epinio
nerdctl
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epinio | nerdctl | |
---|---|---|
10 | 33 | |
501 | 7,356 | |
4.6% | 2.5% | |
9.0 | 9.6 | |
19 days ago | 8 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.
epinio
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I want to be able to deploy apps as quickly as possible to on-prem k8s. I was looking at Jenkins-x with their jx create command, looks pretty powerful, but it looks complicated to setup. Any easier alternatives?
You could have a look to https://epinio.io/. It is a PAAS that leverage build pack to deploy app on k8s cluster. Disclaimer: my team is working on it
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Questions for Heroku-like Project
Epinion
- Epinio: Kubernetes PaaS from SuSE
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A selfhosted Heroku clone on your Kubernetes cluster
Would have helped if I spent it right 😂 - https://github.com/epinio/epinio
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Epinio: the open-source Application development engine for Kubernetes
Epinio can be installed using Helm onto any compliant Kubernetes Cluster. The latest CLI release can be found at [][https://github.com/epinio/epinio/releases]
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How to manage access to a Kubernetes cluster for Dev Teams ?
We are building a product (Epinio) to avoid this. The idea is that devs don't need to access the cluster and to know the Kubernetes internals to deploy something. It's still in alpha/beta, with a lot of development ongoing. 🙂
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Moving to Kubernetes
For the Apache/php container portion and building the app itself, I'd suggest looking at buildpacks (Paketo buildpacks are easy). This can let you standardize on the code->container pipeline. (I'm biased since I'm working on Epinio which uses them to simplify the code->running application pipeline)
- Opinionated K8s platform to take you from Code to URL in one step
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Should We Replace Docker Desktop With Rancher Desktop?
For dev work, we also are working on a project called Epinio which takes a bit of a different approach to developing on top of Kubernetes. (https://epinio.io)
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Example of using Makefile for Kubernetes development
Your workflow describes the inner loop of development. Take a look at https://skaffold.dev that. If you can’t be bothered to learn how to write k8s manifests, epinio might be worth a shot. I tried it on some simple stuff and it worked but I doubt it’s usefulness in complex setups. https://github.com/epinio/epinio
nerdctl
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Colima k8s nix setup
What about the docker-cli? colima also ships with a docker-compatible cli to interact with containerd called nerdctl. We can execute the same docker cli commands like:
- Nerdctl v2 Beta
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Nginx Unit – Universal web app server
Using nerdctl: https://github.com/containerd/nerdctl
I'd really disagree that compose files are somehow one-shot, or blindly modified. To the contrary, really, we have them checked in with the source code. Upon deployment to the cluster, the (running) services will be intelligently updated or replaced (in a rolling manner, causing zero downtime). LXC might be more elegant, but I have no idea what simple, file-based format I could use to let engineers describe the environment their app should run in without compose.
I need something that even junior devs can start up with a single command, that can be placed in the VCS along with the code, and that will not require deep Linux knowledge to get running. Open for suggestions here, really.
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Jenkins Agents On Kubernetes
Now since Kubernetes works off of containerd I'll be taking a different approach on handling container builds by using nerdctl and the buildkit that comes bundled with it. I'll do this on the amd64 control plane node since it's beefier than my Raspberry Pi workers for handling builds and build related services. Go ahead and download and unpack the latest nerdctl release as of writing (make sure to check the release page in case there's a new one):
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Going through a Kubernetes training with autogenerated captions and about half are coming up like this.
That's why nerdctl, their cli binary, is so well named.
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Python + containerd? Who might be interested?
Well, it is indeed a good option. However, containerd is a good alternative that is growing even among developers. Please see: https://github.com/containerd/nerdctl
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How to own your own Docker Registry address
Nerdctl/containerd has IPFS support :)
https://github.com/containerd/nerdctl/blob/main/docs/ipfs.md
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DockerHub replacement stratagy and options
nerdctl supports IPFS for both image pulling and pushing, including encrypted images and eStargz lazy pulling. For building, the current method is a locally hosted translator so that the traditional pulls can be converted to work over IPFS. They even have docs on running it on k8s node, though if my reading is correct this isn't exactly a cloud native approach (running systemd services on each node...).
- Docker's deleting Open Source images and here's what you need to know
- Release v1.0.0 · containerd/nerdctl
What are some alternatives?
okteto - Develop your applications directly in your Kubernetes Cluster
lima - Linux virtual machines, with a focus on running containers
space-cloud - Open source Firebase + Heroku to develop, scale and secure serverless apps on Kubernetes
podman-compose - a script to run docker-compose.yml using podman
kaniko - Build Container Images In Kubernetes
skaffold - Easy and Repeatable Kubernetes Development
podman - Podman: A tool for managing OCI containers and pods.
OpenFaaS - OpenFaaS - Serverless Functions Made Simple
Moby - The Moby Project - a collaborative project for the container ecosystem to assemble container-based systems
kube-makefile - Makefile tooling to simplify local development for small Kubernetes projects.
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes