Parity
DISCONTINUED
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Parity | conduit | |
---|---|---|
49 | 33 | |
1,604 | 10,282 | |
- | 1.3% | |
7.7 | 9.9 | |
almost 2 years ago | 3 days ago | |
Rust | Go | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
Parity
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Understanding the Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM)
OpenEthereum | Programming Language = Rust
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Daily General Discussion - March 8, 2022
OpenEthereum v3.2.0 is ready for Berlin.
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How is a Bitcoin upgrade being coordinated when Satoshi Nakamoto is not around?
For Ethereum, there is Geth, OpenEthereum, Nethermind, among others.
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The Parity Bitcoin client, written in Rust
I'm not sure why this was linked. Parity decided to stop developing their Ethereum client and this repo has been sitting unmaintained for about 2 years now, it will almost certainly not successfully sync with mainnet.
The Parity codebase was taken over by new maintainers and turned into OpenEthereum: https://github.com/openethereum/openethereum
However, writing and maintaining an Ethereum client is an exceptional amount of work with very little benefit, the primary OpenEthereum maintainers recently announced they would stop maintaining OpenEthereum and would start pouring their energies into an upcoming client called Erigon. https://medium.com/openethereum/gnosis-joins-erigon-formerly...
Erigon is a much better client.
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Who are the Ethereum Developers?
Also, the Ethereum Foundation doesn't own a lot of the code used in the network. For example, lots of people use OpenEthereum as their client, which is not managed by EF.
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RiB Newsletter #23 - Rewriting In Rust?
OpenEthereum. Ethereum in Rust. Originally developed by Parity. While Geth, written in Go, is often considered the main client, Ethereum strategically has multiple implementations.
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Daily General Discussion - April 18, 2021
~ The Berlin Ethereum protocol upgrade this week was successful! One client, Open Ethereum, experienced a syncing issue, but this was quickly fixed. Well done to the Eth1 clients teams for a successful release.
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Daily General Discussion - April 15, 2021
OpenEthereum client had a bug. It's being fixed already: https://github.com/openethereum/openethereum/pull/364
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Ethereum Fork Fails on OpenEthereum
Looks like they've extracted it to a separate hotfix PR here:
conduit
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Optimal JMX Exposure Strategy for Kubernetes Multi-Node Architecture
Leverage a service mesh like Istio or Linkerd to manage communication between microservices within the Kubernetes cluster. These service meshes can be configured to intercept JMX traffic and enforce access control policies. Benefits:
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Linkerd no longer shipping open source, stable releases
Looks like CNCF waved them through Graduation anyway, let's look at policies from July 28, 2021 when they were deemed "Graduated"
All maintainers of the LinkerD project had @boyant.io email addresses. [0] They do list 4 other members of a "Steering Committee", but LinkerD's GOVERNANCE.md gives all of the power to maintainers: [1]
> Ideally, all project decisions are resolved by maintainer consensus. If this is not possible, maintainers may call a vote. The voting process is a simple majority in which each maintainer receives one vote.
And CNCF Graduation policy says a project must "Have committers from at least two organizations" [2]. So it appears that the CNCF accepted the "Steering Committee" as an acceptable 2nd committer, even though the Governance policy still gave the maintainers all of the power.
I would like to know if the Steering Committee voted to remove stable releases from an un-biased position acting in the best interest of the project, or if they were simply ignored or not even advised on the decision.
I'm all for Boyant doing what they need to do to make money and survive as a Company. But at that point my opinion is that they should withdraw the project from the CNCF and stop pretending like the foundation has any influence on the project's governance.
[0] https://github.com/linkerd/linkerd2/blob/489ca1e3189b6a5289d...
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Ultimate EKS Baseline Cluster: Part 1 - Provision EKS
From here, we can explore other developments and tutorials on Kubernetes, such as o11y or observability (PLG, ELK, ELF, TICK, Jaeger, Pyroscope), service mesh (Linkerd, Istio, NSM, Consul Connect, Cillium), and progressive delivery (ArgoCD, FluxCD, Spinnaker).
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Istio moved to CNCF Graduation stage
https://linkerd.io/ is a much lighter-weight alternative but you do still get some of the fancy things like mtls without needing any manual configuration. Install it, label your namespaces, and let it do it's thing!
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API release strategies with API Gateway
Open source API Gateway (Apache APISIX and Traefik), Service Mesh (Istio and Linkerd) solutions are capable of doing traffic splitting and implementing functionalities like Canary Release and Blue-Green deployment. With canary testing, you can make a critical examination of a new release of an API by selecting only a small portion of your user base. We will cover the canary release next section.
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GKE with Consul Service Mesh
I have experimented with other service meshes and I was able to get up to speed quickly: Linkerd = 1 day, Istio = 3 days, NGINX Service Mesh = 5 days, but Consul Connect service mesh took at least 11 days to get off the ground. This is by far the most complex solution available.
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How is a service mesh implemented on low level?
https://github.com/linkerd/linkerd2 (random example)
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Kubernetes operator written in rust
It’s not an operator but a major component of the Linkerd control plane is written in Rust with kube-rs. https://github.com/linkerd/linkerd2/tree/main/policy-controller
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What is a service mesh?
Out of the number of service mesh solutions that exist, the most popular open source ones are: Linkerd, Istio, and Consul. Here at Koyeb, we are using Kuma.
What are some alternatives?
go-ethereum - Official Go implementation of the Ethereum protocol
Nethermind - A robust execution client for Ethereum node operators.
Zone of Control - ⬡ Zone of Control is a hexagonal turn-based strategy game written in Rust. [DISCONTINUED]
Way Cooler
besu - An enterprise-grade Java-based, Apache 2.0 licensed Ethereum client https://wiki.hyperledger.org/display/besu
api - An API for managing your servers
citybound - A work-in-progress, open-source, multi-player city simulation game.
ripgrep - ripgrep recursively searches directories for a regex pattern while respecting your gitignore
tauri - Build smaller, faster, and more secure desktop applications with a web frontend.
tokei - Count your code, quickly.
Parallel
rim - Aspiring vim-like text editor