casdoor-js-sdk
seaweedfs
casdoor-js-sdk | seaweedfs | |
---|---|---|
7 | 37 | |
29 | 21,446 | |
- | 1.7% | |
5.0 | 9.9 | |
about 1 month ago | 8 days ago | |
TypeScript | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
casdoor-js-sdk
- Casdoor: An open-source Identity and Access Management (IAM) / Single-Sign-On (SSO) platform and AI gateway with web UI supporting OAuth 2.0, OIDC, SAML and OpenAI ChatGPT
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🚀 ZITADEL v2.19.1 is out!
How much memory does it use per default and how does it resource usage compare to Authelia or casdoor?
- I created Atomic: Self Hosted Open Source Alternative to Reclaim, Clockwise & Motion
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ElasticJob UI now supports Auth 2.0, OIDC and SAML single sign-on thanks to Casdoor
The source code of Casdoor is on GitHub, and its boot mode includes development mode and production mode. The development mode is taken as an example here. Please refer to this link for more details.
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Rebuiding my entire server - Looking for advises to start on a right foot
And there are other solutions instead of Keycloak like Authelia (roughly 20MB at all times and temporary 1GB for Argon2did on sign ins), Zitadel or Casdoor. Authentik has a nice GUI but uses a lot of resources.
- Casdoor: an open-source SSO & IAM platform with beautiful web UI supporting connecting to Google, GitHub, Azure accounts and protocols like OAuth, OIDC, SAML, CAS
- casdoor-js-sdk: Javascript client SDK for Casdoor IAM platform
seaweedfs
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S3 Is Showing Its Age
> When it gets too out of hand, people will paper it over with a new, simpler abstraction layer, and the process starts again, only with a layer of garbage spaghetti underneath.
I'm pretty happy that there are S3 compatible stores that you can host yourself, that aren't insanely complex.
MinIO: https://min.io/
SeaweedFS: https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs (this one's particularly nice and is permissively licensed, in contrast to everything else)
There was also Zenko, but I don't think they gained a lot of traction for the most part: https://www.zenko.io/
Of course, many will prefer hosted/managed solutions and that's perfectly fine, but at least when you run software yourself, you are more in control over it and for the most part can also make the judgement on how hard it is to operate and keep operational (e.g. similar to what you'd experience when running PostgreSQL/MariaDB/MySQL or trying to run Oracle).
- Ask HN: What distributed file system would you use in 2024?
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DwarFS – The Deduplicating Warp-Speed Advanced Read-Only File System
Whoops: WebDAV:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39417503
SeaweedFS supports WebDAV. https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs/wiki/WebDAV
I'm not able to find if both/restic supports mounting backups as WebDAV, but in theory there's nothing stopping you.
It's 100% user space (expose a rest service) and supported by a bunch of file-browsers with a bit of a network aware component to it as well.
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Billion File Filesystem
If you want/need to take out the metadata, there's some nice solutions for that https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs
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SeaweedFS fast distributed storage system for blobs, objects, files and datalake
I posted this on https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs/discussions/5290
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DuckDB + dbt for a serverless event correlation pipeline?
I like the idea of using SeaweedFS as an intermediate layer with object write notifications going to SQS, RabbitMQ, or a local file, which could also allow me to observe the changes to different files through a metric collection layer like Prometheus and Grafana.
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Show HN: OpenSign – The open source alternative to DocuSign
> Theoretically they could swap with minio but last time we used it it was not a drop-in replacement yet.
Depends on whether AGPL v3 works for you or not (or whether you decide to pay them), I guess: https://min.io/pricing
I've actually been looking for more open alternatives, but haven't found much.
Zenko CloudServer seemed to be somewhat promising, but doesn't seem to be managed very actively: https://github.com/scality/cloudserver/issues/4986 (their Docker images on DockerHub were last updated 10 months ago, which is what the homepage links to; blog doesn't seem active since 2019, forums don't have much going on, despite some action on GitHub still)
There was also Garage, but that one is also AGPL v3: https://garagehq.deuxfleurs.fr/
The closest I got was discovering that SeaweedFS has an S3 compatible mode: https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs
- The Tailscale Universal Docker Mod
- SeaweedFS
- Google Cloud Storage FUSE
What are some alternatives?
next-auth - Authentication for the Web.
minio - The Object Store for AI Data Infrastructure
atomic - Chat with and teach your calendar to solve your scheduling & time problems
Ceph - Ceph is a distributed object, block, and file storage platform
zitadel - ZITADEL - The best of Auth0 and Keycloak combined. Built for the serverless era.
garage - (Mirror) S3-compatible object store for small self-hosted geo-distributed deployments. Main repo: https://git.deuxfleurs.fr/Deuxfleurs/garage
jellyfin-plugin-sso - This plugin allows users to sign in through an SSO provider (such as Google, Microsoft, or your own provider). This enables one-click signin.
cubefs - cloud-native distributed storage
casbin - An authorization library that supports access control models like ACL, RBAC, ABAC in Golang: https://discord.gg/S5UjpzGZjN
GlusterFS - Web Content for gluster.org -- Deprecated as of September 2017
authelia - The Single Sign-On Multi-Factor portal for web apps
MooseFS - MooseFS – Open Source, Petabyte, Fault-Tolerant, Highly Performing, Scalable Network Distributed File System (Software-Defined Storage)