greptimedb
act
greptimedb | act | |
---|---|---|
16 | 146 | |
3,781 | 50,324 | |
4.8% | 1.5% | |
9.9 | 9.2 | |
about 21 hours ago | about 14 hours ago | |
Rust | Go | |
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.
greptimedb
- GreptimeDB: A fast and cost-effective alternative to InfluxDB
- Another distributed time-series database written in Rust
-
GreptimeAI + Xinference - Efficient Deployment and Monitoring of Your LLM Applications
GreptimeAI, built upon the open-source time-series database GreptimeDB, offers an observability solution for Large Language Model (LLM) applications, currently supporting both LangChain and OpenAI's ecosystem. GreptimeAI enables you to understand cost, performance, traffic and security aspects in real-time, helping teams enhance the reliability of LLM applications.
-
What's everyone working on this week (49/2023)?
Continuing to work hard on a new MetricEngine in GreptimeDB. BTW, If you have a keen interest in Rust or database development, GreptimeDB might be a good starting point. Check it out for some good first issues here.
-
Practical Tips for Refactoring Release CI using GitHub Actions
Since the very first day of GreptimeDB going open-source, it embraced the automated software building process with GitHub Actions, and leading to the inaugural Release Pipeline.
-
GreptimeCloud - A Fully Managed Serverless Prometheus Backend
Born from the open-source project GreptimeDB, GreptimeCloud serves as a fully-managed, serverless cloud backend for Prometheus, offering integrated support for remote read/write protocols and PromQL as one of our primary query languages.
-
Bridging Async and Sync Rust Code - A lesson learned while working with Tokio
Recently, while working on our GreptimeDB project, we encountered an issue with calling asynchronous Rust code in a synchronous context.
-
A Deep Dive into PromQL — Promql Parser v0.1.0 Written in Rust is Now Available
To explore data stored in GreptimeDB through PromQL, GreptimeDB needs to provide the ability to parse the query into AST (abstract syntax tree), and retrieve data from memory or disk via logical and physical plans. Since there is no ready-to-use PromQL Rust Parser, our team decides to develop it by ourselves. We’re glad to announce that promql-parser v0.1.0 is now available.
-
Extending Python with Rust
This is truly a fantastic combination -- implement the logic in Rust and use it in Python. GreptimeDB also implements a similar functionality that allows writing Python script to do post-process of SQL query results, with the help of RustPython and Arrow. Maybe this combination can bring a sweet point between performance and efficiency.
docs: https://docs.greptime.com/user-guide/coprocessor-and-scripti...
code: https://github.com/GreptimeTeam/greptimedb/tree/develop/src/...
act
-
Create a Custom GitHub Action in Rust
To speed up your development cycle, install and use the act tool to test-run your action directly in your development environment. This tool lets you invoke a GitHub workflow right on your local machine and will save you the round-trips of pushing each change to GitHub to see if it works.
-
How to debug GitHub actions. Real-world example
When it comes to the alternatives to tmate, there is another great debugging tool that you could check out. It is called act and it allows you to run GitHub Actions code on your local machine making debugging even easier. It has its own limitations and some learning curve but overall it is another tool you should use if you can’t fix the CI bugs by connecting directly into the running action with the tmate.
-
Using my new Raspberry Pi to run an existing GitHub Action
Link: https://github.com/nektos/act
-
Show HN: Open-source x64 and Arm GitHub runners. Reduces GitHub Actions bill 10x
Could you upload your build of GitHub's runner image to Docker Hub?
This would be quite useful for users of other GitHub Actions clones like act [0].
[0]: https://github.com/nektos/act
-
Git commit messages are useless
> These kinds of commit messages are typically an indicator of a broken process where somebody needs to commit to see something happen, like a deployment or build process, and aren't able to assert that stuff works locally.
This is one of my biggest pet peeves with services like github actions. Something running locally like "act" [1] isn't sufficient because it doesn't have everything github has and is extra friction anyway to get everyone to use it for testing.
[1] https://github.com/nektos/act
-
Essential Command Line Tools for Developers
View on GitHub
-
What’s with DevOps engineers using `make` of all things?
If you use Github actions, act is incredibly useful. It can be used to test your GH actions, but also serves as an interface for running tasks locally.
