hub-feedback
JHipster
Our great sponsors
hub-feedback | JHipster | |
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379 | 63 | |
231 | 21,221 | |
0.0% | 0.3% | |
0.0 | 10.0 | |
almost 2 years ago | about 5 hours ago | |
Java | ||
- | 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.
hub-feedback
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Docker compose, orchestrating and automating services
image: this key specifies the image this container is based on to be created. It can be a local image or an image from the Docker hub.
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Dockerizing Next.js
Finally, we can upload our application to Docker Hub so that other people can use the image we created. To do this, follow the steps below:
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How to run PostgreSQL and pgAdmin on Docker?
Pull the official Docker distribution of pgAdmin 4 from the Docker Hub repository with the following command:
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Securely Containerize a Python Application with Chainguard Images
To use Docker Scout, you'll first have to have a Docker Hub account. Follow the installation instructions for Docker Scout on GitHub. Once Docker Scout is installed, you can sign in to Docker Hub on the command line with the docker login command.
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Building Scalable GraphQL Microservices With Node.js and Docker: A Comprehensive Guide
Go to Docker Hub, sign up, and log in to your account's overview page.
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Welcome to world of Containerization
Login to Docker [Create an account with https://hub.docker.com/]
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Next.js with Public Environment Variables in Docker
Docker Hub
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Leveraging GitHub Actions, Docker, Code Quality, and Slack Integration
Dockerhub account
- (Docker) Criando um ambiente LAMP utilizando Docker-Compose
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A Gentle Introduction to Containerization and Docker
There are a lot of docker-compatible registries almost every cloud provider has its registry but for this article, we will use the docker registry called docker hub. Go to the website create a new account and sign in then you can push or pull images.
JHipster
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Java Microservices with Spring Boot and Spring Cloud
An easy way to get a pre-configured Keycloak instance is to use JHipster's jhipster-sample-app-oauth2 application. It gets updated with every JHipster release. You can clone it with the following command:
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Deploy Secure Spring Boot Microservices on Amazon EKS Using Terraform and Kubernetes
provider "auth0" { domain = "https://" debug = false } # Create a new Auth0 application for the JHipster app resource "auth0_client" "java_ms_client" { name = "JavaMicroservices" description = "Java Microservices Client Created Through Terraform" app_type = "regular_web" callbacks = ["http://localhost:8080/login/oauth2/code/oidc"] allowed_logout_urls = ["http://localhost:8080"] oidc_conformant = true jwt_configuration { alg = "RS256" } } # Configuring client_secret_post as an authentication method. resource "auth0_client_credentials" "java_ms_client_creds" { client_id = auth0_client.java_ms_client.id authentication_method = "client_secret_post" } # Create roles for the JHipster app resource "auth0_role" "admin" { name = "ROLE_ADMIN" description = "Administrator" } resource "auth0_role" "user" { name = "ROLE_USER" description = "User" } # Create an action to customize the authentication flow to add the roles and the username to the access token claims expected by JHipster applications. resource "auth0_action" "jhipster_action" { name = "jhipster_roles_claim" runtime = "node18" deploy = true code = <<-EOT /** * Handler that will be called during the execution of a PostLogin flow. * * @param {Event} event - Details about the user and the context in which they are logging in. * @param {PostLoginAPI} api - Interface whose methods can be used to change the behavior of the login. */ exports.onExecutePostLogin = async (event, api) => { const namespace = 'https://www.jhipster.tech'; if (event.authorization) { api.idToken.setCustomClaim(namespace + '/roles', event.authorization.roles); api.accessToken.setCustomClaim(namespace + '/roles', event.authorization.roles); } }; EOT supported_triggers { id = "post-login" version = "v3" } } # Attach the action to the login flow resource "auth0_trigger_actions" "login_flow" { trigger = "post-login" actions { id = auth0_action.jhipster_action.id display_name = auth0_action.jhipster_action.name } } # Create a test user. You can create more users here if needed resource "auth0_user" "test_user" { connection_name = "Username-Password-Authentication" name = "Jane Doe" email = "[email protected]" email_verified = true password = "passpass$12$12" # Don't set passwords like this in production! Use env variables instead. lifecycle { ignore_changes = [roles] } } resource "auth0_user_roles" "test_user_roles" { user_id = auth0_user.test_user.id roles = [auth0_role.admin.id, auth0_role.user.id] } output "auth0_webapp_client_id" { description = "Auth0 JavaMicroservices Client ID" value = auth0_client.java_ms_client.client_id } output "auth0_webapp_client_secret" { description = "Auth0 JavaMicroservices Client Secret" value = auth0_client_credentials.java_ms_client_creds.client_secret sensitive = true }
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Simpler way to develop CRUD apps?
If you want a Spring backend with an Angular Frontend check out https://www.jhipster.tech. This is very nice for CRUD stuff.
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How hard is it to make one ?
Use https://www.jhipster.tech/
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DevOps For Developers: Continuous Integration, GitHub Actions & Sonar Cloud
To test GitHub Actions, we need a new project which in this case I generated using JHipster with the configuration seen here:
- Anyone using JHipster?
- Looking for professional code bases / boilerplates to check out and learn best practices
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Micro Frontends for Java Microservices
exports.onExecutePostLogin = async (event, api) => { const namespace = 'https://www.jhipster.tech'; if (event.authorization) { api.idToken.setCustomClaim('preferred_username', event.user.email); api.idToken.setCustomClaim(`${namespace}/roles`, event.authorization.roles); api.accessToken.setCustomClaim(`${namespace}/roles`, event.authorization.roles); } }
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Are there any recommended libraries to make Spring Boot development even faster / easier?
What you maybe asking for is something like vaadin or jhipster which marries the front with the backend. (I don't like them tbh but it worth mentioning)
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Looking for a ready-to-extend-and-deploy OpenID + Spring REST solution.
You can try this stack https://www.jhipster.tech with generator for mobile app https://github.com/jhipster/generator-jhipster-ionic.
What are some alternatives?
rook - Storage Orchestration for Kubernetes
Lombok - Very spicy additions to the Java programming language.
kubernetes - Production-Grade Container Scheduling and Management
jhipster-lite - JHipster Lite ⚡ is a development platform to generate, develop & deploy modern web applications & microservices architecture, step by step - using Hexagonal Architecture :gem:
chartmuseum - helm chart repository server
Quarkus - Quarkus: Supersonic Subatomic Java.
Harbor - An open source trusted cloud native registry project that stores, signs, and scans content.
CircleMenu for Android - :octocat: ⭕️ CircleMenu is a simple, elegant UI menu with a circular layout and material design animations. Android UI library made by @Ramotion
Docker Compose - Define and run multi-container applications with Docker
AspectJ
Portainer - Making Docker and Kubernetes management easy.
initializr - A quickstart generator for Spring projects