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Phil (aka MP3Monster)'s Blog

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Phil (aka MP3Monster)'s Blog

Category Archives: development

Oracle Cloud + GitHub Actions

05 Monday Jul 2021

Posted by mp3monster in Cloud, development, General, Oracle, Technology

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Tags

@oracledevs, @soacommunity, actions, always free, arm, CICD, Cloud, flake8, free, GitHub, OCI, Oracle, pytest, python, unit test

While there is a deserved amount of publicity around the introduction of ARM compute onto OCI with the ARM Ampere CPU offering, and the amazing level of always free compute being provided (24GB of memory and 4 cores which can be used in any combination of servers). There have been some interesting announcements that perhaps haven’t drawn as much attention that they deserve. This includes OCI support for GitHub Actions, plus several new DevOps services and an Artifact Registry. We’ll comeback to the new services in another post. Today, let’s look at GitHub Actions.

Continue reading →

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Extracting Dependencies and Versions for a Node Solution

15 Monday Feb 2021

Posted by mp3monster in development, NodeJS Cloud, Technology

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Tags

jason, JQ, node.js, npm, parser

We have had a requirement from a customer to be able define every package including dependencies within a Node solution (as it happens Apollo GraphQL), not only the complete download path but the version numbering as well. There are many ways to solve this problem. But here is an elegant(?) and portable answer. To ensure that we don’t get pollution from a global node space we created a project package in an empty folder using:

 npm init --yes

This defaults all the package,json settings which for our requirements is fine. Then in the same location its npm install <product from the npm registry to pull> e.g. for Apollo GraphQL:

npm install apollo-server graphql

This will bring down to your npm project all the dependencies putting them in the node_modules child folder. We’re now in a position to retrieve all the details of the packages, their dependencies and version information. This can be done by using the command:

npm list --json
Continue reading →

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Virtual Developer Meetups

15 Monday Jun 2020

Posted by mp3monster in Cloud, Dev Meetup, development, General, Oracle, Technology

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Tags

charity, development, hackerthon, meetup, Oracle

With the impact of Covid19 on the Meetup community really hitting, the Oracle Developer Meetups across Europe have got together and gone on-line. We’re several events in now, whilst Lucas Jellema (AMIS) and Rolando Carrasco (SPS) are leading the charge with a great series of sessions focusing Oracle Cloud Native services complete with practical labs.

Today was one of my sessions, whilst I only co-hosted, we got to hear a great presentation with a heart warming story which in this challenging times seems all the more appropriate. Christian McCabe (Steltix) and Filip Huysmans (Contribute) presented on how a multinational hackerthon spanning South Africa to Belgium was put together to only help children of Christel House (a charity who work to provide education to those who would not normally get access to it). Not only was the hackerthon engineered to given the students a chance to learn and experience software development in a pretty realistic context, it also provided the school with some software to help their everyday activities, in this case managing books in their library.

The hackerthon yielded a lot of successful outcomes (Steltix wrote about it here), but, what was really interesting is that whilst working with the school, children and interns (from both Steltix and Contribute) took a lot lessons away as well.

The Meetup recording can be found here.

Finally we should thank Geertjan Wielenga who facilitated and supported the development of the hackerthon.

If you want to know more about the virtual meetups then check our meetup page (https://www.meetup.com/Oracle-Developer-Meetup-London) for both virtual events, and when things change so we can all be a lot closer and be sharing pizza again.

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GraphQL Mindmap

29 Saturday Feb 2020

Posted by mp3monster in APIs & microservices, Books, development, mindmap, Technology

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

API, book, GraphQL, mindmap

We’ve added a new mindmap to our catalogue here. This covers the core of GraphQL. The catalogue contains both the image and a Word representation. The map is built based on a reading of Learning GraphQL by Eve Porcello  & Alex Banks on O’Reilly.

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Developer Meetup – JavaScript Frameworks and Web Components

17 Monday Feb 2020

Posted by mp3monster in Dev Meetup, development, General, Oracle, Technology

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Tags

@GeertjanW, code, developer, enterprise, framework, javascript, JET, meetup, toolket

Last night was the latest in #OracleDeveloperMeetups in London. The evening’s focus was on JavaScript Frameworks, Toolkits and Web Components.  Whilst the event is sponsored by Oracle the focus is very much on the challenges of JavaScript Frameworks.

Thanks to the Oracle and Cap Gemini teams including @GeertjanW and @PhilConsultant for an excellent session in London on Oracle Jet @OracleJET this evening. Very insightful. #oracledevelopermeetup

— David Archbold (@archbold_david) February 17, 2020

Continue reading →

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Security Vulnerabilities in Solution Deployment

04 Saturday Jan 2020

Posted by mp3monster in development, General, Technology

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Tags

CNCF, deployment, Oracle, Owasp, Security, software, TUF, update framework, updating

To varying degrees, most techies are aware of the security vulnerabilities identified in the OWASP Top 10 (SQL Injection, trying to homebrew Identity management etc), although I still sometimes have conversations where I feel the need to get the yellow or red card out. But the bottom line is that these risks are perhaps more appreciated because it is easier to understand external entities attacking seeking direct attacks to disrupt or access information. But there are often subtler and at least more costly to repair attacks such as internal attacks and indirect attacks such as compromising software deployment mechanisms.

This, later attack Is not a new risk, as you can see from the following links, been recognised by the security community for some time (you can find academic papers going back 10+ years looking at the security risks for Yum and RPM for example).

