agola | ci | |
---|---|---|
7 | 10 | |
1,441 | 345 | |
1.9% | 1.4% | |
8.8 | 0.0 | |
5 days ago | over 2 years ago | |
Go | PowerShell | |
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.
agola
- The worst thing about Jenkins is that it works
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What’s the easiest way to run side projects with CI/CD on my nas?
Agola is a third option.
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Give Up GitHub: The Time Has Come!
Agola (GitLab/Gitea)
- Show HN: Git(hub/lab/EA) compatible self hosted CI/CD
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Open source and collaborative platform for CI/CD
Yes, drone.io or woodpecker (to stay on the FOSS side) are simpler than most alternatives, I had some hopes in https://agola.io/ but could not finish the tutorials due to random errors, and most other solutions are either a hassle to setup and integrate (buildbot), a vulnerable honeypot (jenkins), or require an existing k8s cluster or even more managed infra.
At some point it is easier to install a gitlab omnibus than having to worry about the rest
- Agola CI/CD
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Have costs on the cloud (AWS/Azure/GCP) been an painful issue for your startup?
Have you looked into https://github.com/agola-io/agola
ci
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Top 15 Must Have Tools For JavaScript Developers
APPVEYOR: Appveyor is an open source project builder. It works good for GITHUB repositories. The user can login to the actual VM. For more info: https://www.appveyor.com/
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free-for.dev
appveyor.com — CD service for Windows, free for Open Source
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Give Up GitHub: The Time Has Come!
AppVeyor (GitLab/Gitea)
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Tutorial: Build and package a multi-platform desktop app in Python
If you don't have an access to Mac or PC you can bundle your app for all three platforms with AppVeyor - Continuous Integration service for Windows, Linux and macOS. In short, Continuous Integration (CI) is an automated process of building, testing and deploying (Continuous Delivery - CD) application on every push to a repository.
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Short story of Rust being amazing yet again (because it compiles on different architectures effortlessly)
I then do my building on a CI/CD service that offers Windows VMs free to open-source projects, with Appveyor being the first I'm aware of to start doing so.
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Cheapest place for Mac runners?
Appveyor does as well. https://www.appveyor.com/
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GitHub action to publish .NET packages to NuGet
We were also using AppVeyor for CI during the early periods of the library and I managed to add a step at the end of the CI pipeline to do a NuGet publish, when a tag was created in GitHub. This completely removed any human error or any inadvertent omissions due to lack of time etc. This worked well for us other than the occasional NuGet publish failures due to expired API key. We had to jump into AppVeyor dashboard to see what was going on and fix things. Eventually, we migrated all the CI builds to use GitHub actions so that we can lookup things all in one-place without logging into different systems. This is a huge convenience and time saver for us. We settled on doing a manual GitHub action trigger (user invoked) especially for publishing NuGet packages rather than keep it automated so that we can inspect and keep an eye on the NuGet publish as it happens after we tag and add a release in GitHub.
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Are there any reasons for .NET developers learning Powershell ?
I thing yes. Personally i'm use powershell scripts to deploy things via appveyor and to run something locally via task scheduler.
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What are some of the core strengths of rust?
Can't cross-build to the MSVC or macOS targets without a license to use the Microsoft or Apple C/C++ developer tools for the final linkage against the platform libraries... and I believe even the free ones require you to have a valid license for Windows or own a Macintosh. (This can be worked around by building your release artifacts on a free-for-open-source CI/CD service like Appveyor or using the MinGW target for Windows if you don't need to link to MSVC-built libraries.)
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Best practices - Server configuration and firewall rules
Script source: https://github.com/appveyor/ci/blob/master/scripts/enterprise/grant_logon_as_service.ps1
What are some alternatives?
argo-cd - Declarative Continuous Deployment for Kubernetes
elm-library-installer - Installs Elm libraries in corporate networks.
Gitea - Git with a cup of tea! Painless self-hosted all-in-one software development service, including Git hosting, code review, team collaboration, package registry and CI/CD
cargo-zigbuild - Compile Cargo project with zig as linker
awgo - Go library for Alfred 3 + 4 workflows
examples - Flet sample applications
cronicle - cronicle is a simple and scalable task scheduler that builds on the foundations of git, golang and standard logging
Rake - A make-like build utility for Ruby.
gitnoter - An open source, markdown-based, self-hosted note taking webapp. [Moved to: https://github.com/batnoter/batnoter]
wally - The Flash(ing tool)
drone - Gitness is an Open Source developer platform with Source Control management, Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery. [Moved to: https://github.com/harness/gitness]
terminal-typeracer