I had the chance to finally sit down and find a way to inspect TLS traffic flowing out of an application running on my machine. Although I did not invent anything, I needed to put together a lot of different tricks in order to succeed, and the documentation I could find online regarding this process is scattered, at best. So, here we are with a guide on “how to inspect TLS encrypted traffic without going nuts”. Hope you enjoy!
We are happy to announce the release of the Koyeb CLI 3.0! This release brings three crucial improvements: Smoother flow for creating and updating services, reworked error messages to ease troubleshooting, and a new foundation to continue building out our CLI. If you want to get started using the Koyeb CLI to deploy your services and applications worldwide directly from your terminal, read the Koyeb CLI documentation and CLI reference.
Azure Web Apps are like the best pizza delivery in town – fast, consistent, and always there when you need them. But like any good pizzeria, they need to be load tested to handle the maximum user load, especially during peak times like the big Saturday night rush.
It’s no surprise that cloud spending is rapidly increasing, so it’s also no surprise that controlling those rapidly increasing cloud costs is a top priority for business, technology, and data leaders. According to Gartner, the use of public cloud computing has increased IT spending for most organizations (54%) over the last three years, with only 29% reporting that the cloud decreased IT spending.
One of the hardest debates is deciding between a code-first API approach or design-first. In an ideal world, we would deliver our APIs at maximum velocity, with minimum maintenance. To maintain the appropriate API consumption, the world has looked at Amazon’s API Gateway as the orchestration of resources to create, deploy, and manage APIs at scale. One of the biggest challenges users face when using any API Gateway is the lack of consistency and standardization throughout the API experience.