alertmanager-status
atbswp
alertmanager-status | atbswp | |
---|---|---|
3 | 16 | |
3 | 697 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
about 1 year ago | 2 months ago | |
Go | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
alertmanager-status
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Grafana Labs launches free incident management tool in Grafana Cloud
I dunno, I don't really mind self-hosting monitoring infrastructure. I basically pay for a website uptime checker to check that Alertmanager is working. If Alertmanager is down, obviously you have to manually check to see what else is down, but it doesn't fail open.
I wrote a little glue to make this straightforward for anyone else who uses Prometheus/Alertmanager: https://github.com/jrockway/alertmanager-status This ensures that the website check checks the health of the whole alerting pipeline; Prometheus has an always firing alert, Alertmanager is set to send that alert to alertmanager-status, and alertmanager-status starts failing its external health check if it isn't seeing that alert firing at the configured interval. If one of [Prometheus, Alertmanager, alertmanager-status] fails, then your website health check fails.
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Slack’s Outage on January 4th 2021
It is quite awkward that the output of "working" and "completely broken" alerting systems have the same visible effect -- no alerts.
For Prometheus users, I wrote alertmanager-status to let a third-party "website up?" monitoring server check your alertmanager: https://github.com/jrockway/alertmanager-status
(I also wrote one of the main Google Fiber monitoring systems back when I was at Google. We spent quite a bit of time on monitoring monitoring, because whenever there was an actual incident people would ask us "is this real, or just the monitoring system being down?" Previous monitoring systems were flaky so people were kind of conditioned to ignore the improved system -- so we had to have a lot of dashboards to show them that there was really an ongoing issue.)
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Ask HN: What Are You Working On?
Many things!
jsso2: Identity provider and authenticating proxy for your non-enterprise use cases. WebAuthn only, no passwords! I was tired of typing a password for things like Grafana and PGAdmin, and IP whitelisting my home Internet for things that didn't have built-in authentication. https://github.com/jrockway/jsso2
If I were starting from 0 today, I'd just use Dex and Envoy's built-in OAuth support. OAuth is overly complicated, requiring a bunch of configuration for each app, and a ton of code in each app... but it won. So use that.
jlog: I read a lot of log files in my day-to-day work and really like the idea of structured logs, but found them hard to read. jlog translates timestamps to my local time zone, lets me query them with jq, etc.: https://github.com/jrockway/json-logs Can't live without it, I use it many times every day, and have even convinced other people to use it without writing any documentation. (There are binary releases and a --help though!)
"kubectl jq": I wanted to play with writing Kubernetes plugins, so I made one that is just "kubectl get x -o json | jq". I use it pretty regularly, but the Kubernetes client machinery doesn't give you autocompletion for free, so it's pretty painful to use. When they fix that, I plan to write more kubernetes extensions (including one that invokes jlog on the logs, saving a pipe ;) https://github.com/jrockway/kubectl-jq
alertmanager-status: How do you know if your Prometheus/Alertmanager is working? If it breaks, it won't be sending you an alert, after all. https://github.com/jrockway/alertmanager-status
ekglue: The good parts of Istio, written by someone who read the xDS spec :P https://github.comjrockway/ekglue
For my day job, I work on Pachyderm Hub, which you should totally use if you want to run production-quality data science workloads (data provenance, reproducibility, etc.): https://hub.pachyderm.com/ I could write a lot about it, but basically... we have customers that want to use Pachyderm, but the complexity of Kubernetes stands in their way. How do you store logs? How do you monitor things? How do you give your coworkers access? We solve those problems by letting you click a button in a web UI. (As for why you'd want to use Pachyderm: https://www.pachyderm.com/use-cases/)
atbswp
- I'm looking for a good auto click that isn't a virus, could anyone link one
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"Automate the Boring Stuff with Python" online course is free to sign up for the next few days with code JUN2021FREE
This book is definitely a good starting point, and if you want a glimpse of what you can achieve with an automation library (pyautogui in the case of the book), do check out atbswp
Using the library of the author pyautogui, I developed a macro recorder atbswp (Yes like the book) which makes it very easy to automate boring tasks, do check it out.
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"Automate the Boring Stuff with Python" online course is free to sign up for the next few days with code APR2021FREE
Seems I am late to the party. Anyway, if you like automation, check out atbswp
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Click
Shameless plug, you can do the same with this[0] albeit not in the CLI.
0: https://github.com/rmpr/atbswp
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"Automate the Boring Stuff with Python" online course is free to sign up for the next few days with code MAR2021FREE
Source: I use both in a project of mine atbswp
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Sunday Daily Thread: What's everyone working on this week?
I just released a new version of atbswp I intend to start working on the v0.3 (or 0.2.1 not sure yet)
- Atbswp 0.2 released
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Graphical interface
Just to add options on top of QT5, there's also wxPython. It's pretty good, and fwiw, I use it for this project not the most convoluted GUI out there but it works. Iirc there's also Pysimplegui but I never used it.
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Updated for 2021: Docker Django and Intercooler Is Go-To Stack for Building SaaS
Not necessarily, you can use a CI pipeline to verify that your project can be build with many Python versions. This is the workflow I use here[0]. It makes catching and fixing breaking changes easier. Plus, I'm confident the core team is not likely to introduce a painful breaking change (think Python 2 -> 3) soon[1]
0: https://github.com/rmpr/atbswp
1: https://mobile.twitter.com/gvanrossum/status/130608247244308...
What are some alternatives?
Oat++ - 🌱Light and powerful C++ web framework for highly scalable and resource-efficient web application. It's zero-dependency and easy-portable.
mockoon - Mockoon is the easiest and quickest way to run mock APIs locally. No remote deployment, no account required, open source.
auto-editor - Auto-Editor: Effort free video editing!
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slam-crappy - Navigation project for an indoor robot using a Raspberry Pi, Arduino by combining a camera/OpenCV and physical measurements from ultrasonic and single point lidar sensor.
pg-mem - An in memory postgres DB instance for your unit tests
covid_status
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
SVG Gauge - Minimalistic, animated SVG gauge. Zero dependencies
procedural-gl-js - Mobile-first 3D mapping engine with emphasis on user experience
vscodium - binary releases of VS Code without MS branding/telemetry/licensing
cratetorrent - A BitTorrent V1 engine library for Rust (and currently Linux)