cloudquery
cue
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cloudquery | cue | |
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102 | 28 | |
5,524 | 3,181 | |
2.6% | - | |
10.0 | 9.1 | |
6 days ago | over 2 years ago | |
Go | Go | |
Mozilla Public 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.
cloudquery
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Cloud asset tracking
There both do something like what you're looking for.... https://github.com/cloudquery/cloudquery https://github.com/openraven/magpie
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Show HN: Nango – Open unified API for product integrations
Unified API is a holly grail but as many said quite difficult to abstract every use case in a scalable way that won't break. At CloudQuery (https://github.com/cloudquery/cloudquery) we focus solely on the ELT use-case(Founder/Maintainer here).
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Welcome to Datasette Cloud
Congrats!! How does it compare to the ELT space and the modern data stack where you have ingestion/storage/visualization layers decoupled?
Asking as the founder of CloudQuery (https://github.com/cloudquery/cloudquery), Saw Datasette quite a few times around data exploration but curious to hear about the most popular use-cases of Datasette!
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Launch HN: PeerDB (YC S23) – Fast, Native ETL/ELT for Postgres
Congrats!! We also focus on performance at CloudQuery (https://github.com/cloudquery/cloudquery) by using Golang, gRPC and still trying to be abstract enough to support different databases :)
In any case good luck!
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airbyte VS cloudquery - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 2 Jun 2023
CloudQuery for ETL
2 projects | 2 Jun 2023Another ELT framework that's an alternative to Airbyte
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meltano VS cloudquery - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 2 Jun 2023
Another alternate ELT
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Cloudquery, Resoto, Steampipe, or Airbyte?
Cloudquery: https://cloudquery.io/
Hello! Im Yevgeny, Founder & maintainer at CloudQuery . We've built CloudQuery as an open source high performance ELT framework so you should get pretty good results syncing all your cloud assets from high number of accounts (we have users syncing more than 10K Azure subscription and thousands of AWS accounts concurrently).
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Test On 4 Concurrent Jobs Using Python-Polars 0.17.11 to GroupBy Billion Rows
CloudQuery supports a lot of APIs https://github.com/cloudquery/cloudquery
cue
- The Perfect Configuration Format? Try TypeScript
- YAML: It's Time to Move On
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Ask HN: What you up to? (Who doesn't want to be hired?)
I'm continuing to work on https://concise-encoding.org which is a new security-conscious ad-hoc encoding format to replace JSON/XML and friends. I've been at it for 3 years so far and am close to a release.
In a nutshell:
- Edit in text, transmit in binary. One can be seamlessly converted to the other, but binary is far more efficient for processing, storage and transmission, while text is better for humans to read and edit (which happens far less often than the other things).
- Secure by design: Everything is tightly specced and accounted for so that there aren't differences between implementations that can be exploited to compromise your system. https://github.com/kstenerud/concise-encoding/blob/master/ce...
- Real type support because coercing everything into strings sucks (and is another security risk and source of incompatibilities).
XML had a good run but was replaced by JSON which was a big improvement. JSON also had a good run but it's time for it to retire now that the landscape has changed even further: Security and efficiency are the desires of today, and JSON provides neither.
I've got the spec nailed down and can finally see the light at the end of the tunnel for the reference implementation in golang. I still need to come up with a system for schemas, but I'm hoping that https://cuelang.org will fit the bill.
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No YAML
Has anyone taken a look at Cue who can share any experiences?
It's mentioned on the site as an alternative to Yaml. Recently watched (~half of) this intro to it: https://youtu.be/fR_yApIf6jU
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Cue: A new language for data validation
the most interesting summary explanation of cue lang and its differences is from a bug filing - https://github.com/cuelang/cue/issues/33
>CUE is a bit different from the languages used in linguistics and more tailored to the general configuration issue as we've seen it at Google. But under the hood it adheres strictly to the concepts and principles of these approaches and we have been careful not to make the same mistakes made in BCL (which then were copied in all its offshoots). It also means that CUE can benefit from 30 years of research on this topic. For instance, under the hood, CUE uses a first-order unification algorithm, allowing us to build template extractors based on anti-unification (see issue #7 and #15), something that is not very meaningful or even possible with languages like BCL and Jsonnet.
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CMake proposal: Unified way of describing dependencies of a project
I agree with you. Personally, I think Cue is much better than either YAML, TOML or JSON because it adds the concept of types to the idea of describing configuration.
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Cloud Infrastructure as SQL
true, but the tooling and workflow remains the same.
Not sure of any tool that could abstract the details sufficiently to be widely adopted. There is just too much nuance in cloud config.
I'm exploring using CUE (https://cuelang.org) to define TF resources, exporting as JSON for TF. So far it's much nicer
- Ask HN: What open source projects are you working on and why?
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Tgen: A template tool a la Helm or Consul Templates
I've been using https://cuelang.org for any configuration / yaml like generation. This link has a GH search with two discussions that talk about Rego: https://github.com/cue-lang/cue/search?q=rego&type=discussio...
I wrote https://github.com/hofstadter-io/hof to use this concept "at scale", i.e. inputting & outputting multiple files & dirs. The main idea was to generate common code across the stack from a single-source-of-truth. Today it inputs CUE only, which has all the things needed to validate the incoming data and also contains the templates, so `hof gen` takes the same args as `cue export`. It uses diff3 so that you can regenerate the output after modifying the input or the generated content, which is something I needed so that when I fill in the generated API handler func, and then change the design a bit, that I can keep the manual work.
What are some alternatives?
steampipe - Zero-ETL, infinite possibilities. Live query APIs, code & more with SQL. No DB required.
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.
dhall-lang - Maintainable configuration files
steampipe-mod-aws-compliance - Run individual controls or full compliance benchmarks for CIS, PCI, NIST, HIPAA and more across all of your AWS accounts using Powerpipe and Steampipe.
jsonnet - Jsonnet - The data templating language
cloud-custodian - Rules engine for cloud security, cost optimization, and governance, DSL in yaml for policies to query, filter, and take actions on resources
Pulumi - Pulumi - Infrastructure as Code in any programming language. Build infrastructure intuitively on any cloud using familiar languages 🚀
cloudsploit - Cloud Security Posture Management (CSPM)
ytt - YAML templating tool that works on YAML structure instead of text
starlark-rust - A Rust implementation of the Starlark language
cartography - Cartography is a Python tool that consolidates infrastructure assets and the relationships between them in an intuitive graph view powered by a Neo4j database.
opencspm - Open Cloud Security Posture Management Engine