atlas-migration-toolkit | help users migrate their MongoDB Community | Collaboration library

 by   wbleonard JavaScript Version: Current License: No License

kandi X-RAY | atlas-migration-toolkit Summary

kandi X-RAY | atlas-migration-toolkit Summary

atlas-migration-toolkit is a JavaScript library typically used in Web Site, Collaboration, MongoDB applications. atlas-migration-toolkit has no bugs, it has no vulnerabilities and it has low support. You can download it from GitHub.

A set of tools to help users migrate their MongoDB Community workloads to Atlas
Support
    Quality
      Security
        License
          Reuse

            kandi-support Support

              atlas-migration-toolkit has a low active ecosystem.
              It has 4 star(s) with 1 fork(s). There are 1 watchers for this library.
              OutlinedDot
              It had no major release in the last 6 months.
              atlas-migration-toolkit has no issues reported. There are no pull requests.
              It has a neutral sentiment in the developer community.
              The latest version of atlas-migration-toolkit is current.

            kandi-Quality Quality

              atlas-migration-toolkit has no bugs reported.

            kandi-Security Security

              atlas-migration-toolkit has no vulnerabilities reported, and its dependent libraries have no vulnerabilities reported.

            kandi-License License

              atlas-migration-toolkit does not have a standard license declared.
              Check the repository for any license declaration and review the terms closely.
              OutlinedDot
              Without a license, all rights are reserved, and you cannot use the library in your applications.

            kandi-Reuse Reuse

              atlas-migration-toolkit releases are not available. You will need to build from source code and install.
              Installation instructions are not available. Examples and code snippets are available.

            Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA

            kandi's functional review helps you automatically verify the functionalities of the libraries and avoid rework.
            Currently covering the most popular Java, JavaScript and Python libraries. See a Sample of atlas-migration-toolkit
            Get all kandi verified functions for this library.

            atlas-migration-toolkit Key Features

            No Key Features are available at this moment for atlas-migration-toolkit.

            atlas-migration-toolkit Examples and Code Snippets

            No Code Snippets are available at this moment for atlas-migration-toolkit.

            Community Discussions

            QUESTION

            Back to Collaborate from Plastic SCM
            Asked 2022-Mar-10 at 08:58

            I want to turn off the Plastic SCM and start using Collaborate as it was before. We are get used to it and we don't need Plastic SCM. I turned off Plactic SCM in its preferences, turned on Collaborate and I get this error

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2022-Mar-10 at 08:58

            Collaborate is going to be deprecated very soon and I'm afraid once an organization is migrated to Plastic SCM, you cannot go back.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/71416665

            QUESTION

            Github allow all visitors to change one specific sub-directory
            Asked 2022-Feb-25 at 02:05

            I have a Github repository where I want to put ideas from Redditors into one big file. I want to be the only one who can edit the master file, but I do want the Redditors to create there own files and edit them inside of a subdirectory of the Github repository. How can I do this?

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2022-Feb-25 at 02:05

            You're going to need to have to accept pull requests from users' independent forks in order to do this. GitHub doesn't offer a way to let arbitrary people modify any part of your repository, since that is usually not what people want, and in any event, it would be prone to serious abuse and spam problems. GitHub also doesn't offer restrictions on only a part of a repository, because as a practical matter Git doesn't support that and it couldn't be effectively enforced.

            Accepting pull requests to files in that directory will allow people to contribute without letting them make arbitrary changes to the repository. You can, if you like, set up CI to allow people to only add files instead of modifying files or other similar kinds of policies.

            You can of course set up a wiki if you want and use that, and then you can take the ideas out of there and put them into the repository as you'd like them to be.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/71253890

            QUESTION

            Is there a package in R that mimics KEDRO as a modular collaborative framework for development?
            Asked 2021-Dec-15 at 15:15

            I currently work with Kedro (from quantum black https://kedro.readthedocs.io/en/stable/01_introduction/01_introduction.html) as a framework for deployment oriented framework to code collaboratively. It is a great framework to develop machine learning in a team.

            I am looking for an R equivalent.

            My main issue is that I have teams of data scientists that develop in R, but each team is developing in different formats.

            I wanted to make them follow a common framework to develop deployment ready R code, easy to work on in 2 or 3-people teams.

