flyctl
piku
Our great sponsors
flyctl | piku | |
---|---|---|
543 | 26 | |
1,298 | 2,570 | |
2.5% | 5.3% | |
9.9 | 6.9 | |
7 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Go | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
flyctl
-
Breaking the Myth: Scalable, Multi-Region, Low-Latency App Exists And Will Not Cost You A Kidney.
Create an account on Fly.io.
-
How to use fly.io and Tigris to deploy a Next.js app
You can learn more about fly.io and tigris, we will need to create an account on both platforms for this project regardless. Anyway with the theory out of the way let's get started in the next section as we create our accounts and start building the app.
-
Set up your own personal browser in the Cloud
Fly.io is a platform that helps you run your apps and databases closer to your users all around the world. It takes your app code, packages it up neatly, and puts it on virtual machines that can be quickly started or stopped. This makes your app faster for users and more reliable. Fly.io is easy to use, works well for small projects or personal apps. It's a great way to make sure your app runs smoothly for people no matter where they are.
-
NoSQL Postgres: Add MongoDB compatibility to your Supabase projects with FerretDB
In this post, we'll start from scratch, running FerretDB locally via Docker, trying out the connection with mongosh and the MongoDB Node.js client, and finally deploy FerretDB to Fly.io for a production ready set up.
-
Free tools for developers to build their apps
2- fly.io
-
Top 5 Ways To Host Your Full-Stack App For Free 🚀✨
Fly is a cloud platform that focuses on global edge computing. Fly specializes in high-performance hosting and provides a global network of edge locations. Fly is known for its scalability and performance optimizations.
-
Tech stack used for SaaS
But videototextai.com is built using NextJS + Firebase auth + Firestore and a backend deployed at fly.io . Fly makes it really easy to deploy docker containers and that is IMO the fastest way to develop, you can setup a local setup
-
Is it still worth choosing Heroku in 2023?
Alternatives explored: * northflank: While running the wrk test, requests were taking 3-7 seconds. Couldn't repeat Heroku's phenomenon of "400ms-800ms" during such a load test. * fly.io: Reliability: It’s Not Great * render.com: I remember the time when indiehackers.com was down because of an outage on Render, not sure if it's worth trusting.
-
what do I do in the meantime?
For personal/portfolio projects fly.io and render.com both have free tiers that support the major backend frameworks and Postgres at the very least (although I think with Render at least the DB expires and has to be reloaded after a certain amount of time, have not personally tried it).
-
Easy way to publish your project.
We must download and install CLI for fly.io. If you use Windows, you can download the installer by this link. Or you can also use PowerShell script as well.
piku
-
Show HN: Hancho – A simple and pleasant build system in ~500 lines of Python
I like it. I wrote Piku (https://github.com/piku/piku) with much the same interest in fixing some of my pains, so I get where you're coming from with this. Will drop it into one of my current projects to build ESP32 binaries :)
-
Gokrazy Is Cool
I never had any serious issue with SD cards since the Pi 2B (and I've kept Pis running for years).
Anyway, for those wanting to deploy more generic apps, that is why I initially wrote https://github.com/piku/piku - you still have to flash the OS (and rpi-imager does that with sane defaults these days), but once you're done you have Heroku-like deployments for any language runtime you install on the Pi.
I also have https://github.com/rcarmo/ground-init, a cloud-init like shim that simplifies setting up machines (I'm a big fan of cloud-init, but since Raspbian doesn't support it and Ubuntu on ARM requires some fiddling to make it work I decided it wasn't too hard to roll my own).
(I probably should look into glueing that into rpi-imager, but there is are only so many hours in the day...)
-
Show HN: Local development with .local domains and HTTPS
I automated that away a long time ago: https://github.com/piku/piku/blob/master/piku.py#L814
-
Tool to deploy docker images from github repos?
Piku https://github.com/piku/piku
-
Stupid question: Why not use 'baremetal' OS instead of docker containers to run web apps?
So, stupid question: why couldn't I just use the 'baremetal' OS provided by Hetzner, install Postgres, Redis & node, create a separate db for each app, and run each app with https://github.com/piku/piku on a different port? For backups, I'll setup crontab to dump dbs locally and to S3.
-
Selfhosted PaaS? (No dokku pls)
piku?
- How do you deploy your side-projects?
- Ask HN: What's Your Proudest Hack?
- Piku
-
Comparing selfhosted Heroku alternatives
Piku https://github.com/piku/piku
What are some alternatives?
vercel - Develop. Preview. Ship.
Dokku - A docker-powered PaaS that helps you build and manage the lifecycle of applications
supabase - The open source Firebase alternative.
RaspberryPi-Note - Raspberry Pi note
s6-overlay - s6 overlay for containers (includes execline, s6-linux-utils & a custom init)
awesome-home-kubernetes - ⚠️ Deprecated: Awesome projects involving running Kubernetes at home
podman-compose - a script to run docker-compose.yml using podman
awesome-paas - A curated list of PaaS, developer platforms, Self hosted PaaS, Cloud IDEs and ADNs.
containers-roadmap - This is the public roadmap for AWS container services (ECS, ECR, Fargate, and EKS).
litestream - Streaming replication for SQLite.
nixpacks - App source + Nix packages + Docker = Image