k3os
centos-stream | k3os | |
---|---|---|
44 | 25 | |
- | 3,489 | |
- | - | |
- | 0.0 | |
- | 5 months ago | |
Go | ||
- | 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.
centos-stream
- OpenELA releases redhat source code for everyone
- Curl/libcurl HIGH CVE-2023-38545 leaked early?
- Fixes CVE-2023-38403 – Resolves: rhbz#2223729
- Can any Red Hat Employee comment on this? Why it's not accepted as CVE bug fix that sent by community?
-
Tell HN: Red Hat refuse AlmaLinux CVE patch to CentOS Stream: no customer demand
In an unexpected and surprising move, contrary to what Red Hat has been saying lately to the community about CentOS Stream collaboration and rebuilders, Red Hat will refuse patches to CVE issues, developed by downstream contributors, in CentOS Stream citing "no customer demand".
Link to CentOS Stream Gitlab of the AlmaLinux CVE patch commit: https://gitlab.com/redhat/centos-stream/rpms/iperf3/-/merge_requests/5
Discussion going on Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/AlmaLinux/comments/1544w8b/red_hat_refuses_almas_cve_patches_to_centos/
-
Question to mods: dealing with trolls
The source RHEL is built from can be found here with absolutely no restrictions: https://gitlab.com/redhat/centos-stream
-
SUSE Preserves Choice in Enterprise Linux by Forking RHEL
https://gitlab.com/redhat/centos-stream/src/kernel/centos-st...
Fedora and many other distros do a lot of valued work, too.
FWICS there are FIPS kernel variants for Ubuntu <= 20.04 LTS (2020) but not 22.04 LTS (2022), and Debian and Ubuntu don't have the selinux policy set that Fedora and RHEL+EPEL have. https://ubuntu.com/kernel
From https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36480033 :
> Would it be feasible to sed-replace the RHEL and/or Fedora selinux and container-selinux rulesets for use with other Linux distros?
> "AFAIU only SUSE can run both AppArmor and SELinux?*
> And browsers are running as unconfined in selinux with like all major distros; even on ChromiumOS
Act like you added `systemd-nspawn respawn` to every SysV-init script and correctly formatted the epoch time in the correct column of each of the log files to merge and then logship again.
-
Stuff to think about for RHers.
There is nothing stopping any of the rebuilders from using gitlab.com/redhat/centos-stream to continue rebuilding.
-
My thoughts on the recent Red Hat source code availability changes.
Is "284.18 1" the commit that gets you the kernel version 5.14.0-284.18.1 ?
k3os
-
SUSE Preserves Choice in Enterprise Linux by Forking RHEL
I still don't forgive SUSE for buying Rancher and then unceremoniously killing k3os. They just left the website up and everything, made no announcement, made no attempt to help the community take over, just left the Github repo to rot: https://k3os.io/
Hard to have confidence in SUSE's commitment to another open source operating system side project after that. SUSE's announcement at the time:
Like SUSE, Rancher is 100% open source and equally as passionate as SUSE about true open source innovation, community empowerment, and customer success. SUSE and Rancher share the same goal – happy and satisfied customers.
https://www.suse.com/c/suse-acquires-rancher/
-
(help) best minimal distro for master nodes
k3os is no longer supported by Rancher: https://github.com/rancher/k3os/issues/846 I've been keeping mine up to date with https://github.com/BlueKrypto/k3os
- Here, there, and back again: personal K8S clusters?
-
Advice on rolling home setup to k3s from docker
[0] https://docs.k3s.io/installation/ha-embedded [1] https://k3os.io/
-
Spin up a bare metal cluster in 2022
I (still) run k3os, but it's dead since SUSE bought rancher. (see https://github.com/rancher/k3os/issues/846)
-
v107 stable w/ 5.10 kernel
virt-install --install \ --memory 2048 \ --os-type linux \ --os-variant ubuntu20.04 \ --disk size=20 \ --graphics=none \ --name k3os \ kernel=https://github.com/rancher/k3os/releases/download/v0.21.5-k3s2r1/k3os-vmlinuz-amd64,initrd=https://github.com/rancher/k3os/releases/download/v0.21.5-k3s2r1/k3os-initrd-amd64,kernel_args='k3os.fallback_mode=install k3os.install.iso_url=https://github.com/rancher/k3os/releases/download/v0.21.5-k3s2r1/k3os-amd64.iso k3os.install.silent=true k3os.install.tty=ttyS0 console=ttyS0 k3os.install.device=/dev/vda k3os.password=hunter2'
-
Any good howto set up your own full cluster?
I'm personally fond of https://k3os.io for my small to medium hobby and professional clusters. It comes with a lot the bells and whistles, but is also pretty minimum and just scales easily.
-
What is going on with Kubernetes Microdistros?
I really liked K3OS, but I feel like Rancher is no longer supporting it. The last commit on the k3os repo is from April, and before those three commits, November of last year. When Rancher decided to move their HCI offering, Harvester, over to RancherOS V2 being based on cOS toolkit/OpenSuse, I don't have high hopes that K3OS will be maintained.
- Which k8s are you using?
-
Organization of Docker and VMs
I run k3os on an old laptop with a broken screen.
What are some alternatives?
zfs - OpenZFS on Linux and FreeBSD
proxmox-k8s
centos2ol - Script and documentation to switch CentOS/Rocky Linux to Oracle Linux
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes
LetsShip - Let's learn devops by shipping a final product in .NET 5
otomi-core - Self-hosted DevOps PaaS for Kubernetes
CoreCLR - CoreCLR is the runtime for .NET Core. It includes the garbage collector, JIT compiler, primitive data types and low-level classes.
kubernetes - Production-Grade Container Scheduling and Management
bflat - C# as you know it but with Go-inspired tooling (small, selfcontained, and native executables)
profanity - Ncurses based XMPP client
.NET Runtime - .NET is a cross-platform runtime for cloud, mobile, desktop, and IoT apps.
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.