juicefs
mdBook
juicefs | mdBook | |
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42 | 101 | |
9,824 | 16,669 | |
3.1% | 2.8% | |
9.8 | 8.6 | |
1 day ago | 14 days ago | |
Go | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | Mozilla Public 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.
juicefs
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South Korea's No.1 Search Engine Chose JuiceFS over Alluxio for AI Storage
Support for Kerberos keytab files
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5 Open Source tools written in Golang that you should know about
JuiceFS under the Apache License 2.0, is a high-performance POSIX file system optimized for cloud-native environments. It stores data in Object Storage (e.g., Amazon S3) and metadata in databases like Redis, MySQL, or TiKV. JuiceFS integrates massive cloud storage with big data, machine learning, and AI applications efficiently, akin to local storage. It features full POSIX and Hadoop compatibility, S3 interface, Kubernetes support, and shared file storage for numerous clients. Some cool features are - strong consistency, scalable performance, data encryption, global file locks, and compression with LZ4 or Zstandard.
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How to Build a Ceph Cluster and Integrate with the JuiceFS File System
To improve the handling process of capacity overrun, the JuiceFS client supports deletion operations in the case of Ceph cluster fullness (see related code changes in JuiceFS Community Edition). Therefore, for newer client versions, there is no need to use set-full-ratio for temporary adjustments.
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A Deep Dive into the Design of Directory Quotas in JuiceFS
If you have any questions or would like to learn more, feel free to join discussions about JuiceFS on GitHub and the JuiceFS community on Slack.
- JuiceFS 1.1 - Distributed File System written in Go
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Gcsfuse: A user-space file system for interacting with Google Cloud Storage
The architecture image shows GCS and others, so I suspect it does.
https://github.com/juicedata/juicefs#architecture
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Google Cloud Storage FUSE
See also: JuiceFS: https://juicefs.com/
Adds a DBMS or key-value store for metadata, making the filesystem much faster (POSIX, small overwrites don't have to replace a full object in the GCS/S3 backend).
Almost certainly a better solution if you want to turn your object storage into a mountable filesystem, with the (big) caveat that you can't access the files directly in the bucket (they are not stored transparently).
- Using S3 as shared storage
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s3fs-fuse VS juicefs - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 19 Feb 2023
JuiceFS can do the same thing as s3fs-fuse, but better. Because it supports robust data consistency and caching policies to improve performance.
- JuiceFS: Turn Cloud Blob Storage into Local Posix Filesystems
mdBook
- Everything Curl
- Doks – Build a Docs Site
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Ask HN: How do you organize software documentation at work?
I'm responsible for a number of Java products. I try to provide high-quality Javadoc for all public library interfaces, library user's guides where appropriate, and development guides for applications. The latter two take the form of MDBook documents (https://rust-lang.github.io/mdBook/), with the document source living in the GitHub repo so that it's tied to the particular software release in a natural way.
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Outline: Self hostable, realtime, Markdown compatible knowledge base
My org has used mdBook: https://rust-lang.github.io/mdBook/ (That link is itself a rendered mdBook, so that'll give you an idea of the feature set.)
(While it's definitely a Rust "thing", if you just have a set of .md files, all you need is a "SUMMARY.md" (which contains the ToC) and a small config file; i.e., you don't have to have any Rust code to use it, and it works fine without. We document a large, mostly non-Rust codebase with it.)
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Ask HN: Best tools for self-authoring books in 2023?
If you want the lowest friction, open source, easily extensible Markdown to Web, Kindle, PDF, etc. tool, highly recommend mdBook: https://github.com/rust-lang/mdBook it’s written in Rust, but you don’t have to know any Rust to use it. And then wing is all CSS; for which there are many good (free) themes.
- Early performance results from the prototype CHERI ARM Morello microarchitecture
- FLaNK Stack for 4th of July
- MdBook – A command line tool to create books with Markdown
- MdBook Create book from Markdown files. Like Gitbook but implemented in Rust
What are some alternatives?
cubefs - cloud-native file store
gitbook - The open source frontend for GitBook doc sites
goofys - a high-performance, POSIX-ish Amazon S3 file system written in Go
MkDocs - Project documentation with Markdown.
s3-benchmark - Measure Amazon S3's performance from any location.
Wiki.js - Wiki.js | A modern and powerful wiki app built on Node.js
gcsfuse - A user-space file system for interacting with Google Cloud Storage
bookdown - Authoring Books and Technical Documents with R Markdown
Golang-PDF-to-Image-Converter - This project will help you to convert PDF file to IMAGE using golang.
obsidian-releases - Community plugins list, theme list, and releases of Obsidian.
hdfs - A native go client for HDFS
Docusaurus - Easy to maintain open source documentation websites.