ops-examples
nanos
ops-examples | nanos | |
---|---|---|
4 | 27 | |
97 | 2,477 | |
- | 1.8% | |
6.9 | 9.2 | |
about 2 months ago | 10 days ago | |
Python | C | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
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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.
ops-examples
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Nanos – A Unikernel
Yeh - we have a small language list here:
https://github.com/nanovms/ops-examples
If you're looking for a particular piece of software search on the repo first:
https://repo.ops.city/
If you don't find it and need help creating one ping me or open an issue in ops.
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Building a unikernel that runs WebAssembly – part 1
Nanos runs not just go but pretty much any language you want to throw at it:
https://github.com/nanovms/ops-examples .
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Running Postgres as a Unikernel
FYI, erlang && elixir workloads can run on Nanos: https://github.com/nanovms/ops-examples/tree/master/elixir .
I do understand what you are asking for though. There used to be an older project called erlang-on-xen: https://github.com/cloudozer/ling .
It'd be great to see this idea revisited although you'll need to create some sort of new handling/framework.
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Bare Metal Racket?
See for example nanovm provides examples for a bunch of different languages, including this in Chicken Scheme https://github.com/nanovms/ops-examples/tree/master/scheme/01-hello-world ...I expect Racket would be possible too
nanos
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Nanos – A Unikernel
I am a bit confused, there are three sites:
* https://nanos.org/
* https://nanovms.com/
* https://ops.city/
And I am not sure what "thing" I am using. Is there some disambiguation? I know is OPS is the orchestration CLI, but I am confused at the difference between Nanos and NanoVMs. What should I call the section of my README that deals with this tech? Currently gone with Nanos/OPS but I am confused.
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Kolibri OS: fits on a floppy disk, programmed using interrupts
I work with https://nanos.org && https://ops.city - we can run thousands of these on commodity hardware.
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Mirage – A programming framework for building type-safe, modular systems
Unik was just a build tool that utilized other projects like Rump, Mirage, IncludeOS, etc. It's now dead since Solo pivoted a very long time ago to service mesh/api gateways.
The GoRump port they use was from us and then we realized we needed to code our own from the ground up for many reasons so we wrote https://nanos.org (runs as a go unikernel in GCP).
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Building a unikernel that runs WebAssembly – part 1
A couple unikernel projects that caught my eye in the past may be of interest to you. I have no experience with them, so I can't speak to their quality though.
https://unikraft.org/
https://github.com/nanovms/nanos
- Build Your Own Docker with Linux Namespaces, Cgroups, and Chroot
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Running Postgres as a Unikernel
Definitely agree with the top part, however, I should note that, ops, the tool's, whole existence is to create disk images and upload them to any cloud, any hypervisor.
In particular, both https://ops.city && https://nanos.org are Go unikernels running on GCP and their deploys take just a few seconds to push out. AWS can be even faster cause we skip the s3 upload part. We also have lots of people using Azure which would be utilizing vhdx.
- Ask HN: Resources for Building a Webserver in C?
- A kernel designed to run only one application in a virtualized environment
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Applications available in unikernels?
I'm with that organization that works on https://nanos.org and https://ops.city . If you aren't a software engineer but still would like to use unikernels you're in luck - we also have a package repository at https://repo.ops.city/ (running as a go unikernel on GCP) that will allow you to run and deploy pre-made applications. If you don't see something that you'd like to us there's also a way of importing docker containers into unikernels via ops which works for most (but not all) applications.
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Ask HN: Software with biggest potential for positive impact in 5 years?
I think Unikernels like NanoVMs (https://nanos.org/) will become more important. They are more efficient and more secure than than full operating systems. Right now, I think there are no good monitoring solutions available (or at least I am not aware of any). You can't just ssh to your server, so if something goes wrong, it can be hard to debug. And they are certainly not integrated into bigger monitoring solutions like Dynatrace. But once the infrastructure is available, I would expect a large percentage of Linux servers to be replaced with unikernels.
What are some alternatives?
ChezScheme - Chez Scheme
unikraft - A next-generation cloud native kernel designed to unlock best-in-class performance, security primitives and efficiency savings.
eggos - A Go unikernel running on x86 bare metal
rusty-hermit - Hermit for Rust. [Moved to: https://github.com/hermit-os/hermit-rs]
atmos - 👽 Terraform Orchestration Tool for DevOps. Keep environment configuration DRY with hierarchical imports of configurations, inheritance, and WAY more. Native support for Terraform and Helmfile.
OPS - ops - build and run nanos unikernels
dockerops - Nanovms running in Docker x86 container for M1 Mac ARM64.
linuxkit - A toolkit for building secure, portable and lean operating systems for containers
unik - The Unikernel & MicroVM Compilation and Deployment Platform
osbuild - Build-Pipelines for Operating System Artifacts
dark - Darklang main repo, including language, backend, and infra