uuid
ctop
uuid | ctop | |
---|---|---|
18 | 37 | |
5,016 | 15,167 | |
1.0% | - | |
7.1 | 0.0 | |
about 1 month ago | 7 months ago | |
Go | Go | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | 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.
uuid
- UUIDs and the probability of being hit by a meteorite
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Any way of blocking or preferring a package?
I use Google's UUID package a lot. But every time I refer to it in a new package, the language server picks up https://github.com/gofrs/uuid instead of https://github.com/google/uuid and then complains that the gofrs package isn't in go.mod. I assume because it's the first alphabetically (though this seems like a huge supply chain security loophole).
- What is the best practice for a Go Model id?
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Authentication for HTMX app
Just store one single UUID as a token in a client's cookie (use https://github.com/google/uuid for ex), and associate that to a user ID (or anything else relevant in your case), and an expiry date for example
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Which UUID package do you use? and why?
Depends on your needs I think, I generally just use github.com/google/uuid like /u/wowsux mentioned it supports v1 through v5 of the UUID spec.
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Create a REST API with Go
And we are also going to use google/uuid to generate random uuids.
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Testing UUID, how to access same UUID as created by the thing you are testing?
If you are using "github.com/google/uuid", try the following codes
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Go Lang for .NET devs
You can see the same naming dilemma in many Go library implementations, i.e., where a package is used to organize functions related to a single a type (https://github.com/google/uuid) vs organizing code of related functionality (https://github.com/golang/go/tree/master/src/math).
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goes - CQRS & Event-Sourcing Toolkit
Type inference is not perfect yet (especially for functional options). Also not being able to add type parameters to methods is a bit annoying (can be worked around using package-level functions) but besides that generics fit quite nicely into the library. If type inference gets better then I think I can even remove the hard dependency on github.com/google/uuid and let users use custom types for ids.
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Web dev learning path advice
Learn how to create UUIDs: https://github.com/google/uuid
ctop
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Lazydocker
This does remind me of ctop as well: https://github.com/bcicen/ctop
It also let's you look at containers, resource usage graphs, their logs and even do some actions through a TUI.
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Portainer Business Edition 5 free nodes plan will change to 3 nodes in the future.
ssh, nnn, micro and ctop is all I need on my dockerhosts
- Ctop – Top-like interface for container metrics
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Found an amazingly handy terminal UI for both docker and docker-compose. Have actually just added the bin to my git repo with all my compose files. Great for a quick look at what is going on host machines.
My problem with ctop is, that it seems to show wrong memory usage data: https://github.com/bcicen/ctop/issues/314
- FLaNK Stack Weekly 3 April 2023
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Portainer Alternatives?
When talk about interface and cli... I am a huge fan of ctop
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What do you think about Portainer?
You can use CTOP. It's like a lite portainer on CLI. You can check logs, stats, restart containers.
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Ask HN: What is the best source to learn Docker in 2023?
In the terminal, there are also a few useful projects:
- for Docker, there is ctop: https://github.com/bcicen/ctop
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Docker 2.0 went from $11M to $135M in 2 years
> I tried portainer, awful UX experience and all good features are inside paid version.
This is interesting to me, because it doesn't quite match my experience - I've been using Portainer for around 3 years at this point and it's been pretty decent.
The worst issues that I've gotten is networking issues in some hybrid configurations with Docker Swarm (e.g. Portainer cannot reach the manager node of the cluster for a bit), or troubles configuring Traefik ingresses when managing Kubernetes (though I think the recent patch notes talked about improving the ingress section, so maybe the experience will get better with non-Nginx ingresses).
Other than that, it's been great for onboarding new people, illustrating the cluster state at a glance, easily operating with stacks and scaling/restarting services as needed, including pulling new images, viewing the logs or even connecting to containers through a web UI if need be. The webhook functionality in particular is really nice - you can just do a curl request against a given URL and that will pull the new container versions for the given image and do a redeploy, which works nicely with a variety of CI solutions.
When I last tried, initializing Nomad clusters with networking encryption was a bit less of a smooth experience (needing to essentially manage your own PKI) and the web UI felt more like a dashboard, instead of something that you could click around in, if you're a proponent of that workflow.
Rancher is probably better than both of those options, though there's a certain overhead in regards to running both that software and a full Kubernetes cluster. If Kubernetes feels like a good fit for a particular project and resources aren't an issue, definitely check it out! You can, of course, also have some success with lightweight clusters, like K3s: https://k3s.io/
I'll definitely agree that Lazydocker is a nice tool, but I wouldn't call it superior, just different (TUI vs GUI), their demo video is nice though: https://youtu.be/NICqQPxwJWw
It actually reminds me of ctop, which you might also want to check out, though it's not something that you'd manage clusters in, merely the individual containers on a node (which won't always be enough, same as Docker Compose isn't): https://github.com/bcicen/ctop
Regardless, for Kubernetes, I'm inclined to say that you'd enjoy k9s a bunch then, it has a similar TUI approach: https://k9scli.io/
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Looking for a simple Docker dashboard
However, something like ctop may be easier to use.
What are some alternatives?
uuid - A UUID package originally forked from github.com/satori/go.uuid
Plausible Analytics - Simple, open source, lightweight (< 1 KB) and privacy-friendly web analytics alternative to Google Analytics.
go.uuid - UUID package for Go
colima - Container runtimes on macOS (and Linux) with minimal setup
xid - xid is a globally unique id generator thought for the web
go-dry - DRY (don't repeat yourself) package for Go
swagger-ui - Swagger UI is a collection of HTML, JavaScript, and CSS assets that dynamically generate beautiful documentation from a Swagger-compliant API.
minify - Go minifiers for web formats
validator - :100:Go Struct and Field validation, including Cross Field, Cross Struct, Map, Slice and Array diving
csvtk - A cross-platform, efficient and practical CSV/TSV toolkit in Golang
jwt - ⚠️ Deprecated repository, available within Fiber Contrib.
git-time-metric - Simple, seamless, lightweight time tracking for Git