mizu
Packer
mizu | Packer | |
---|---|---|
40 | 66 | |
4,543 | 14,915 | |
- | 0.4% | |
9.7 | 9.4 | |
over 1 year ago | 4 days ago | |
C | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
mizu
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The Future of Open Source, or Why Open Core Is Dead
UP9, Founded 2019, 3,743 stars
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Interesting tools?
API traffic viewer for kubernetes(kinda like wireshark): https://github.com/up9inc/mizu
- Mizu - The API Traffic Viewer for Kubernetes
- PI traffic viewer for Kubernetes enabling you to view all API communication between microservices
- What are Kubernetes developers missing? What tool or library do you wish you had?
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Hacker News top posts: Apr 12, 2022
Mizu – API traffic viewer for Kubernetes\ (4 comments)
- Up9inc/mizu: API traffic viewer for Kubernetes:view API comms btw microservices
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Gain Visibility into Istio mTLS Traffic with Mizu
Mizu is an open source multi-protocol traffic viewer for Kubernetes that can be used to view API traffic between microservices communicating over synchronous and message queue protocols.Traffic viewing is essential for troubleshooting bugs, defects, and regressions. It helps developers find the root cause of a problem quicker and therefore deploy faster. Mizu is available to download as an executable binary or as source code directly from its GitHub repository.
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How do you see TLS traffic on K8's?
As a reminder, Mizu is a lightweight API traffic viewer for Kubernetes that doesn't require any code instrumentation. It provides complete visibility to all API traffic and payloads with support for different protocols and encryption. A short video describing the new feature can be found here [Add link to video].
Packer
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AWS Cloud Platform for highly loaded WordPress website
The missing piece of puzzle is the AMI "golden image" that will be used to start the instances in autoscaling group. The AMI has to have NGINX and PHP installed with the list of required modules enabled. The great tool to brew one is hashicorp packer.
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The 2024 Web Hosting Report
To manage a VM, you can use something as simple as just manual actions over SSH, or can use tools like Ansible, Hashicorp's Packer and Terraform or other automations. For an app where there is minimal load and security/reliability concern, VMs are still a great option that provide a lot of value for the buck
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Avoiding DevOps tool hell
Server templating: Using Packer has never been easier to create reusable server configurations in a platform-independent and documented manner.
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How to create an iso image of a finished system
I'll give you hard, but rewarding and easy to modify(once you know what you're doing) way. Packer may be a thing you're looking for.
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13.2 ZFS root AMIs in AWS
It is straightforward to build them with packer (I have built AMIs for 13.0 and 13.1, but 13.2 should be exactly the same). I've been meaning to write a blog post about it for a while, but have not gotten to it yet... In any case, what I am doing is using the EBS Surrogate Builder to start an instance running the official FreeBSD 13.2 image with an extra volume attached and run a script to create a zpool on the extra volume and bootstrap and configure FreeBSD 13.2-RELEASE on it. After that packer takes care of creating an AMI out of that extra volume, so you can use it... If you have any issues, let me know, and maybe I will finally get to writing that blog post...
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DevOps Tooling Landscape
HashiCorp Packer is a tool for creating machine images for a variety of platforms, including AWS, Azure, and VMware. It allows you to define machine images as code and supports a wide range of configuration options.
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auto-provisioning multiple raspberry pi's
Packer is a tool that can be used to build machine images. Basically, it takes a base image, runs a series of steps to provision that image, and then burns a new image. In my workplace we use it heavily to build AWS AMIs. But it has an ARM plugin that looks to be very very suitable for building customised Raspberry Pi images (my quick read of the doco there says it can go ahead and write the final image to an SD card for you too).
- How do hosting companies immediately create vm right after purchasing one?
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Packer preseed file seems to not be read
Seems related to https://github.com/hashicorp/packer/issues/12118 But the workaround discribed in the comments doesn’t seems to work anymore
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How to create AMI which also copies the user data?
I'd suggest using a tool like Packer to build a gold image based on your base AMI and all your changes. Then you'll have your own AMI you can launch new instances with.
What are some alternatives?
s3-proxy - S3 Reverse Proxy with GET, PUT and DELETE methods and authentication (OpenID Connect and Basic Auth)
Vagrant - Vagrant is a tool for building and distributing development environments.
easyssh-proxy - easyssh-proxy provides a simple implementation of some SSH protocol features in Go
helm - The Kubernetes Package Manager
kubernetes - Production-Grade Container Scheduling and Management
oVirt - oVirt website
GVM - Go Version Manager
cloud-init-vmware-guestinfo - A cloud-init datasource for VMware vSphere's GuestInfo interface
Gitea - Git with a cup of tea! Painless self-hosted all-in-one software development service, including Git hosting, code review, team collaboration, package registry and CI/CD
Gogs - Gogs is a painless self-hosted Git service
QEMU - Official QEMU mirror. Please see https://www.qemu.org/contribute/ for how to submit changes to QEMU. Pull Requests are ignored. Please only use release tarballs from the QEMU website.