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Are there production applications in Angular2?
Are there production applications in Angular2? I would like to see the full application. I myself am not a frontend developer, but there was a need to develop a corporate application, we are looking towards Angular, but the authorities, having learned about Angular2, were instructed to deal with this issue. Should I look towards the second version?
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Yes, I have.
Through developer preview and alpha we've worked closely with several large projects here at Google including AdWords, GreenTea (Google's internal CRM system), and Google Fiber. In fact, just a few weeks ago we saw Google Fiber launch on their new Angular 2 code base.
Externally, we've worked closely with several other teams integrating with Angular 2 including Ionic Framework on Ionic 2, Telerik on NativeScript, Rangle.io on Batarangle, and many others.
angularjs.blogspot.com.by/2015/12/angular-2-beta.html
Actually, it makes sense to watch, especially if you still have at least 3-4 months before the release. The main problem with angular2 is that it is still in beta, the documentation is there but not fully completed, there are still changes in the API and discussions of new goodies. And most importantly - the infrastructure will be pulled up for at least another half a year. Although the main things will be available soon.
Well, yes, if you take Angular 1.5, angular / router and babel (or typescript, which is useful for large projects), read things like ngUpgrade, etc. then you can start developing on angular 1.5 now and then migrate to 2.0 if you need features like isomorphism, etc. Or maybe it’s even easier to take React with a ready-made infrastructure.
Colleagues, thank you very much for your thoughts and advice.
Everything was decided like this:
1. At first, I raised Bridges between physics and EoIP tunnel on CentOS on each piece of iron.
2. Landed all EoIP tunnels on one machine, and already from it gave VLANs inside one router. VLAN between the pieces of iron blocked the hoster, that's why it's the only way.
3. It basically worked, but something broke at the hoster, so he made me a general switch to all external interfaces at his level
4. Therefore, I was able to land external addresses on any hardware and eventually throw out all this nonsense and do it right =)
In total, I have one (plus a replica) gateway, several external IPs and a flat network =)
It is not strong in Hyper-V (a nasty hypervisor), on other hypervisors you can configure it like this:
1) We combine all hypervisors through the second network interface into a cluster, the migration of virtual machines will also be via this interface. - we solve your 1 problem.
2) As an interface for virtual machines, we use a bridge to the network hypervisor, and not nat - we solve your second and third task, so the virtual machine from any of the hypervisors will be able to save its address.
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