PictShare
minio
Our great sponsors
PictShare | minio | |
---|---|---|
8 | 99 | |
802 | 44,094 | |
1.2% | 1.9% | |
7.2 | 9.9 | |
5 days ago | 1 day ago | |
JavaScript | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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.
PictShare
-
AI beats human sleuth at finding problematic images in research papers
I guess they had a system that required humans to confirm the validity or so.
I had a similar problem when I realized someone put up CSAM (Children sexual abuse material) on my public demo of my CDN called PictShare [1].
I didn't want to look through all of these images so I built a Raspberry Pi with a Neural compute stick [2] that used an AI model trained by yahoo to filter out "nudity" images and I put them in an encrypted ZIP file along with the access logs and sent them to Interpol.
This lead to the arrest of a teacher here in Austria so I'm glad I could do my part.
This even lead to a BBC article about my system [3]
[1] https://github.com/HaschekSolutions/pictshare
[2] https://blog.haschek.at/2018/fight-child-pornography-with-ra...
-
Lightweight image-gallery to share reaction images & gifs
If all you need is to just host pics and videos for reaction images, not albums or other metadata, Pictshare should do the hosting part well, and something like Syncthing could be used to copy files from/to the sharing directory. It's one of the solutions i considered to migrate away from using Imgur for this, but veered away from it since i do use albums with metadata too, for your case it wouldn't matter
- Open Source federated link aggregator in rust
-
Recommendations for self-hosted image repo?
PictShare
-
Imagor 0.8.5: fast image processing server - now with animated GIF resize, crop, watermark and more
Reminds me a lot of pictshare
-
Fast, Docker-ready image processing server written in Go and libvips, with Thumbor URL syntax
Interesting approach! I also made a project many years ago (still maintained though) that does something like that (also on docker hub). Basically it's a simple self-hosted image hoster where you can upload videos and images and you can resize them on the fly by changing the URL.
-
After Imgur got acquired, looking again for a self-hosted replacement
Image hosting. Not "Photo Gallery", not "Photography Showcase". Hosting pics to use all over the net. On Imgur i upload an image, a gif or even a short mp4 with sound, it will happily accept it, then give me the ability to quickly link directly to the image (not to the "Page of the Image", but to the direct image, gif or video itself). I can easily upload something and have it ready to be used anywhere, like here. Most image hosting solutions are poorly optimized for this as they're solving a different problem (replacing Flicker/Google Photos/Instagram/etc.). The one I've found that's by far the closest to fulfill this requirement is Pictshare, which is pretty much built for this, but lacks the second big requirement:
-
X0.at: upload files from cURL (free)
Can confirm. I had a public demo of my open source image hosting solution [1] (where you can resize images and videos by just entering a different URL) up for years without problems, until idiots started uploading CSAM (Children sexual abuse material).
Luckily I found out before law enforcement did [2] so I proactively talked to my federal bureau for months generating Excel sheets of IPs and access times and devices and countries. I didn't see many of the images myself, basically just looked at one upload per IP which was like three in total and forwarded all uploads of that IP to the police but man.. what the hell is wrong with people. 4 digit number of uploads of CSAM.
minio
-
A Distributed File System in Go Cut Average Metadata Memory Usage to 100 Bytes
Looks like minio added this in 2022:
-
Simulate multi-nodes configuration
We have this example of docker compose you can adapt to be larger https://github.com/minio/minio/blob/master/docs/orchestration/docker-compose/docker-compose.yaml
-
Ask HN: I have 10 yrs of Exp. Failed 4 takehome projects. What am I doing wrong?
>Again, here you seem to be arguing against a strawman that doesn't know that blocking the IO loop is bad. Try arguing against one that knows ways to work around that. This is why I'm saying this rule isn't true. Extensive computation on single-threaded "scripting" languages is possible (and even if it wasn't, punt it off to a remote pool of workers, which could also be NodeJS!).
Very rare to find a rule that's absolutely true.. I clearly stated exceptions to the rule (which you repeated) but the generality is still true.
Threading in nodejs is new and didn't exist since the last time I touched it. It looks like it's not the standard use case as google searches still have websites with titles saying node is single threaded everywhere. The only way I can see this being done is multiple Processes (meaning each with a copy of v8) using OS shared memory as IPC and they're just calling it threads. It will take a shit load of work to make v8 actually multi-threaded.
Processes are expensive so you can't really follow this model per request. And we stopped following threading per request over a decade ago.
Again these are exceptions to the rule, from what I'm reading Nodejs is normally still single threaded with a fixed number of worker processes that are called "threads". Under this my general rule is still generally true: backend engineering does no typically involve writing non blocking code and offloading compute to other sources. Again, there are exceptions but as I stated before these exceptions are rare.
>Here's what I mean -- you can actually solve the ordering problem in O(N) + O(M) time by keeping track of the max you've seen and building a sparse array and running through every single index from max to zero. It's overkill, but it's generally referred to as a counting sort:
Oh come on. We both know these sorts won't work. These large numbers will throw off memory. Imagine 3 routes. One route gets 352 hits, another route gets 400 hits, and another route gets 600,000 hits. What's Big Oh for memory and sort?
It's O(600,000) for both memory and runtime. N=3 and it doesn't even matter here. Yeah these types of sorts are almost never used for this reason, they only work for things with smaller ranges. It's also especially not useful for this project. Like this project was designed so "counting sort" fails big time.
Also we don't need to talk about the O(N) read and write. That's a given it's always there.
>I don't think these statements make sense -- having docker installed and having redis installed are basically equivalent work. At the end of the day, the outcome is the same -- the developer is capable of running redis locally. Having redis installed on your local machine is absolutely within range for a backend developer.
