enclaver
upspin
enclaver | upspin | |
---|---|---|
8 | 20 | |
119 | 6,226 | |
2.6% | 0.2% | |
8.1 | 6.0 | |
3 months ago | 15 days ago | |
Rust | 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.
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enclaver
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PostgreSQL Encryption: The Available Options
If you're looking for the best way to take a container and run it with Nitro, I work on https://github.com/edgebitio/enclaver
Works great with Kubernetes as a DaemonSet or straight on a VM.
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Ask HN: What Are You Working on This Year?
Building a tool for running secure enclaves called Enclaver (https://github.com/edgebitio/enclaver). There is a big opportunity for keeping data encrypted while running code against it within enclaves.
And a more secure software supply chain is possible with device attestation and cryptographic measurements of software.
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My company open sourced our tool to mix pods with secure enclaves into a regular EKS cluster
Check out the code on GitHub: https://github.com/edgebitio/enclaver
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Supabase secrets management available in beta
I'm building the "in-use" part of this right now...what if you could encrypt your data with an encryption key (at-rest), _but also_ to a set of code that is allowed to decrypt it (in-use). If that code is identified cryptographically, its identity can't be spoofed or stolen.
We're exploring secure enclaves as the protected runtime env and the code attestation generation: https://github.com/edgebitio/enclaver
- Enclaver - run code in secure enclaves so it can't be observed by any human (like your iPhone enclave, but on AWS servers instead)
- Show HN: Enclaver – create and run secure enclaves
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What’s the coolest thing you did this year?
I have been building out an open source project called Enclaver, which allows you to wrap sensitive workloads inside of a secure enclave (the same as your iPhone, but on servers). It's intended for anything you don't want observed, like JWT signers, encryption/decryption, partner integrations using highly privileged API keys, etc.
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The Security Design of the AWS Nitro System
I found the side channel protection and CPU/L1 isolation between customers to be particularly interesting.
Very cool to see the physical hardware interconnects for resetting the system. Also the PCI bus as one of the isolating boundaries.
I have built an open source project for managing Nitro Enclaves (https://github.com/edgebitio/enclaver), so it is cool to see how these build on this foundation to provide even more protection.
upspin
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I Moved My Blog from IPFS to a Server
Super intriguing. Thanks for sharing!
It reminds me a bit of an early Go project called Upspin [1]. And also a bit of Solid [2]. Did you get any inspiration from them?
What excites me about your project is that you're addressing the elephant in the room when it comes to data sovereignty (~nobody wants to self-host a personal database but their personal devices aren't publicly accessible) in an elegant way.
By storing the data on my personal device and (presumably?) paying for a managed relay (and maybe an encrypted backup), I can keep my data in my physical possession, but I won't have to host anything on my own. Is that the idea?
https://upspin.io/
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Educational Codebases
There are a few Go projects meant to be learned from:
- https://github.com/pion/opus for to learn audio
- https://github.com/benbjohnson/wtf for overall production quality
- https://github.com/upspin/upspin difficult to explain, personally I'm not a fan of the errors
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Fundamentals to Learn
You could also take a look at some real-world open-source projects. I like upspin for its idiomatic approach.
- Examples of Good Go Repos
- Examples of an idiomatic API project
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Best practices of validation on web apps?
For example, Rob Pike's upspin places all its validations in the separate package. Do you agree with that approach? Which yet proven options there are?
- Is there a good example of an open source non-trivial (DB connection, authentication, authorization, data validation, tests, etc...) Go API?
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Ask HN: What Are You Working on This Year?
Just a few projects that could perhaps interest you in terms of design of your own solution :
Upspin: https://upspin.io/
- Upspin: A framework for naming everyone's everything.
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proposal: Go 2: error handling: try statement with handler
The early error wrapping work which emerged out of the Upspin project, that eventually made its way into the errors package, included stack traces in the wrap error. This would provide exactly what it appears you seek.