awesome-paas
deno
awesome-paas | deno | |
---|---|---|
9 | 448 | |
377 | 92,975 | |
- | 0.3% | |
5.3 | 9.9 | |
6 months ago | 7 days ago | |
Rust | ||
MIT License | MIT License |
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.
awesome-paas
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Show HN: Appliku – Deployment PaaS for Python/Django
Hey there. Firstly, Congratulations on the progress. From the screenshot, I can tell you the UI/UX is great. I have been maintaining Awesome PaaS [1]. Overtime, I have started feeling this space has become commoditised. Because of containers, kubernetes etc. this has been an explosion in the number of tools in the space, however in your case, because of the django/python niche you might have something. In my opinion, very few early stage apps fit into PaaS model, most of the orgs have so much customization that it hard to fit them into your platform. I guess with Django as framework specialization this won't be a problem. Goodluck, with your endeavours.
[1] https://github.com/debarshibasak/awesome-paas
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aws should be easy
There's been a number of these projects out there. I think the biggest part developers misunderstand when building these is that your target audience either knows AWS enough to build all of this with Terraform / CDK, or they don't know enough about AWS to know which tool they need to use to get done and they use something like Elastic Beanstalk or Amplify. Unfortunately the market for something in the middle is almost non-existent.
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What don't you like about Heroku and PaaS ?
You will literally be joining a market that's already over saturated with "Deploy your apps 100x faster/easier/better/safer/secure" platforms. Here's a running list of ones that exist: https://github.com/debarshibasak/awesome-paas
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Free Cloud for Doers and Dreamers
My argument is that most of the small business and startups struggle to make revenue from get go. Asking for revshare, when it is day-0/day-1 kind of situation can hit the startups, small business, individuals really hard.
To me the your model looks very close to a royalty structure. Which is bad on books if you have seen "Shark Tank". It can be a fun place to host apps for indie hackers.
Another argument is that, Major cloud providers give away a lot of credits for various services. It can go upto $100k. I would even argue that you don't need devops or specialized team from you are a small org, startup and your operations are small.
Anyways, Looks like a fun project would love to list you on my Awesome Paas[1] list.
[1] https://github.com/debarshibasak/awesome-paas
- OAuth with Cloudflare Workers on a Statically Generated Site
- GitHub - debarshibasak/awesome-paas: A curated list of PaaS, developer platforms tools to emulate PaaS on cloud, Cloud IDEs and ADNs.
- A curated list of PaaS and tools to emulate PaaS on cloud providers
- Show HN: PaaS, A curate list of Platform as a service providers
deno
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Bun - The One Tool for All Your JavaScript/Typescript Project's Needs?
NodeJS is the dominant Javascript server runtime environment for Javascript and Typescript (sort of) projects. But over the years, we have seen several attempts to build alternative runtime environments such as Deno and Bun, today’s subject, among others.
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Bun 1.1
https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues is the ideal place -- we try to triage all incoming issues, the more specific the repro the easier it is to address but we will take a look at everything that comes in.
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I have created a small anti-depression script
Install Node.js (or Bun, or Deno, or whatever JS runtime you prefer) if it's not there
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How QUIC is displacing TCP for speed
QUIC is very exciting, after seeing what it can do for performance in Cloudflare network and Cloudflare workers, I can't wait to finally see it in Deno[0] 1.41.
[0] https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/21942#issuecomment-192...
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Unison Cloud
So as an end user it's kind of like https://deno.com/ where you buy into a runtime + comes prepacked with DBs (k/v stores), scheduling, and deploy stuff?
> by storing Unison code in a database, keyed by the hash of that code, we gain a perfect incremental compilation cache which is shared among all developers of a project. This is an absolutely WILD feature, but it's fantastic and hard to go back once you've experienced it. I am basically never waiting around for my code to compile - once code has been parsed and typechecked once, by anyone, it's not touched again until it's changed.
Interesting. Whats it like upgrading and managing dependencies in that code? I'd assume it gets more complex when it's not just the Union system but 3rd party plugins (stuff interacting with the OS or other libs).
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Deno in 2023
~90MB+ at this stage and do now allow compression without erroring out. Deploying ala Golang is not feasible at that level but could well be down the line if this dev branch is picked up again!
The exe output grew from from ~50MB to plus ~90MB from 2021 to 2024: https://github.com/denoland/deno/discussions/9811 which mean Deno is worse than Node.js's pkg solution by a decent margin.
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Mini site for recommending songs using Svelte & Deno
Behind the scenes is a simple Sveltekit-powered server function to fetch a Spotify client token then find a user's recommendation playlist and its track information. A Deno edge function to performs this data fetch and renders server-side Svelte.
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Supercharge your app with user extensions using Deno JavaScript runtime
If your application is written in JavaScript, integrating it with JavaScript extensions is a no-brainer. However, Secutils.dev is entirely written in Rust. How would I even begin? Fortunately, I recently came across an excellent blog post series explaining how to implement your JavaScript runtime in a Rust application with Deno:
- Deno, the next-generation JavaScript runtime
- Oxlint – written in Rust – 50-100 Times Faster than ESLint
What are some alternatives?
piku - The tiniest PaaS you've ever seen. Piku allows you to do git push deployments to your own servers.
ASP.NET Core - ASP.NET Core is a cross-platform .NET framework for building modern cloud-based web applications on Windows, Mac, or Linux.
krustlet - Kubernetes Rust Kubelet
typescript-language-server - TypeScript & JavaScript Language Server
e2core - Server for sandboxed third-party plugins, powered by WebAssembly
pnpm - Fast, disk space efficient package manager
libaws - aws should be easy
esbuild - An extremely fast bundler for the web
workers-chat-demo
bun - Incredibly fast JavaScript runtime, bundler, test runner, and package manager – all in one
miniflare - 🔥 Fully-local simulator for Cloudflare Workers. For the latest version, see https://github.com/cloudflare/workers-sdk/tree/main/packages/miniflare.
Koa - Expressive middleware for node.js using ES2017 async functions