Unfortunately these statements do make sense and your characterization seems completely dishonest to me. People like to keep their local environments pure and segregated away from daemons that run in a web server. I'm sure in your universe you are claiming web developers install redis, postgresql and kafka all locally but that just sounds absurd to me. We can agree to disagree but from my perspective I don't think you're being realistic here.
>Also, remote development is not practiced by many companies -- the only companies I've seen doing thin-clients that are large.
It's practiced by a large amount and basically every company I've worked at for the past 5 years. Every company has to at least partially do remote dev in order to fully test E2E stuff or integrations.
>I see it as just spinning up docker, not compose -- you already have access to the app (ex. if it was buildable via a function) so you could spawn redis in a subprocess (or container) on a random port, and then spawn the app.
Sure. The point is it's hacky to do this without an existing framework. I'll check out that library you linked.
>I agree that integration testing is harder -- I think there's more value there.
Of course there's more value. You get more value at higher cost. That's been my entire point.
>Also, for replicating S3, minio (https://github.com/minio/minio) is a good stand-in. For replicating lambda, localstack (https://docs.localstack.cloud/user-guide/aws/lambda/) is probably reasonable there's also frameworks with some consideration for this (https://www.serverless.com/framework/docs/providers/aws/guid...) built in.
Good finds. But what about SNS, IOT, Big Query and Redshift? Again my problem isn't about specific services, it's about infra in general.
>Ah, this is true -- but I think this is what people are testing in interviews. There is a predominant culture/shared values, and the test is literally whether someone can fit into those values.
No. I think what's going on is people aren't putting much thought into what they're actually interviewing for. They just have some made up bar in their mind whether it's a leetcode algorithm or whether the guy wrote a unit test for the one available pure function for testing.
>Whether they should or should not be, that's at least partially what interviews are -- does the new team member feel the same way about technical culture currently shared by the team.
The answer is no. There's always developers who disagree with things and just don't reveal it. Think about the places you worked at. Were you in total agreement? I doubt it. A huge amount of devs are opinionated and think company policies or practices are BS. People adapt.
>Now in the case of this interview your solution was just fine, even excellent (because you went out of your way to do async io, use newer/easier packaging methodologies, etc), but it's clearly not just that.
The testing is just a game. I can play the game and suddenly I pass all the interviews. I think this is the flaw with your methodology as I just need to write tests to get in. Google for example in spirit attempted another method which involves testing IQ via algorithms. It's a much higher bar
The problem with google is that their methodology can also be gamed but it's much harder to game it and often the bar is too high for the actual job the engineer is expected to do.
I think both methodologies are flawed, but hiring via ignoring raw ability and picking people based off of weirdly specific cultural preferences is the worse of the two hiring methodologies.
Put it this way. If a company has a strong testing culture, then engineers who don't typically test things will adapt. It's not hard to do, and testing isn't so annoying that they won't do it.
-
Unable to configure a MinIO cluster, pls help
The answer is here https://github.com/minio/minio/discussions/17543
You've already helped me here https://github.com/minio/minio/discussions/17543. Thank you very much once more.
-
What's the best AWS S3 protocol alternative?
You say protocol alternative, but assuming you're more concerned with AWS as the host than S3 as the protocol you might try https://github.com/minio/minio
If you do feel an aversion to the protocol then the rclone backend list would be a good starting point
-
proper content delivery (images etc)
Seems like you want object storage. S3 would be the goto suggestion here, but you said it needs to run on prem so perhaps MinIO.
-
Reason to use other Build Tool than Make?
You could refer to big OSS project Makefiles to take a look, what could be there, for example: https://github.com/minio/minio/blob/master/Makefile
-
Looking for a Backblaze B2 compatible cloud backup application for Linux that uses standard file level (not block level) ZIP encryption (and with GUI would be nice).
Backblaze's B2 is compatible with AWS S3 that also implemented in selfhosted minio
- Why compress-force doesn't compress
What are some alternatives?
OnionShare - Securely and anonymously share files, host websites, and chat with friends using the Tor network
Nextcloud - ☁️ Nextcloud server, a safe home for all your data
linx - Self-hosted file/code/media sharing website. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Demo: https://demo.linx-server.net/ [Moved to: https://github.com/linx-server/linx-server]
Seaweed File System - SeaweedFS is a fast distributed storage system for blobs, objects, files, and data lake, for billions of files! Blob store has O(1) disk seek, cloud tiering. Filer supports Cloud Drive, cross-DC active-active replication, Kubernetes, POSIX FUSE mount, S3 API, S3 Gateway, Hadoop, WebDAV, encryption, Erasure Coding. [Moved to: https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs]
uPste
GlusterFS - Gluster Filesystem : Build your distributed storage in minutes
Dropcenter
Samba - https://gitlab.com/samba-team/samba is the Official GitLab mirror of https://git.samba.org/samba.git -- Merge requests should be made on GitLab (not on GitHub)
chibisafe - Blazing fast file vault written in TypeScript! 🚀
seaweedfs - SeaweedFS is a fast distributed storage system for blobs, objects, files, and data lake, for billions of files! Blob store has O(1) disk seek, cloud tiering. Filer supports Cloud Drive, cross-DC active-active replication, Kubernetes, POSIX FUSE mount, S3 API, S3 Gateway, Hadoop, WebDAV, encryption, Erasure Coding.
XBackBone - A lightweight file manager with full ShareX support and more
Swift - OpenStack Storage (Swift). Mirror of code maintained at opendev.org.