In the fast-paced world of continuous integration and deployment (CI/CD), managing sensitive information like API keys, tokens, and credentials—collectively known as secrets—is not just a best practice; it's a critical foundation for security and efficiency. GitHub Actions provides a robust framework for automating workflows, but a common friction point for many development teams, particularly tho
The Challenge of Scalable Secrets Management in GitHub Actions For development teams scaling beyond a handful of repositories, managing environment-specific variables and secrets in GitHub Actions can quickly become a significant bottleneck. The manual duplication of configurations across multiple repos, especially when dealing with distinct environments like development, staging, and production
A Haystack pipeline can be perfectly wired and still unsafe. The retriever returns documents. Every component did its job. But if untrusted text moved through the pipeline as ordinary context, the trust boundary was lost. That is the problem this post is about. Not bad Python. A valid component connection only says: this value fits the next component It does not say: this value is safe to influen
I got tired of the same three-step content publish loop: write draft → open CMS → paste, format, re-paste, fight the rich-text editor, click publish. Repeat for every environment — staging, then production. For one article, fine. For a team publishing 20+ pieces a month? That workflow is a quiet tax on everyone's time. So I wired up a pipeline that cuts the loop entirely. You commit a .md file to
Most teams I have worked with have one auth test in their suite. It looks like this: test('valid token verifies', () => { const token = signSync({ sub: 'user-1', aud: 'api://backend' }, secret); const result = verify(token, options); expect(result.valid).toBe(true); }); That test is fine. It is also a smoke test, not a regression suite. It catches the case where verification is completely b
Comparison: Haystack 2.0 vs. RAGatouille 0.3 for Building High-Accuracy RAG Pipelines for Developer Docs Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) has become the standard for building LLM-powered tools that answer questions using private or domain-specific data. For developer documentation (dev docs) — which includes technical jargon, versioned APIs, code snippets, and structured reference material —