images
cloudblock
images | cloudblock | |
---|---|---|
6 | 32 | |
493 | 797 | |
3.7% | - | |
9.9 | 6.4 | |
5 days ago | 2 months ago | |
HCL | HCL | |
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.
images
- Suas imagens de container não estão seguras!
- Chainguard Images
-
Musl 1.2.4 adds TCP DNS fallback
I'm very sorry that we broke things for you.
To be clear, nothing has changed with Wolfi. Wolfi is an open source community project and everything is still available there: https://github.com/wolfi-dev/.
We have made changes to Chainguard Images - our commercial product built on top of Wolfi - which mean you can no longer pull images by tag (other than latest). Chainguard images are rebuilt everyday and have a not inconsiderable maintenance cost.
The easiest way to avoid this is to build the images yourself. You can rebuild identical images to ours using apko and the source files in the images repo e.g: https://github.com/chainguard-images/images/blob/main/images... (note you can replace package names with versioned versions). You can also just use a Dockerfile with the wolfi-base image to "apk add" packages. Full details are here: https://www.chainguard.dev/unchained/a-guide-on-how-to-use-c...
I agree that pinning is a best practice. The above blog explains that you can still do it using a digest, but I accept this isn't the simplest solution.
If I can help any more, please feel free to get in touch - you can find me most places including twitter https://twitter.com/adrianmouat
-
Wolfi: A community Linux OS designed for the container and cloud-native era
We needed Wolfi to be able to create minimal (distroless if you like) container images based on glibc with 0 vulnerabilities. Turns out a lot of other people are interested in Wolfi for various reasons, and we're more than happy to work with them.
You definitely don't need to use Wolfi! But I would say, if you run containers you might want to check out Chainguard Images: https://github.com/chainguard-images/images
-
Creating Safer Containerized PHP Runtimes with Wolfi
In this article, we'll see how to leverage Wolfi to create safer PHP application environments based on containers. To demonstrate Wolfi usage in a Dockerfile workflow (using a Dockerfile to build your image), we'll create an image based on the wolfi-base image maintained by Chainguard. The goal is to have a final runtime image able to execute a PHP command-line script. By definition, this image won't be completely distroless, because it will require APK to be present in order to install system dependencies described in the Dockerfile. For building pure distroless images, you should have a look at apko.
cloudblock
-
Install Pi Hole and configure to work with WireGuard on Free OCI Instance
https://github.com/chadgeary/cloudblock Another one which you can use but with less work
-
Do I need raspberry pi for pihole? Can't get it anywhere!
2.) Cloudblock I use OCI's free tier.
- Is there a guide to setup a fresh GCP account to make it easy to use Terraform?
-
Question Regarding Cloudblock
It looks like you choose a DNS over HTTPS provider, and it defaults to OpenDNS.
-
Creating a Remote Pi-Hole in the Cloud for Your Whole Home (for Free)
/u/chadgeary made cloudblock which was super easy to setup with his tutorials
-
Labs deploying AWS with terraform/CF and GitHub (or other DevOps tool)?
https://github.com/chadgeary/cloudblock pihole/wireguard
-
Working abroad without comapny knowing
I’d recommend Oracle, as they have a free tier that should cover your use case. If your interested check out Step-by-step cloud deployment - Wireguard VPN
-
Is there a dead simple way to setup a remote PiHole that my phone can access all the time? Preferably free or very cheap?
if you want to run it in the cloud, for free, and not rely on anything at home, use cloudblock and run it on oracle cloud infra, they have a forever free tier that i have been using for years.
-
What do you use your oracle free tier for?
https://github.com/chadgeary/cloudblock/ or https://github.com/chadgeary/cloudoffice/ are both fun projects
-
VPN on church wifi
In case you're feeling ambitious, you can take a look at this project which is designed to make it easy to deploy your own ad-blocking VPN on a cloud server. Watch one of the step-by-step videos linked to on that page (like this one for Oracle Cloud) to see if it's something you'd feel comfortable setting up.
What are some alternatives?
fortigate-terraform-deploy - Deployment templates for FortiGate-VM on cloud platforms with terraform
wirehole - WireHole is a combination of WireGuard, Pi-hole, and Unbound in a docker-compose project with the intent of enabling users to quickly and easily create a personally managed full or split-tunnel WireGuard VPN with ad blocking capabilities thanks to Pi-hole, and DNS caching, additional privacy options, and upstream providers via Unbound.
rocker-versioned2 - Run current & prior versions of R using docker. rocker/r-ver, rocker/rstudio, rocker/shiny, rocker/tidyverse, and so on.
docker-pihole-unbound - Run Pi-Hole + Unbound on Docker
NuGet - NuGet Gallery is a package repository that powers https://www.nuget.org. Use this repo for reporting NuGet.org issues.
scrcpy - Display and control your Android device
horus - Free cloud native platform for service hosting
terransible-wirehole - Wirehole (Wireguard, Pi-hole, Upbound) deployment on Free Tier Oracle Cloud or other providers leveraging Docker Containers and deployed using Terraform and Ansible.
os - Main package repository for production Wolfi images
unbound-docker-rpi - Run Unbound with latest version of OpenSSL on Raspberry Pi with Docker.
sbomnix - A suite of utilities to help with software supply chain challenges on nix targets
cloudoffice - Cloudoffice deploys Nextcloud and OnlyOffice automatically with LetsEncrypt HTTPS certificates. Text and video instructions included. Six compatible cloud providers, or via Ubuntu/Raspberry Pi. Cloud provider deployments include low-cost object storage integration (e.g. S3).