However, deploying Rails apps was always the weak spot. I remember being blown away by the demos of “let’s build a blog from zero in a few minutes” but was always frustrated that the same developer elegance didn’t extend to the deployment side of things. Things like Passenger (née mod_rails) and Litespeed eventually helped by bringing a sort of PHP-like “just copy my code to a remote directory” method of deployment, but I still remember pushing stuff out with non-trivial Capistrano configs or hand-rolled Ansible playbooks to handle deployments, migrations and restarts. And then there were all the extra supporting components that would inevitably be required at each step along the way.
No, that video of Kai Trump on a runway isn’t a “war selfie” from the Iran conflict"It's just a reminder that she's of legal age to sign up and serve her country."
,这一点在safew中也有详细论述
Credit: Haley Henschel / Mashable
My experience is that it is so shit-hot—and fast as f…errari—the vast majority of the time that the nett gain over just doing it yourself manually is still great.