bgems
awesome-compose
bgems | awesome-compose | |
---|---|---|
1 | 45 | |
1 | 30,755 | |
- | 3.6% | |
10.0 | 2.6 | |
about 10 years ago | 6 days ago | |
Ruby | HTML | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal |
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.
bgems
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Rails on Docker · Fly
One problem you're likely to run into is that systems using the same packaging lineage cut the same dependency up in different ways. The "right name" for a dependency can change between Ubuntu and Debian, between different releases of Ubuntu, and different architectures. It very quickly gets out of hand for any interesting set of dependencies. Now it might be that there's enough stability in the repositories these days that that's less true than it was, but I remember running into some really annoying cases at one point when I had a full gem mirror to play with.
This is one of those problems that sounds easy but gets really fiddly. I had a quick run at it from a slightly different direction a looooong time ago: binary gems (https://github.com/regularfry/bgems although heaven knows if it even still runs). Precompiled binary gems would dramatically speed up installation at the cost of a) storage; and b) getting it right once. The script I cobbled together gathers the dependencies together into a `.Depends` file which you can just pipe through to the package manager, and could happily use to strap together a package corresponding to the dependency list.
I've never really understood why a standard for precompiled gems never emerged, but it turns out it's drop-dead simple to implement. The script does some linker magic to reverse engineer the dpkg package dependency list from a compiled binary. I was quite pleased with it at the time, and while I don't think it's bullet-proof I do think it's worth having a poke at for ideas. Of course it can only detect binary dependencies, not data dependencies or anything more interesting, so there's still room for improvement.
awesome-compose
- GitHub - docker/awesome-compose: Awesome Docker Compose samples
- Docker Compose Samples
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How to learn Docker?
examples here: https://github.com/docker/awesome-compose/
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Ask HN: Why is there no major push towards Android for Servers and Desktops?
Docker compose wraps the app and db in a few lines of config: https://github.com/docker/awesome-compose/tree/master/offici... the extra config is for networking / db connections - you don't get those on Android because you don't run network services on it.
K8s can do the same thing, but has more options.
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Simplifying preview environments for everyone
Simplicity: Docker Compose is easy to use, requiring no extensive DevOps knowledge.
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WordPress On unRAID using Bitnami images
I'm a big fan of people who write guides to help - but to balance this, this can be deployed with a one liner, with NPM, its database and the WP frontend, with one line with docker-compose. It would be quicker to update, faster to boot and use noticeably less resources. Good work on documenting your OVA conversion though, as that is still useful and can be generalized. :-)
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[help] Multiple React App Containers with External Reverse Proxy
I'm trying to use the react-express-mysql awesome-compose as a framework for setting up multiple react apps that are tied to the same domain. Once dev is complete, I update the Dockerfile for the frontend to add in Nginx and have Nginx serve the frontend so that it is not running using npm start. I additionally am using Nginx Proxy Manager as a reverse proxy to route where I need and manage SSL termination for me.
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Old laptop for programming
Take a look at https://github.com/docker/awesome-compose pick your stack and use docker compose up -d
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server-compose - A collection of sample docker compose files for self-hosted applications.
Check out awesome compose there might be overlap projects
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Docker compose works locally but not on vultr box
Maybe easier to link to a recommended docker compose config that also fails : https://github.com/docker/awesome-compose/tree/master/official-documentation-samples/wordpress/
What are some alternatives?
docker-projects
docker-kodi-beta - Docker image for kodi master branch builds
lamby - 🐑🛤 Simple Rails & AWS Lambda Integration
coturn - coturn TURN server project
cruftspy - Detect unnecessary files in Docker images
mrsk - Deploy web apps anywhere. [Moved to: https://github.com/basecamp/kamal]
dockerfiles - Various Dockerfiles I use on the desktop and on servers.
wg-easy - The easiest way to run WireGuard VPN + Web-based Admin UI. [Moved to: https://github.com/wg-easy/wg-easy]
buildkit - concurrent, cache-efficient, and Dockerfile-agnostic builder toolkit
DockSTARTer - DockSTARTer helps you get started with running apps in Docker.
buildah - A tool that facilitates building OCI images.
FreshRSS - A free, self-hostable news aggregator…