official-images
initializr
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official-images | initializr | |
---|---|---|
14 | 258 | |
6,271 | 3,344 | |
1.7% | 0.8% | |
10.0 | 8.9 | |
2 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Shell | Java | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
official-images
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Nix is a better Docker image builder than Docker's image builder
Ubuntu now has snapshot.ubuntu.com, see https://ubuntu.com/blog/ubuntu-snapshots-on-azure-ensuring-p...
Related discussion about reproducible builds by the Docker people: https://github.com/docker-library/official-images/issues/160...
- Starter for Jakarta EE staged (beta)
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How to own your own Docker Registry address
> In their updated policy, it appears they now won't remove any existing images, but projects who don't pay up will not be able to publish any new images
This is not correct. It's the "organization" features are going away. That is the feature which lets you create teams, add other users to those teams, and grant teams access to push images and access private repositories. Multiple maintainers can still collaborate on publishing new images through use of access tokens which grant access to publish those images. It's kind of a hack, but it works. You would typically use these access tokens with automated CI tools anyway. This will require converting the organization account to a personal user (non-org) account. (Interesting note/disclosure: I was the engineer who first implemented the feature of converting a personal user account into an organization account some time around 2014/2015, but I no longer work there.)
For open source projects which are not part of the Docker Official Images (the "library" images [1]), they announced that such projects can apply to the Docker-Sponsored Open Source Program [2].
I would also heed the warning from the author of this article:
> Self-hosting a registry is not free, and it's more work than it sounds: it's a proper piece of infrastructure, and comes with all the obligations that implies, from monitoring to promptly applying security updates to load & disk-space management. Nobody (let alone tiny projects like these) wants this job.
Having most container images hosted by a handful of centralized registries has its problems, as noted, but so does an alternative scenario where multiple projects which decided to go self-hosted eventually lack the resources to continue doing so for their legacy users. Though, I suppose the nice thing about container images is that you can always pull and push them somewhere else to keep around indefinitely.
[1] https://hub.docker.com/u/library
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Docker's deleting Open Source images and here's what you need to know
Indeed. While I do maintain two of them, that maintenance is effectively equivalent to being an open source maintainer or open source contributor. I do not have any non-public knowledge about the Docker Official Images program. My interaction with the Docker Official Images program can be summed up as “my PRs to docker-library/official-images” (https://github.com/docker-library/official-images/pulls/TimW...) and the #docker-library IRC channel on Libera.Chat.
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Oracle per-employee Java pricing causes concern
"AdoptOpenJDK up until now was producing OpenJDK binaries with both Hotspot and OpenJ9 VM's. With Adopt's move to Eclipse, legal restrictions prevent the new Eclipse Adoptium group from producing/releasing OpenJ9 based binaries. As a result, IBM will be producing OpenJ9 based binaries in 2 flavours, Open and Certified, both under the family name IBM Semeru Runtimes. Essentially the same binaries, released under different licenses."
Source: https://github.com/docker-library/official-images/pull/10666...
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PHP 8.2.0 has been released!
They should be available soon, the corresponding PR at docker-library/official-images has already been merged: https://github.com/docker-library/official-images/pull/13693
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Docker series (Part 8): Images from Docker Hub
Official image lists are added here: https://github.com/docker-library/official-images/tree/master/library
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GCC 12.1 Released
Looks like this PR will release the official version to the hub: https://github.com/docker-library/official-images/pull/12382
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1 Million Docker pulls and more container updates
We’ve also officially release containers for ppc64le available on all the major registries and we’ve also gone ahead and updated our containers to 8.5.4 and patched against the latest security updates where applicable. 18 packages have been updated and you can see that work here.
- Where are the 10.7.2/10.7.3 docker images?
initializr
- Como funciona um Load Balance e como implementar utilizando Nginx.
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Develop your Tomcat App with Docker Compose Watch
The best way, for generating a ready-to-run application in Java you can use the Spring Boot Initializr tool.
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Consuming and Testing third party API's using Spring Webclient
curl --location 'https://start.spring.io/starter.zip?type=maven-project&language=java&bootVersion=3.2.2&baseDir=ms-xcoffee&groupId=com.xcoffee&artifactId=ms-xcoffee&name=ms-xcoffee&description=Demo%20project%20for%20Spring%20Boot&packageName=com.xcoffee.ms-xcoffee&packaging=jar&javaVersion=21&dependencies=webflux%2Clombok%2Cvalidation' | tar -xzvf -
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Spring boot and PostgreSQL in Docker Compose
In this segment we will create a basic Spring boot app from Spring Initializer. Add the below dependencies:
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Spring Data MongoDB — CRUD, Aggregations, Views and Materialized Views
Add the following MongoDB dependencies in your pom.xml or use spring initializer and select the Spring Data MongoDB dependency:
- AWS SQS: Como publicar e consumir mensagens com Spring Cloud AWS
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Java Microservices with Spring Boot and Spring Cloud
I created all of these applications using start.spring.io's REST API and HTTPie.
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Run a java service serverless with ECS and Fargate
An easy way to create the skeleton project is to visit Spring Initializr, I set the Project to Gradle - Groovy, Language to Java, and add Spring Web dependency. Then it's just to generate the project and unpack it.
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A Passwordless Future! Passkeys for Java Developers
Create a new Spring Boot application using the Spring Initializr. You can use the web version or the curl command below. Use the default for most of the options. For the dependencies, select web, and okta. For the build tool, select Gradle.
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Spring Cloud Functions, Kafka | How to interact asynchronous
I will start with a simple example of a cloud function, which is the same as a rest endpoint in the classical spring boot web application. You can create a project from your favorite IDE or from Spring Initliazr.
What are some alternatives?
buildx - Docker CLI plugin for extended build capabilities with BuildKit
JHipster - JHipster, much like Spring initializr, is a generator to create a boilerplate backend application, but also with an integrated front end implementation in React, Vue or Angular. In their own words, it "Is a development platform to quickly generate, develop, & deploy modern web applications & microservice architectures."
gcc - Docker Official Image packaging for gcc
Spring Boot - Spring Boot
registry.k8s.io - This project is the repo for registry.k8s.io, the production OCI registry service for Kubernetes' container image artifacts
Javet - Javet is Java + V8 (JAVa + V + EighT). It is an awesome way of embedding Node.js and V8 in Java.
backend
elastic-beanstalk-roadmap - AWS Elastic Beanstalk roadmap
nerdctl - contaiNERD CTL - Docker-compatible CLI for containerd, with support for Compose, Rootless, eStargz, OCIcrypt, IPFS, ...
jhipster-sample-app - This is a sample application created with JHipster
4.2BSD - Upload of the source of 4.2BSD taken from /usr/src
spring-petclinic - A sample Spring-based application