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Autres articles (61)

  • Des sites réalisés avec MediaSPIP

    2 mai 2011, par

    Cette page présente quelques-uns des sites fonctionnant sous MediaSPIP.
    Vous pouvez bien entendu ajouter le votre grâce au formulaire en bas de page.

  • La sauvegarde automatique de canaux SPIP

    1er avril 2010, par

    Dans le cadre de la mise en place d’une plateforme ouverte, il est important pour les hébergeurs de pouvoir disposer de sauvegardes assez régulières pour parer à tout problème éventuel.
    Pour réaliser cette tâche on se base sur deux plugins SPIP : Saveauto qui permet une sauvegarde régulière de la base de donnée sous la forme d’un dump mysql (utilisable dans phpmyadmin) mes_fichiers_2 qui permet de réaliser une archive au format zip des données importantes du site (les documents, les éléments (...)

  • Script d’installation automatique de MediaSPIP

    25 avril 2011, par

    Afin de palier aux difficultés d’installation dues principalement aux dépendances logicielles coté serveur, un script d’installation "tout en un" en bash a été créé afin de faciliter cette étape sur un serveur doté d’une distribution Linux compatible.
    Vous devez bénéficier d’un accès SSH à votre serveur et d’un compte "root" afin de l’utiliser, ce qui permettra d’installer les dépendances. Contactez votre hébergeur si vous ne disposez pas de cela.
    La documentation de l’utilisation du script d’installation (...)

Sur d’autres sites (6340)

  • How to write unit tests for your plugin – Introducing the Piwik Platform

    17 novembre 2014, par Thomas Steur — Development

    This is the next post of our blog series where we introduce the capabilities of the Piwik platform (our previous post was How to verify user permissions). This time you’ll learn how to write unit tests in Piwik. For this tutorial you will need to have basic knowledge of PHP, PHPUnit and the Piwik platform.

    When is a test a unit test ?

    There are many different opinions on this and it can be sometimes hard to decide. At Piwik we consider a test as a unit test if only a single method or class is being tested and if a test does not have a dependency to the filesystem, web, config, database or to any other plugin.

    If a test is slow it can be an indicator that it is not a unit test. “Slow” is of course a bit vague. We will cover how to write other type of tests, such as integration tests, in one of our next blog posts.

    Getting started

    In this post, we assume that you have already installed Piwik 2.9.0 or later via git, set up your development environment and created a plugin. If not, visit the Piwik Developer Zone where you’ll find the tutorial Setting up Piwik and other Guides that help you to develop a plugin.

    Let’s create a unit test

    We start by using the Piwik Console to create a new unit test :

    ./console generate:test --testtype unit

    The command will ask you to enter the name of the plugin the created test should belong to. I will use the plugin name “Insights”. Next it will ask you for the name of the test. Here you usually enter the name of the class you want to test. I will use “Widgets” in this example. There should now be a file plugins/Insights/tests/Unit/WidgetsTest.php which contains already an example to get you started easily :

    1. /**
    2.  * @group Insights
    3.  * @group WidgetsTest
    4.  * @group Plugins
    5.  */
    6. class WidgetsTest extends \PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase
    7. {
    8.  
    9.     public function testSimpleAddition()
    10.     {
    11.         $this->assertEquals(2, 1+1);
    12.     }
    13.  
    14. }

    Télécharger

    We don’t want to cover how you should write your unit test. This is totally up to you. If you have no experience in writing unit tests yet, we recommend to read articles on the topic, or a book, or to watch videos or anything else that will help you learn best.

    Running a test

    To run a test we will use the command tests:run which allows you to execute a test suite, a specific file or a group of tests.

    To verify whether the created test works we will run it as follows :

    ./console tests:run WidgetsTest

    This will run all tests having the group WidgetsTest. As other tests can use the same group you might want to pass the path to your test file instead :

    ./console tests:run plugins/Insights/tests/Unit/Widgets.php

    If you want to run all tests within your plugin pass the name of your plugin as an argument :

    ./console tests:run insights

    Of course you can also define multiple arguments :

    ./console tests:run insights WidgetsTest

    This will execute all tests within the insights plugin having the group WidgetsTest. If you only want to run unit tests within your plugin you can do the following :

    ./console tests:run insights unit

    Advanced features

    Isn’t it easy to create a unit test ? We never even created a file ! You can accomplish even more if you want : You can generate other type of tests, you can run tests on Amazon’s AWS and more. Unfortunately, not everything is documented yet so we recommend to discover more features by executing the commands ./console list tests and ./console help tests:run.

