examples
charts
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examples | charts | |
---|---|---|
26 | 88 | |
2,281 | 8,391 | |
1.8% | 2.5% | |
9.3 | 10.0 | |
7 days ago | 3 days ago | |
TypeScript | Smarty | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
examples
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Is kubernetesx (kx) dead?
It seems that kubernetesx never really got much traction, since I'm also having trouble finding any documentation / examples for it (except in the repo itself). For example, it's not even listed in https://github.com/pulumi/examples
- Why are pulumi examples repo not showing good re-useable design patterns
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Test-Driven Infrastructure Development with Pulumi and Jest
From here, there's a bunch more you might think about next: writing more tests to cover the code we just added, exploring some additional flavors of testing in the docs, or having a look at a few examples. You'll find the full source for this walkthrough up on GitHub as well.
- Things I Wish I Knew Earlier About Pulumi
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What does the opts variable in TS Pulumi do?
https://github.com/pulumi/examples: Lots of useful references in here. It's organized by [cloud]-[language]-* (so for example, aws-ts for AWS TypeScript) and many have good comments that explain what each piece is doing.
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Some Pulumi Questions
I've found the Python one to work well. I haven't used Go's. You can check out code examples for yourself: https://github.com/pulumi/examples. Pulumi programs are really just instantiations of classes/objects with key/value pairs that mirror the cloud provider's API, so it's not surprising that the code between languages look similar. It's interesting that you're not a fan of TypeScript though given that its language features work incredibly well for describing cloud infrastructure work. I would suggest reevaluating it as a language choice.
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Run Your Own RSS Server on AWS with Pulumi
If you're already comfortable with Pulumi, and you just want to get up and running, I've set up a GitHub repo (complete with a Deploy with Pulumi button!) that should have all you need to get going. Just click the button, set a few configs (like your RSS server's administrative password, which will be stored as an encrypted Pulumi secret), and follow the prompts. Your shiny new server should be up and running within minutes.
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API Gateway to EventBridge with Pulumi
There's a lot more you can do with integrations like this that we didn't cover: add more Lambda function handlers, have EventBridge target other AWS services (Step Functions might be a good one to try next), validate HTTP request bodies (with API Gateway models, to keep bad data from ever reaching EventBridge), and more. Hopefully this gives you sense of what's possible, though. And as promised, you'll find examples that use both versions of API Gateway in our examples repository on GitHub:
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Platform Engineering with Pulumi- Episode 1: Building the AWS Landing Zone with Pulumi
provisioners module is an implementation of Terraform provisioner in Pulumi, which allows us to copy files, run commands remotely on the EC2 instance. Refer to documentation.
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Creating Kubernetes Guestbook App With Pulumi
Pulumi example projects https://github.com/pulumi/examples
charts
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Coexistence of containers and Helm charts - OCI based registries
Both of these examples seem pretty obvious and something you wouldn’t mess up, but as your chart grows, so does your values.yaml file. A great example is the Redis chart by Bitnami. I encourage you to scroll through its values file. See you in a minute!
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How to deploy and manage a RabbitMQ cluster on Amazon EKS using Terraform and Helm
We will write a Terraform module that will take a list of configurations for each required RabbitMQ instance. Luckily for us, we don't have to write the Kubernetes yaml configurations since the helm charts by Bitnami does a great job of doing all the things we discussed above. All we need to do is leverage Terraform Helm Provider and deploy the chart with the required values for our use case.
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Master Helm, Chart the Kubernetes Seas 🌊🧭🏴☠️
💡 The full details of helm charts can be referenced in their associated GitHub Repository.
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Bitnami Kibana dashboard import
I have a configmap with the ndjson set up under data:, similar to https://github.com/bitnami/charts/issues/6159 and it's subsequent answer.
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Deploy Kubernetes Helm Charts in Minutes
This way, you can easily deploy any Helm charts from this public repo - https://github.com/bitnami/charts/tree/main/bitnami in just minutes.
- [Kubernetes] Comment déployez-vous un cluster Postgres sur Kubernetes en 2022?
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Is there any tutorial, blog post that shows you how to use the bitnami-mysql helm chart?
The Bitnami Github Pages themselves usually cover everything you need to know. Configure a values.yaml file, or modify that to your liking, and you run helm install, as written in their docs.
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Dynamic Volume Provisioning in Kubernetes with AWS and Terraform
The actual reason that our pods are not coming up is found when we review the helm installation that we are trying to run. If you check the dependencies in the GitHub repository (https://github.com/bitnami/charts/blob/main/bitnami/drupal/values.yaml) you find out that persistent storage is enabled by default and set to 8Gi. Also, the helm package uses MariaDB and the database size is specified to a default of 8Gi, thus setting the minimum storage for this installation to be 16Gi.
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Experience setting up Spark and Hudi on Kubernetes
We're using https://github.com/bitnami/charts/tree/main/bitnami/spark, but I have heard good things about https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/spark-on-k8s-operator as well. Hudi should not need any long running deployments as per the docs https://hudi.apache.org/docs/0.5.1/deployment/#deploying
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"helm crearte" command for bitnami charts/common Library?
Bitnami has its own scaffolding published at https://github.com/bitnami/charts/tree/main/template
What are some alternatives?
pulumi-k8s-guestbook - Project using Pulumi to create a Kubernets Guestbook
helm-charts - A curated set of Helm charts brought to you by codecentric
cloud-pricing-api - GraphQL API for cloud pricing. Contains over 3M public prices from AWS, Azure and GCP. Self-updates prices via an automated weekly job.
oauth2-proxy - A reverse proxy that provides authentication with Google, Azure, OpenID Connect and many more identity providers.
t2d2 - Terraform Test Driven Development
renovate - Universal dependency automation tool.
Pulumi - Pulumi - Infrastructure as Code in any programming language. Build infrastructure intuitively on any cloud using familiar languages 🚀
promscale - [DEPRECATED] Promscale is a unified metric and trace observability backend for Prometheus, Jaeger and OpenTelemetry built on PostgreSQL and TimescaleDB.
laf - Laf is a cloud development platform offering ready-to-use resources like cloud functions, databases, and storage. It empowers developers to quickly unleash their creativity.
kube-thanos - Kubernetes specific configuration for deploying Thanos.
fortigate-autoscale-azure - An implementation of FortiGate Autoscale for the Microsoft Azure platform API with a Cosmos DB storage backend.
kubegres - Kubegres is a Kubernetes operator allowing to deploy one or many clusters of PostgreSql instances and manage databases replication, failover and backup.