dashboard
skaffold
Our great sponsors
dashboard | skaffold | |
---|---|---|
31 | 83 | |
13,791 | 14,650 | |
2.0% | 0.7% | |
9.8 | 9.2 | |
7 days ago | 4 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.
dashboard
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The Inner Workings of Kubernetes Management Frontends — A Software Engineer’s Perspective
Setting up and interacting with your first cluster can be overwhelming. Just like me, you might have come across the infamous kubernetes/dashboard, followed the installation instructions, and asked yourself: "What did I just do and why exactly does this work the way it works?" And after some tinkering with your cluster, you might have installed even more external tools that help you with some specific aspects of cluster management, providing you with either a CLI or a Web UI.
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Show HN: Kubetail – A private, real-time log viewer for Kubernetes clusters
Loki needs Promtail
Kibana needs Elasticsearch
I'm not sure if this has good enough log viewing https://github.com/kubernetes/dashboard
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Easy UI for teams to control their namespace?
The Kubernetes Dashboard could work for this use case.
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I wrote a setup guide for developers to practice and learn Kubernetes locally
At the end of the guide, two web applications will be deployed: the sample ASP.NET Core app from Microsoft and Kubernetes dashboard. Both served on custom local domains with trusted TLS.
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Kubernetes dashboard
Pls see below link. https://github.com/kubernetes/dashboard/blob/master/docs/user/access-control/README.md
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11 of the Best Open-Source Kubernetes Tools - 2021 Edition
Kubernetes projects like Minikube come out of the box with a sleek and straightforward GUI called Dashboard. It is an excellent read-focused view of the environment, but what if you want to do everything from a UI?
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K8s dashboard release cycle
The release page here: https://github.com/kubernetes/dashboard/releases
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HULL Tutorial 02: Setting up a Helm Chart based on HULL
echo 'apiVersion: v2 appVersion: 2.5.0 dependencies: - condition: metrics-server.enabled name: metrics-server repository: https://kubernetes-sigs.github.io/metrics-server/ version: 3.5.0 - name: hull version: "1.23.3" repository: "https://vidispine.github.io/hull" description: General-purpose web UI for Kubernetes clusters home: https://github.com/kubernetes/dashboard icon: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/master/logo/logo.svg keywords: - kubernetes - dashboard kubeVersion: ">=1.21.0-0" maintainers: - email: [email protected] name: desaintmartin name: kubernetes-dashboard sources: - https://github.com/kubernetes/dashboard version: 5.2.0' > Chart.yaml
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Prometheus (via Rancher) is a memory hog ... Is there any simple light-weight alternative?
https://codeberg.org/hjacobs/kube-web-view/ can give you what you want if you really just want a read-only web UI. Or the official dashboard.
skaffold
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You've just inherited a legacy C++ codebase, now what?
A nice middle ground is using a tool like Google's Skaffold, which provides "Bazel-like" capabilities for composing Docker images and tagging them based on a number of strategies, including file manifests. In my case, I also use build args to explicitly set versions of external dependencies.
While I am in a Typescript environment with this setup at the moment, my personal experience that Skaffold with Docker has a lighter implementation and maintenance overhead than Bazel. (You also get the added benefit of easy deployment and automatic rebuilds.)
I quite liked using Bazel in a small Golang monorepo, but I ran into pain when trying to do things like include third-party pre-compiled binaries in the Docker builds, because of the unusual build rules convention. The advantage of Skaffold is it provides a thin build/tag/deploy/verify layer over Docker and other container types. Might be worth a look!
Kudos to the Google team building it! https://skaffold.dev
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Simplifying preview environments for everyone
To get a similar experience of preevy up, first we’ll need to split the build and deploy using process or alternatively employ tools that orchestrate build-tag-push-update-sync flow like Skaffold/Tilt.
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Set up docker and kubernetes in ubuntu 22.04
We will be using docker and microk8s from Canonical. For running our software during development, we will be using skaffold which is a great tool developed by Google.
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How do you develop cloud-native applications locally on Kubernetes?
I have used both Skaffold and Devspace. I prefer the latter.
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Launch HN: Moonrepo (YC W23) – Open-source build system
I wonder if it has some overlap with https://skaffold.dev/.
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Building a RESTful API With Functions
K3d and Skaffold for local development
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Does anyone else feel like this?
skaffold.dev - build in k8s - no more asking for the database password. All the plumbing to the backend is just done so it's easier for them to test and demo any branch
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Which environments do you use/support?
To access you service your have several options (it depends on teams the preferences) you can use scaffold https://skaffold.dev/ or for simple case kfwd https://github.com/GiGurra/kfwd. Last for everything that is normally expose on internet you would have an Ingress and use external-dns as you would in prod.
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Approaches in Cloud Development Ergonomics
This approach works great when it’s feasible, which is usually at a very early stage in the life of the application where it’s still small and tenable. There’s some tooling that lets you extend this honeymoon phase by letting you do it more easily, like docker-compose, Skaffold, or Tilt. However, at a certain point, even if you’ve written whatever scriptage is needed to actually configure and run the latest stable version of all of your components together, you’re going to hit some sort of ceiling: if you’ve got a large database, or some CPU-heavy computations, or you’re relying on some managed service that can’t be containerized, this approach soon becomes untenable.
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Connecting a local container with a Kubernetes cluster
Another dev optimization is the conditional rebuilding of a container. For example tools like devspace and skaffold support syncing filles which have changes, but which don't require recompiling.
What are some alternatives?
argo-cd - Declarative Continuous Deployment for Kubernetes
devspace - DevSpace - The Fastest Developer Tool for Kubernetes ⚡ Automate your deployment workflow with DevSpace and develop software directly inside Kubernetes.
okteto - Develop your applications directly in your Kubernetes Cluster
telepresence - Local development against a remote Kubernetes or OpenShift cluster
helm - The Kubernetes Package Manager
flux2 - Open and extensible continuous delivery solution for Kubernetes. Powered by GitOps Toolkit.
Bazel - a fast, scalable, multi-language and extensible build system
tilt - Define your dev environment as code. For microservice apps on Kubernetes.
garden - Automation for Kubernetes development and testing. Spin up production-like environments for development, testing, and CI on demand. Use the same configuration and workflows at every step of the process. Speed up your builds and test runs via shared result caching
ingress-nginx - Ingress-NGINX Controller for Kubernetes
tilt-extensions - Extensions for Tilt
Docker Compose - Define and run multi-container applications with Docker