containers
Gradle
containers | Gradle | |
---|---|---|
9 | 92 | |
191 | 16,155 | |
3.1% | 0.8% | |
8.7 | 10.0 | |
5 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Dockerfile | Groovy | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
containers
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Need a VM for Java 11 and a specific Program - which distro to choose?
eclipse-temurin:11 https://hub.docker.com/_/eclipse-temurin
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CentOS 7 vs CentOS Stream vs Rocky vs Alma vs Debian vs Ubuntu for server
Then you build the container. That will download that container that already has linux with java on it, like this one: https://hub.docker.com/_/eclipse-temurin
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From Java to Golang and back
You can shrink the docker image greatly by starting with an Alpine based one like this https://hub.docker.com/_/eclipse-temurin
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MinIO passes 1B cumulative Docker Pulls
> Just imagine the vast number of poorly cached CI jobs pulling gigabytes from Docker hub on every commit, coupled with naive aproaches to CI/CD when doing microservices, prod/dev/test deployments, etc.
I hit the rate limits that others talk of in the comments, which motivated me to use Nexus for both proxying and storing my own container images.
So far, it's been pretty good, I actually wrote about the process on my blog, "Moving from GitLab Registry to Sonatype Nexus": https://blog.kronis.dev/tutorials/moving-from-gitlab-registr...
Another thing that I tried, however, was to only rely upon Docker Hub for the base images that I want (Ubuntu in my case) and then build everything I need on top of that, doing things like installing Java/Node/Python/Ruby/... manually, adding utilities I want across all of the images etc.
Once again, I wrote about it on my blog, "Using Ubuntu as the base for all of my containers": https://blog.kronis.dev/articles/using-ubuntu-as-the-base-fo...
That approach is absolutely more work, but also is something that's underexplored and works really nicely for me. Now I mostly rely on the OS package manager repositories (or mirrors of those), put less load on Docker Hub, don't risk running into its rate limits and also have common base layers across most of the images that I build, which in practice means less data actually needing to be downloaded to any of the servers where I want to utilize my images.
Of course, the downside is that getting something like PHP running was an absolute pain (tried with Apache, didn't work for some reason, then moved over to Nginx), and I technically miss out on some of the more complex space optimizations because if you look at the Dockerfiles for some of the more popular images, like OpenJDK, you'll occasionally see some interesting approaches, like getting the software package as a bunch of files and "installing" them directly, as opposed to using something like apt/yum: https://github.com/adoptium/containers/blob/08dd7d416cee0fe0...
Then again, personally I'd much prefer to rely on packages that I can get from something like apt directly, even if some of those versions can be a bit older (or add the project's official apt repositories as needed).
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Question?
The FROM looks incorrect. When i watch the Youtube video it mentions adoptopenjdk which is deprecated (https://hub.docker.com/\_/adoptopenjdk). You now should use https://hub.docker.com/_/eclipse-temurin/.
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Java eclipse temurin:18.0.1_10-jre-alpine is out ! Now what ?
Eclipse Temurin is maintaining a rich collection of Java images.
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Anyone using the Alpine Musl JDK builds in production?
Intially only the 17 was the musl-native variant, later added 11 and very recently (6 days ago) for 8 as well: https://github.com/adoptium/containers/issues/72
Gradle
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Setting up linters in Gitlab CI for C++ and Groovy / Jenkins code
Because executing CodeNarc from the command-line is not so simple, I find it easier to use Gradle and its dedicated plugin to execute CodeNarc:
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Gradle's leaky abstractions: Declarative(ish) shell, imperative core: Implementing a safe(ish) global configuration DSL
A ("shared") build service is kind of like a singleton, in that when you register one in any project, it's available in all projects as a single instance. (This unfortunately turns out not to be true, in some cases, when using composite builds, but can be worked around.) An actual singleton (global static instance) doesn't work at all, for the record—try it if you want to lose some sanity. Anyway, use a build service whenever you need global mutable state in your build.
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Working with Environment Variables in Java
When using build tools like Maven or Gradle, you can configure environment variables in the build scripts or configuration files.
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Intro to Java Question
For large projects, purpose-made build tools such as Gradle and Maven are preferred for managing the directory structure since they introduce additional semantics for managing test code and other programming languages (among lots of other things). Most IDEs can integrate with these build tools easily. If you're just starting out though, I wouldn't worry too much about these, you can visit them later.
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Quarkus 3.4 - Container-first Java Stack: Install with OpenJDK 21 and Create REST API
Project Build and Management: Apache Maven 3 (3.9.5), Gradle 8 (8.3)
- OpenJDK JDK 21 GA Release
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Version Catalogs in Convention Plugins for multi-module Android code-base ?
No wonder this had been raised previously, https://github.com/gradle/gradle/issues/15383
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Creating a Ktor Server with Gradle and SDKMAN!: A Step-by-Step Guide
Ktor, a powerful web framework built with Kotlin, offers a lightweight and flexible solution for building web applications. In this article, we will guide you through the process of creating a Ktor project manually using Gradle and SDKMAN!. By following the steps below, you'll have a basic Ktor project up and running in no time.
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How to Run GitHub Code?
The details regarding the code compiling would vary from one project to another. For that project, it seems that it uses Gradle (a helper tool) for compiling. Check Gradle's documentation for more information.
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What are some alternatives?
docker-images - Official source of container configurations, images, and examples for Oracle products and projects
Bazel - a fast, scalable, multi-language and extensible build system
zsh-in-docker - Install Zsh, Oh-My-Zsh and plugins inside a Docker container with one line!
Buck - A fast build system that encourages the creation of small, reusable modules over a variety of platforms and languages.
grype - A vulnerability scanner for container images and filesystems
Apache Maven - Apache Maven core
Dragonfly - This repository has be archived and moved to the new repository https://github.com/dragonflyoss/Dragonfly2.
maven-mvnd - Apache Maven Daemon
jetson-containers - Machine Learning Containers for NVIDIA Jetson and JetPack-L4T
Apache Ant - Apache Ant is a Java-based build tool.
minecraft-docker
Drools - This repository is a fork of apache/incubator-kie-drools. Please use upstream repository for development.