planetscale-java
OpenLens
planetscale-java | OpenLens | |
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9 | 24 | |
5 | 3,838 | |
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9.3 | 5.3 | |
2 days ago | 19 days ago | |
Kotlin | JavaScript | |
MIT License | - |
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planetscale-java
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Breaking the Myth: Scalable, Multi-Region, Low-Latency App Exists And Will Not Cost You A Kidney.
For MySQL, we've got PlanetScale, and for PostgreSQL, there's Neon.
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From Messy to Memorable: Shorten Your Links, Boost Your Brand
PlanetScale – database
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Self-hosting Ghost with Docker and PlanetScale
PlanetScale and Ghost were previously incompatible due to differences in their support for foreign key constraints. With PlanetScale now supporting foreign key constraints, a seamless collaboration between the two is achievable. Nonetheless, there remain minor incompatibilities that require resolution.
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Iotawise: An Open-Source Habit Tracking App
PlanetScale: The MySQL database ensuring data integrity and performance.
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AWS cancels serverless Postgres service that scales to zero
AWS Serverless MySQL/Postgres offerings are straight trash. I used v1 to build a new app but had nothing but problems. Extremely slow starts (from zero), horrible scaling (it would always get stuck), (relatively) huge bills for the smallest capacity, limitations all over the place. After the first year on that I looked into v2 but my costs would have doubled and I didn't believe their promises of faster scaling. I moved to PlanetScale [0] and was very happy ($30/mo covered prod and dev/qa vs well over that for v1 even with having scale to zero on the AWS dev/qa instances). Also you can quickly be forced into paying for RDS Proxy if you are using lambdas/similar which is not cheap (for me). PS doesn't scale to 0 but at the time $30/mo was a decent savings over AWS Aurora Serverless.
This year I started to run into some issue with PS mainly around their plans changing (went from pay for reads/writes/storage to pay for compute/storage). Yes, yes, I know they still offer the $30/mo plan but it's billed as "Read/write-based billing for lower-traffic applications" and they dropped all mentions of auto-scaling. That coupled with them sleeping your non-prod DB branches (no auto-wakeup, you had to use the API or console) even after saying that was a feature of the original $30 plan rubbed me the wrong way. Eventually the costs (for what I was getting) were way too out of whack. My app is single-tenant (love it or hate it, it's what it is) so for each customer I was paying $30/mo even though this is event-based software (like in-person, physical events that happen once a year) so for most the year the DB sat there and did nothing.
Given all that I looked into Neon [1] (which I had heard of here on HN, but PS support suggested them, kudos to them for recommending a competitor, I always liked their support/staff) and while going from MySQL to Postgres wasn't painless it was way easier than I had anticipated. It was one of the few times Prisma "just worked", I don't think I'd use it again though, that DB engine is so heavy especially in a lambda. I just switched over fully last week to Neon and things seem to have gone smoothly. I can now run multiple databases on the same shared compute and it scales to 0. In fact it's scale up time is absurdly fast, the DB will "wake up" on it's own when you connect to it and unlike AWS Aurora Serverless v1 it comes up in seconds instead of 30-60+ so you don't even have to account for it. With AWS I had to have something poll the backend waiting to see if the DB was awake yet, to fire off my requests, if it was asleep. With Neon I don't even consider it, the first requests just take an extra second or two if that.
I don't have any ill will towards PlanetScale and I quite enjoyed their product for almost the whole time I used it. Also their support is very responsive and I loved the branching/merging features (I'll miss those but zero-downtime migrations aren't required for my use-case, just nice to have). In fact if I had written my app to be multi-tenant then I'd probably still be on them since I could just scale up to one of their higher plans. It does seem like Neon is significantly (for me/my workload) cheaper for more compute, I had queries taking _forever_ on PS that come back in a second or less on Neon all while paying less.
All that said, I _highly_ recommend checking out Neon if you need "serverless" hosting for Postgres that scales to 0.
[0] https://planetscale.com/
[1] https://neon.tech/
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Imagine the best Kubernetes Dashboard. What does it have?
See dashboard here
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Suggestions on where to deploy angular/node app
Planetscale: https://planetscale.com/ has a free plan with 5GB storage and limit on reads/writes
- PlanetScale Connector for JVM
OpenLens
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Building a Kubernetes Operator with the Operator Framework
To support visual feedback for the users who are using tools like Openlens, we can add a +kubebuilder:printcolumn annotation to the MyApp struct. To do so, add the following code to the MyApp struct:
- Imagine the best Kubernetes Dashboard. What does it have?
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Lazydocker
There is also OpenLens (https://github.com/MuhammedKalkan/OpenLens). And for anyone switching from Lens, pod shell and logs functionality can be found as an extension.
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'ekscli' vs. 'aws eks'
`openlens` is now preferred over `Lens`, it has everything you need and none of the fluff that Lens wants to charge you for.
- Kubernetes Enthusiasts: Share Your Ideas for Future Dev Tools
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Stupid question? Lens vs OpenLens vs Monokle
It's actually called OpenLens: https://github.com/lensapp/lens#readme but I don't think the official repo offers binary builds of it. Someone does here though: https://github.com/MuhammedKalkan/OpenLens
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Quick story about adding essential functionality that is missing in the 6.3.0 version of Openlens
It's already at OpenLens readme file: https://github.com/MuhammedKalkan/OpenLens
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Any easy to use gui to create/deploy/monitor k8s for a devops newbie?
You can use Lens which also offers a free license. I would also take a look at OpenLens. You stated that you were looking for something GUI-centric, but I would also take a look at k9s to help you dig deep into your cluster, quickly.
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How do you administrate your cluster on windows?
For managing clusters via Windows, check out WSL2 + k9s and OpenLens
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Questions about Kubernetes and Terraform
Yep Rancher or K3s is a good start. As is OpenLens.
What are some alternatives?
lens - Lens - The way the world runs Kubernetes
k9s - 🐶 Kubernetes CLI To Manage Your Clusters In Style!
Tailwind CSS - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development.
zod - TypeScript-first schema validation with static type inference
Monokle - Monokle is a set of OSS tools designed to help create and maintain high-quality Kubernetes configurations throughout the application lifecycle
TypeScript - TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.
cdk8s - Define Kubernetes native apps and abstractions using object-oriented programming
flyctl - Command line tools for fly.io services
kube-explorer-ui
stripe-node - Node.js library for the Stripe API.
kubecolor - colorizes kubectl output