brick
mrsk
brick | mrsk | |
---|---|---|
20 | 26 | |
249 | 6,294 | |
- | - | |
8.4 | 9.4 | |
28 days ago | 8 months ago | |
Ruby | TeX | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
brick
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Rails Generate Migration — Everything you need to know (a handy reference guide)
(While you were doing this article, I've been busy making bugfixes on the gem that looks at a database and auto-creates migrations.)
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Anyone tried Django? How does it compare to RoR?
I'm on a path to try to recreate the Django admin interface in Rails. Many things work -- all BT and HM things, plus polymorphism / STI stuff / etc. And it's fast. But it doesn't yet have time series stuff or some other niceties that the Django one does.
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Any devs who made the switch from Django to Rails?
Working VERY hard to have a lean and mean admin panel that can compare favorably to Django's.
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I've hit a dead end of comprehension with has_many through: and subclassing
Was able to fix that bug in the video when the ERD diagram had two lines when there should have been only one. So creating this example ended up revealing that bug and now has made The Brick that little bit stronger.
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Where is the best place to get specific help with errors during a Ruby install?
Using The Brick is an easy way to make many Rails 3.1 apps run under Ruby 2.7.8. In your Gemfile: gem 'brick' And at the very top of your application.rb add this line: require 'brick' And there's a good chance it will run fine. Note that nothing older than 3.1 will work. You got lucky to have an app that's right at the cutoff line!
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Why does pry/Zeitwerk have issues loading constants in breakpoint context?
I feel your pain, u/2called_chaos -- so much that after being totally fed up with this kind of unreliable faff, I fixed it in a gem I maintain! Here's a video demo of your exact setup. You can see it broken and then working after simply adding the gem:
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Deploy rails app
-Lorin Curator of The Brick.
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Rails Foundation announces first-ever conference!
... and while waiting, unrelated, but if you haven't yet given my lockdown creation a whirl then please drop this into your current project and tell me what you think -- a gem called The Brick!
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Tail end of the Brick API demo
For the full story on auto-creating RESTful APIs for any Rails app, [go here](https://github.com/lorint/brick).
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Gemfile of dreams: the libraries we use to build Rails apps
I want to bring 👽 my API thing 🚀 to your martian party with hopes that it could become a useful player amongst your universe of useful gems!
mrsk
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Deploy Anycable with MRSK
Here we'll deploy Anycable wih MRSK.
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Fly.io Postgres cluster went down for 3 days, no word from them about it
Honestly these days I am leaning towards this approach: https://github.com/mrsked/mrsk/
It's all just docker.
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The Curse of Scalable Technology
Did you consider MRSK[1], k3s[2], or dokku[3]? They are all significantly simpler to operate than Kubernetes, curious to hear your take.
[1] https://github.com/mrsked/mrsk
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How to cache MRSK deployments in CI
https://github.com/mrsked/mrsk/pull/159 Closed PR about --cache-to option in MRSK
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Thoughts on MSRK?
Yes, that thing with the setup is misleading in the docs. I'll make a PR now. There's this issue about it: https://github.com/mrsked/mrsk/issues/301
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Rails Foundation announces first-ever conference!
god or bad, dhh is doing noise and people know about rails. just look at there https://github.com/mrsked/mrsk
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MRSK vs. Fly.io
I don't think there's a writeup out there, but mrsk just uses docker under the hood. So, if you have a CMD in your Dockerfile, it will use that.
If you have an image that can run multiple things, like a rails app that can run the app process for web traffic by default, but it can also run job workers with the right command, you can provide the cmd in the mrsk config. You can see this in the jobs role in the example: https://github.com/mrsked/mrsk#using-different-roles-for-ser....
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Looking to use Docker & Docker Compose in production and need advice.
You may want to checkout MRSK if you are going to be using docker compose in production on a single VPS https://github.com/mrsked/mrsk
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Deploying with MRSK
"MRSK basically is Capistrano for Containers, without the need to carefully prepare servers in advance" https://github.com/mrsked/mrsk
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Need some advice on how to deploy images to our vending machines
https://github.com/mrsked/mrsk might be interesting to you.
What are some alternatives?
Apipie - Ruby on Rails API documentation tool
awesome-compose - Awesome Docker Compose samples
phlex - A framework for building object-oriented views in Ruby.
Dokku - A docker-powered PaaS that helps you build and manage the lifecycle of applications
Cocoon - Dynamic nested forms using jQuery made easy; works with formtastic, simple_form or default forms
kubero - A free and self-hosted Heroku PaaS alternative for Kubernetes that implements GitOps
Simpsons - Testing out hierarchical stuff -- recursive functions and so on
docker-phoenix-example - A production ready example Phoenix app that's using Docker and Docker Compose.
Arbre - An Object Oriented DOM Tree in Ruby
lamby - 🐑🛤 Simple Rails & AWS Lambda Integration
rswag - Seamlessly adds a Swagger to Rails-based API's
deploy - Ansible role to deploy scripting applications like PHP, Python, Ruby, etc. in a capistrano style