[PLUG] Capture of CSV data

Nat Taylor bioborg at gmail.com
Tue Jun 24 19:47:17 UTC 2014


Here's a dockerfile for drupal, if you install docker then run the
dockerfile, you'll have a working instance of drupal in no time
https://github.com/ricardoamaro/docker-drupal


On Tue, Jun 24, 2014 at 12:42 PM, Nat Taylor <bioborg at gmail.com> wrote:

> Now, to add a little more overhead, if you don't want to install drupal on
> your local machine bare, you could either install it in virtualbox ( an
> apt-get install drupal7 on an ubuntu image is a pretty easy way to go, as
> long as you're willing to figure out where debianized drupal puts its
> modules directory ... )
>
> Or, create a Dockerfile with what you need in it and install drupal in a
> docker container...
>
>
> My solution seems kinda like chainsaw art to me, you could use a chisel,
> but a chainsaw might get it done quicker...
>
>
> On Tue, Jun 24, 2014 at 12:32 PM, Chuck Hast <wchast at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Rich,
>> Thank you for the info, here is sort of  straw man of my information
>>
>> IP Addy,       Machine, Location, Job,       Date,          Time
>> 172.20.80.3, ViC,         GGRS,   BY521,   2014.06.24, 09:44:05
>>
>> This is the data that maps to that IP address.
>>
>> As to seeing the area, as soon as my wife returns from Costa Rica
>> (she is down there dealing with family issues, her mother is in the
>> hospital right now) I want to take her to see Crater Lake, I have
>> been doing some weekend work down in the bay area and on my
>> return trips the air has been very clear, the last one was real nice
>> got a great shot of Crater lake from the air. Also the volcanos like
>> a string of white stones running north and south. So from the air
>> I can see that it is a fantastic area to go drive through.
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Jun 24, 2014 at 9:32 AM, Rich Shepard <rshepard at appl-ecosys.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>> > On Tue, 24 Jun 2014, Chuck Hast wrote:
>> >
>> > > The machine differentiation between same type machines is based on the
>> > > communications connection (IP address) so I assume that I would have a
>> > set
>> > > of descriptions for each machine, and the IP address is mapped to that
>> > > description. So when they view a given machine (IP address), the
>> machine
>> > > info should be presented as part of the page. That will include the
>> job
>> > > being run at that time. Each IS machine makes bottles for two
>> inspection
>> > > lines, there are 3 types of inspection machines on each line. A Side
>> Wall
>> > > Inspector, Base and Finish (sealing surface) inspector and a
>> Rotational
>> > > Inspector steps the bottles through 5 stations 3 of which rotate the
>> > > bottle to do various inspections. (this is my favourite machine). The
>> > data
>> > > stream I sampled to the list is from a Rotational Inspector. But the
>> data
>> > > from all of the machines is in the same format, and the other
>> machines in
>> > > the plant generate data in about the same format also.
>> >
>> > Chuck,
>> >
>> >    First step: list each nugget of information that is available. From
>> what
>> > you wrote above, I'd start the list with IP address, machine type,
>> machine
>> > location, job number, job type, inspection line, inspection type,
>> station
>> > number, station role, date, time.
>> >
>> > > But later on I came out when we fielded the system and I got to see
>> the
>> > > Portland area in the day.
>> >
>> >    Make the opportunity to drive through central and eastern Oregon,
>> too.
>> > Go
>> > to Burns, then take 205 south to French Glen and continue south to
>> Fields
>> > and Denio, NV. Just watch for cattle on the road! The dummies stand
>> there
>> > and look at you while you honk the horn at them. Calves are particularly
>> > stupid. If you catch it right, you'll see proghorn running across the
>> road,
>> > especially if you take OR 78 east from Burns across the Blue Mountains.
>> > IMHO
>> > it's really worth driving through fly-over country.
>> >
>> > Rich
>> >
>> > _______________________________________________
>> > PLUG mailing list
>> > PLUG at lists.pdxlinux.org
>> > http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
>> >
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>>
>> Chuck Hast  -- KP4DJT --
>> Glass, five thousand years of history and getting better.
>> The only container material that the USDA gives blanket approval on.
>> _______________________________________________
>> PLUG mailing list
>> PLUG at lists.pdxlinux.org
>> http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
>>
>
>



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