opentofu
Vegeta
opentofu | Vegeta | |
---|---|---|
46 | 41 | |
21,390 | 22,885 | |
6.8% | - | |
9.8 | 6.0 | |
about 11 hours ago | about 1 month ago | |
Go | Go | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | 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.
opentofu
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Terraform Init โ Command Overview
Note: New versions of Terraform will be placed under the BUSL license, but everything created before version 1.5.x stays open-source. OpenTofu is an open-source version of Terraform that will expand on Terraform's existing concepts and offerings. It is a viable alternative to HashiCorp's Terraform, being forked from Terraform version 1.5.6.
- Opentofu v1.7.2 Bugfix Release
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What is OpenTofu?
The OpenTofu initiative was launched with significant initial support, boasting over 18 full-time equivalents (FTEs) committed to the project from four companies. The manifesto has been endorsed by over 140 companies, involving 11 projects with the participation of over 700 individuals. Moreover, the manifesto has received more than 35,000 GitHub stars, and the fork itself has garnered over 6,000 stars in just one week.
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How to deploy your own website on AWS
Terraform/OpenTofu installed. We use Terraform in this article.
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Oracle goes vegan: Dumps Terraform for OpenTofu
It's great to see more companies adopting OpenTofu!
As a side note, we've recently released OpenTofu 1.7 with end-to-end state encryption, enhanced provider-defined functions, and a bunch more[0].
If you've been holding out with the migration, now is the perfect moment to take another look, and join the many companies that have already migrated!
[0]: https://github.com/opentofu/opentofu/releases/tag/v1.7.0
Note: Tech Lead of the OpenTofu project
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OpenTofu v1.7: Enhanced Security with State File Encryption
and more.
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OpenTofu 1.7.0 is out with State Encryption, Dynamic Provider-defined Functions
Hey!
> With OpenTofu exclusive features making such an early debut, is the intention to remain a superset of upstream Terraform functionality and spec, or allow OpenTofu to diverge and move in its own direction?
The intention is to let it diverge. There will surely be some amount of shared new features, but we're generally going our own way.
> Will you aim to stick to compatibility with Terraform providers/modules?
Yes.
Regarding providers, we might introduce some kind of superset protocol for providers at some point, for tofu-exclusive functionality, but we'll make sure to design it in a way where providers keep working with both Terraform and OpenTofu.
Regarding modules, this one will be more tricky, as there might Terraform languages features that aren't supported in OpenTofu and vice-versa. We have a proposal[0] to tackle this, and enable module authors to easily create modules with support for both, even when using some exclusive features of any one of them.
> Is the potential impact of community fragmentation on your mind as many commercial users who donโt care about open source ideology stick to the tried-and-true Hashicorp Terraform?
We've talked to a lot of people, and we've met many who see the license changes as a risk for them, while OpenTofu, with its open-source nature, is the less-risky choice. That includes large enterprises.
> Is there any intention to try and supplement the tooling around the core product to provide an answer to features like Terraform Cloud dashboard, sentinel policies and other things companies may want out of the product outside of the command line tool itself?
That's mostly covered by the companies sponsoring OpenTofu's development: Spacelift (I work here), env0, Scalr, Harness, Gruntworks.
[0]: https://github.com/opentofu/opentofu/issues/1328
- IBM to Acquire HashiCorp, Inc
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IBM Planning to Acquire HashiCorp
Please remember to file in a calm and orderly fashion toward the exits and remember: IBM killed Centos for profit.
Terraform users can pick up their new alternative here:
https://opentofu.org/
and for those of you with Vault, you can find your new alternative here:
https://openbao.org/
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Grant Kubernetes Pods Access to AWS Services Using OpenID Connect
OpenTofu v1.6
Vegeta
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Netlify just sent me a $104K bill for a simple static site
Vegeta worth a look if you want something a bit more sophisticated: https://github.com/tsenart/vegeta
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Under Pressure: Benchmarking Node.js on a Single-Core EC2
There are tons of tools to do this, I'll use Vegeta
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Deep-dive into Vegeta - HTTP load testing tool and library
To install vegeta, grab the right download url from https://github.com/tsenart/vegeta/releases/tag/v12.11.1 and download using the below command.
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Set Up Tracing for a Node.js Application on AppSignal
One of the easiest ways to send lots of fabricated requests at the same time is to use the Vegeta load testing tool. Being a load testing tool, it can send lots of requests consistently, every second, to the given target URL. You can read more about Vegeta on GitHub. The binary can be downloaded and used without installation.
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What tools you use for http load testing?
Good morning what tool do you use to test your infra in terms of http load ? A tool that works, I tested : - https://github.com/tsenart/vegeta but it returns 0 errors or a http_net error from Golang - LOIC (Low Orbit Ion Canon) https://github.com/NewEraCracker/LOIC but the requests do not appear in my nginx logs and I feel no slowdown - Apache Jmeter https://jmeter.apache.org/ but I can't drop my infra and I have Java socket closed errors - K6 https://k6.io/ but I can't bring down my infra with - wrk https://github.com/wg/wrk no matter what parameter I put it doesn't make enough requests per second, I put the same parameters as on a tutorial and I don't get the same result...
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How does one answer performance related questions such as these for a web API?
I use tools like vegeta and wrk2 to answer those questions.
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Why use internal package and main package in the same module?
A module can be an executable and a library at the same time. For example, https://github.com/tsenart/vegeta
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Where to learn more as I scale up?
Some tools to investigate: * https://prometheus.io/ * https://github.com/tsenart/vegeta
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How to learn system performance as a beginner?
No, not at all. You just need a tool like Vegeta.
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How to Deploy and Scale Strapi on a Kubernetes Cluster 1/2
vegeta v12.8.4
What are some alternatives?
adoptium
k6 - A modern load testing tool, using Go and JavaScript - https://k6.io
datadog-static-analyzer - Datadog Static Analyzer
Hey - HTTP load generator, ApacheBench (ab) replacement
hnrss - Custom, realtime RSS feeds for Hacker News
Gatling - Modern Load Testing as Code
awesome-ai-safety - ๐ A curated list of papers & technical articles on AI Quality & Safety
kubernetes - Production-Grade Container Scheduling and Management
Cap'n Proto - Cap'n Proto serialization/RPC system - core tools and C++ library
bombardier - Fast cross-platform HTTP benchmarking tool written in Go
tabby - Self-hosted AI coding assistant
Apache JMeter - Apache JMeter open-source load testing tool for analyzing and measuring the performance of a variety of services