plugins
Grafana
plugins | Grafana | |
---|---|---|
7 | 380 | |
16 | 60,503 | |
- | 0.8% | |
9.8 | 10.0 | |
1 day ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
- | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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.
plugins
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Auth0 and Amplication: Simplifying Authentication in Your Applications
Setting up Auth0 authentication in your Amplication application is easy. You can use the Auth0 plugin to add the required dependencies and configuration files to your application. The steps are as follows:
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Celebrating Hacktoberfest 2023 with Amplication
amplication/plugins
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The Complete Microservices Guide
đź’ˇ Did you know? Amplication provides a Dockerfile for containerizing your services out of the box and has a plugin to create a Helm Chart for your services to ease container orchestration.
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How to Effectively Use Caching to Improve Microservices Performance
đź’ˇPro Tip: Amplication now offers a Redis Plugin that can help you integrate Redis into your microservices more easily than ever before.
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Serverless vs. Containers for Microservices: What should you choose?
2. Helm Charts Plugin: Amplication offers a Helm Charts plugin that simplifies the deployment of containerized microservices on Kubernetes clusters. Helm charts provide a templated approach to defining Kubernetes resources, making it easier to manage the deployment process and ensure consistency across different environments.
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The Amplication Plugin System
To illustrate this development workflow, let's look at the MySQL plugin. But first, let's review the functionality of a database connection:
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Show HN: Amplication v1.0 – open-source generator for Node.js microservices
Hello, Yuval here, founder of Amplication. I’m very excited to share with you what the Amplication team is working on.
Amplication saves engineers from undifferentiated heavy lifting in application development, while helping organizations speed up delivery, and enforcing best practices and standardization across multiple teams and developers.
Amplication accelerates the development of backend applications and microservices with high-quality code generation, streamlining and automating development while solving issues that delay production readiness.
We built Amplication so developers like us could focus on coding the parts that matter rather than get distracted by repetitive tasks and boilerplate code.
Amplication is an open-source platform that lets you easily configure your backend services, by generating a human-readable and editable TypeScript Node.js codebase. The generated code includes everything you need to start writing your business logic.
Amplication continuously generates the code based on changes in the schema and configuration, then pushes the code to a GitHub repository to allow developers to continue off and edit it further based on their needs.
Today's launch of our v1.0 also incorporates a plugin architecture that enables developers to develop their own plugins to implement best practices, code conventions, custom integrations, and virtually anything in the generated code. Developers can use plugins created by Amplication’s core team, by our community, or create their own.
We already have several plugins on our Github plugins repo -https://github.com/amplication/plugins, including support for Kafka, MySQL PostgreSQL, Passport JWT, Passport Basic authentication, and the list is growing.
We can’t wait for you to experience Amplication, please share your thoughts.
Grafana
- Grafana: From Dashboards to Centralized Observability
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Docker Log Observability: Analyzing Container Logs in HashiCorp Nomad with Vector, Loki, and Grafana
Monitoring application logs is a crucial aspect of the software development and deployment lifecycle. In this post, we'll delve into the process of observing logs generated by Docker container applications operating within HashiCorp Nomad. With the aid of Grafana, Vector, and Loki, we'll explore effective strategies for log analysis and visualization, enhancing visibility and troubleshooting capabilities within your Nomad environment.
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Golang: out-of-box backpressure handling with gRPC, proven by a Grafana dashboard
To help us visualize these scenarios, we'll build a Grafana Dashboard so we can follow along.
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Monitoring, Observability, and Telemetry Explained
Visualization and Analysis: Choose a tool with intuitive and customizable dashboards, charts, and visualizations. A question to ask is, "Are the visualization features of this tool user-friendly and adaptable to our team's specific needs?" Tools like Grafana and Kibana provide powerful visualization capabilities.
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4 facets of API monitoring you should implement
Prometheus: Open-source monitoring system. Often used together with Grafana.
- Grafana: Open and composable observability and data visualization platform
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The Mechanics of Silicon Valley Pump and Dump Schemes
Grafana
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Reverse engineering the Grafana API to get the data from a dashboard
Yes I'm aware that Grafana is open source but the method I used to find the API endpoints is far quicker than digging through hundreds of files in a codebase I'm not familiar with.
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Building an Observability Stack with Docker
So, you will add one last container to allow us to visualize this data: Grafana, an open-source analytics and visualization platform that allows us to see traces and metrics simply. You can set Grafana to read data from both Tempo and Prometheus by setting them as datastores with the following grafana.datasource.yaml config file:
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How to collect metrics from node.js applications in PM2 with exporting to Prometheus
In example above, we use 2 additional parameters: code (HTTP response code) and page (page identifier), which provide detailed statistics. For example, you can build such graphs in Grafana:
What are some alternatives?
amplication - 🔥🔥🔥 Open-source backend development platform. Build production-ready services without wasting time on repetitive coding.
Thingsboard - Open-source IoT Platform - Device management, data collection, processing and visualization.
terraform - Terraform enables you to safely and predictably create, change, and improve infrastructure. It is a source-available tool that codifies APIs into declarative configuration files that can be shared amongst team members, treated as code, edited, reviewed, and versioned.
Apache Superset - Apache Superset is a Data Visualization and Data Exploration Platform [Moved to: https://github.com/apache/superset]
gRPC - The C based gRPC (C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, C#)
Heimdall - An Application dashboard and launcher
ApacheKafka - A curated re-sources list for awesome Apache Kafka
Wazuh - Wazuh - The Open Source Security Platform. Unified XDR and SIEM protection for endpoints and cloud workloads.
RabbitMQ - Open source RabbitMQ: core server and tier 1 (built-in) plugins
Thingspeak - ThingSpeak is an open source “Internet of Things” application and API to store and retrieve data from things using HTTP over the Internet or via a Local Area Network. With ThingSpeak, you can create sensor logging applications, location tracking applications, and a social network of things with status updates.
docker - Docker - the open-source application container engine
uptime-kuma - A fancy self-hosted monitoring tool