community
homebrew-core
community | homebrew-core | |
---|---|---|
9 | 133 | |
64 | 13,216 | |
- | 0.5% | |
7.2 | 10.0 | |
14 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Jupyter Notebook | Ruby | |
MIT License | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" 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.
community
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Trying to decide best practices for production environment
Pros are instant HA and Migration. Cons are huge bandwidth hits. With your 4x1gbe you would be maxed out on replicating those 25 VMs. You wouldn't have anything for users. I have a test lab with 4 nodes, 22cpu 100gbram and 30tb space, using low end stuff, 12hdds. Proxmox, ceph dashboard, (the native ceph dashboard you can turn on), and a netdata.cloud account. So I watch it like a hawk and like to load test.
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Ask HN: Reducing the maintenance surface area of hosting a small internal app
Docker-compose, not k8s. Set up a script to update the OS, pull all your containers and reboot after hours once a week or once a day. Make sure the script specifies non interactive. Set up alerting for low disk space, see https://netdata.cloud or use your own tool
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Whatβs your preferred stack?
There can be some issues if you mix and match elastic versions, wazuh versions, logstash versions. But the documentation guides you very well with matrix of what is and is not compatible. You will want a beefy VM to run it in, I started smaller than I should of, and after running a while it kind of puked on itself, certain things would randomly stop working. After giving it 32GB RAM, plenty of disk 4TB, and 8 vcpu, it now runs like a top. of course you will need to run, test and tune all the config files for Ossec, Wazuh, Logstash etc. The big one being JVM heap memory settings, larger these can be, the better performance. Also if you can, run it on SSD disk, helps alot being there is lots of I/O, log ingestion, processing etc. One free Linux monitoring platform I use, which I highly recommend for all Linux servers is netdata.cloud. Awesome, awesome, awesome! It actually helps tune and get real time health of the Wazuh server, and can point out pain points with hardware being undersized for example, too much swap utilization, disk I/O etc. Regardless, check that out regardless.
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Netdata on MacOS
$ brew info netdata netdata: stable 1.29.3 (bottled) Diagnose infrastructure problems with metrics, visualizations & alarms https://netdata.cloud/ Not installed From: https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/blob/HEAD/Formula/netdata.rb License: GPL-3.0-or-later ==> Dependencies Build: autoconf β, automake β, pkg-config β Required: json-c β, libuv β, lz4 β, [email protected] β ==> Caveats To start netdata: brew services start netdata Or, if you don't want/need a background service you can just run: /usr/local/opt/netdata/sbin/netdata -D
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Monitoring Software 2021
Try netdata.cloud
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Netdata cloud and data control
What I know is that each node's data is still primarily stored on the node itself, and I've figured that the Registry used by Netdata cloud stores only URLs and randomly generated UUIDs. So my question is, will any other data be stored outside of my nodes? Does Netdata Cloud have access to my servers 24/7 or only when I got a browser tab with Netdata cloud open? Is there more information on security and data collection (besides GDPR and personal data collection) available on your site, netdata.cloud?
- Top 10 Trending GitHub Repositories
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Introduction to StatsD
StatsD in Netdata
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Ansible Is Stressing Me Out More Than Doing
hey, sorry about taking so long to reply, and thanks for opening an issue on Gitlab. I just released v1.0.0 of https://xsrv.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ and will try to send a PR to https://github.com/netdata/community/tree/main/netdata-agent-deployment explaining how to bootsrap netdata from the ansible monitoring role in the coming weeks.
homebrew-core
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Is Go Used in Production more than Rust ?
$ brew info eza ==> eza: stable 0.18.13 (bottled) Modern, maintained replacement for ls https://github.com/eza-community/eza Not installed From: https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/blob/HEAD/Formula/e/eza.rb License: MIT ==> Dependencies Build: pandoc β, pkg-config β, rust β Required: libgit2 β ==> Analytics install: 12,792 (30 days), 38,295 (90 days), 68,375 (365 days) install-on-request: 12,790 (30 days), 38,293 (90 days), 68,375 (365 days) build-error: 0 (30 days)
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GitHub Disabled the Xz Repo
Is disabling the compromised repo the typical GitHub policy? My concern is there are monorepos used by package managers, like brew, that are a collection of thousands of projects [1]. These monorepos seem like a prime target for attack and if GitHub disables one because a malicious commit was merged then you've taken down an entire ecosystem.
[1] https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core
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Backdoor in upstream xz/liblzma leading to SSH server compromise
> Correct. Though we do not appear to be affected, this revert was done out of an abundance of caution.
[1] https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/pull/167512
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Pyenv β lets you easily switch between multiple versions of Python
> right, but now you know even less about your setup when you some roadblock
This is the same with a binary though. And with homebrew, you can't follow patches or flags used or if they change.
- https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/blob/c964ad7fa53ad...
- Apple curl security incident 12604
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Cowsay
definitely be careful about using fortune in a corporate environment or public space if you don't know what dat files you are using or you might just get an extremely unwelcome surprise.
I was practicing a presentation and used to use "fortune" all the time. I forget exactly what it output but I remember being absolutely mortified about what could have happened if that had popped up during an internal company tech talk.
Kudos to brew for keeping unsuspecting people safe
https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/commit/3fb3c4c3e55...
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Ask HN: Trouble with a Stargate
I'm sorry to be asking this as I find it a bit silly, but it's blocking my PR [3], so could a few of you star the project on Github [1] to get my PR to run?
[1] https://github.com/laktak/chkbit-py
[2] https://brew.sh
[3] https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/pull/160018
- Simulate an Ubuntu-like VM inside macOS
- When open source platforms are worse than closed source
- Homebrew Rejects the Idea for Post-Install Notes
What are some alternatives?
snmp_exporter - SNMP Exporter for Prometheus
yt-dlp - A feature-rich command-line audio/video downloader
Statsd - Daemon for easy but powerful stats aggregation
asdf-python - Python plugin for the asdf version manager
tetris-os - An operating system, but it only plays Tetris. [UnavailableForLegalReasons - Repository access blocked]
HomeBrew - πΊ The missing package manager for macOS (or Linux)
cwa-app-android - Native Android app using the Apple/Google exposure notification API. The CWA development ends on May 31, 2023. You still can warn other users until April 30, 2023. More information:
homebrew-php - :beer: Homebrew tap for PHP 5.6 to 8.4. PHP 8.4 is built nightly.
difftaichi - 10 differentiable physical simulators built with Taichi differentiable programming (DiffTaichi, ICLR 2020)
osxfuse - FUSE extends macOS by adding support for user space file systems
Awesome-Linux-Software - A list of awesome applications, software, tools and other materials for Linux distros. [Moved to: https://github.com/luong-komorebi/Awesome-Linux-Software]
homebrew-cask-versions - π’ Alternate versions of Casks