cloudformation-guard
quiche
cloudformation-guard | quiche | |
---|---|---|
20 | 26 | |
1,241 | 8,928 | |
1.5% | 1.3% | |
8.7 | 9.0 | |
10 days ago | 2 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" 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.
cloudformation-guard
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Pull Request Reporting with CDK-Validator-CFNGuard and Azure DevOps
If you now use these services to fix the infrastructure findings, a drift occurs that is not always easy to fix. It is better to check for possible problems before the actual deployment. This approach is called “Shift-Left”. This can be done with the package cdk-validator-cfnguard. It's based on the CloudFormation Guard package.
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Write AWS Config rules using cfn-guard
AWS Config rules allow you to determine if a resource is compliant or not. Previously when you wanted to do custom checks you needed to write AWS Lambda functions to validate the configuration of a resource. Since Aug 2, 2022 you have the ability to use cfn-guard rules to achieve the same.
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This is how you can test your cfn-guard rules
In my previous blog, How do you prove that your infrastructure is compliant. I explained how you can prove your infrastructure is compliant using CloudFormation Guard. But, how do you write those rules? And even more important, how do you test your rules? If you look at the repository CloudFormation Guard. You will notice that the project itself offers a testing framework. Alright! Let’s build a ruleset and write some tests for it!
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How do you prove that your infrastructure is compliant
When you use CloudFormation Guard in combination with CodeBuild Reports it makes it easier to see what rules have failed and keeps a history. When you have a solid set of compliance rules. It gives you a report that you can use to prove that the build of the infrastructure was compliant. You are also able to prevent non-compliant code rollout in production.
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Make your life easier using Makefiles
cloudformation-guard.
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Uncomplicating cloud Security — Foundations (Part 1)
AWS CloudFormation: can help with deploying compliant stacks. You can make sure that a stack is compliant by using AWS CloudFormation guard.
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OPA Rego is ridiculously confusing - best way to learn it?
See https://github.com/aws-cloudformation/cloudformation-guard
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How we use AWS Config and Security Hub for Cloud Governance
Currently, we're also exploring the brand new AWS Config rules backed by guard. Now you can write rules using guard which is a policy-as-code language. Here is some example of a Guard Rule which we are testing.
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Validating cloudFormation templates
https://github.com/aws-cloudformation/cloudformation-guard is also very useful, but more so when you want to keep your templates consistent to standards.
- AWS CloudFormation Guard
quiche
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Nghttp3 1.0.0 – HTTP/3 library written in C
The title of this post puts emphasis on "written in C", making me wonder when this would ever be a desirable feature, given that more secure implementations are available, and can be integrated into old C projects just as easily.
No need to rewrite everything from the ground up: https://github.com/cloudflare/quiche#curl
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Curl HTTP/3 with quiche discouraged
The issue is dead silent too!
https://github.com/cloudflare/quiche/issues/1115
- Best performing quic implementation?
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Oxy is Cloudflare's Rust-based next generation proxy framework
Even though Oxy is a proprietary project, we try to give back some love to the open-source community without which the project wouldn’t be possible by open-sourcing some of the building blocks such as https://github.com/cloudflare/boring and https://github.com/cloudflare/quiche.
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How Rust and Wasm power Cloudflare's 1.1.1.1
They’ve been on the Rust train since at least 2019. Just look at projects like quiche, wrangler, and boringtun
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What is a CDN? How do CDNs work?
It's more like Cloudflare forked nginx a long time ago, and is meanwhile in the very slow (like, decade-long) process of replacing it entirely.
The Cloudflare Workers Runtime, for instance, is built directly around V8; it does not use nginx or any other existing web server stack. Many new features of Cloudflare are in turn built on Workers, and much of the old stack build on nginx is gradually being migrated to Workers. https://workers.dev https://github.com/cloudflare/workerd
In another part of the stack, there is Pingora, another built-from-scratch web server focused on high-performance proxying and caching: https://blog.cloudflare.com/how-we-built-pingora-the-proxy-t...
Even when using nginx, Cloudflare has rewritten or added big chunks of code, such as implementing HTTP/3: https://github.com/cloudflare/quiche And of course there is a ton of business logic written in Lua on top of that nginx base.
Though arguably, Cloudflare's biggest piece of magic is the layer 3 network. It's so magical that people don't even think about it, it just works. Seamlessly balancing traffic across hundreds of locations without even varying IP addresses is, well, not easy.
I could go on... automatic SSL provisioning? DDoS protection? etc. These aren't nginx features.
So while Cloudflare may have gotten started being more-or-less nginx-as-a-service I don't think you can really call it that anymore.
(I'm the tech lead for Cloudflare Workers.)
- Using WebTransport
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Is it better to learn web development with Python or C?
Ask Cloudflare why they use HTTP/3 and QUIC https://github.com/cloudflare/quiche.
- DNS-over-HTTP/3 in Android
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The MQTT broker powering Cloudflare's new Pub/Sub product is written in Rust!
Cloudflare has used rust for multiple projects in the past such as their QUIC/HTTP3 implementation Quiche and a WireGuard implementation BoringTun.
What are some alternatives?
cfn-python-lint - CloudFormation Linter
quinn - Async-friendly QUIC implementation in Rust
delta - A syntax-highlighting pager for git, diff, and grep output
msquic - Cross-platform, C implementation of the IETF QUIC protocol, exposed to C, C++, C# and Rust.
leaf - A versatile and efficient proxy framework with nice features suitable for various use cases.
quic-go - A QUIC implementation in pure Go
cfn-guard-test - This tool allows you to easily run your cfn-guard tests against your cfn-guard rules.
shadowsocks-rust - A Rust port of shadowsocks
rust-raspberrypi-OS-tutorials - :books: Learn to write an embedded OS in Rust :crab:
neqo - Neqo, an implementation of QUIC in Rust
bat - A cat(1) clone with wings.
s2n-quic - An implementation of the IETF QUIC protocol