cloudwithchris.com
Cloud With Chris is my personal blogging, podcasting and vlogging platform where I talk about all things cloud. I also invite guests to talk about their experiences with the cloud and hear about lessons learned along their journey. (by chrisreddington)
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6.9 | - | |
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The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.
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.
cloudwithchris.com
Posts with mentions or reviews of cloudwithchris.com.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-07-13.
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Shift Left and Increase your Code Quality with GitHub Branch Protection Rules
Navigate to a GitHub Repository that you own. For example, I am the organization owner of CloudWithChris, so will navigate to my cloudwithchris.com repository.
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Choosing between Azure Static Web Apps and Static Websites on Azure Storage
For example, the website you're reading (Cloud With Chris) is - and has been - hosted using the Static Websites on Azure Storage approach since March 2020. As an end-user, when you navigate to www.cloudwithchris.com, you'll be routed to an Azure CDN instance that is fronting the Azure Storage Account which hosts the production Static Website. The CDN is how I'm able to have an SSL Certificate mapped against a Custom Domain, otherwise that wouldn't be possible directly on the storage account (as there's no way to map a custom SSL certificate in that way directly).
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Introducing the Cloud Native Compute Foundation (CNCF)
So, what's the point in this post (other than reinforcing a brilliant episode, thank you again Annie)? Over time, I'll release a set of blog posts which cover these CNCF projects. I don't have a timeframe. I don't have a specific goal in mind just yet. But given that it's Cloud with Chris, it does feel that Cloud native should have a spot in there somewhere. So stay tuned! If you'd like me to focus on any projects in particular, please let me know either in the Cloud With Chris GitHub repository by raising a GitHub Issue, or letting me know on Twitter, @reddobowen.
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Azure Static Web Apps are Generally Available
Now, one of the main points that I raise in my usual talk on hosting websites using the Static Content Hosting pattern is the significant cost-benefit of doing this. In an average month, I spend less than £5 for the entire end-to-end running of my environments. Yes, environments plural - that includes Preview, Staging and production, and also includes the cost of streaming my audio files to third party platforms like Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify and consumed directly from www.cloudwithchris.com.
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Using schema.org for SEO optimisation
There are plenty of existing articles that talk about how to optimise these common SEO practices, so I recommend you search for these as I'm going to aim to not reinvent the wheel. If you're interested on how I achieve some of these in Cloud with Chris, you can take a look at the metadata partial template that I use within my Hugo template.
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Using Git LFS to version Podcast Audio files and trigger releases to production with GitHub Actions
name: "Podcast Audio Upload" on: push: branches: - master paths: - "podcast_audio/**" jobs: publish: environment: name: production.azure url: https://www.cloudwithchris.com runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - name: Download Podcast files that are different from prior commit run: | git clone --config lfs.fetchexclude="/podcast_audio" https://github.com/chrisreddington/cloudwithchris.com.git ./ fileschanged=$(git diff --name-only HEAD^ HEAD -- '*.mp3') echo "$fileschanged" > files.txt xargs -a files.txt -d'\n' rm git config --unset lfs.fetchexclude git checkout . cd podcast_audio sed -i -e 's/podcast_audio\///g' ../files.txt for i in *; do if ! grep -qxFe "$i" ../files.txt then echo "Deleting: $i" rm "$i" fi done - name: Azure Login uses: azure/login@v1 with: creds: ${{ secrets.AZURE_CREDENTIALS }} - name: "Upload podcast files to storage that don't yet exist" uses: azure/CLI@v1 with: azcliversion: 2.20.0 inlineScript: | az storage blob upload-batch --account-name cloudwithchrisprod -d 'podcasts' -s '/github/workspace/podcast_audio' --if-unmodified-since 2020-01-01T00:00Z --auth-mode login
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Using GPG Keys to sign Git Commits - Part 3
Once you have added the Public GPG Key details to GitHub, you can now go ahead and push your local changes to GitHub by using git push (If you haven't already associated a remote location with the Git repository, then you may also need to use the git remote add command, and then use git push). Assuming that the Public Key in the GPG Keys section of your GitHub account corresponds with the Private Key used to sign the commits, then you will notice that commits will be marked as verified in the GitHub user interface. See the example below from the cloudwithchris.com Git Repository Commits page.
