below
jmespath.py
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below | jmespath.py | |
---|---|---|
10 | 30 | |
985 | 2,071 | |
1.4% | 1.9% | |
8.7 | 0.0 | |
10 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Rust | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
below
- A time traveling resource monitor for modern Linux systems
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Diagnosing Memory Useage on Linux - Catch Me Up
below is good. Enable the service and add the --dict-compress-chunk-size argument, and you can keep a week of... pretty much everything, by cgroup and by process, at 5 second sampling period, in under 1 GB of /var/log space.
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The modern way for troubleshooting high Linux system load (2020)
IO wait is counted against load by linux. So high IO pressure, i.e. found in `/proc/pressure`
I'm liking this project https://github.com/facebookincubator/below
It's packaged in Fedora.
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Type-Checked Keypaths in Rust
I created something similar for our project “below” (https://github.com/facebookincubator/below/blob/main/below/b...).
The program collects system resource metrics into a data structure and we need to display the fields with different styles and formats. In order to decouple the data structure from rendering, Queriable (Keyable) and FieldId (combine KeyPath + mirror struct into enum) are used. I will definitely like to checkout the KeyPath implementation as it seems more general.
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List of CLI programs (follow-up to GUI). Feel free to make suggestions.
System Monitors: Would include Below.
- facebookincubator/below: A time traveling resource monitor for modern Linux systems
- Below - time traveling resource monitor for modern Linux systems
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BTOP++ is a power resource monitor for Linux
I have been using glances for a terminal sysmon but I don't like that it eats so much RAM. Can someone please recommend a system monitor that is easy to comprehend and less resource hungry?
I am also curious about below [0] since it came up recently.
[0] https://github.com/facebookincubator/below
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ATOP seems more intuitive than htop...what's your throught?
Below! https://github.com/facebookincubator/below
jmespath.py
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Automating Nightly Local Database Refreshes from Azure Blob Storage with Docker
The Azure CLI lets us write queries to filter the results of the az storage blob list command. The queries are written in JMESPath, which is a query language for JSON. In this case, we are filtering the results to only include blobs that end with the .bacpac extension and then selecting the first one as ordered by the lastModified property. If there are no blobs found, the script exits with a failure code. If we find a blob, we download it to the local path specified by the localPath variable.
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What's New in Python 3.12
For JSON there is the `jmespath` library which might help.
https://github.com/jmespath/jmespath.py
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jq 1.7 Released
I love jq, but I also use JMESPath (especially with AWS CLI), yq (bundled with tomlq and xq as well), and dasel [2]. I also wish hclq [3] wasn't so dead!
[0]: https://jmespath.org/
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Announcing serde-query 0.2.0
Probably writing the query side of things is a lot of the fun here, but there is actually a spec (and a complying Rust impl) you can hook into for this JQ-like querying: https://jmespath.org/ ( https://github.com/jmespath/jmespath.rs ).
- JMESPath
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Spring Boot logging with Loki, Promtail, and Grafana (Loki stack)
Thanks to custom variables that use labels, we can create various filters for the dashboard. You can look up my configuration of variables and extend it with an analogy way for your own needs. At the top, I marked the filter with detected pods in selected namespace. In the lower part, you can see a preview of all labels that are associated with a single log line. Most labels are meta information that Promtail adds during scraping targets. This part of the Promtail configuration provides it. In this section, I also marked a few labels that not comes out-of-the box e.g. leavel , class , thread . We added these labels using the Promtail json stage. You need to know that Promtail processes scraped logs in a pipeline. A pipeline is comprised of a set of stages. json stage is a parsing stage that reads the log line as JSON and accepts JMESPath expressions to extract data.
- Who is JSON?
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jmespath.py VS jertl - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 31 Oct 2022
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YAML value retrieval
The tester on the official website for JMESPath (what json_query is doing) has been useful to me: https://jmespath.org/
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I've built a PathDict, a library that makes it easy to work with dicts!
Interesting. How does this compared to Jmespath? Not saying Jmespath is superior, just wondering whether you were aware of it.
What are some alternatives?
bottom - Yet another cross-platform graphical process/system monitor.
jq - Command-line JSON processor [Moved to: https://github.com/jqlang/jq]
btop - A monitor of resources
jq - Command-line JSON processor
awesome-alternatives-in-rust - A curated list of replacements for existing software written in Rust
yq - yq is a portable command-line YAML, JSON, XML, CSV, TOML and properties processor
unp - Unpacks things.
jfq - JSONata on the command line
bpytop - Linux/OSX/FreeBSD resource monitor
jello - CLI tool to filter JSON and JSON Lines data with Python syntax. (Similar to jq)
dua-cli - View disk space usage and delete unwanted data, fast.
yq - Command-line YAML, XML, TOML processor - jq wrapper for YAML/XML/TOML documents