fleet
Comcast
Our great sponsors
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.
fleet
-
The 2024 Web Hosting Report
Docker didn’t have a default way to run on multiple hosts, and so in the wake of docker’s explosive adoption there was a rush of different solutions offered for scheduling containers across a fleet. One of the first well-adopted solutions was actually called fleet - it was part of CoreOS, whose team went on to be very influential throughout the container revolution. This was in the systemd era, and was basically seen as a multi-host systemd. It was very cool and it worked great!
-
The Container Orchestrator Landscape
Figure out how to revive https://github.com/coreos/fleet as something native in systemd?
-
Kubernetes is just Systemd distributed just like /etc is ETCD(istributed)
I guess what in trying to say is k8s is systemd distributed but more then. I see how in line fleet and systemd is though https://github.com/coreos/fleet/blob/master/Documentation/fleet-k8s-compared.md
-
We Don’t Use Docker (We Don’t Need It)
What you describe is essentially the original CoreOS fleet[0] project. It's distributed systemd init files.
[0] https://github.com/coreos/fleet#fleet---a-distributed-init-s...
I find it ironic half of k8s mojo, etcd, came out of this project as well.
Comcast
-
Twenty-five open-source network emulators and simulators you can use in 2023
And comcast: https://github.com/tylertreat/comcast
-
macOS Command-Line Tools You Might Not Know About
[Comcast](https://github.com/tylertreat/comcast) also does this for macOS, BSD, and Linux. And it's _brilliantly_ named.
-
Hundreds of millions of stars turned into a map of GitHub projects
I knew GitHub is not a tiny website, but I didn't imagine how big it actually is. Each of those dots are giant parts of someone's life.
There are a lot of interests that I didn't know exist. For example https://github.com/cat-milk/Anime-Girls-Holding-Programming-... - someone collects anime girls holding programming books.
https://github.com/tylertreat/Comcast - and here is someone who is amazing at coming up with funny project names =)
- simmulate a high latency network
-
How to simulate a high ping?
There's a tool called "comcast" for exactly that (and more): https://github.com/tylertreat/comcast
-
Speedbump - a TCP proxy for simulating variable network latency
looks similar to https://github.com/tylertreat/comcast
- Ask HN: How do I force network failures during development against remote APIs?
- Simulating poor network connections so you can build better systems .
What are some alternatives?
peg - Peg, Parsing Expression Grammar, is an implementation of a Packrat parser generator.
woke - Detect non-inclusive language in your source code.
confd - Manage local application configuration files using templates and data from etcd or consul
Orbit - :satellite: A cross-platform task runner for executing commands and generating files from templates
borg - Search and save shell snippets without leaving your terminal
Docker - Notary is a project that allows anyone to have trust over arbitrary collections of data
orange-cat
nes - NES emulator written in Go.
croc - Easily and securely send things from one computer to another :crocodile: :package:
clumsy - clumsy makes your network condition on Windows significantly worse, but in a controlled and interactive manner.
limetext - Open source API-compatible alternative to the text editor Sublime Text
Hugo - The world’s fastest framework for building websites.