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JAMStack and the Cloud - A winning combination
Similarly, Cloud With Chris is an example of a JAMStack site, driven by Hugo, a static website generator. Rather than calling any backend APIs, the content is all entirely driven by markdown which is hosted in the GitHub repository mentioned a moment ago. This means I'm not calling any external APIs. Instead, the content is finalised at deployment time. I run a command in my GitHub Actions (Hugo build) which goes ahead and takes my site's configuration, necessary theme information and content, and renders the needed files to generate the set of webpages to render to my clients. The content is then uploaded to an Azure Blob Storage account which is publicly accessible and configured using the Static Website functionality.
billing
Posts with mentions or reviews of billing.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-05-17.
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Can you switch between monthly/yearly payment later?
Yes. Go to Settings | Billing. Scroll down to Add-ons, and you can change from yearly to monthly or the reverse there.
- GitHub Student Developer Pack com 86 recursos gratuitos para estudantes + Github Pro
- Copilot trial ending - check you want to pay for it!
- Since GitHub Copilot free preview ends soon, What was it like for you so far?
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Ask HN: Are you going to start paying for copilot?
If you're not going to pay for it and you're on the preview, the first wave of charges are about to go out. So make sure you do want to pay or cancel: https://github.com/settings/billing
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Question about Free vs Pro account
Link to plan comparison: https://github.com/settings/billing/plans
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Question about GitHub raw files
I've been testing in the last hour or so, and so far I don't see the Github LFS bandwidth limit moving under https://github.com/settings/billing. I just want to make sure I don't run into bad surprises. So I'd have three questions :
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Where do I find compilers?
GitHub is free for anything you'd need to do for CS50
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Meet Billing Portal - a Laravel Spark alternative for Jetstream 🚀
An easier example would be the Github Billing's Usage Reports. All of the metrics they have there report the usage, and if you were to write some kind of feature in your billing app that works like this, using Cashier Register, you'd increment the amount of usage for any of your features, and later on you can retrieve them or check when the limit was reached to ping your users, per se.
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Using Git LFS to version Podcast Audio files and trigger releases to production with GitHub Actions
Chris, that looks to do the job. You're triggering the workflow run when there is a change in the podcast_audio folder pushed to the master branch. You've also enabled the lfs flag, so that the runner will go ahead and pull down the binary files as needed. Why is that a naïve implementation? I'm glad you asked! As a GitHub user you have a storage and bandwidth quota for Git LFS data. You can find this in the billing section of your GitHub account.
What are some alternatives?
When comparing cloudwithchris.com and billing you can also consider the following projects:
smi-spec - Service Mesh Interface
jetstream-cashier-billing-portal - Cashierstream is a simple Spark alternative written for Laravel Jetstream, with the super-power of tracking plan quotas, like seats or projects number on a per-plan basis
git-lfs - Git extension for versioning large files
keys
checkout - Action for checking out a repo
static-web-apps-cli - Azure Static Web Apps CLI ✨
Hugo - The world’s fastest framework for building websites.
emails
kubernetes - Production-Grade Container Scheduling and Management
helm - The Kubernetes Package Manager
cloudwithchris.com vs smi-spec
billing vs jetstream-cashier-billing-portal
cloudwithchris.com vs git-lfs
billing vs git-lfs
cloudwithchris.com vs keys
billing vs checkout
cloudwithchris.com vs static-web-apps-cli
cloudwithchris.com vs Hugo
cloudwithchris.com vs emails
cloudwithchris.com vs kubernetes
cloudwithchris.com vs checkout
cloudwithchris.com vs helm