  • Survivable Key Compromise in Software Update Systems
  • Consequences of Insecure Software Updates
  • Attacks on Package Manager
  • The Problem of Package Manager Trust

But software is becoming ever more pervasive, we’re more aware than ever that maintaining software to the latest releases means that known vulnerabilities are closed. As a result, we have seen a proliferation in mechanisms to recognise the need to update and deploying updates. 10 years ago, updating frameworks where typically small in number and linked to vendors who could/had to invest in making the mechanisms as a secure as possible – think Microsoft, Red Hat. However we have seen this proliferate, any browser worthy of attention has automated updating let alone the wider software tools. As development has become more polyglot every language has its central repos of framework libraries (maven central, npm, chocolatey ….). Add to this the growth in multi-cloud and emphasis on micro deployments to support microservices and the deployment landscape gets larger and ever more complex and therefore vulnerable.

What to do?

Continue reading →

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Popping Up on the Net and more

28 Friday Jun 2019

Posted by mp3monster in APIs & microservices, Books, Dev Meetup, development, General, Oracle, Packt, Technology

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Tags

API, blog, books, developer, interview, meetup, Oracle

It’s been a quiet month for this blog, but I’ve been pretty busy with a raft of other activities…

  • a recent article on our sister site – oracle-integration.cloud on  RPA.
  • I also appear in an interview with K21 Academy here.
  • 4186btedcpl._sx403_bo1204203200_Reviewing a new book on Enterprise API Management for Packt which we would very highly recommend if you want to understand the more Enterprise perspectives of adopting APIs, particularly if you’re considering APIs as a potential new revenue stream.
  • UK Oracle User Group committees for TechFest (having been reviewing the paper submissions it looks like it’s going to be an excellent conference in December) and Southern Summit (next week).
  • Just launched a number of sessions for the Oracle London Developer Meetup, with another to be announced soon (Blockchain) and potentially two more before the end of the year (we’re working on the speakers now).

ch-1
meetup-monitoring

 

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Oracle Groundbreakers Podcast – Helidon

21 Sunday Apr 2019

Posted by mp3monster in APIs & microservices, development, General, Helidon, Oracle, Podcasts, Technology

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Tags

groundbreakers, Helidon, meetup, podcast

One of the things I am fortunate enough to get involved with on occasion is the Oracle Groundbreakers Podcast (previously known as the Oracle Developer Podcast) and something I have written about in the past, even as Oracle Developer Community (ODC) Appreciation Day post.

As a result of the recent Meetups on the subject of Helidon that have been occurring recently, we made the suggestion that Helidon is the subject of a Groundbreaker’s Podcast, net result I was invited to be part of the panel.  The podcast was recorded a few weeks ago, and know available (here). Go check it out, as it includes the key contributors to the project Dmitry Kornilov and Tomas Langer.

GBPodcast-image-365

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Oracle Developer Meetup – London Feb 19

05 Tuesday Feb 2019

Posted by mp3monster in Dev Meetup, development, General, Helidon, Oracle, Technology

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

developer, GitHub, Helidon, meetup, micro profile, Microservices, open tracing, Oracle, signatures

Last night was the first Oracle Developer Meetup in London for 2019.  We were very fortunate to have Tomas Langer fly over to talk about the new micro container/framework being developed as an open-source solution by Oracle.

 

Oracle Developer Meet-up - Tomas Langer presenting on Helidon

Tomas, opened by explaining the evolution of the micro-profile being championed by the Eclipse Foundation who are now the guardians of J2EE also known as Jakarta and how the J2EE and Micro-Profile standards compare (in simplistic terms – micro-profile is J2EE stripped back to be simple and support what is typically needed in a micro-service world).

The presentation then went onto compare Helidon SE and Helidon MP (micro-profile).  What was really pleasing is that with a couple of exceptions everything that Helidon MP can do, can be done in the SE edition, the difference being that for SE you have to implement more code, rather than the auto-magic of annotations, but in return you have a Reactive Java platform with a development paradigm which relates to JavaScript Express.

In addition to talking about what can be done, Tomas described the kinds of features being developed, this includes:

  • Bringing micro-profile support up to the very latest specification,
  • More reactive persistence technologies support,

With the scene set, Tomas then worked through a series of live code scenarios starting with a clean slate and building Hello World in both the SE & MP models illustrating the differences in approach.  This was then built upon to add the following capabilities:

  • Tracing (using Zipkin leveraging the Open Tracing Standard)
  • Dynamic configuration
  • Security (including Signatures)
  • Fault Handling (just MP)

You can get the complete example which uses Helidon in both configurations from Tomas GitHub.

In addition to Helidon itself on GitHub, there are resources provided include rich documentation and examples of each key feature.  Plus a Slack community, that if you contact any of the Helidon team will get you invited allowing you to discuss with the development team how to do things along with other developers using Helidon.

Tomas can be contracted via @Langer_Tomas.  Helidon project also has its own Twitter account – Helidon Project

Helidon itself can be found at:

  • Helidon website
  • GitHub
  • Helidon documentation

I have previously blogged on Helidon at Exploring Helidon – Part 1

 

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London Oracle Developer Meet-up – November 18

19 Monday Nov 2018

Posted by mp3monster in development, General

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

IaaS, infrastructure, Microservices, monolith, OCI, Oracle, Terraform

Another Oracle Developer Meet-up took place in London yesterday. This meet-up focused on Terraform and Microservices. The summary of the evening slides:

Oracle London Developer Meetup November 2018 from Phil Wilkins

Chris Hollies’ slides can be found at here.  As demo’s aren’t included in the deck, the following videos are alternatives:

Our second session, that I presented on how we can establish paths of transition that make it easy to adopt microservices. The presentation material for this is available here:

Microservices in a Monolith World from Phil Wilkins

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