    If you have any feedback regarding our APIs or our guides in the Developer Zone feel free to send it to us.

  • How to write unit tests for your plugin – Introducing the Piwik Platform

    17 novembre 2014, par Thomas Steur — Development

    This is the next post of our blog series where we introduce the capabilities of the Piwik platform (our previous post was How to verify user permissions). This time you’ll learn how to write unit tests in Piwik. For this tutorial you will need to have basic knowledge of PHP, PHPUnit and the Piwik platform.

    When is a test a unit test ?

    There are many different opinions on this and it can be sometimes hard to decide. At Piwik we consider a test as a unit test if only a single method or class is being tested and if a test does not have a dependency to the filesystem, web, config, database or to any other plugin.

    If a test is slow it can be an indicator that it is not a unit test. “Slow” is of course a bit vague. We will cover how to write other type of tests, such as integration tests, in one of our next blog posts.

    Getting started

    In this post, we assume that you have already installed Piwik 2.9.0 or later via git, set up your development environment and created a plugin. If not, visit the Piwik Developer Zone where you’ll find the tutorial Setting up Piwik and other Guides that help you to develop a plugin.

    Let’s create a unit test

    We start by using the Piwik Console to create a new unit test :

    ./console generate:test --testtype unit

    The command will ask you to enter the name of the plugin the created test should belong to. I will use the plugin name “Insights”. Next it will ask you for the name of the test. Here you usually enter the name of the class you want to test. I will use “Widgets” in this example. There should now be a file plugins/Insights/tests/Unit/WidgetsTest.php which contains already an example to get you started easily :

    1. /**
    2.  * @group Insights
    3.  * @group WidgetsTest
    4.  * @group Plugins
    5.  */
    6. class WidgetsTest extends \PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase
    7. {
    8.  
    9.     public function testSimpleAddition()
    10.     {
    11.         $this->assertEquals(2, 1+1);
    12.     }
    13.  
    14. }

    Télécharger

    We don’t want to cover how you should write your unit test. This is totally up to you. If you have no experience in writing unit tests yet, we recommend to read articles on the topic, or a book, or to watch videos or anything else that will help you learn best.

    Running a test

    To run a test we will use the command tests:run which allows you to execute a test suite, a specific file or a group of tests.

    To verify whether the created test works we will run it as follows :

    ./console tests:run WidgetsTest

    This will run all tests having the group WidgetsTest. As other tests can use the same group you might want to pass the path to your test file instead :

    ./console tests:run plugins/Insights/tests/Unit/Widgets.php

    If you want to run all tests within your plugin pass the name of your plugin as an argument :

    ./console tests:run insights

    Of course you can also define multiple arguments :

    ./console tests:run insights WidgetsTest

    This will execute all tests within the insights plugin having the group WidgetsTest. If you only want to run unit tests within your plugin you can do the following :

    ./console tests:run insights unit

    Advanced features

    Isn’t it easy to create a unit test ? We never even created a file ! You can accomplish even more if you want : You can generate other type of tests, you can run tests on Amazon’s AWS and more. Unfortunately, not everything is documented yet so we recommend to discover more features by executing the commands ./console list tests and ./console help tests:run.

    If you have any feedback regarding our APIs or our guides in the Developer Zone feel free to send it to us.

  • AWS Lambda making video thumbnails

    5 février 2017, par Jesus

    I want make thumbnails from videos uploaded to S3, I know how to make it with Node.js and ffmpeg.

    According to this forum post I can add libraries :

    ImageMagick is the only external library that is currently provided by
    default, but you can include any additional dependencies in the zip
    file you provide when you create a Lambda function. Note that if this
    is a native library or executable, you will need to ensure that it
    runs on Amazon Linux.

    But how can I put static ffmpeg binary on aws lambda ?

    And how can I call from Node.js this static binary (ffmpeg) with AWS Lambda ?

    I’m newbie with amazon AWS and Linux

    Can anyone help me ?