djinn | goimports | |
---|---|---|
20 | 46 | |
39 | 7,215 | |
- | 0.4% | |
7.1 | 9.8 | |
6 months ago | 6 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
djinn
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Monthly 'Shameless Self Promotion' thread - 2022/12
Djinn CI is a newly launched CI platform, with the following features:
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Act: Run your GitHub Actions locally
I've built a CI platform [1] that does support running your CI builds without the server using an offline runner. I wrote about it here before: https://blog.djinn-ci.com/showcase/2022/08/06/running-your-c...
[1] - https://about.djinn-ci.com/
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Djinn CI – open-source CI platform
Author of Djinn CI here. This is a CI platform that I developed, it is open source but there is also a hosted offering https://about.djinn-ci.com. Some of the features are detailed below:
* Fully virtualized Linux VMs
* GitHub/GitLab integration
* Variable masking
* Configurable artifact cleanup limits
* Multi-repository builds
* Repeatable builds with cron jobs
* Custom QCOW2 images for builds
I've written some posts demonstrating the features of the platform which I have posted here before:
* https://blog.djinn-ci.com/showcase/2022/08/06/running-your-c...
* https://blog.djinn-ci.com/showcase/2022/08/16/using-multiple...
For further reading there is also the documentation sub-site at https://docs.djinn-ci.com/.
If you have any questions don't hesitate to reach out.
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Blazing fast CI with MicroVMs
Good article. Firecracker is something that has definitely piqued my interest when it comes to quickly spinning up a throwaway environment to use for either development or CI. I run a CI platform [1], which currently uses QEMU for the build environments (Docker is also supported but currently disabled on the hosted offering), startup times are ok, but having a boot time of 1-2s is definitely highly appealing. I will have to investigate Firecracker further to see if I could incorporate this into what I'm doing.
Julia Evans has also written about Firecracker in the past too [2][3].
[1] - https://about.djinn-ci.com
[2] - https://jvns.ca/blog/2021/01/23/firecracker--start-a-vm-in-l...
[3] - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25883253
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From WampServer, to Vagrant, to QEMU
At this point when it came to my hobbyist development, I had moved past PHP and started learning Go, and was looking to do some serious development with this for a CI platform I had an idea for. By now, I had a firmer grasp of the software stack I wanted to work with, a better understanding of how everything pieced together. And so I went about developing that CI platform, that would later become Djinn CI. I uninstalled VirtualBox and Vagrant and fully committed to using QEMU, booting up the local machine was as simple as hitting CTRL + R in my terminal, searching for qemu and hitting enter, an elegant solution I know.
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Looking for a mature distributed task queuer/scheduler in go
I use mcmathja/curlyq and found it pretty reliable. This is the queue I use for Djinn CI an open source CI platform I developed.
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Using multiple repositories in your CI builds
Djinn CI makes working with multiple repositoriesin a build simple via the sourcesparameter in the build manifest. This allows you to specify multiple Git respositories to clone into your build environment. Each source would be a URL that could be cloned via git clone. With most CI platforms, a build's manifest is typically tied to the source code repository itself. With Djinn CI, whilst you can have a build manifest in a source code repository, the CI server itself doesn't really have an understanding of that repository. Instead, it simply looks at the sources in the manifest that is specified, and clones each of them into the build environment.
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Running your CI builds without the server
Perhaps the one feature that sets Djinn CI out from other CI platforms is the fact that is has an offline runner. The offline runner allows for CI builds to be run without having to send them to the server. There are some limitations around this, of course, but it provides a useful mechanism for sanity checking build manifests, testing custom images, and for building software without the need for a CI server.
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Show HN: OneDev – A Lightweight Gitlab Alternative
You mention CI being done in a distributed fashion. Could you elaborate on what you mean by this?
I'm asking as I'm someone who has developed a CI platform [1], and one of its features is the offline runner [2]. The offline runner allows you to run your CI builds on your own computer, and does not communicate with the CI server whatsoever. Is this what you had in mind?
[1] https://about.djinn-ci.com
[2] https://docs.djinn-ci.com/user/offline-runner/
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Monthly 'Shameless Self Promotion' thread - 2022/06
Djinn CI is a newly launched CI platform, with the following features:
goimports
- Gopls/v0.15.0
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How to find all methods which return struct "Foo" (vscode or cli)
Just a guess, but it might be somewhere in gopls https://github.com/golang/tools/tree/master/gopls/doc On this page https://langserver.org/ it says it should support "finding references"
- Major rewrite of gopls released (2 weeks ago)
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What LSP are y'all using?
Language server protocol. Here’s a good one: https://github.com/golang/tools/blob/master/gopls/README.md
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Can Someone Explain To Me Like I'm 5
gopls was not able to find modules in your workspace.When outside of GOPATH, gopls needs to know which modules you are working on.You can fix this by opening your workspace to a folder inside a Go module, orby using a go.work file to specify multiple modules.See the documentation for more information on setting up your workspace:https://github.com/golang/tools/blob/master/gopls/doc/workspace.md.
- Latest gopls version still v0.11.0 from December 22?
- GitHub - orijtech/structslop: structslop is a static analyzer for Go that recommends struct field rearrangements to provide for maximum space/allocation efficiency.
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betteralign - structs field alignment static analyzer for Go
For more gopls settings, you can see files in this folder: https://github.com/golang/tools/tree/master/gopls/doc
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Linter for explicit hint to interface which gets implemented.
But finding which interface is satisfied by a type is trivial anyways through gopls which integrates conveniently into any LSP supporting IDE (such as VSCode and Goland).
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Setting up helix for golang
You need to make sure you have Google's lsp server for golang installed.
What are some alternatives?
gatus - ⛑ Automated developer-oriented status page
gofumpt - A stricter gofmt
tracetest - 🔭 Tracetest - Build integration and end-to-end tests in minutes, instead of days, using OpenTelemetry and trace-based testing.
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
packj - Packj stops :zap: Solarwinds-, ESLint-, and PyTorch-like attacks by flagging malicious/vulnerable open-source dependencies ("weak links") in your software supply-chain
goreturns - A gofmt/goimports-like tool for Go programmers that fills in Go return statements with zero values to match the func return types
atuin - ✨ Magical shell history
GoLint - [mirror] This is a linter for Go source code. (deprecated)
onedev - Git Server with CI/CD, Kanban, and Packages. Seamless integration. Unparalleled experience.
staticcheck
ddosify - Effortless Kubernetes Monitoring and Performance Testing. Available on CLI, Self-Hosted, and Cloud
golines - A golang formatter that fixes long lines