preevy
docker
preevy | docker | |
---|---|---|
41 | 153 | |
1,996 | 518 | |
1.4% | 1.4% | |
9.5 | 0.0 | |
5 days ago | 3 days ago | |
TypeScript | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
preevy
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How to Get Preview Environments for Every Pull Request
Feel free to star the Preevy repo here.
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What's New In Docker 2023?
We at Livecycle, a Docker-centric company, are super excited to share some highlights from the event and discuss how we are developing our products, Livecycle Docker Extension and Preevy, to improve collaboration, feedback, etc., in the vision that Docker is moving with their recent development and announcement at DockerCon.
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Anti-FAQs: Use localhost for collaboration?? Seriously?!
To learn more about how to use Preevy, just check out the docs site.
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Docker’s Recent Product Announcement is Bigger than You Realize
Historically, many developers have preferred to facilitate this type of collaboration with ephemeral preview environments that are triggered with every PR or commit. And indeed, we have built robust solutions like “Preevy” to facilitate the creation of these environments for dockerized applications on any cloud or Kubernetes cluster.
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In-Flight Collaboration With The Livecycle Docker Extension
Preevy also integrates into your CI pipeline to convert your pull requests into easily shareable ephemeral environments
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Featured Mod of the Month: Pradumna Saraf
My typical day is filled with a couple of meetings, building the Lifecycle community on Slack, collaborating with projects and people, and creating strategies and content (videos, blogs, short forms for Twitter and LinkedIn) around the product to increase adoption. I heavily focus on the company’s Open Source offering called Preevy which helps create a preview environment using Docker Compose underneath.
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Easy Dockerization with Docker init
Also, at Livecycle, we are building Preevy, which helps you create a preview environment for Docker Compose applications. Do check out https://github.com/livecycle/preevy. It's open source, and don't forget to leave a star to show your support.
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[Showoff Saturday] Preevy: an open source tool for instantly creating ephemeral environments for Dockerized apps on any cloud/Kubernetes cluster
Check out the docs here
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The (Detailed & Creative) Playbook for More GitHub Stars
A dedicated docs site with relevant technical information and how-to guides for people who want to use it
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Why Developers Should Use Preview Environments
About “Preevy” - an open source tool that simplifies the creation of preview environments
docker
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Run Large and Small Language Models locally with ollama
Download and install Docker
- Live reload em Go com docker e compile daemon
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My Favorite DevTools to Build AI/ML Applications!
Deploying AI models into production requires tools that can package applications and manage them at scale. Docker simplifies the deployment of AI applications by containerizing them, ensuring that the application runs smoothly in any environment. Kubernetes, an orchestration system for Docker containers, allows for the automated deployment, scaling, and management of containerized applications, essential for AI applications that need to scale across multiple servers or cloud environments.
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Ask HN: What software sparks joy when using?
Linux Mint with Cinnamon: https://www.linuxmint.com/ as far as desktop OSes go it's familiar (Ubuntu without snaps by default), whereas the UI feels both snappy, doesn't use too much resources and is actually pretty to look at.
MobaXTerm: https://mobaxterm.mobatek.net/ this one is a bit more Windows centric but I ended up paying for it and replaced mRemoteNg and PuTTY with it, it's even better than Remmina or whatever Linux has to offer - you can manage SSH/RDP/VNC/... sessions, input across multiple sessions side by side and it just simplifies things a lot (jump host support, a port forwarding too and so much more).
GitKraken: https://www.gitkraken.com/ also a piece of software that I paid for, this one actually makes using Git pleasant, feels better to use than SourceTree and Git Cola (even though that latter is wonderfully lightweight, too) and honestly I prefer that to the CLI nowadays.
Kanboard: https://kanboard.org/ is a lightweight Kanban project management tool, it might not have every feature under the sun but it's the most snappy project management tool I've ever used, looks simple and runs well. I honestly love it, what a nice thing to have.
