litmus
k3d
Our great sponsors
litmus | k3d | |
---|---|---|
63 | 76 | |
4,182 | 5,067 | |
2.2% | 2.1% | |
9.4 | 7.3 | |
9 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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.
litmus
-
Building Resilience with Chaos Engineering and Litmus
Litmus, Gremlin, Chaos Mesh, and Chaos Monkey are all popular open-source tools used for chaos engineering. As we will be using AWS cloud infrastructure, we will also explore AWS Fault Injection Simulator (FIS). While they share the same goals of testing and improving the resilience of a system, there are some differences between them. Here are some comparisons:
-
Strategies for Writing More Effective Tests in Golang
This LFX quarter I got to get my hands on LitmusChaos, a CNCF incubating opensource project that dives deep on making cloud-native chaos-engineering accessible to multiple developer personas.
-
Introduction to Chaos Engineering
In 2010 Netflix developed a tool called "Chaos Monkey", whose goal was to randomly take down compute services (such as virtual machines or containers), part of the Netflix production environment, and test the impact on the overall Netflix service experience. In 2011 Netflix released a toolset called "The Simian Army", which added more capabilities to the Chaos Monkey, from reliability, security, and resiliency (i.e., Chaos Kong which simulates an entire AWS region going down). In 2012, Chaos Monkey became an open-source project (under Apache 2.0 license). In 2016, a company called Gremlin released the first "Failure-as-a-Service" platform. In 2017, the LitmusChaos project was announced, which provides chaos jobs in Kubernetes. In 2019, Alibaba Cloud announced ChaosBlade, an open-source Chaos Engineering tool. In 2020, Chaos Mesh 1.0 was announced as generally available, an open-source cloud-native chaos engineering platform. In 2021, AWS announced the general availability of AWS Fault Injection Simulator, a fully managed service to run controlled experiments.
-
Building a More Robust Apache APISIX Ingress Controller With Litmus Chaos
Litmus Chaos is an open-source Chaos Engineering framework that provides an infrastructure experimental framework to validate the stability of controllers and microservices architectures. It can simulate various environments, such as container-level and application-level environments, natural disasters, faults, and upgrades, to understand how the system responds to these changes. The framework can also explore the behavior changes between controllers and applications, and how controllers respond to challenges in specific states. Litmus Chaos offers convenient observability integration capabilities and is highly extensible.
-
Getting the Github Octernship
I am Pratik Singh, a final-year engineering student from Bangalore. I have been alumni of the pilot program of the Github Octernship. Back in 2021, it was called Github Externship. I worked for an organisation LitmusChaos
-
rootly Vs firehydrant, any experience?
https://litmuschaos.io/ (open source)
-
How to Deploy and Scale Strapi on a Kubernetes Cluster 2/2
LitmusChaos, is a platform that helps you to run Chaos Engineering in your cluster to identify weaknesses and improvement opportunities.
-
From KubeCon to my first keynote as a DevRel
When the workshop was over, I headed back to the conference pavilion to attend the LitmusChaos Project Office Hours. These discussion events are great because they allow you to learn more about the project ask questions, meet the maintainers, and learn about new features and upcoming updates.
-
Reliability/chaos engineering tools
I don't have experience with the solutions you mentioned but I'll add one more to your list. It's Litmus which is open source... https://github.com/litmuschaos/litmus
-
Implement DevSecOps to Secure your CI/CD pipeline
Implement Chaos Mesh and Litmus chaos engineering framework to understand the behavior and stability of application in real-world use cases.
k3d
-
15 Options To Build A Kubernetes Playground (with Pros and Cons)
K3D: is a lightweight distribution of Kubernetes designed for resource-constrained environments. It is an excellent option for running Kubernetes on virtual machines or cloud servers.
-
Why You Should Use k3d for Local Development. A Developer's Guide
k3d is a lightweight wrapper that makes running Kubernetes (specifically, the lightweight k3s distribution) in Docker straightforward and efficient. It's designed to provide developers with a quick and easy way to test Kubernetes without the overhead of setting up a full cluster.
- Turning my laptop into a one-node k8s-cluster?
- Single node K8S distribution for little production
-
Distributing containers to run locally?
If you customer prefers to run the standard docker engine you could use k3d
-
Unable to launch older version (v2.6.8) of Rancher
You donโt need to run Rancher from a Kubernetes cluster, the rancher/rancher image works fine with Docker (it uses k3d, aka ยซ k3s in docker ยป : https://k3d.io/).
- Blog: KWOK: Kubernetes WithOut Kubelet
-
Building a RESTful API With Functions
K3d and Skaffold for local development
-
Local Kubernetes Playground Made Easy
If you are a developer and want to learn how to deploy applications to a cluster, getting a cluster up an running can be a daunting task in it's own rights. There are many ways to do it: spinning up local virtual machines and configuring from scratch or using tools like minikube, etc. You may not care for the pain of setting up and configuring a cluster, and if that is you, then the quickest way that I have found is using k3d.
- Despliega un clรบster de Kubernetes en segundos con k3sup
What are some alternatives?
chaos-mesh - A Chaos Engineering Platform for Kubernetes.
kind - Kubernetes IN Docker - local clusters for testing Kubernetes
chaosmonkey - Chaos Monkey is a resiliency tool that helps applications tolerate random instance failures.
lima - Linux virtual machines, with a focus on running containers
aws-fis-templates-cdk - Collection of AWS Fault Injection Simulator (FIS) experiment templates deploy-able via the AWS CDK
k0s - k0s - The Zero Friction Kubernetes
podtato-head - Demo App for TAG App Delivery
k3sup - bootstrap K3s over SSH in < 60s ๐
backstage - Backstage is an open platform for building developer portals [Moved to: https://github.com/backstage/backstage]
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes
mentoring - ๐ฉ๐ฟโ๐๐จ๐ฝโ๐๐ฉ๐ปโ๐CNCF Mentoring: LFX Mentorship + Summer of Code
microk8s - MicroK8s is a small, fast, single-package Kubernetes for datacenters and the edge.