            Any suggestions are welcome

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Dec-15 at 15:10

            Not on a very prominent scale as kedro but i can think of the below :

            1. Local project of a R Expert : https://github.com/Jeniffen/projectr
            2. Pipeliner on Tidyverse : https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/pipeliner/index.html

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/70365836

            QUESTION

            Is there an alternative for GIT or a fast workflow for small teams?
            Asked 2021-Aug-14 at 06:18

            We are a small team (2 Developers, 1 Graphist) working on android studio projects and we are using GitLab. The Thing is we found that classic approach of adding feature by Branching & then Merge request not ideal for our circumstance. We tend to make changes on a daily basis and do it fast.

            My colleague told me about a workflow which he had used in past, it's something like : you lock the part of code you want to work on, then no one can change it even if they don't know you have locked it and by the time they try to add/edit/delete something that is locked, they can't, and when you are finished, you can unlock it and now others can make changes.

            My question is :
            1. Is there any other option rather than git, which you have a kind of source controller and there is no ( / rarely) need to prune on daily basis?
            2. If git is the only way, Is there a fast workflow aside from Branch --> Add new feature --> merge?
            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Aug-14 at 06:18

            You can always directly push to your main branch (usually "master"), then there is no need to create branches. However, I strongly recommend to let the rest of the team review your changes before pushing them to "master". This means that you need to create branches and merge requests. It might seem inconvenient at first but maybe you just need the right workflow.

            Instead of checking out short-lived branches all the time you can always stay on the same local Git branch, committing early and often, but only push "good" commits.

            Let's say your local branch contains 10 commits.

            • 6 commits are ready for review / merge
            • the remaining 4 commits are WIP, you'd like to amend them before pushing them.

            Then you can use git rebase -i (or the faster alternative git revise -i) to reorder your branch so the "good" commits come first. Then you can use this command to push them to a new branch on GitLab, which allows you to create a merge request:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/68780487

            QUESTION

            Does anyone know how to easily collaborate in real time in Tableau?
            Asked 2021-May-07 at 01:33

            I'm working on a data viz project with a team of four. We're using the same merged data sets and regularly make modifications to them (e.g. delete invalid data, make data names consistent, and otherwise clean the data). Does anyone know a good way we effectively can work together remotely using the same data source?

            If the answer isn't Tableau, that's fine too. We're using it now, but are open to other tools.

            Thank you for your help!

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-May-03 at 19:53

            One way could be , Install Tableau Desktop on RDP/Remote Desktop and instead of making changes on local computer do the changes on it. In this way every one can login and see what have been implemented and deleted so far.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67278078

            QUESTION

            Remote Pair Programming for IntelliJ
            Asked 2020-Nov-17 at 09:57

            Is there a free way to use IntelliJ when pair-programming?

            My question is similar to this question which is 10 years old with Remote Pair Programming in IntelliJ but I was hoping for a more updated answer since many links like screenhero on that question are now broken. I use special libraries that only exist in IntelliJ so using VSC Liveshare is out of the question and I have no where else to ask so please do not close this question for reputation points from closing a question, many people have this question and with COVID + transition to work online this is more important than ever.

            SO has a perfect audience to see questions and answers like this one. Questions on the SO are not only about code itself but also SO should be a place for: "a specific programming problem" or "software tools commonly used by programmers" or "a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development" In other words, I strongly disagree with closing questions like this, especially that these tools evolve. – Sławomir Lenart

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2020-Nov-13 at 14:46

            QUESTION

            R package for post js load webscraping without relying on an external headless browser
            Asked 2020-Jul-20 at 18:06

            I need to scrape content and sniff network activity from an asynchronous web page using R. The problem is that in my team we work both on Mac and Windows machines on a project directory shared via github.

            This creates quite some problem in using external headless browsers via RSelenium (mac/windows path differences, different locations of executables, dynamic number of collaborators).

            So an ideal solution would be to use some simple headless browser written directly in R and installed as a package, so that we don't have to take care of OS support, location, etc...

            Does such a package exist?

