As per [their blog post of the 27th April](https://blog.readthedocs.com/securing-subdomains/) ‘Securing subdomains’:
> Starting today, Read the Docs will start hosting projects from subdomains on the domain readthedocs.io, instead of on readthedocs.org. This change addresses some security concerns around site cookies while hosting user generated data on the same domain as our dashboard.
Test Plan: Manually visited all the links I’ve modified.
Currently, this sample Makefile has problems if there are any
files/directories named init or test in the same directory as the
makefile. This commit adds a phony to the sample Makefile so that these
targets are not treated as files.
dictConfig expects a special `root` key outside of the `loggers` subdictionary in order to configure the root logger. I've tried the existing example code on python 2.7.5 and 3.5.1, and in neither case does the final log line produce any output (because the root logger remains set to `looging.WARN` by default).
Changing the example to use the `root` key causes the log message to appear properly.
The `root` key is explained in PEP391: https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0391/#dictionary-schema-detail
Quoting https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0257/#one-line-docstrings
"The docstring is a phrase ending in a period. It prescribes the function or method's effect as a command ("Do this", "Return that"), not as a description; e.g. don't write "Returns the pathname ...".
Quoting https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0257/#one-line-docstrings
The docstring is a phrase ending in a period. It prescribes the function or method's effect as a command ("Do this", "Return that"), not as a description; e.g. don't write "Returns the pathname ...".
As can be seen on the Homebrew website (http://brew.sh/), it seems that
Homebrew is now recommending that you install Homebrew by calling
`/usr/bin/ruby` instead of just `ruby`.
afaik Mule is an Enterprise Service Bus, which can be useful in enterprise application integration scenarios,
but imo it is really is not useful in the context of continuous integration of Python programs.