Most modern text editors and IDEs: I personally pay for JetBrains IDEs but also like Visual Studio Code as a text editor and both have helped me immensely, they're reasonably performant when you have the RAM, look nice, often give you suggestions about how to improve your code and also have a plethora of plugins in their ecosystems. Nowadays I unapologetically use LLMs as well and overall it feels like I have these great tools and cool autocomplete (that is sometimes a bit silly and wrong) at my disposal, that makes me happy.
Kdenlive: https://kdenlive.org/ imagine if there was a successor to Windows Movie Maker, though something that gets most of the important stuff out of Sony Vegas, except is also completely free and works on most platforms. Kdenlive is all of that and also somehow quite pleasant to use, I actually prefer it to DaVinci resolve. There is a bit of a learning curve to any piece of software like this, but everything mostly makes sense in this one.
Gitea: https://about.gitea.com/ I still use this for my personal Git repositories and integrating with CI systems and it's lightweight, looks good and just feels pleasant to use. Previously I self-hosted GitLab and constantly ran into resource exhaustion as well as doubts about the next update is going to corrupt all of my data and break (it did), so now I use Gitea instead.
Drone CI: https://www.drone.io/ a container native CI solution that I can also self host. It's container oriented, integrates with Gitea nicely, is similarly nice to GitLab CI and doesn't cause me headaches like Jenkins would.
Docker: https://www.docker.com/ yes, even Docker desktop. It just makes working with containers really pleasant and predictable, even when something like Podman also exists (and also is great). I don't know, I feel like Docker really saved me from having brittle legacy environments, even self-contained containers with health checks and resource limits with still the same brittle code inside of those make me feel way more safe.
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Build and deploy a REST API with Postgres database in TypeScript
Note: Before running your application in the next step, make sure you have Docker installed and running. It's required to locally run Encore applications with databases.
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Introducing WP Setup
Developing WordPress plugins and themes often requires a reliable development environment. Current we have good solutions as wp-env from Autommatic, Local WP from WP Engine, Docker, XAMPP (for old ones) and so on. All this can be good suits for a development environment, specially Local WP that is probably the easiest one to get up and running and wp-env that leverages Docker as a development environment in a very easy way to use.
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Building Scalable GraphQL Microservices With Node.js and Docker: A Comprehensive Guide
Docker, an open-source development platform, provides containerization technology for building and packaging applications along with their dependencies into portable images.
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Building Llama as a Service (LaaS)
With each app containerized with Docker, this allows it to be run on any other developer's machine also running Docker. Although I had automated deployments to Heroku without this, I decided to upload each service to a container registry.
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Exploring 7 Efficient Alternatives to MAMP for Local Development Environments
Docker
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The power of the CLI with Golang and Cobra CLI
Today we are going to see all the power that a CLI (Command line interface) can bring to development, a CLI can help us perform tasks more effectively and lightly through commands via terminal, without needing an interface. For example, git and Docker, we practically use their CLI all the time, when we execute a git commit -m "commit message" or docker ps -a we are using a CLI. I'm going to leave an article that details what a CLI is.
What are some alternatives?
Appwrite - Your backend, minus the hassle.
SillyTavern - LLM Frontend for Power Users.
Pulumi - Pulumi - Infrastructure as Code in any programming language. Build infrastructure intuitively on any cloud using familiar languages 🚀
SillyTavern-extras - Extensions API for SillyTavern [Moved to: https://github.com/SillyTavern/SillyTavern-extras]
framer/motion - Open source, production-ready animation and gesture library for React
SillyTavern-Extras - Extensions API for SillyTavern.
zustand - 🐻 Bear necessities for state management in React
winget-pkgs - The Microsoft community Windows Package Manager manifest repository
traefik - The Cloud Native Application Proxy
SillyTavern - LLM Frontend for Power Users. [Moved to: https://github.com/SillyTavern/SillyTavern]
helm - The Kubernetes Package Manager
hummingbird - Hummingbird compiles trained ML models into tensor computation for faster inference.