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2020-Jul-20 at 18:06

            Looks like there are now solutions to do this through packages like https://github.com/rstudio/chromote or https://github.com/RLesur/crrri without installing any headless browser since recently Chrome exposes an API for interacting with it.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/62997386

            QUESTION

            Live collaboration with another person on the same .py file?
            Asked 2020-Apr-24 at 12:19

            I am trying to work on the same .py file as my friend. I am looking for the Google Docs of coding (being able to see each other's changes live). How can I do it? Is there a plugin for PyCharm or Sublime Text 3 (preferably Sublime)? Thanks

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2020-Apr-24 at 12:19

            QUESTION

            Basic Question About Collaboration and Tools for iOS App Development
            Asked 2020-Apr-14 at 17:57

            Hi I am trying to make an app on iOS with a few of my friends. None of us have any experience developing for iOS. I have three logistical questions:

            1. What are common tools used to collaborate on iOS development? (i.e. how can we work together even though we are all remote at the moment)
            2. What is a common way development teams break up app development?
            3. Is it necessary for all team members to have macs or is there a workaround?
            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2020-Apr-14 at 17:57
            1. Github is the most popular versioning tool and quite handy to collaborate with so I would go for that. But you can pick whichever you want.
            2. You can use whatever methodology you want, Agile is good & popular so if you expand your team later on that's a good pick.
            3. Team members that do not use Xcode (designers for example) do not specially need macs. Otherwise, team developers do need macs since XCode runs only on OS X.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/61213720

            QUESTION

            How to elegantly collaborate in Apps Script?
            Asked 2020-Feb-26 at 20:01

            So I'm on a team of 2-3 developers who will be primarily working with Apps Script connected to Google Sheets.

            I've looked into various tools/workflows but there seems to be no elegant way for two people to work on the same Apps Script file at the same time:

            • If two people are both editing the same file on the online editor and save their changes, only one set of changes is carried over with the other being overwritten. This makes sense but I was hoping for a Google docs-like experience when multiple editors were working on the same file.
            • Developing locally and version controlling with git is also not a great option as to iteratively make changes and test those changes requires it to be on the cloud (because of our Google Sheets dependency). You can not make changes locally and test to see the effect of those changes without doing a clasp push call each time and then running the code in the native Apps Script GUI on the cloud.
            • I've read the Apps Script documentation pretty thoroughly (deployments, versionsing, collaboration, etc.) but nothing stands out as a elegant solution to this problem (seems to summarize "Use a shared Google Drive" and "Use git"...).

            I'd be curious as to whether anyone has had experience working on a team environment with App Script and what workflows ended up being used. How do teams have 2+ people work on the same file while also allowing rapid iteration without the friction of needing to call clasp pull/push every iteration? Or is this unavoidable?

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2020-Feb-26 at 20:01

            Long story short, you can't. There are many challenges and security issues. For example, if the script is tied to a trigger owned by an individual and uses certain copes like Gmail/Drive, you do not want to give others edit access to the script cause that will inadvertently give them access to the individuals other Google data (like Gmail/Drive).

            The current version of the online editor does not support collaboration like you're describing. There is a new version of the IDE coming but who knows when that will happen and if it'll address this functionality.

            You could use clasp run to run the code locally but that may not work elegantly with all use-cases. Plus, it still requires you to do clasp push first.

            You can have multiple folks edit/collaborate but not at the same time. :/ Not that I have seen. It's a huge struggle for me.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/60420796

            Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network

            Vulnerabilities

            No vulnerabilities reported

            Install atlas-migration-toolkit

            You can download it from GitHub.

            Support

            For any new features, suggestions and bugs create an issue on GitHub. If you have any questions check and ask questions on community page Stack Overflow .
            Find more information at:

            Find, review, and download reusable Libraries, Code Snippets, Cloud APIs from over 650 million Knowledge Items

            Find more libraries
            CLONE
          • HTTPS

            https://github.com/wbleonard/atlas-migration-toolkit.git

          • CLI

            gh repo clone wbleonard/atlas-migration-toolkit

          • sshUrl

            git@github.com:wbleonard/atlas-migration-toolkit.git

          • Stay Updated

            Subscribe to our newsletter for trending solutions and developer bootcamps

            Agree to Sign up and Terms & Conditions

            Share this Page

            share link

            Explore Related Topics

            Consider Popular Collaboration Libraries

            discourse

            by discourse

            excalidraw

            by excalidraw

            forem

            by forem

            flarum

            by flarum

            community

            by kubernetes

            Try Top Libraries by wbleonard

            atlas-user-migration

            by wbleonardPython

            mongo_db_stats

            by wbleonardPython

            github-playground

            by wbleonardJavaScript

            stitch-api-react

            by wbleonardJavaScript

            atlas-connection-analysis

            by wbleonardPython