76 lines
2.8 KiB
YAML
76 lines
2.8 KiB
YAML
uuid:
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- value: c58749a0-bec2-415b-aa25-33eca5cce8b7
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langcode:
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- value: en
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type:
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- target_id: daily_email
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target_type: node_type
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target_uuid: 8bde1f2f-eef9-4f2d-ae9c-96921f8193d7
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revision_timestamp:
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- value: '2025-05-11T09:00:16+00:00'
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revision_uid:
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- target_type: user
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target_uuid: b8966985-d4b2-42a7-a319-2e94ccfbb849
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revision_log: { }
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status:
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- value: true
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uid:
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- target_type: user
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target_uuid: b8966985-d4b2-42a7-a319-2e94ccfbb849
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title:
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- value: 'Releasing a new project one page at a time'
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created:
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- value: '2024-04-02T00:00:00+00:00'
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changed:
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- value: '2025-05-11T09:00:16+00:00'
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promote:
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- value: false
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sticky:
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- value: false
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default_langcode:
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- value: true
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revision_translation_affected:
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- value: true
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path:
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- alias: /daily/2024/04/02/releasing-a-new-project-one-page-at-a-time
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langcode: en
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body:
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- value: |
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<p>How do you release a new project?</p>
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<p>Do you build everything and release everything at once?</p>
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<p>I've used the strategy of building and releasing it a page at a time and running two versions simultaneously.</p>
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<p>The main live version stays running, and you use a tool like NGINX or Cloudflare as a gatekeeper to direct traffic to the correct application - either the current one or the new one - based on the requested page.</p>
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<p>When a page is ready, you add it to the list of pages to serve from the new application to put it live.</p>
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<p>If there's an issue, it is also easy to revert to the original page.</p>
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<p>I've used this approach with my website and for client Drupal upgrade projects, where some pages are on Drupal 7 and some on Drupal 10.</p>
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<p>It's not the right approach for every situation, but it's a useful one to have in the toolkit.</p>
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format: full_html
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processed: |
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<p>How do you release a new project?</p>
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<p>Do you build everything and release everything at once?</p>
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<p>I've used the strategy of building and releasing it a page at a time and running two versions simultaneously.</p>
|
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|
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<p>The main live version stays running, and you use a tool like NGINX or Cloudflare as a gatekeeper to direct traffic to the correct application - either the current one or the new one - based on the requested page.</p>
|
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<p>When a page is ready, you add it to the list of pages to serve from the new application to put it live.</p>
|
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<p>If there's an issue, it is also easy to revert to the original page.</p>
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<p>I've used this approach with my website and for client Drupal upgrade projects, where some pages are on Drupal 7 and some on Drupal 10.</p>
|
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<p>It's not the right approach for every situation, but it's a useful one to have in the toolkit.</p>
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summary: null
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field_daily_email_cta: { }
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