coolify
SvelteKit
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coolify | SvelteKit | |
---|---|---|
111 | 611 | |
13,852 | 17,685 | |
21.3% | 2.2% | |
10.0 | 9.8 | |
3 days ago | 1 day ago | |
PHP | JavaScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT 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.
coolify
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Deploy SvelteKit with SSR on Coolify (Hetzner VPS)
This is my first quick try deploying SvelteKit with the open source software Coolify by Andras Bacsai.
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Standalone Next.js. When serverless is not an option
With a serverful approach, you can avoid these drawbacks, and the main challenge lies in selecting the platform that aligns with your requirements. Options may include AWS, Render, DigitalOcean, and others. While VPS is also an option, it's generally not recommended due to the significant setup and maintenance overhead involved (logging, monitoring, CI/CD pipelines, etc.). However, you can make your life easier by leveraging tools like Coolify that help managing your VPS.
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Let's build a screenshot API
Heroku and similar providers can simplify the server management issues, but you can use something much better that can combine both cost efficiency and ease of deployment—Coolify:
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Quantum alternatives - coolify and meli
3 projects | 12 Mar 2024
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Serverless Horrors
> VPSs being “easy to manage” is a strong option full of assumptions.
There are definitely many footguns with managing a VPS but I think the threshold to get vaguely competent with a VPS is not really that far off with getting familiar with the average cloud platform - which comes with its own dangers, like the near-total inability to put an upward cap on fees that that person found out with Netlify recently.
Having a $5 VPS and knowing it's never going to cost your more than $5 might balance out a lot of things on the other side for a lot of people.
(And, as a bonus, it comes with the benefit of having a better idea of what is going on on the actual computer which is running your code.)
Platforms like https://coolify.io/ (which I have not tried, but looks interesting) seem to give you some of the abstractions that you get in cloud platforms to save you having to mess with too much low level stuff and become an expert in a billion separate systems.
If you have Debian with automatic updates that does most of the heavy lifting for you. The hardest problem I have is resisting the temptation to just install everything, because the cost to do it is capped at my VPS monthly fee.
So yep, it comes with a lot of assumptions. But so does everything!
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Netlify just sent me a $104K bill for a simple static site
https://coolify.io/ might be worth a look
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The 2024 Web Hosting Report
The modern iteration of these tools has taken the developer experience learnings from the Platform as a Service (PaaS) category, and will bring them to your own VM, giving you your own personal PaaS. Example of this include Dokku, Coolify, Caprover, Cloud66 and many more!
- Coolify – Self-Hostable PaaS
- Open-source and self-hostable Heroku/Netlify alternative
- Best image optimization alternative to Vercel
SvelteKit
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ChatCrafters - Chat with AI powered personas
Svelte Kit for the fullstack framework It has first class support for Cloudflare Pages Svelte is a very elegant framework, and Svelte Kit is a very good meta-framework for Svelte. Svelte was probably the reason that…
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Fun, Beautiful, Printable 'Story Cards' for Kids with Cloudflare AI
This AI-powered Story Card Maker is built as a SvelteKit application with Typescript. Using Flowbite Svelte component library, the whole application was laid out. The layout for the Story Card (emulating the size of a postcard - 4" x 3") is created as an HTML Canvas using Fabric.js.
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Image Generator with Cloudflare
Svelte kit
- Cannot CRUD cookies in SvelteKit from another port
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The State of Angular SSR Deployment in 2024
These adapters, for example, were built by the community: https://github.com/sveltejs/kit/tree/master/packages/adapter-vercel https://github.com/nuxt/vercel-builder If somebody builds a working one for Angular Universal, we will gladly add it to our Framework Presets → https://vercel.com/docs/concepts/deployments/build-step#framework-preset.
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AI for Web Devs: Deploying Your AI App to Production
UPDATE: If you liked this project and are curious to see what it might look like as a SvelteKit app, check out this blog post by Tim Smith where he converts this existing app over.
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Ask HN: Looking for lightweight personal blogging platform
I've played around with several platforms in the last year or so. I've landed on the following setup that works very well for me and ticks all your boxes:
A SvelteKit[0] app hosted on Cloudflare pages. The repo is hosted on GitHub and hooked up to the Cloudflare Pages app [1]. On PRs, I get preview environments. On merge, the changes get deployed to my "production" website. I write blog posts and other content in markdown, which is then processed by mdsvex[2] with very minimal setup.
Mostly, my requirements were more focused around getting the actual framework, hosting, etc. out of my way so that I could focus on writing. Gatsby and Next.js were too configuration heavy and turned me off once I scratched beyond the surface.
[0] https://kit.svelte.dev/
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Mini site for recommending songs using Svelte & Deno
Behind the scenes is a simple Sveltekit-powered server function to fetch a Spotify client token then find a user's recommendation playlist and its track information. A Deno edge function to performs this data fetch and renders server-side Svelte.
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Removing React is just weakness leaving your codebase
It’s 2024, and you are about to start a new project. Do you reach for React, a framework you know and love or do you look at one of the other hot new frameworks like Astro, Enhance, 11ty, SvelteKit or gasp, plain vanilla Web Components?
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CryptoFlow: Building a secure and scalable system with Axum and SvelteKit - Part 5
From part 0 to part 4, we built out CryptoFlow's backend service. Though we can quickly use Postman, VS Code's ThunderClient or automated tests to see the endpoints working easily, this isn't all we want. We want to actively interact with the backend service via some intuitive user interface. Also, a layman wouldn't be able to "consume" the service we've built in the last parts. This article introduces building out the user interface of the system. We will be using SvelteKit, a framework that streamlines web development, and TailwindCSS, the utility-first CSS framework. Let's dig in!
What are some alternatives?
CapRover - Scalable PaaS (automated Docker+nginx) - aka Heroku on Steroids
Next.js - The React Framework
Dokku - A docker-powered PaaS that helps you build and manage the lifecycle of applications
Nuxt.js - Nuxt is an intuitive and extendable way to create type-safe, performant and production-grade full-stack web apps and websites with Vue 3. [Moved to: https://github.com/nuxt/nuxt]
porter - Kubernetes powered PaaS that runs in your own cloud.
Express - Fast, unopinionated, minimalist web framework for node.
meli - Platform for deploying static sites and frontend applications easily. Automatic SSL, deploy previews, reverse proxy, and more.
astro - The web framework for content-driven websites. ⭐️ Star to support our work!
Empire - Empire is a PowerShell and Python post-exploitation agent.
vite - Next generation frontend tooling. It's fast!
pack - CLI for building apps using Cloud Native Buildpacks
Svelte - Cybernetically enhanced web apps