spec
Paperless-ng
DISCONTINUED
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spec | Paperless-ng | |
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48 | 141 | |
2,666 | 5,320 | |
8.7% | - | |
7.3 | 0.0 | |
10 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
Python | ||
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
spec
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Show HN: Lapdev, a new open-source remote dev environment management software
Hi, Lapdev dev here. Let me try to answer your question.
It's installed on a remote server so it provides remote environments. If you use VSCode remote, then you can "open" it through VSCode remote ssh.
The environment that Lapdev provides essentially is a container (other format is on the roadmap) with things pre-installed as defined in Devcontainer(https://containers.dev/) format.
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Show HN: Flox 1.0 – Open-source dev env as code with Nix
Happy to take this one, as I am one of the cofounder of Daytona.
Daytona solves all the automation and provisioning of the dev environment, actually wrote an article here laying out exactly what we do: https://www.daytona.io/dotfiles/diy-guide-to-transform-any-m...
Daytona currently supports only the dev container (https://containers.dev/) "dev env infrastructure as code" standard, but are looking to support others such as devfile, nix and flox.
Hope this helps
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A Journey to Find an Ultimate Development Environment
The full usage of the container means that you'll do the development inside the container. All the tools for development need to be installed inside the container. One of the technologies that leverage this approach is Devcontainers.
- Use Docker to create a local development Python environment
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Launching dev containers from code - is impossible?
... is how I introduced the concept of dev containers in my last article.
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Dev Containers: Open, Develop, Repeat...
How it works? Dev Containers is a specification based on Docker. This specification describes a metadata file (devcontainer.json), which defines how the project (Docker container, IDE settings, plugins, etc) is set up.
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Try MongoDB and Laravel in 1-click via GitHub Codespaces
Codespaces is built to run Dev Containers, an open standard for Development Containers. The Dev Container will reference a Docker build file, which describes the software and services our app is running on. It also defines things related to our development environment, including IDE plugins, network ports, and more.
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Dev Container for React Native with Expo
// For format details, see https://aka.ms/devcontainer.json. For config options, see the // README at: https://github.com/devcontainers/templates/tree/main/src/typescript-node { "name": "Node.js & TypeScript", // Or use a Dockerfile or Docker Compose file. More info: https://containers.dev/guide/dockerfile "image": "mcr.microsoft.com/devcontainers/typescript-node:1-20-bullseye", // Features to add to the dev container. More info: https://containers.dev/features. // "features": {}, // Use 'forwardPorts' to make a list of ports inside the container available locally. "forwardPorts": [8081], "initializeCommand": "bash .devcontainer/initializeCommand.sh", // Use 'postCreateCommand' to run commands after the container is created. "postCreateCommand": "bash .devcontainer/postCreateCommand.sh", // Configure tool-specific properties. // "customizations": {}, // Uncomment to connect as root instead. More info: https://aka.ms/dev-containers-non-root. // "remoteUser": "root", // "containerEnv": { // }, // "remoteEnv": { // "DEV_USER_HOST": "${localEnv:USERNAME}" // }, "runArgs": ["-p=8081:8081", "--env-file", ".devcontainer/.env"] }
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Microsoft Docker Development Container Templates
I do not know why someone shared this repo, there is nothing special about it other than containing some start templates. I would start here for understanding Dev Containers: https://containers.dev
If you have a scenario where using a container as your development environment makes sense, this is some tooling that can improve the developer experience vs just using plain Docker and Docker Compose.
I see it as being similar to the relationship between Vagrant and Virtual Machines.
You can use plain Dockerfiles if you prefer, dev containers provides some tooling to smooth out the rough edges of using Docker to host your dev environment including mounting your source code into the container etc. Details are at: https://containers.dev
Paperless-ng
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🔍Underrated Open Source Projects You Should Know About 🧠
Paperless-ngx is the successor to the original Paperless & Paperless-ng projects, both of which are now in public archive. The original projects are not dead, but rather, continued through the open source community!
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Paperless-Ngx v2.0.0
As others said I'm not sure if the name relates to Angular but it's worth saying that the frontend is in fact Angular
https://github.com/jonaswinkler/paperless-ng/tree/master/src...
paperless-ng (https://github.com/jonaswinkler/paperless-ng/)
- [Selfhosted] Paperless-NG ou Paperless-NGX
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IT-Spielereien die einem das Leben ein bischen erleichtern
Paperless-ng ist wohl tot (https://github.com/jonaswinkler/paperless-ng/ ist seit dem 16. Februar archiviert).
- Self Hosted Roundup #31
- So...what do you use Docker for??
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Need To Store Tax & Tax Related Documents. Suggestions Given The IRS Guidance?
paperless-ng / paperless-ngx has been nice for storing PDFs. I'll probably throw this year's documents into that as well.
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Ask HN: What have you built more than twice and wish someone had built for you?
A SaaS for managing personal documents. The closest I have right now (not SaaS) is paperless-ng[0], but I have to self-host it, unless I missed a really compelling solution.
I have a sea of documents, both physical and electronic, and it's always a struggle to scan/organize/find them. I'd pay good money for a software/service that manages my documents, from scanning to archiving.
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Best (simple) tool for personal Wiki
If it's a PDF manual then I prefer paperless-ng or paperless-ngx. Then it's searchable and you can filter by 'correspondent' which I normally put down as the manufacturer, label is as a technical manual, etc.
What are some alternatives?
Papermerge - Open Source Document Management System for Digital Archives (Scanned Documents)
Docspell - Assist in organizing your piles of documents, resulting from scanners, e-mails and other sources with miminal effort.
paperless-ngx - A community-supported supercharged version of paperless: scan, index and archive all your physical documents
Mayan EDMS - Free Open Source Document Management System (mirror, no pull request or issues)
Teedy - Lightweight document management system packed with all the features you can expect from big expensive solutions
Paperless - Scan, index, and archive all of your paper documents
Nginx Proxy Manager - Docker container for managing Nginx proxy hosts with a simple, powerful interface
icloud-drive-docker - Dockerized iCloud Client - make a local copy of your iCloud documents and photos, and keep it automatically up-to-date.
OCRmyPDF - OCRmyPDF adds an OCR text layer to scanned PDF files, allowing them to be searched
CryptPad - Collaborative office suite, end-to-end encrypted and open-source.
Calibre Web - :books: Web app for browsing, reading and downloading eBooks stored in a Calibre database
scanservjs - SANE scanner nodejs web ui