables.
A
We
can-
and
we
do-
and
this
is
like
this-
is
how
to
because
rails
would
check
for
rails
master
key
availability
when
you,
for
example,
run
some
rake
task
right
and
it
will
fail
because
it
wouldn't
be
able
to
find
this
master
key.
So
even
if
your
config
credential
yaml,
if
I
open
it
locally
on
my
machine,
it
will
it's
basically
empty
files.
There
is
nothing
there,
because
I
use
all
that.
A
Have
other
services
there
so
if
they
want
to,
I
don't
know
like
let's
say
some,
whatever,
not
not
email,
but
maybe
I
don't
know
like
some
social
networking
or
some
other,
like
third
party
sources,.
B
It
makes
sense
like
either
we
disable
it
or
we
add
it
and
then
let's
add
it
so
that
everything
just
works
so
street.
Would
you
be
okay
with
like
in
this
sentence
that
first
sentence,
like
master
key,
that
should
probably
link
to
the
documentation
of
rails
and
find
your
master
key,
should
like
deep
link
to
a
paragraph
where
you
can
find
it
on
your
file
system
or
something
like
that.
A
Yeah,
I
can
do
it.
I
will
yeah
just
just
three
just
create
an
issue
quickly
right
and
assigned
to
me.
I
will
I
have
a
lot
of
wizards
to
rails
recommendation
lately.
So
it's
just
a
matter
of
filling
the
links,
cool.
B
Thanks
to
michi
and
then
maybe
that
database
sorry
sorry.
A
B
B
A
B
B
Cool
in
a
production
environment
for
production-
if
I
add
next
line-
oh
yeah,
that
makes
sense
because
you
gotta
set
that
rails
variable.
A
Yeah
that,
like
the
thing
is,
if
you
can
run
it
in
development,
I
saw
a
lot
of
people
using
even
after
devops
and
have
their
applications.
There
are
the
containers
running
in
development
mode,
because
people
didn't
realize
that
yeah
rails
will
boot
by
default
in
development,
so
it
will
work
in
development
anyway,
but
at
certain
point
you
would
want
to
you
know,
like
level
up
the
game,
so
you
want
a
production
environment,
so
you
would
need
to
define
it
explicitly.
B
Cool
that's
cool
and
then
like
things
like
your
assets,
pre-compiled
and
just
follow
the
rails
documentation.
There
should
probably
be
also
links
to
the
to
the
docs,
but
this.
A
B
A
B
So
much
better
if
I
don't
have
to
open
another
doc
and
then
the
we're
still
going
to
add
something
for
the
email.
That's
not
ready
yet.
B
A
Need
to
move
oh
yeah
yeah.
We
need
to
move
yeah
to
an
instruction
here
for
how
to
actually
some
tp
with
rails.
So
this
is
a
good
one
can
yeah.
I
also
need
to
do
it.
B
B
Cool
and
you
said
redis
like
you
pay
by
the
minute
and
it's
free
for
a
limited
time.
I
think
that
applies
to
everything
else,
to
israelis,
something
different.
Is
it.
A
B
B
B
A
Cash,
why
why
I
thought
that
it's
like
always
750
hours
free
per
month,
no
matter
it's
like
it's
first
12
months
or
not,
but
yeah
yeah.
Okay,
so
it
seems
like
the
free
tier
like
this.
750
hours
will
be
gone
after
one
year
right.
A
B
B
A
A
B
Yeah
that
makes
sense,
but
they're
limited
to
12
months,
because
otherwise
you
kind
of
get
the
problems.
That
heroku,
for
example,
also
has.
A
A
The
kind
variable
yeah-
I
just
hope,
someone
documented
all
that
okay
yeah,
I
think
we're
done
with
with
readme
right
yeah.
I
think
so
too.
B
Oh
cool
yeah,
I
had
a
couple
of
things:
north
flank
was
an
interesting
project,
there's
also
a
live
stream
on
it.
B
B
I've
heard
and
you
can
see
in
the
dock,
but
maybe
not
verbally.
I've
heard
that
if
you
ask
let's
encrypt
nicely,
they
will
increase
the
rate
limits
for
certain
domains.
So,
as
as
our
own
dynamic,
dns
provider
gets
more
certificate
requests,
we
can.
We
can
maybe
ask
let's
encrypt.
