hbm
hashi-ui
hbm | hashi-ui | |
---|---|---|
1 | 2 | |
42 | 1,235 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
almost 5 years ago | about 1 year ago | |
Go | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
hbm
-
Harbormaster: The anti-Kubernetes for your personal server
Beware that harbormaster is also the name of a program for adding RBAC to docker: https://github.com/kassisol/hbm
It's kind of abandonware because it was the developer's PhD project and he graduated, but it is rather unfortunately widely used in one of the largest GEOINT programs in the US government right now because it was the only thing that offered this capability 5 years ago. Raytheon developers have been begging to fork it for a long time so they can update and make bug fixes, but Raytheon legal won't let them fork a GPL-licensed project.
hashi-ui
-
Harbormaster: The anti-Kubernetes for your personal server
Nomad also scales really well. In my experience swarm had a lot of issues with going above 10 machines in a cluster. Stuck containers, containers that are there but swarm can't see them and more. But still i loved using swarm with my 5 node arm cluster, it is a good place to start when you hit the limit of a single node.
> The only serious downsides is having to use the HCL DSL ( https://github.com/hashicorp/hcl ) and their web UI being read only in the last versions that i checked.
1. IIRC you can run jobs directly from UI now, but IMO this is kinda useless. Running a job is simple as 'nomad run jobspec.nomad'. You can also run a great alternative UI ( https://github.com/jippi/hashi-ui ).
2. IMO HCL > YAML for job definitions. I've used both extensively and HCL always felt much more human friendly. The way K8s uses YAML looks to me like stretching it to it's limits and barely readable at times with templates.
One thing that makes nomad a go-to for me is that it is able to run workloads pretty much anywhere. Linux, Windows, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Illumos and ofc Mac.
-
Looking for non-dev friendly batch job operation service
Hashicorp Nomad combined with Hashi-ui (https://github.com/jippi/hashi-ui) comes relatively close, but is disqualified because it provides no support for easy to use provisioning. Azkaban comes relatively close, but seems not to have strong supoort for containers.
What are some alternatives?
docker-box - A lightweight docker application platform for single servers.
dagster - An orchestration platform for the development, production, and observation of data assets.
swarmpit - Lightweight mobile-friendly Docker Swarm management UI
hashi-up - bootstrap HashiCorp Consul, Nomad, or Vault over SSH < 1 minute
hcl - HCL is the HashiCorp configuration language.
Portainer - Making Docker and Kubernetes management easy.
https-portal - A fully automated HTTPS server powered by Nginx, Let's Encrypt and Docker.
watchtower - A process for automating Docker container base image updates.
git-pipe - Hassle-free minimal CI/CD for git repositories with docker or docker-compose projects.
consul - Consul is a distributed, highly available, and data center aware solution to connect and configure applications across dynamic, distributed infrastructure.
Juju - Orchestration engine that enables the deployment, integration and lifecycle management of applications at any scale, on any infrastructure (Kubernetes or otherwise).
dokku-scheduler-nomad - Scheduler plugin for deploying applications to nomad