komiser
helm
komiser | helm | |
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11 | 2 | |
3,861 | 4 | |
1.0% | - | |
9.7 | 6.8 | |
1 day ago | 19 days ago | |
Go | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
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.
komiser
- Komiser – Your cloud resources will have nowhere to hide
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Can I Mention My Open Source Contributions On My Resume?
Here's my recent Pull request that got merged i am quite new to it its been like 2 months i started open source
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Productivity hacks for OSS contributors
Note: this comes from the tailwarden project which advertises themselves as open source while using a ELv2 license which puts limitations on certain use. Looks like the project switched from MIT last year.
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How to practice FinOps with Komiser
Yes its free and open-source project, here's the repo: https://github.com/tailwarden/komiser :)
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Discover cloud cost savings opportunities with Komiser (OSS Community call)
For anybody interested in cloud savings: Join us tomorrow at 10am UTC to learn how to optimise cloud costs (including Azure) with the open source tool Komiser!
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Manage Kubernetes objects all in one place with Komiser
Komiser is an open-source cloud cost optimization tool that can help with this challenge. It provides insights into the costs associated with different regions, managed services, and individual resources, making it a valuable addition to any cloud environment. But not only that, Komiser's Kubernetes integration offers even greater visibility into the Kubernetes clusters running on compute instances, allowing users to create custom views that dynamically update to reflect the current state of their microservice resources.
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Why we made Komiser open sourcea
The tool was open-sourced and become a cloud-agnostic with the support of major cloud providers. Upon release, it gained popularity and my colleague Cyril and I noticed that many organizations shared similar challenges, particularly regarding limited visibility into their infrastructure and related tools. To address this challenge, we launched Tailwarden, an open-core company founded on the principles of Komiser and built on an open-source model. Our aim is to empower developers by improving transparency and collaboration in the cloud. Our mission is to put control of the cloud into the hands of developers by tackling one of the most pressing issues in the space.
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Tagging Cloud Resources with Komiser
With Komiser, you can connect multiple cloud accounts, and build your cloud inventory in seconds. In the example below, we’ve connected an AWS production and sandbox accounts:
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A multi-cloud cost inspector & optimizer (almost 3k stars)
Neat project! But I noticed it's licensed as ELv2 which isn't typically considered open source, since such a license does not meet the common open source definition due to it's limitations on usage.
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Komiser vs AWS Resource Explorer
Komiser is an open-source cloud-agnostic resource manager. It integrates with multiple cloud providers (including AWS), builds a cloud asset inventory, and helps you break down your cost at the resource level.
helm
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Manage Kubernetes objects all in one place with Komiser
If you want to self-host Komiser in a Kubernetes cluster, you can use the official Komiser Helm chart to deploy it to any type of Kubernetes cluster. Although the documentation focuses on deploying to an AWS EKS cluster, you can use it to deploy to any other Kubernetes cluster as well.
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A practical guide to use and install Komiser
The easiest way to deploy Komiser to a Kubernetes cluster is by using the official Komiser Helm chart. Which is going to give you the templates to create the requisite Kubernetes object that we are going to need to run the deployment successfully. This helm chart can be deployed to any Kubernetes cluster but the resources used in the steps below will reference Amazon EKS.
What are some alternatives?
doctl - The official command line interface for the DigitalOcean API.
awesome-kubernetes - A curated list of awesome references collected since 2018.
cloud-provider-azure - Cloud provider for Azure
aws-cdk - The AWS Cloud Development Kit is a framework for defining cloud infrastructure in code
komiser - The open-source cloud environment inspector 👮 [Moved to: https://github.com/tailwarden/komiser]
autoscaler - Autoscaling components for Kubernetes
aws_breaking_changes - List of changes announced for AWS that may break existing code
eksctl - The official CLI for Amazon EKS
aws-lambda-power-tuning - AWS Lambda Power Tuning is an open-source tool that can help you visualize and fine-tune the memory/power configuration of Lambda functions. It runs in your own AWS account - powered by AWS Step Functions - and it supports three optimization strategies: cost, speed, and balanced.