murder
gx
murder | gx | |
---|---|---|
3 | 4 | |
2,524 | 1,877 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 7 years ago | about 2 years ago | |
Ruby | Go | |
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.
murder
-
MicroShift
> I have many thousands of machines running in multiple datacenters and even getting a ~4mb binary distributed onto them without saturating the network (100mbit) and slowing everything else down, is a bit of a challenge.
You may find murder[1] of some use.
[1] https://github.com/lg/murder
-
Fork Freshness: Discover Active Forks of Abandoned GitHub Repositories
Is there a repository for Fork Freshness? I could see the twitter account ignoring requests in the future and the same fate could fall to this project. I would recommend releasing the project under AGPL-3.0-or-later to partially solve this issue so the project can continue in the event of abandonment. I could see people contributing code to search for projects in other known forges such as GitLab, Sourceforge, Savannah, Gitea, pagure, and sourcehut as sometimes projects are forked outside of the original forge.
I have noticed this issue that Fork Freshness tries to solve. My example is Twitter's project murder https://github.com/lg/murder When a project becomes unmaintained whether officially or unofficially, the future home is often lost unless the original points to the new home at the top of the README file. You can dig within GitHub in the Insights > Network section to get a visual glimpse of what has changed since. https://github.com/lg/murder/network The original repository put up a notice that the project is unmaintained and archived the project which effectively ends the project in practice. In this case, ervinb's fork seems to be the most active commits before being abandoned. https://github.com/ervinb/murder Other forks also had independent commits that never were pulled into other projects. Looking at the network method fails to differentiate 30 grammar fixes from 30 new features without digging into each promising looking fork. Even then, you may miss a single commit that included more work then the entirety of the other commits. Disclosure: I have not worked on murder.
This is a serious problem and I hope we solve it.
- I have a ~2gb file I need regularly sent to ~300 *Nix servers. What's the best way to do this?
gx
-
⏫ I've uploaded EVERY single Minecraft PLUGIN to IPFS
Btw, Protocol Labs have already made a package manager based on IPFS, called [gx](https://github.com/whyrusleeping/gx)
- MicroShift
- Anyone working on a package manager for their language?
-
The feasibility of using IPFS to replace linux software sources (http and ftp)!
You're talking about package management, right? https://github.com/whyrusleeping/gx
What are some alternatives?
active-forks - Find active github forks of a repo https://git.io/vSnrC
pacman.store - Pacman Mirror via IPFS for ArchLinux, Endeavouros, Manjaro plus custom repos ALHP and Chaotic-AUR.
murder - Large scale server deploys using BitTorrent and the BitTornado library
xmake-repo - 📦 An official xmake package repository
Better-Github-Forks - Script for finding good forks of any project on Github
apt-transport-ipfs - IPFS transport for apt
cli - CLI tool for creating minecraft servers
aws-sdk-go-v2 - AWS SDK for the Go programming language.
microshift - A small form factor OpenShift/Kubernetes optimized for edge computing
micro - A Go service development platform