Incoming
Filestash
Our great sponsors
Incoming | Filestash | |
---|---|---|
42 | 108 | |
308 | 9,414 | |
-0.3% | - | |
4.2 | 9.3 | |
24 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Ruby | JavaScript | |
MIT License | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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.
Incoming
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Best practices for DB modifications MySQL
This article from HoneyBadger explains most relevant topics about Rails DB transactions.
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A guide to exception handling in Python
Honeybadger is a powerful error-monitoring tool for Python applications. Integrating an error monitoring service like Honeybadger into your development workflow provides numerous benefits for effectively managing exceptions. From real-time notifications and error grouping to rich diagnostics and trend analysis, Honeybadger equips you with the tools you need to quickly identify, investigate, and resolve errors and ultimately enhance the overall quality and reliability of your applications. To demo this, let's now explore some features and examples of integrating Honeybadger into your Python code.
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A list of SaaS, PaaS and IaaS offerings that have free tiers of interest to devops and infradev
honeybadger.io - Exception, uptime, and cron monitoring. Free for small teams and open-source projects (12,000 errors/month).
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Debugging an Application in Production
It sounds like you want to implement an exception monitoring tool like Honeybadger (my company), Sentry, or similar. They will tell you when someone encounters an error with your app, where the error occurred, and what the state of the app was (parameters, etc.) at the time of the error.
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Let’s scan DEV’s forem project with Bearer and analyze the results
You may wonder why this is a problem. In the case of this code, we're sending the user's username to a third-party service. While username isn't inherently sensitive data, it certainly has to potential to be and should be treated as such. It's better to use IDs that can't identify the user if the third party—in this case, honeybadger—is breached. You can see the full list of supported data types, sorted by category, on the docs.
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Exception Handling in JavaScript
Sign up on the Honeybadger website and click on ‘start free trial’, as shown in the following image.
- Have you ever been mad enough at a company treating you wrong that you thought about building your own solution? Well, back in 2012 we did that! This is the story of how three devs with an app have thrived amid an excess of venture-capital-backed competitors.
- Monitoring doesn't have to be so complicated. That's why we built the monitoring tool we always wanted: a tool that's there when you need it, and gets out of your way when you don't—so that you can keep shipping
- Do you currently use one service for uptime monitoring, another for error tracking, another for status pages and yet another to monitor your cron jobs and microservices? Paying for all of those services separately may be costing you more than you think.
Filestash
- Ask HN: What Underrated Open Source Project Deserves More Recognition?
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A list of SaaS, PaaS and IaaS offerings that have free tiers of interest to devops and infradev
Filestash — A Dropbox-like file manager that connects to a range of protocols and platforms: S3, FTP, SFTP, Minio, Git, WebDAV, Backblaze, LDAP and more.
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Ask HN: What apps have you created for your own use?
I made https://github.com/mickael-kerjean/filestash out of the need to collaborate on org mode documents with non emacs users. Once the first release was done, I got to reflect on the infamous top comment of the Dropbox HN to make an attempt at abstracting the storage aspect of Dropbox so those org document could be made stored on a FTP server, SFTP, S3, ....
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Ask HN: Experience using your user's Google Drive instead of a database?
> we need an abstraction for just this. "Bring your own storage"
I made exactly this: https://github.com/mickael-kerjean/filestash and there's an API from which you can abstract any kind of storage: S3, SFTP, FTP, GIT, WebDav, Samba, Local FS, NFS, Backblaze, Storj, Artifactory, .... There's even some funky ones like Mysql from which you have an abstraction where first level folders are databases, second level folders are tables and files are the actual rows
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Let's learn how modern JavaScript frameworks work by building one
Yes, I rewrote my react app onto vanilla JS using nothing else than rxjs, didn't have the time to document it all yet but it looks like this: https://github.com/mickael-kerjean/filestash/blob/master/pub...
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Found the ultimate Nextcloud / Owncloud replacement!
I'm not familiar with Cloudreve, but FileStash is a similar application often recommended on this subreddit.
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HTML Web Components
I do use them on my OSS work (https://github.com/mickael-kerjean/filestash/tree/master/pub...) which is used by many thousands of people
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UI frameworks are stuck in the last decade
- [2] current state of the rewrite where you can see this pattern in action https://github.com/mickael-kerjean/filestash-rewrite/tree/ma...
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Ask HN: Tell us about your project that's not done yet but you want feedback on
https://github.com/mickael-kerjean/filestash
This is what I wish Dropbox was, a simple layer that make interacting with your FTP server easy so nobody has to own your data. The end game is both to be feature complete with Dropbox and be able to change every aspect of the application through plugin so everyone can get out what they want from it.
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Meta pledges Three-Year sponsorship for Python if GIL removal is accepted
> but I don't think its the companies responsibility to give back to open source just because they use it
As someone who does quite a bit of OSS, the reality is most people are asking for things but aren't willing to pay for it. Take Microsoft, I had one of their employee asking me to support their azure stuff: https://github.com/mickael-kerjean/filestash/issues/180. When I found out the dude was actually employed by Microsoft, he started to talk some nonsense and ended up running away.
What are some alternatives?
Ahoy Email - First-party email analytics for Rails
filemanager - 📂 Web File Browser
Griddler - Simplify receiving email in Rails
SFTPGo - Fully featured and highly configurable SFTP server with optional HTTP/S, FTP/S and WebDAV support - S3, Google Cloud Storage, Azure Blob
Sup - A curses threads-with-tags style email client (mailing list: [email protected])
filegator - Powerful Multi-User File Manager
Maily - 📫 Rails Engine to preview emails in the browser
minio - The Object Store for AI Data Infrastructure
Mailman
h5ai - HTTP web server index for Apache httpd, lighttpd and nginx.
Markerb
Apaxy - a simple, customisable theme for your apache directory listing