plan9port | rke2 | |
---|---|---|
28 | 26 | |
1,559 | 1,357 | |
0.3% | 3.2% | |
5.0 | 9.3 | |
about 1 month ago | 3 days ago | |
C | 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.
plan9port
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Only9Fans
Acme is genuinely worth trying, you can run it on Linux/Mac without a VM [1]. I'm pretty sure Russ Cox [2] and Rob Pike use it as their daily driver which is insane because it doesn't even have syntax highlighting. I used it for years when I was in school as an exercise in masochism, but I learned a lot about Unix, and the mouse-driven workflow actually grew on me.
[1]: https://9fans.github.io/plan9port/
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Show HN: Towards Oberon+ concurrency; request for comments
[2] https://9fans.github.io/plan9port/
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A pure C89 implementation of Go channels, including blocking and non-blocking selects
If you find it too complicated and closely tied to Go internals, you can also check out Plan 9 from User Space's version, which is itself based on libthread from Plan 9 starting from 3rd edition, which is itself based on Alef's implementation of channels (Alef is Go's grandfather).
- A tutorial for the Sam command language (1986) [pdf]
- Makefile Tutorial
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Mk: A Successor to Make [pdf]
I tried plan9port's mk for a moment out of curiosity. I quickly ran into an annoying usability problem: it compares file mtimes with second accuracy.
https://github.com/9fans/plan9port/blob/cc4571fec67407652b03...
With sub-second build times for individual targets, this causes mk to needlessly recompile files because the target may have the same mtime as the prerequisites.
- Plan 9 from User Space
rke2
- Deploy Nginx Load Balancer for Rancher
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Install RKE2 with Cilium and Metallb
In this essay, we showed how to use Rancher rke2 to deploy a Kubernetes cluster with 6 Debian nodes with firewall enabled. We've also covered deploying Cilium as a CNI for our cluster and have it completely replace kube-proxy so as to increase speed and gain more observability via Cilium tools. This article also showed how to deploy Metallb to manage IP pools and load balance traffic for those IP pools. Throughout this guide, we assumed that we have an external load balancer that will distribute traffic to our workload and control plane nodes. For further information please visit rke2 official documents: "https://docs.rke2.io/".
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5-Step Approach: Projectsveltos for Kubernetes add-on deployment and management on RKE2
In this blog post, we will demonstrate how easy and fast it is to deploy Sveltos on an RKE2 cluster with the help of ArgoCD, register two RKE2 Cluster API (CAPI) clusters and create a ClusterProfile to deploy Prometheus and Grafana Helm charts down the managed CAPI clusters.
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OpenTF Announces Fork of Terraform
Did something happen to the Apache 2 rancher? https://github.com/rancher/rancher/blob/v2.7.5/LICENSE RKE2 is similarly Apache 2: https://github.com/rancher/rke2/blob/v1.26.7%2Brke2r1/LICENS...
- Self-hosted Serverless with Kubernetes for a Small Team
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Just finished migrating my old tower servers to a Kubernetes cluster on my new rack!
To provision all of my clusters, I use Rancher with RKE2. The primary Rancher server is hosted on a bootstrapped RKE2 cluster running on a VPS.
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Golang is evil on shitty networks
Golang has burned me more than once with bizarre design decisions that break things in a user hostile way.
The last one we ran into was a change in Go 1.15 where servers that presented a TLS certificate with the hostname encoded into the CN field instead of the more appropriate SAN field always fail validation.
The behavior could be disabled however that functionality was removed in 1.18 with no way to opt back into the old behavior. I understand why SAN is the right way to do it but in this case I didn’t control the server.
Developers at Google probably never have to deal with 3rd parties with shitty infrastructure but a lot of us do.
Here’s a bug in rke that’s related https://github.com/rancher/rke2/issues/775
- Documentation on how to deploy an RKE2 cluster with rancher?
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K3s or RKE2?
just looking at this myself. I think k3s has more support for arm, but looking through the github repo there are a lot of bugs indicating its a mess. RKE2 seems to be their big push, they also have a github issue open that has been open for the last 2 releases that they are going to add a update path from k3s to rke2. https://github.com/rancher/rke2/issues/881
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Best way to install and use kubernetes for learning
RKE (https://rancher.com/docs/rke) and RKE2 (https://docs.rke2.io/) from Rancher folks
What are some alternatives?
sam - An updated version of the sam text editor.
kubespray - Deploy a Production Ready Kubernetes Cluster
plan9-1e - Mirror of Plan 9 1st Edition from p9f
talos - Talos Linux is a modern Linux distribution built for Kubernetes.
Fontpkg-PxPlus_IBM_VGA8 - A monospace system font in the styles of regular, italic and underline.
hetzner-k3s - The easiest and quickest way to create and manage Kubernetes clusters in Hetzner Cloud using the lightweight distribution k3s by Rancher.
Shrine - A TempleOS distro for heretics
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes
fsv - fsv is a file system visualizer in cyberspace. It lays out files and directories in three dimensions, geometrically representing the file system hierarchy to allow visual overview and analysis.
ansible-role-k3s - Ansible role for deploying k3s cluster
mk - make remade
manifesto - The OpenTF Manifesto expresses concern over HashiCorp's switch of the Terraform license from open-source to the Business Source License (BSL) and calls for the tool's return to a truly open-source license.