kubevela
pipeline
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kubevela | pipeline | |
---|---|---|
27 | 51 | |
6,046 | 8,270 | |
2.1% | 0.7% | |
9.0 | 9.7 | |
6 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
kubevela
- Is there any Django app deployment tool for VPS-based environments with UI?
- What's the status of Open Application Model?
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Using compose files as a universal infrastructure interface, even for Kubernetes
Finally, I think the OAM model offers one possible future. Take a look at projects like KubeVela and Crossplane. These allow you to compose your own custom abstraction layer. The developer creates a simple CRD called "Application" and this is translated into ths k8s or even off-cluster resources. Problem right now is the complexity is transferred onto guys configuring the platform..... I want to see more "out of the box" implementations.
- Helm or Kustomize for my situation?
- KubeVela, the extensible engine for IDP and platform engineering
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Opinionated application platform on top of Kubernetes?
Gotcha, thanks! We already run ArgoCD but having devs write raw manifests feels so low-level when it’s usually the same combo of configmaps, ingresses, services, deployments… Maybe this is more in the direction of what I’m looking for? 🤔 https://kubevela.io
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Finding better motivations for software work (Other than pride)
Note: On that topic, I'm keeping a close eye on the Open Application Model and the kubevela projects. I think it’ll help write a representation of an application and its components that we can validate the structure of our code against, and generate documentation from it. Not a complete solution to the problem, but it'll help with certain parts of architecture documentation
- Kubevela - The modern application platform.
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Clusterpedia —— Cluster API Searching Has Never Been Easier
Also, kubevela is getting ready to connect to clusterpedia https://github.com/kubevela/kubevela/issues/4237,
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Acorn
https://kubevela.io/ is an alternative that has been around longer, exposes CUE naturally, and builds on open standards for app packs. I'd recommend this open-source product.
pipeline
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14 DevOps and SRE Tools for 2024: Your Ultimate Guide to Stay Ahead
Tekton
- GitHub Actions could be so much better
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Distributed Traces for Testing with Tekton Pipelines and Tracetest
Tekton is an open-source framework for creating efficient CI/CD systems. This empowers developers to seamlessly construct, test, and deploy applications across various cloud environments and on-premise setups.
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Practical Tips for Refactoring Release CI using GitHub Actions
Despite other alternatives like Circle CI, Travis CI, GitLab CI or even self-hosted options using open-source projects like Tekton or Argo Workflow, the reason for choosing GitHub Actions was straightforward: GitHub Actions, in conjunction with the GitHub ecosystem, offers a user-friendly experience and access to a rich software marketplace.
- Wolfi: A community Linux OS designed for the container and cloud-native era
- Nu stiu ce sa fac, orice sfat e bine venit
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What are some good self-hosted CI/CD tools where pipeline steps run in docker containers?
Drone, or Tekton, Argo Workflows if you’re on k8s
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Is Jenkins still the king?
If you want a step up, I would recommend trying out Tekton Pipelines. It’s a very popular ci tool, and it runs on Kubernetes. Yes, this would involve setting up a Kubernetes cluster but please don’t run for the hills! You can setup a Kubernetes cluster and install Tekton on top of it with minimal setup using minikube (see here. This would be a great joint exercise as it will give you a bit of Kubernetes understanding alongside it, and the mechanisms of Tekton are a little trickier than GitHub actions imo. It’s all much the same though.
- Is there a way to run a one-off pod that would work as a command line tool?
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K8s powered Git push deployments
I've recently found this quote by Kelsey Hightower:
"I'm convinced the majority of people managing infrastructure just want a PaaS. The only requirement: it has to be built by them."
Source: https://twitter.com/kelseyhightower/status/85193508753294540...
In the last few weeks, I've experimented a bit with Flux (https://fluxcd.io/), Tekton (https://tekton.dev/) and Cloud Native Buildpacks (https://buildpacks.io/) on how to provide K8s powered git push deployments without using a dedicated CI/CD server.
My project is still in early alpha stage and just a proof of concept :-) My vision is to expand it into an Open Source PaaS in the future.
Do you think the above quote is true? What does an open source PaaS need to be like in order to be accepted by software developers?
Some other projects have been discontinued in the past (like Flynn or Deis) or were created before the Kubernetes era.
Is it the right direction to provide a Heroku like solution based on K8s or is it better to provide an Open Source Infrastructure as Code library with building blocks to avoid everything from scratch?
What are some alternatives?
crossplane - The Cloud Native Control Plane
dagger - Application Delivery as Code that Runs Anywhere
argo-cd - Declarative Continuous Deployment for Kubernetes
kustomize - Customization of kubernetes YAML configurations
tekton-argocd-poc - This a PoC using Tekton (for CI) and ArgoCD (CD). It uses a local k8s cluster (K3D)
rancher - Complete container management platform
NUKE - 🏗 The AKEless Build System for C#/.NET
Dokku - A docker-powered PaaS that helps you build and manage the lifecycle of applications
skaffold - Easy and Repeatable Kubernetes Development
porter - Kubernetes powered PaaS that runs in your own cloud.
earthly - Super simple build framework with fast, repeatable builds and an instantly familiar syntax – like Dockerfile and Makefile had a baby.