B
Yeah
five
is
something
that
was
that
we
saw
on
vantage.sh
kind
of
a
cool
way
to
create
the
credentials.
So
you
looked
into
it
see.
What
did
you
make
of
it.
D
Hey
yeah,
I
looked
into
it
and,
more
importantly,
I
spoke
to
a
solutions
architect
from
aws
just
prior
to
this
call.
D
Vantage
uses
cloud
formation
deep,
linking
as
a
way
to
as
a
way
to
overcome
the
lack
of
oauth
2.
So
the
good
thing
we
found
out
is
that
it's
not
so.
This
at
first
seemed
like
a
hack
right,
because
cloud
formation
is
not
meant
for
this,
but
I
learned
from
the
aws
ssa
that
this
is
a
common
pattern
that
many
aws
partners
use,
including
datadock.
D
B
Darby
you're
at
question
number
six.
C
Yep
yeah,
so
I
guess
just
trying
to
get
a
understanding
of
what
comes
next
after
the
end
of
this
quarter,
we're
wrapping
up
q4
and
I
my
original
understanding
was
this
was
kind
of
a
one-quarter
sprint,
not
sure
if
we
have
stated
goals
for
q1
or
if
people
are
moving
on
to
other
projects.
So
I
wanted
to
get
an
understanding
of
that.
So
I
can
bring
that
into
the
discussion
with
the
development
team.
B
Yeah
great
question:
I'm
not
sure
how
dimitri
is
feeling
I
feel
like
this
is
shaping
up
really
nicely
and
it's
something
I
would
want
as
a
developer.
B
So
maybe
dimitri
wants
to
keep
working
on
it
for
street.
I
think
it's
time
the
agreement
was.
This
is
for
a
limited
time,
but
I
also
want
to
hear
from
sri
what
he's
thinking.
A
Yeah
yeah
so
three
ends
in
ten
days,
and
my
thinking
was
like.
I
don't
want
to
work
on
this
aws
plugin
button
on
something
like
this.
I
think
it's
a
much
better
fit
for
for
a
gitlab
as
a
company
to
work
on
it,
like
you
know,
using
a
regular,
designer's,
front-end
and
everyone
else
to
do
it
like
it's
pretty
much
a
gitlab,
integrated,
duplicate,
lab
integrated
feature,
so
I
don't
feel
like
yeah,
my
solo
developer.
Experience
would
be
would
be
good
there,
so,
based
on
that,
I
defined
it.
Like
you
know.
A
A
scope
of
this
thing
to
like
actually
make
everything
from
once.
You
put
the
credentials
in
to
your
application
running,
be
great,
and
I
think
up
to
you
like
to
judge,
but
I
think
it's
on
final
stage.
It's
like
working
really
well,
for
me
at
least
so
I
want
to
actually
you
know
like
make
some
final
touches
for
next.
A
I
don't
know
a
few
few
weeks
like
fix
up,
read
me
documentation
and
everything,
and
just
either
press
it
by
to
other
team
as
a
group
or
just
switch
to
the
maintenance
level
and
focus
on
something
else.
While,
while
keeping
this
alive
and
yeah
while
there
is
a
team
to
pick
it
under
their
wing.
B
D
Yeah
so
dc-
and
I
spoke
about
this
yesterday
before
I've
got
roughly
10
days
left
and
the
expectation
from
from
the
customer
success
organization
is
that
I
go
back
as
per
the
agreement,
which
is
something
I'm
willing
to
do
and
happy
to
do.
B
Cool
yeah,
so
I
think
what
I
would
put
your
focus
on
the
the
cloud
formation
template
getting
that
to
getting
that
to
work
before
the
quarter
is
over.
If
that's,
okay
with
you.
D
It
is
okay
with
me,
but
I
think
it's
a
bit.
I
don't
think
I
can
do
it
in
the
next
week,
because
there
are
a
few
moving
parts
there.
One
of
the
requirements
of
the
cloud
formation
deep
linking
is
that
there
is
a
web
hook
or
a
service
listening
to
the
post
pack
from
the
steep
link
and
that
should
go
inside
the
main
gitlab
source
code.
So
this
should
be
a
web
hook
in
the
gitlab
application.
A
Yeah,
sorry,
but
we
need
to.
There
are
a
few
things
that
are
really
like.
