Skip to main content

Beautiful Trincomalee : One of the stunning places to visit in Sri-Lanka


Recently my self and few of my friends traveled to the ancient city of Trncomalee which is situated in eastern province and lies on the east cost of the little island. In ancient times it was identified as Gokanna and it was one of the major see ports in the international trading history of Sri Lanka. The city is home to the famous ancient Koneswaram Temple and it is said that this is the capital city of king Ravana.

This was my first travel to this ancient city and I would say that, it is one of the best places to visit in Sri Lanka. There are lot of places to visit there including Konesvaram Temple, Dutch Fort, Nilaveli Beach, Marble Beach and Pigeon Island. Nilaveli beach is considered to be one of the best beaches in Sri Lanka and Knee deep shallow seas spreads out hundreds of meters towards the sea. That provides ideal and pure conditions for sun bathing. Some of the pictures taken(by me and my friends) trough out the tour is listed bellow as a evidence to the stunning place. At last I would like to remind that, everyone who travel there should help to keep that natural environment clean and calm.
 


















Comments

  1. There are various stunning places to visit in Sri-Lanka. Trincomalee is one of them.Trincomalee is a port city on the east coast of Sri Lanka. The city is located on a peninsula and it is very beautiful city.
    Luxury Tours to Sri Lanka

    ReplyDelete
  2. That looks an awesome place. I'm gonna try to visit it. I'm pretty sure me and my friends are going to love it. Check out the Cloverleaf, you'll love it too. Anyway, Thanks for sharing!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

How to install IBM WebSphere MQ on Ubuntu (Linux)

Following are the steps to install IBM WebSphere MQ version 8 on Ubuntu 14.04. 1) Create a user account with name "mqm" in Ubuntu. This should basically create a user called "mqm" and usergroup called "mqm" 2) Login to "mqm" user account and proceed with next steps 3) Increase the open file limit for the user "mqm" to "10240" or higher value. For this open "/etc/security/limits.conf" file and set the values as bellow. mqm       hard  nofile     10240 mqm       soft   nofile     10240 4) Increase the number of processes allowed for the user "mqm" to "4096" or higher value. For this open "/etc/security/limits.conf" file and set the values as bellow. You will need to edit this file as a sudo user. mqm       hard  nproc      4096 mqm       soft   nproc      4096 5) Install "RPM" on Ubuntu if you already don't have it. sudo apt-get install rpm   6) Download

How to use Dynamic Registry Keys with WSO2 ESB Mediators

From this post I will going to briefly introduce about one of the new features provided by WSO2 ESB . Earlier WSO2 ESB supported static registry keys where users can select a key for the mediator as a static value. But from ESB 4.0.0 users can use dynamic registry keys where users can define XPath expression to evaluate the registry key in run time. For an example let's consider XSLT mediator. With earlier static registry key based method user have to define only single XSLT file for transformation. With the use of dynamic registry key, user will be able to use XPath expressions to dynamically generate the registry key, based on the message context. So with that user can have multiple XSLT files and based on the evaluated key mediator will be able to select the required XSLT file in run time. Following is a sample usage of static and dynamic registry keys and user can use both of them according to situation.   Static Registry Key – define the exact path to find the xslt fil

Creating a Simple Axis Service(.aar file) and Deploy it in WSO2 Application Server

In this post I am explaining how to Create a Simple Axis Service(.aar file) and Deploy it in WSO2 Application Server using a simple sample. And also at the end I am describing how to do the same thing with creation of a Jar Service. Lets assume "sample-home" as our parent directory and inside that we can create following folder structure. With this folder structure we can include our external libraries (jar files) inside lib folder and  the "services.xml" file inside "META-INF" folder. Following is the sample services.xml definition which I used with this sample creation. < service name = "HelloService" > < Description > This is a sample service to explain simple aar service </ Description > < messageReceivers > < messageReceiver mep = "http://www.w3.org/2006/01/wsdl/in-out" class = "org.apache.axis2.rpc.receivers.RPCMessageReceiver" /> </ messageReceivers > < parame