docker-rollout
securestore-rs
docker-rollout | securestore-rs | |
---|---|---|
9 | 2 | |
2,093 | 112 | |
- | 0.9% | |
6.2 | 5.1 | |
29 days ago | 2 months ago | |
Shell | Rust | |
MIT License | 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.
docker-rollout
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Show HN: Deploy highly available infra to EC2 with Docker-compose and CDK
I created a CDK deploy that uses docker-rollout [1][2] to deploy highly available infrastructure to EC2 using only autoscaling groups. It is not super polished but it is a complete example, so it could be useful if you are considering hosting on EC2. Rolling out deploys involves updating one file on S3 and running one script.
Ironically after all that setup, I decided to give Linode with k8s a try [3] :-) (due to aws' high costs of egress and NAT gws / IPv4 tax on AWS, and the fact that some apps that I want to run are easier to deploy with helm).
More notes:
* I did try ECS and Fargate, which are nice, but also come with associated costs and a bunch of complexity. At that point, I rather spend time directly with k8s, which should make my localhost parity way higher, and hosting somewhere more affordable.
* I tried both Pulumi and Terraform. I have mixed feelings about them. I ended up using CDK because it _felt_ like the nicer development experience (except when CloudFormation fails and it kind of hides the reason why, sigh ... fishing for logs on CloudWatch is such a drag!).
* I tried to add some NACL rules since I ended up running the thing on a public VPC. I couldn't make it work but at that time I had already decided to host elsewhere so I left it like that :-). I did succeed on adding support for AWS WAF. Sadly, the cdk currently doesn't have high level support for WAF so it was not as nice to setup.
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1: https://github.com/Wowu/docker-rollout
2: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34690947
3: https://medium.com/@elliotgraebert/comparing-the-top-eight-m...
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How I run my servers
````
This way, Caddy will buffer the request and give 30 seconds for your new service to get online when you're deploying a new version.
Ideally, during deployment of a new version the new version should go live and healthy before caddy starts using it (and kills the old container). I've looked at https://github.com/Wowu/docker-rollout and https://github.com/lucaslorentz/caddy-docker-proxy but haven't had time to prioritize it yet.
- Zero-downtime deployment tool for web apps (created by DHH, creator of Rails)
- docker rollout - Zero Downtime Deployment for docker-compose
- Show HN: Docker rollout – Zero Downtime Deployment for Docker-compose
securestore-rs
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How I run my servers
You can include encrypted secrets and deploy the key out of band. Our open source solution for this (cross-platform, cross-language): https://neosmart.net/blog/securestore-open-secrets-format/
Eg this is the rust version on GitHub: https://github.com/neosmart/securestore-rs/tree/master
- Secure Store
What are some alternatives?
mypaas - Run your own PaaS using Docker, Traefik, and great analytics
ts-neural-network - A neural network to play with
susam.net - Source code of https://susam.net/
Exocryption - A simple file encryption program written in Rust using the Rust Crypto set of crates.
Moby - The Moby Project - a collaborative project for the container ecosystem to assemble container-based systems
etsd - Transmit sensitive data encrypted across your organization!
flyctl - Command line tools for fly.io services
caddy-docker-proxy - Caddy as a reverse proxy for Docker