We
need
to
do
because,
like
relative
to
three
expertise
and
that's
a
refactor
terraform
quite
a
bit
to
like
improve
the
networking
right
now,
because
they're
like
ec2
postgres
and
everything,
should
work
in
one
like
private
network
and
not
be
accessible
from
outside
and
be
more
secure
from
that
perspective.
So
I
want
to
use
three
knowledge
of
terror
for
my
iws
to
actually
fix.
A
What's
what
he's
good
at
and,
like
you
know,
make
this
like
more
real.
I
don't
know
more
safe,
more
secure
before
before
trying
out,
like
you
know,
more
features
more
stuff.
B
A
B
Dmitry
you're
you're
in
the
lead.
So
let's
do
that
and
s3.
If
you
can't,
if
you
don't
have,
if
you
run
out
of
time
in
the
cloud
for
information
stuff,
make
sure
there's
a
good
write-up
of
what's
next
like
make
sure
that
a
new
developer
can
come
in
and
and
build
that
and
knows
what
to
do.
Does
that
make
sense.
A
Yeah
there's
a
plan
like
we
should
recommend
as
much
as
possible
and
for
for
anyone
who
will
proceed
with
cloud
formation.
C
Okay,
thanks
thanks
for
the
detail
there,
I
will
I'll
set
up
some
time
to
chat
with
both
these
and
three
probably
like
later
next
week,
maybe
and
just
get
kind
of
kind
of
a
wrap
up
there
and
and
links
to
all
the
issues
that
we
need
to
to
keep
track
of,
and
things
like
that
and
just
make
sure
that
I
have
a
good
picture
of
everything
that
we're
kind
of
handing
off
and
then
I'll
work
with
the
development
team
to
figure
out
where
this
is
going
to
land
over
there
cool
thanks.
B
Thanks,
can
we
maybe
oh
I'll,
do
I'll
do
8
hb47?
B
We
should
probably
get
some
metrics
of
usage
to
figure
out
whether
people
are
already
using
this
or
not
maybe
use
production
analytics
or
something
like
that
to
get
an
idea.
A
Yeah,
I'm
up
for
my
tricks.
That's
like
that's
the
most
logical
thing
like
after
yeah,
like
basically
feature-wise.
We
are
ready.
Three
will
refactor
networks,
so
it's
more
secure
and
after
that,
it's
a
matter
of
just
yeah
figuring
out
in
cloud
formation
while
actually
measuring
how
people
use
it.
B
C
B
Yes,
I
like
that
to
exist,
but
no
one
else
wants
that
to
exist,
so
people
made
it
alpha
and
it's
not
in
the
real
database
and
it
can
be
removed
and
it's
rate
limited
and
if
it's
rate
limited,
you
don't
know
that
it's
rate
limited,
so
it
will
show
super
low
numbers,
even
though
people
are
actually
using
it.
So
time
check
right
time.
B
C
B
Cool
and
then
seven
I'll
shelf
for
the
next
time,
but
I
want
to
explore
really
ugly
things
to
have
less
configuration
for
people
so
make
make
it
even
more
automatic,
maybe
generate
an
automatic,
merge,
requests
to
change
the
rails,
configuration
or
something
like
that.
A
Important
it's
I.
I
did
a
lot
of
them,
like
example,
projects
with
with
other
languages,
and
I
must
say
that
rails
become
quite
complicated
in
the
last
few
years
from
d,
because
it's
very
different
between
development,
environment
production,
environment,
like
how
much
scenes
are
required,
and
so
on
so
yeah.
We
can
simplify
things
for
rails,
but
I
feel
like
if
someone
just
uses
something
else
right.
A
They
have
either
a
great
experience
because
their
framework
is
not
as
complicated
as
rails
or
they
have
still
a
painful
experience,
because
they're
java,
10
years
old
or
50
years
old
framework
is
crazy.
Complicated
in
life
live
on
hundreds
of
environmental
variables
and
configurations,
so
the
experience
of
different
users
will
be
will
where
it
depends
on
what
framework
and
language
they
are
going
to
use.
B
A
Yeah,
I
hope
just
people
extend
it
while,
like
I
don't
know,
while
people
try
it,
they
submit
the
documentation
extended
with
such
hugs.
I
know
rail
saw
I
put
it
as
much
in
rails
as
I
can
like
this.
Half
of
this
is
not
necessary
if
I
just
run
rails
in
development
without
yeah,
without
cash
and
immigrations,
or
anything
like
that
right.
So.