gotaskr
fibratus
Our great sponsors
gotaskr | fibratus | |
---|---|---|
8 | 46 | |
17 | 2,071 | |
- | - | |
6.9 | 8.4 | |
about 2 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
gotaskr
-
Generic Task Runner in Go -> gotaskr
Feel free to head over to GitHub and check the wiki for more details and I would be happy to get feedback or improvement ideas for gotaskr.
-
Build / Makefile templates for Go monorepo?
I created https://github.com/Roemer/gotaskr for that and we are very happy with it for a very complex build system. Give it a try if you want.
-
Is your makefile supposed to be a justfile?
May I present my alternative https://github.com/Roemer/gotaskr It is kind of similar to magefile but provides some other features similar to cake build and inbuilt tools useful for devops. And also it is a plain go program so no magic compilation in the background. It replaced basically 100 bash files in our rather complex build/deploy setup. Sometimes a declarative approach is just not enough.
-
Unpopular opinion: CI/CD engines are an awful idea
I have used many CI systems on large scale and to be honest, Jenkins is still my favorite. Everything you need is provided and works. You have 100% control over the workflow. With code. All those declarative yaml based ones need sooooo much workarounds to get more complex workflows to run and often you are just stuck with a less optimal solution. Beside the build workflow, we do not write any build logic in the ci engine but use external code runners instead. For .Net I used Cake or Nuke build for example but now my absolute preference for build logic is go. There we use a task runner like gotaskr. This helps having the build logic centralized and usually you can also run different build tasks locally to debug and test them. Also with go, you don‘t need any runtime to run the logic. Just build the task runner once and then you can copy the binary anywhere (eg for parallel build tasks) and just run it. This is optimal to integrate it in Docker base builds so you don‘t need to change the base image at all.
-
Task runner like go-task/task, but in pure Go, no external DSLs
May I present my solution: https://github.com/Roemer/gotaskr Heavily inspired by cake build. It has no compile magic anywhere. Just write your go file and run the tasks in it. Or build it and re-use it in a ci for example.
-
Utility library, most gopher way for namespaces/packages
The current refactoring is in: https://github.com/Roemer/gotaskr/tree/feature/toolsrefactoring
-
Any open source projects need help ?
I'm a go youngling that tried to create a task runner (inspired by cake build for .net) in go as an alternative to magefile. What I would like is to get some feedback about how it is implemented and if there are go-principles that are violated and where the code should be improved. So if you want to do some reviewing, feel free to have a look at https://github.com/Roemer/gotaskr
fibratus
- Announcing Fibratus 2.0.0
-
Announcing Fibratus 1.10.0 - a modern Windows kernel tracing and threat detection engine
I'm thrilled to announce the availability of Fibratus 1.10.0. This release brings a set of interesting features , such as the Yara function for combining signature and behavior-based detections, expanded detection rules catalog, native grammar for sequence rules, etc.
-
Fibratus 1.10.0 - a modern Windows kernel tracing and threat detection engine built in Go
I'm happy to announce the availability of Fibratus 1.10.0. Fibratus aims at providing a high-performance engine for capturing Windows system events and asserting them against a ruleset for the purpose of detecting adversary kill chain. All rules are built on top of the prominent MITRE security framework.
- Release v1.10.0 · Fibratus
- Announcing fibratus 1.10.0 - a modern Windows kernel tracing and threat detection engine
- Announcing Fibratus 1.8.0 - a modern tool for Windows kernel tracing with a focus on security
-
Fibratus - a modern tool for Windows kernel tracing with a focus on threat detection and prevention
You can check the full changelog here.
- Fibratus: Open-source threat detection and prevention solution
What are some alternatives?
weaver - Programming framework for writing and deploying cloud applications.
androguard - Reverse engineering and pentesting for Android applications
go-gitlab - GitLab Go SDK
space-cloud - Open source Firebase + Heroku to develop, scale and secure serverless apps on Kubernetes
kertish-dfs - Kertish-dfs is a simple distributed storage platform, implements file storage on a single distributed computer cluster, and provides interfaces for file/folder handling. Kertish-dfs aims primarily for completely distributed operation without a single point of failure, scalable to the exabyte level.
go-financial - A go port of numpy-financial functions and more.
devtron - Tool integration platform for Kubernetes
Project-Lightspeed - A self contained OBS -> FTL -> WebRTC live streaming server. Comprised of 3 parts once configured anyone can achieve sub-second OBS to the browser livestreaming
ziti - The parent project for OpenZiti. Here you will find the executables for a fully zero trust, application embedded, programmable network @OpenZiti
OpenDiablo2 - An open source re-implementation of Diablo 2
mkdkr - mkdkr = Makefile + Docker
core - Backend server API handling user mgmt, database, storage and real-time component