localias
overmind
localias | overmind | |
---|---|---|
4 | 15 | |
521 | 2,717 | |
- | - | |
6.2 | 6.4 | |
10 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | 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.
localias
-
You Can't Follow Me
I empathize with the author and found the post to be a interesting and concrete example of what it's _actually like_ to try to publish a blog to Mastodon, which is something that I have thought about and read about in abstract. So, thank you sir for writing this up.
One thing to consider would be to try to use Caddy [0], or a tool like localias [1], as a local https proxy. You might be able to run both the mastodon server and your blog software on the same computer and refer to local-only urls like "https://blog.test" and "https://mastodon.test" and have everything work.
I'd be curious to know why the author didn't try this, they seem to be quite knowledgeable of other web technologies so I have to assume there's a problem that I'm not seeing here.
[0] https://caddyserver.com/
[1] https://github.com/peterldowns/localias
-
Show HN: Local development with .local domains and HTTPS
Sure, but there are also excellent FOSS solutions for this, such as https://github.com/peterldowns/localias which has the benefit of being cross-platform.
-
Free and open source software projects are in transition
Pretty good overview from Baldur — I don't always agree with everything he writes but this seems relatively correct.
One question I'd ask him (and anyone else reading) is: what are some other options for monetization?
Over the last few weeks I had three different VCs reach out to me about some of the open source projects I've been releasing, and ask me if I'd thought about making a business out of them. I told them that no, based on the problem the software was solving, I didn't see how I could adopt open-core or companion-saas business models, and I wasn't sure how else it could be done while keeping the code open source.
Can anyone suggest a viable business model that would allow:
* Code remains at least source available, ideally open source for non-commercial use.
* I can charge for commercial use.
* Actually doing the licensing is reasonable, ie no spyware or phoning home from the tool.
Wouldn't need to be perfect, I understand that if the code is open source a company could easily fork and use it without paying me. The idea would be to make it zero-headache to pay me for a license if the code is being used by a funded team.
The projects:
* https://github.com/peterldowns/localias
* https://github.com/peterldowns/pgmigrate
- Show HN: Localias, securely manage local devserver aliases
overmind
-
Connecting Debugger to Rails Applications
Another solution is to use a different tool to drive the Procfile. The one I'm most familiar with is a tool called overmind. If you run your Procfile with overmind, you'll be able to open up a new terminal window and individually connect to any of the processes that are running. So if you want to connect to the web process to debug, you can open up a new window and run overmind connect web, and you'll have a window where you can work with the debugger's prompt.
-
Overmind, a better foreman or bin/dev for your Procfile
I recently wrote about Overmind (https://github.com/DarthSim/overmind), a drop in replacement for foreman.
If you've ever used Forman or another local Procfile/process manager, I think you'll love Overmind.
It's basically a more customisable foreman that runs in tmux - which means you can do cool things like tmux into a process and attach a debugger (which is nearly impossible with foreman).
Hope you enjoy the article!
-
Procfile.dev, bin/dev, and Rails 7 — how they work, and why (I think) they're great.
We switched to overmind and it's been great.
Hey, thanks for the comment u/sjieg! I don't have anything to add here, apart from suggesting the Overmind gem (https://github.com/DarthSim/overmind), which I just learnt about from another comment.
-
Show HN: Localias, securely manage local devserver aliases
I run an app with a bunch of separate processes managed in a Procfile invoked by Overmind (https://github.com/DarthSim/overmind):
```
app-web: cd app && poetry run invoke server
app-vite: cd app && pnpm dev
app-storybook: cd app && pnpm story:dev
api: cd api && poetry run invoke server
docs: cd docs && npm run dev
marketing: cd marketing && source .env && npm run dev
```
Maybe it's my getting older, but I've found it _infuriating_ to remember which process is bound to 3003 vs 3002 vs 3001 and so on. Very grateful for this project so I can save myself a couple seconds of frustration every day — t/y OP for building it!
-
Yew + Actix project
Use Overmind or cargo-runcc to run multiple commands in a single terminal, instead of running the server and the client in separate terminals
- Scaling Mastodon with systemd template units
-
Fly.io and Tailscale Saved Notado
FYI: Your link for Overmind is to the wrong project. The process manager is https://github.com/DarthSim/overmind
The article currently links to a deprecated Angular.js project with the same name (https://github.com/geddski/overmind)
-
Run multiple discord.py from main.py
However, as you might expect, managing that becomes a bit of a chore in the long run, this is where my recommendation of Overmind comes in.
- docker-compose without dockers
What are some alternatives?
puma-dev - A tool to manage rack apps in development with puma
Foreman - Manage Procfile-based applications
goffy - A command-line tool for downloading public playlists, albums and individual tracks via Spotify URLs.
docker-slim - Slim Rails images, Rails/Sidekiq/ActionCable-standalone/Nginx with Docker-Compose & Kubernetes (StatefulSet Postgres & Redis)
go-camo - A secure image proxy server
exo - A process manager & log viewer for dev
mkcert - A simple zero-config tool to make locally trusted development certificates with any names you'd like.
modd - A flexible developer tool that runs processes and responds to filesystem changes
jkt48-showroom-cli - JKT48 Showroom CLI - A lightning-fast and lightweight CLI tool to access real-time information and live streams of JKT48 members on Showroom
process-compose - Process Compose is a simple and flexible scheduler and orchestrator to manage non-containerized applications.
gnt - Quickly create your Go project in your favorite terminal with `gnt`.
dip - The dip is a CLI dev–tool that provides native-like interaction with a Dockerized application.