hyperkit
Mosh
hyperkit | Mosh | |
---|---|---|
10 | 152 | |
3,574 | 12,216 | |
0.2% | 0.4% | |
0.0 | 4.6 | |
about 1 year ago | 26 days ago | |
C | C++ | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
hyperkit
- HyperKit on Apple Silicon
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Trying Finch and introduce containerd
The author uses a Mac and uses Docker Desktop or colima x Docker CLI to realize a Docker development environment. Dcoker Desktop uses an internal HyperKit (macOS hypervisor) to launch a Linux VM and run dockerd in it. Docker Desktop is based on Lima, and it generates Lima configuration files, and it is used to run Linux.
- LXD containers on macOS at near-native speeds
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Docker on OpenBSD?
Sorry, I was misinformed. It seems MacOS still does use a tool called hyperkit to run a (presumably linux) VM as a backend for docker. I thought it was using something similar to jails.
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New to ARM64 processors world
You might try using HyperKit as the hypervisor with Kubernetes. It uses Apple's own hypervisor. Minikube, or rather docker, supports it. I would go with minicube as you can start and stop it as needed with ease.
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Anyone know how to pass a USB device from M1 mac to Ubuntu container?
I've been reading many forum posts: moby/hyperkit#149 docker/for-mac#900
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A modern toolkit to start working with container images on macOS that meets your needs without requiring a Docker Daemon or even Docker Desktop
What’s the magic behind docker working on macOS?. The answer is virtualization accomplished by the moby/hyperkit hypervisor (AFAIK), a toolkit for embedding hypervisor capabilities in your application, which means that dockerd works in a VM virtualized by the hyperkit. Why I’m telling you this is once you decide to work with containerd on your macOS environment to discover capabilities and more adapt to it because we assume you use containerd in your Kubernetes environment as a default container runtime, you had to have the same virtualization technology under the hood to let containerd working on macOS. Also, you need to have some client tooling to interact with containerd by keeping simplicity and usability in mind.
- Windows PC vs Mac?
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Chromium Browser
Docker on Mac is based on Hyperkit which is a lightweight VM. https://github.com/moby/hyperkit Crostini is running in a full KVM instance. You challenged me about the Termina shell. Type it in and see if I'm right. No need to debate this anymore when you can verify for yourself.
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Docker is not allowed for „big“ companies anymore
Docker Desktop doesn't use virtualbox behind the scenes. It uses hyperkit.
Mosh
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The IDEs we had 30 years ago and we lost
If you haven’t already, and I know this doesn’t hold up for GUI emacs or vim, but consider running them through https://mosh.org/
- mosh: Mobile Shell
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Write Your Own Terminal
FWIW, I wouldn't try to parse escape sequences "directly" from the input bytestream -- it's easy to end up with annoying bugs. Longer-term it's probably better to separate the logic e.g.:
- First step (for a UTF-8-input terminal emulator) means "lexing" the input bytestream as UTF-8 into a stream of USVs, which involves some subtleties (https://github.com/mobile-shell/mosh/blob/master/src/termina...).
- Second step is to run the DEC parser/FSM logic on the sequence of USVs, which is independent of the escape sequences (https://vt100.net/emu/dec_ansi_parser ; https://github.com/mobile-shell/mosh/blob/master/src/termina...).
- And then the third step is for the terminal to execute the "dispatch"/"execute"/etc. actions coming from the FSM, which is where the escape sequences and control chars get implemented (https://github.com/mobile-shell/mosh/blob/master/src/termina...).
Without this separation, it's easier to end up with bugs where, e.g., a UTF-8 sequence or an ANSI escape sequence is treated differently when it's split between multiple read() calls vs. all in one call.
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Typing Fast Is About Latency, Not Throughput
Btw, you can use mosh to hide the latency of SSH. https://mosh.org/
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How do I enable new pane/tab with CWD while using mosh?
I've been using Kitty's SSH features for as long as I can remember but I recently setup Mosh and I really like how it doesn't drop connections and supports roaming.
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Buying an iPad Pro for coding was a mistake
I am surprised many people write about ssh into a server. Mosh[1] feels more responsive and it also supports longer sessions.
[1] - https://mosh.org/
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Prompt2, heads up; they are readying up another version Prompt2 has been abandoned by devs since iOS 14 / 1y ago in a crashing state - Now they want to make another money-heist cash-grab from its users by forcing them to upgrade one of the most expensive apps of all time.
Also they support Mosh which I install on my servers. It's way better than plain ssh when you're on mobile networks and wifi, especially with connections that are unreliable or bandwidth-constrained.
- Zellij New WASM Plugin System
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networkingStarterPack
I’ve recently been experimenting with MoSH (Mobile Shell). Basically think SSH but with UDP - so more resilient to shoddy network conditions, roaming access points, etc.
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How can I get a lisp image to run in the background?
If it is not for production (e.g. running as a daemon or a server) and you only care about the development, another ad-hoc way is using screen/tmus-like software incl. byobu, and combine it with mosh.
What are some alternatives?
lima - Linux virtual machines, with a focus on running containers
Eternal Terminal - Re-Connectable secure remote shell
for-mac - Bug reports for Docker Desktop for Mac
tmux - tmux source code
runj - runj is an experimental, proof-of-concept OCI-compatible runtime for FreeBSD jails.
Gravitational Teleport - The easiest, and most secure way to access and protect all of your infrastructure.
bravetools - A tool to build, deploy, and release any environment using System Containers.
Advanced SSH config - :computer: make your ssh client smarter
buildkit - concurrent, cache-efficient, and Dockerfile-agnostic builder toolkit
Code-Server - VS Code in the browser
colima - Container runtimes on macOS (and Linux) with minimal setup
PowerShell - PowerShell for every system!