g
devpod
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g | devpod | |
---|---|---|
7 | 27 | |
882 | 7,659 | |
- | 11.8% | |
3.2 | 9.7 | |
10 months ago | 8 days ago | |
Shell | Go | |
MIT License | Mozilla Public 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.
g
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A Journey to Find an Ultimate Development Environment
The purpose of a version manager is to help you navigate or install any tools for development easily. Version Manager can be one tool for each dependency (e.g. NVM, g) or One tool for all dependencies (e.g. asdf, mise).
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How can I get recent go versions?
I really like g: https://github.com/stefanmaric/g It’s simple, fast to use, and reliable.
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Managing multiple Go versions in the local environment
If you are using a Unix based system you can use: https://github.com/stefanmaric/g I use it daily and works like charm, I only had some problems using `godoc` but it is solveble if you set the GOPATH to the go location and not the g installation directory
- How can we push homebrew to update go package?
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Simple But Not Simple For Me lol
Don't use Brew for Go! Brew is great for a lot of things but but not for Go installation. So far this is the best Go version manager i've found. It can be nice to have different versions easily available. https://github.com/stefanmaric/g
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NVM equivalent in go?
I used this, easy and stable https://github.com/stefanmaric/g
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setting up Go 1.17.5 on a chromebook
Whatever the language, I find that using a version manager reduces stress considerably. This is the one I use, but there are others: https://github.com/stefanmaric/g
devpod
- Show HN: Lapdev, a new open-source remote dev environment management software
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A Journey to Find an Ultimate Development Environment
When you push your code to Github, you can develop the app using codespace and it will automatically set up an online development environment for you. Other tools will make your life easier when developing using a dev container e.g. DevPod.
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Supercharge your remote development environment with DevPod
DevPod is that new kid in town that works on the same standard of devcontainers.json that Codespaces uses but is on the infrastructure of your choice and is open source. The project was just launched this May and has gathered more than 5.3K stars in this period. The advantage is the lower costs (around 5-10 times cheaper than cloud VMs) with auto-shutdown.
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ChromeOS is Linux with Google’s desktop environment
For students, unless there are allocated server resources with network access, it SHOULD/MUST scale down to one local offline ARM64 node (because school districts haven't afforded containers on a managed k8s cloud for students at scale fwiu, though universities do with e.g. JupyterHub and BinderHub [4] and Colab).
For Chromebook sysadmins, Instructors, and Students learning about how {Linux*, ChromiumOS, Android, Git, Bash, ZSH, Python, and e.g. PyData Tools supported by NumFOCUS} are developed, for example;
When you git commit to a git branch, and then `git push` that branch to GitHub, and create a Pull Request, GitHub Actions runs the (container,command) tasks defined in the YAML files in the .github/workflows/ directory of the repo; so `git push` to a PR branch runs the CI job and the results are written back as cards in the Pull Request thread on the GitHub Project; saving to the server runs the (container,command) Actions with that revision of the git repo.
Somewhat-equivalent GitOps CI Continuous Integration workflows (without Bazel or Blaze or gtest or gn, or GitHub Enterprise or GitHub Free due to the kids' intererests) that might be supported at least in analogue by Education and Chromebooks: k8s with podman-desktop in a VM, Gitea Actions (nektos/act; like Github Actions), devpod
devpod: https://github.com/loft-sh/devpod :
> Codespaces but open-source, client-only and unopinionated: Works with any IDE and lets you use any cloud, kubernetes or just localhost docker. (with devcontainer.json, like Github Codespaces)
devcontainer.json is supported by a number of tools; e.g. VScode, IntelliJ,: https://containers.dev/supporting
repo2docker has buildpacks (like Heroku and Google AppEngine).
repo2docker buildpacks should probably work with devcontainer.json too?
repo2docker docs > Usage > "REES: Reproducible Execution Environment" describes what all repo2docker will build a container from: https://repo2docker.readthedocs.io/en/latest/usage.html
jupyterhub/repo2docker builds a Dockerfile (Containerfile) from git repo (or a Figshare/Zenodo DOI) that minimally has at least an /environment.yml and /example.py (and probably also at least a /README.md to start with), and installs a current, updated version of jupyter notebook along with whatever's in e.g. /environment.yml per the REES spec. [1][2][3]
[1] repo2docker/buildpacks/base.py: https://github.com/jupyterhub/repo2docker/blob/main/repo2doc...
[2] "Make base_image configurable" https://github.com/jupyterhub/repo2docker/commit/20b08152578...
[3] repo2docker/buildpacks/conda/environment.py-3.11.yml:
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Vscode.dev: Local Development with Cloud Tools
Also see https://devpod.sh/ which has had quite a lot of exposure on HN recently.
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Simplifying preview environments for everyone
For these reasons, I believe most developer environments should prioritize developer experience over fidelity. Tools like Containerized development environments and cloud emulators can strike the right balance and there’s no surprise that we see increased activity around devcontainers, and similar solutions.
- FLaNK Stack Weekly on 26 June 2023
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Ask HN: What's a good Linux OS and setup to build a dev “network” on my laptop?
Have you considered devcontainers?
Its use results in carrying entire development environments with you, while not cluttering your host OS.
Using DevPod (https://devpod.sh/) ypu are not locked into Visual Studio or Visual Studio Code, but you can use whatever tool you want.
IMO this kind of setup will provide a much better DX than running a bunch of VMs eating away the resources of your laptop.
- Codespaces but open-source, client-only, and unopinionated
What are some alternatives?
GVM - Go Version Manager
devbox - Instant, easy, and predictable development environments
Shadowsocks-Cloak-Installer - A one-key script to setup Cloak plugin with Shadowsocks on your server
tilt - Define your dev environment as code. For microservice apps on Kubernetes.
gvm - Go Version Manager (gvm) enables seamless installing and swapping between Go versions with a single command. This tool manages a Go environment for the user by allowing a user to specify which Go version they wish to use and handling all of the steps to install and configure that Go version. GVM also supports installing Go from the official Golang master branch so that you can easily try the next version of Go without waiting for a pre release build.
pygwalker - PyGWalker: Turn your pandas dataframe into an interactive UI for visual analysis
goenv - :blue_car: Like pyenv and rbenv, but for Go.
hocus - 🪄 Spin up ready-to-code, disposable dev environments on your own servers. Self-hosted alternative to Gitpod and Github Codespaces.
asdf-golang - Go plugin for the asdf version manager
vcluster - vCluster - Create fully functional virtual Kubernetes clusters - Each vcluster runs inside a namespace of the underlying k8s cluster. It's cheaper than creating separate full-blown clusters and it offers better multi-tenancy and isolation than regular namespaces.
autocomplete - IDE-style autocomplete for your existing terminal & shell
LocalStack - 💻 A fully functional local AWS cloud stack. Develop and test your cloud & Serverless apps offline