go-plantuml
kaniko
go-plantuml | kaniko | |
---|---|---|
1 | 49 | |
371 | 13,989 | |
- | 1.9% | |
0.0 | 9.5 | |
about 1 year ago | 6 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | 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.
go-plantuml
kaniko
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Using AKS for hosting ADO agent and using it to build and test as containers
If all you need to do is build container, you can use https://github.com/GoogleContainerTools/kaniko
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Building Cages - Creating better DX for deploying Dockerfiles to AWS Nitro Enclaves
Kaniko for building the container images
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Container and image vocabulary
kaniko
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EKs 1.24 Docker issue
You should maybe look into Kaniko or use some other build tool
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Schedule on Least Utilized Node
If you are using the docker socket just for building container images, you might want to look into kaniko. It doesn't use docker to build images. If you use the socket also for starting containers (we are actually doing that in our CI pipelines), you could think about limiting the pods Kubernetes schedules on a node (you can change the default of 110 using the kubelet config file).
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Are there tools you can use to improve your docker containers like Docker Slim?
Check out Kaniko for building containers https://github.com/GoogleContainerTools/kaniko . Only issue is it doesnt support windows containers.
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You should use the OpenSSF Scorecard
It took less than 5 minutes to install. It quickly analysed the repo and identified easy ways to make the project more secure. Priya Wadhwa, Kaniko
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Run Docker from within AWS Lambda?
I'd suggest to take a look at the Kaniko project, combined with custom container images in Lambda functions.
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Faster Docker image builds in Cloud Build with layer caching
kaniko is a tool that allows you to build container images inside Kubernetes without the need for the Docker daemon. Effectively, it allows you to build Docker images without docker build.
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Switching from docker-compose to k3s - what is needed ?
Kubernetes prefers to pull containers from registries. You may be able to work around it by specifying a local image in your Kube manifest. Both https://github.com/GoogleContainerTools/kaniko and/ or https://www.devspace.sh/ may help.
What are some alternatives?
Mantis - Sphire Mantis is a broadly featured Go helper library with standalone packages
podman - Podman: A tool for managing OCI containers and pods.
go-zero - A cloud-native Go microservices framework with cli tool for productivity.
buildah - A tool that facilitates building OCI images.
go-json - Fast Go JSON encoder for large arrays of objects
buildkit - concurrent, cache-efficient, and Dockerfile-agnostic builder toolkit
go-wasm - Go+WebAssembly experiments
jib - 🏗 Build container images for your Java applications.
datastation - App to easily query, script, and visualize data from every database, file, and API.
nerdctl - contaiNERD CTL - Docker-compatible CLI for containerd, with support for Compose, Rootless, eStargz, OCIcrypt, IPFS, ...
infracost - Cloud cost estimates for Terraform in pull requests💰📉 Shift FinOps Left!
skopeo - Work with remote images registries - retrieving information, images, signing content