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Stack Overflow has been, and continues to be, a great source of knowledge for problems I never thought would have simple answers.

For example, I've struggled with a nagging problem for a while, involving a family of websites I've been maintaining. Deployment is done via manually copying files to the site via FTP, but some of the pages are generated via an in-house CMS, and some are built by an admin tool and used as shared components of other pages.

When making changes that span all pages, I thought there was no way to search through all the CMS-generated and component files to find any missing lines or missed updates. In addition, I was struggling with figuring out if any deployed files were missed during our painstaking manual FTP deployment procedure.

That is, until I found this answerthis answer, and realized I could just grep it. Derp.

That's going in my favorites, my bookmarks, and my on-screen sticky notes for sure. Finally, the one piece of deployment verification I've been desperately missing is there.

Thanks, Stack Overflow!

Stack Overflow has been, and continues to be, a great source of knowledge for problems I never thought would have simple answers.

For example, I've struggled with a nagging problem for a while, involving a family of websites I've been maintaining. Deployment is done via manually copying files to the site via FTP, but some of the pages are generated via an in-house CMS, and some are built by an admin tool and used as shared components of other pages.

When making changes that span all pages, I thought there was no way to search through all the CMS-generated and component files to find any missing lines or missed updates. In addition, I was struggling with figuring out if any deployed files were missed during our painstaking manual FTP deployment procedure.

That is, until I found this answer, and realized I could just grep it. Derp.

That's going in my favorites, my bookmarks, and my on-screen sticky notes for sure. Finally, the one piece of deployment verification I've been desperately missing is there.

Thanks, Stack Overflow!

Stack Overflow has been, and continues to be, a great source of knowledge for problems I never thought would have simple answers.

For example, I've struggled with a nagging problem for a while, involving a family of websites I've been maintaining. Deployment is done via manually copying files to the site via FTP, but some of the pages are generated via an in-house CMS, and some are built by an admin tool and used as shared components of other pages.

When making changes that span all pages, I thought there was no way to search through all the CMS-generated and component files to find any missing lines or missed updates. In addition, I was struggling with figuring out if any deployed files were missed during our painstaking manual FTP deployment procedure.

That is, until I found this answer, and realized I could just grep it. Derp.

That's going in my favorites, my bookmarks, and my on-screen sticky notes for sure. Finally, the one piece of deployment verification I've been desperately missing is there.

Thanks, Stack Overflow!

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Shotgun Ninja
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Stack Overflow has been, and continues to be, a great source of knowledge for problems I never thought would have simple answers.

For example, I've struggled with a nagging problem for a while, involving a family of websites I've been maintaining. Deployment is done via manually copying files to the site via FTP, but some of the pages are generated via an in-house CMS, and some are built by an admin tool and used as shared components of other pages.

When making changes that span all pages, I thought there was no way to search through all the CMS-generated and component files to find any missing lines or missed updates. In addition, I was struggling with figuring out if any deployed files were missed during our painstaking manual FTP deployment procedure.

That is, until I found this answer, and realized I could just grep it. Derp.

That's going in my favorites, my bookmarks, and my on-screen sticky notes for sure. Finally, the one piece of deployment verification I've been desperately missing is there.

Thanks, Stack Overflow!