crossplane
NATS
crossplane | NATS | |
---|---|---|
60 | 11 | |
8,805 | 5,161 | |
2.3% | 1.2% | |
9.9 | 9.1 | |
2 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
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.
crossplane
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Rethinking Infrastructure as Code from Scratch
did anyone adopt in production https://crossplane.io ?
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Understanding Crossplane is being hard
- https://github.com/crossplane/crossplane/blob/master/design/one-pager-composition-environment.md
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Automated provisioning for data resources
In the overall scheme of things , look at services like backstage.io , crossplane.io and opslevel.com to get ideas. This is not necessarily an endorsement of the services. If all you want is to handle cloud resources and that's it, Terraform can be enough with what ever flavor of web technologies you and your team are comfortable with and can support it along the way. Doesn't take much to create a js based website to collect data from a form, or use other means to collecting data as long as its recorded and transparent for accountability.
- What are some Terraform automation tools you want to exist?
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Crossplane: Unifying platform engineering based on Kubernetes API
XRs are written in a fully declarative manner. And when I am building my XR from underlying managed resources provided by some crossplane provider I need to parametrize resources, use conditionals and create arrays of resuorces The issues of declarativeness in the world of automation are well known- we typically resort to some form of templating and we invent some imperative expressions into that templating language/format. This is currently not very well supported with Crossplane however Crossplane team realizes this issue and they are conteptualizing solution here
- Anyway to automate the AKS cluster creation using Yaml?
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What options are available for using internal code from a fully open source project?
I have an idea for a project that would interface with Crossplane. The project has some code that would save tons of time if I could use it directly in my project, but it is located in the internal directory. I can't import the modules directly, but the project is open sourced under an Apache 2.0 license, so the code itself is available for use under that license.
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Azure vs AWS
There are always new projects like crossplane that sit on top on architecture systems like terraform, vagrant. The pressure to abstract away any sort of resources is mounting, companies can save a lot by for example by alt hosting S3 endpoints. The train is going the direction not to tie anything to a specific platform implementation if its not a must. Most of the companies I work with use AWS as a hosting provider, but Microsoft for github and related CI matters. As I learned, AWS quality is very dependent on location, eu-central-1 is dead stable for our use cases serving about millions requests a day.
- Crossplane on Amazon EKS with IRSA
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One multi-container deployment vs. a separate deployment for each image?
Practically, you'll be replacing stock k8s resources (deployments) with custom ones like Argo Rollouts with Keda autoscaling, so you have to plan the respective Gitops CD pipeline (fluxcd/argocd with some crossplane), as well.
NATS
- High-Performance server for NATS.io, the cloud and edge native messaging system
- Asyncapi with Go
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What is the coolest Go open source projects you have seen?
nats: Golang client for NATS, the cloud native messaging system
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Distributed communication patterns with NATS
Install the nats.go package
- Redis vs. Kafka vs. RabbitMQ
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Distributed messaging with NATS
Now that our NATS server is running, we'll be using Go and Node.js clients to connect to it for simple demonstration. Not familiar with Go or Node? Don't worry NATS has clients available in over 40 languages!
- How do I build a text editor like notepad using wails
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Plugins vs Microservices
You can build monolith applications and if they need cross communication, rely on something like Nats: https://github.com/nats-io/nats.go
- Modern Communication: Sockets
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Subscription management in pub/sub system
You could start by looking/reading how it is implemented in production ala https://github.com/nats-io/nats.go
What are some alternatives?
kubevela - The Modern Application Platform.
nsq - A realtime distributed messaging platform
Pulumi - Pulumi - Infrastructure as Code in any programming language. Build infrastructure intuitively on any cloud using familiar languages 🚀
Centrifugo - Scalable real-time messaging server in a language-agnostic way. Self-hosted alternative to Pubnub, Pusher, Ably. Set up once and forever.
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.
EventBus - [Go] Lightweight eventbus with async compatibility for Go
terraform-cdk - Define infrastructure resources using programming constructs and provision them using HashiCorp Terraform
go-nsq - The official Go package for NSQ
helm - The Kubernetes Package Manager
dbus - Native Go bindings for D-Bus
external-dns - Configure external DNS servers (AWS Route53, Google CloudDNS and others) for Kubernetes Ingresses and Services
emitter - Emits events in Go way, with wildcard, predicates, cancellation possibilities and many other good wins