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When I Google this, I find many places that recommend using the PluralSight tool to generate a certificate, but this tool is no longer available.
Does anyone know of another tool that will easily create and install a certificate?
Edit:
Tool available in a new URL: Plural-sight self cert tool.
You can use openssl to create self signed certificates. Several tutorial are available, following being one of them.
http://www.akadia.com/services/ssh_test_certificate.html
If you are looking for an admin tool you already got some good answers; however if you need to generate certificates from code here are a couple alternatives you can try out (full disclosure: I am a developer for these products), Versile Python (Git repos: python 2, python 3) and Versile Java (Git repo). They do not fully implement X.509, but enough to create basic certificates including some of the main certificate extensions.
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Is there a website or tutorial to have a "Hello World" and more for demandware?
Where can I find the demand ware api documentation
Is there someway to have free server access, for training purpose ?
I already installed Eclipse and UX plugin..
Thanks
The main resources for such queries would be
https://xchange.demandware.com/community/developer
https://documentation.demandware.com
Both require that you have a valid Demandware XChange account.
It should be possible to request such by Demandware support.
There is no free server access as far as I am aware. To get a sandbox, you need to have an active subscription for Demandware SaaS.
It may be the case that your employer/client already has one, so it may be good to check with them.
It's a pay-to-play kind of model, so you can't really learn it without having an enterprise account with DW. If you do have one, you can get access to xchange where there are lots of training videos and documents....but basically it's just like NodeJS with some DW-specific calls and some, optional, funky flow chart things.
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As titled, I'm finding for a software can be installed on my own server, to replace for google apps.
I'm open to commercial solution, the point is I want to keep the data on my own server.
Any advice is appreciated
Okie doke. This is actually pretty challenging -- you're asking for online editing, which is very cloud-oriented, but using a private server. If all you wanted was file services, then you'd have a lot of options -- OwnCloud.org is a personal favorite, but there are a bunch.
If you really want to be able to edit online but save to a private server, SharePoint comes to mind first. Alfresco and its ilk are also out there, but that's enterprise-oriented. There are theoretically some ways to use OpenOffice programs in a browser (see also this) but I've never seen them in action.
Hope that gets you started. Good luck.
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I need a patch utility which generates an exe file from the differences of 2 binaries. Then, end-users only need to run that exe file, point to the old version and apply patch.
I finally found it on my own. It's diablo2oo2's Universal Patcher - [dUP]
I've used xdelta or bsdiff before for very similar purposes. Unlike the standard diff tool, these tools will work properly with binary files. (As your post implies Windows, there are Windows ports available for each of these - or you can use Cygwin.)
These tools won't create a patching exe for you, however. You could still use these tools to get the difference of the binary files, then package everything into an exe to your requirements. I'm not personally and specifically aware of any tool that does all of what you're looking for - but I believe they exist, and most of them are probably commercial products - and giving specific product recommendations is off-topic for SO.
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Does anyone know of a free build server service to coincide with scm/forum/issue tracking services such as sourceforge/googlecode?
Obviously hudson/jenkins service would be my first preference related to primarily java/maven2, but anything would be nice!
Thanks!
Cloudbees has an offering for FOSS projects.
Another one (especially for public Github repos): http://travis-ci.org/
Researching the same thing currently, I stumbled over jenkinshosting.com (reported as suspicious site, Aug2012)- Jenkins build server, free for FOSS. Haven't tried it yet, though.
Atlassian offers licensed and on-demand products to open-source projects. Bamboo may be included.
https://www.atlassian.com/software/views/open-source-license-request
A TeamCity based server farm is available for open source projects through http://teamcity.codebetter.com/. Read the announcement.
Another option for OSS is http://www.appveyor.com/, which is including support for Windows 8.1 store apps.
Jenkinshosting.com use to offer free open source hosting. It's worth checking out to see if it's still continued.
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There are many free online Source Control available but I would like to know your experience on it, if any, and which is the best one?
Me and my friend are starting a small test project and would like some really good online source control.
We will be developing ASP.Net app.
If you're just after a hosted source code repository:
Github
Bitbucket
If you need issue tracking, file releases, wikis, mailing lists, etc:
Sourceforge
Google Code Hosting
I've got one project at Sourceforge, and I find the amenities quite nice. You might find this comparison handy.
I'm using Unfuddle for some personal stuff to avoid issues with corporate firewalls.
You can commit over http with them.
Otherwise, use Github as already suggested.