oras
ultralisp
oras | ultralisp | |
---|---|---|
8 | 16 | |
1,266 | 220 | |
3.3% | 0.9% | |
9.3 | 8.3 | |
4 days ago | 15 days ago | |
Go | Common Lisp | |
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.
oras
- Distribute Artifacts Across OCI Registries
- OCI image from dockerfile
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RFC 6920: Naming Things with Hashes
Interesting, I'd not known of this RFC before.
Another example of a content-addressed data store could be OCI registries (more commonly known as container image registries). Using them to store arbitrary artefacts is quite well supported now: https://oras.land/
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sbcl - require
See https://oras.land/
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Ocicl – An ASDF system distribution and management tool for Common Lisp
> ... but still only supports one niche operating system.
1. Linux is not a niche in the target market for this project.
2. The project is written in Common Lisp with hard dependencies on SBCL-provided libraries[1], so there's reason to suspect it should work on other OSes supported by SBCL.
3. Sure, the presence of Makefile and sb-posix imply it requires a POSIX compliant OS, but Linux is not the only one that fits the bill.
4. The included Linux-only binary 'oras' is clearly a vendored artifact, not part of this project, and clearly an OCI client. A simple search shows it is indeed cross-platform[2].
Perhaps you should try what almost every Linux user has had to do when encountering software actually built for only one "niche" operating system that they want to use on their OS: look.
1. https://github.com/ocicl/ocicl/blob/170aff0/ocicl.asd#L34
2. https://github.com/oras-project/oras/releases
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Looking for an artifact store for generic assets, rather than specially-formatted packages or containers. Thinking maybe ORAS, but wondering if there are other options.
oras isn't that unpopular, Helm is using it as an SDK for example. Here are other projects who are using it. https://github.com/oras-project/oras/network/dependents
- OCI Registry as Storage
ultralisp
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June 2023 Quicklisp dist update now available
If it reduces your pain, you can add it to https://ultralisp.org without any hussle.
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Deploying a web server in SBCL to cloud
- as a dockerized daemon (here is my Dockerfile describing a few microservices: https://github.com/ultralisp/ultralisp/blob/master/Dockerfile)
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Ocicl – An ASDF system distribution and management tool for Common Lisp
Other options are:
- Quicklisp -really slick, libraries in there are curated. (with https support here: https://github.com/rudolfochrist/ql-https and here: https://github.com/snmsts/quicklisp-https.git)
- for project-local dependencies like virtualenv: https://github.com/fukamachi/qlot
- a new, more traditional one: https://www.clpm.dev (CLPM comes as a pre-built binary, supports HTTPS by default, supports installing multiple package versions, supports versioned systems, and more)
For recent Quicklisp upgrades: http://ultralisp.org/
Ocicl is very new (5 days) and tries a new approach, building "on tools from the world of containers".
- Ultralisp – Fast Common Lisp Repository
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Review of 8 Common Lisp IDEs Which One to Choose? [EN Subs]
I'm the author and I'm using Emacs + SLY. Happily switched to Emacs from VIM about 10 years ago when decided to invest all my free time into Common Lisp.
And yes, I have real project experience – a lot of Commmon Lisp libraries at https://github.com/40ants and also I'm developing a hosting for CL library distributions: https://ultralisp.org
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OpenAPI Client Generator
So far openapi-generator is mostly tested on linux/sbcl and it should work for most spec files. It would be great to have some criticism/feedback/improvement ideas. You can download it from Ultralisp via (ql:quickload :openapi-generator)(you may need to update first (ql:update-dist "ultralisp"))
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How to replace Quicklisp and Qlot with CLPM (screencast)
See also Ultralisp, a Quicklisp distribution that builds every 5 minutes: https://ultralisp.org/ where you can publish packages.
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Looking for good common lisp projects on github to read?
There is also a repository behind Ultralisp.org: https://github.com/ultralisp/ultralisp
- Building a Startup on Clojure
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New Lisp-Stat Release
Quicklisp ships releases once a month, so it is very possible it didn't pick the latest release yet.
Your solution is to clone the repository into ~/quicklisp/local-projects/.
Another one would be to use the Ultralisp distribution, that ships every five minutes. https://ultralisp.org/
(ql-dist:install-dist "http://dist.ultralisp.org/"
What are some alternatives?
regclient - Docker and OCI Registry Client in Go and tooling using those libraries.
qlot - A project-local library installer for Common Lisp
containerd - An open and reliable container runtime
ftw - Common Lisp Win32 GUI library
distribution - The toolkit to pack, ship, store, and deliver container content
phel-lang - Phel is a functional programming language that transpiles to PHP. A Lisp dialect inspired by Clojure and Janet.
imgpkg - Store application configuration files in Docker/OCI registries
coalton - Coalton is an efficient, statically typed functional programming language that supercharges Common Lisp.
distribution-spec - OCI Distribution Specification
4ever-clojure - Pure cljs version of 4clojure, meant to run forever!
quicklisp-https
pgloader - Migrate to PostgreSQL in a single command!