-
Streamlining CI/CD Pipelines with Code: A Developer's Guide
That's something that often is difficult or basically impossible. Except for maybe GitHub actions through Act (https://github.com/nektos/act). I'd still lean to something in the yaml sphere if it eventually would be used in deployment pipelines and such. For example a solution incorporating ansible.
It also seems to me that the argument you make is mostly focused on the building step? Earthly certainly seems focused on that aspect.
-
GitHub Actions Are a Problem
I feel I'm being trolled, but I'll bite and accept the resulting downvotes
I don't think treating every mention of act as an opportunity for airing of personal grievances is helpful in a discussion when there's already ample reports of people's concrete issues with it, had one looked at the 800 issues in its repo https://github.com/nektos/act/issues?q=is%3Aissue or the 239 from gitea's for https://gitea.com/gitea/act_runner/issues or whatever is going on with Forgejo's fork https://code.forgejo.org/forgejo/act .
But, as for me specifically, there are two and a half answers: I wanted to run VSCodium's build locally, which act for sure puked about. Then, while trying to troubleshoot that, I thought I'd try something simpler and have it run the lint job from act's own repo <https://github.com/nektos/act/blob/1252e551b8672b1e16dc8835d...> to rule out "you're holding it wrong" type junk. It died with
[checks/lint] Failure - Main actions/setup-go@v3
-
How Steve Jobs Saved Apple with the Online Apple Store
https://twitter.com/mitsuhiko/status/1720410479141487099 :
> GitHub Actions currently charges $0.16 per minute* for the macOS M1 Runners. That comes out to $84,096 for 1 machine year*
GitHub Runner is written in Go; it fetches tasks from GitHub Actions and posts the results back to the Pull Request that spawned the build.
nektos/act is how Gitea Actions builds GitHub Actions workflow YAML build definition documents. https://github.com/nektos/act
https://twitter.com/MatthewCroughan/status/17200423527675700... :
> This is the macOS Ventura installer running in 30 VMs, in 30 #nix derivations at once. It gets the installer from Apple, automates the installation using Tesseract OCR and TCL Expect scripts. This is to test the repeatability. A single function call `makeDarwinImage`.
With a Multi-Stage Dockerfile/Containerfild, you can have a dev environment like xcode or gcc+make in the first stage that builds the package, and then the second stage the package is installed and tested, and then the package is signed and published to a package repo / app store / OCI container image repository.
SLSA now specifies builders for signing things correctly in CI builds with keys in RAM on the build workers.
"Build your own SLSA 3+ provenance builder on GitHub Actions" https://slsa.dev/blog/2023/08/bring-your-own-builder-github
What are some alternatives?
risingwave - Cloud-native SQL stream processing, analytics, and management. KsqlDB and Apache Flink alternative. 🚀 10x more productive. 🚀 10x more cost-efficient.
reverse-rdp-windows-github-actions - Reverse Remote Desktop into Windows on GitHub Actions for Debugging and/or Job Introspection [GET https://api.github.com/repos/nelsonjchen/reverse-rdp-windows-github-actions: 403 - Repository access blocked]
cnosdb - A cloud-native open source distributed time series database with high performance, high compression ratio and high availability. http://www.cnosdb.cloud
cache - Cache dependencies and build outputs in GitHub Actions
FlashDB - An ultra-lightweight database that supports key-value and time series data | 一款支持 KV 数据和时序数据的超轻量级数据库
dagger - Application Delivery as Code that Runs Anywhere
datafuse - An elastic and reliable Cloud Warehouse, offers Blazing Fast Query and combines Elasticity, Simplicity, Low cost of the Cloud, built to make the Data Cloud easy [Moved to: https://github.com/datafuselabs/databend]
earthly - Super simple build framework with fast, repeatable builds and an instantly familiar syntax – like Dockerfile and Makefile had a baby.
numexpr - Fast numerical array expression evaluator for Python, NumPy, Pandas, PyTables and more
action-tmate - Debug your GitHub Actions via SSH by using tmate to get access to the runner system itself.
corrosion - Gossip-based service discovery (and more) for large distributed systems.
LSPatch - LSPatch: A non-root Xposed framework extending from LSPosed