pulumi-terraform-bridge
copilot-cli
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pulumi-terraform-bridge | copilot-cli | |
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7 | 51 | |
180 | 3,319 | |
5.0% | 1.7% | |
9.7 | 9.5 | |
4 days ago | 3 days ago | |
Go | 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.
pulumi-terraform-bridge
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We are the Pulumi Engineering team - Ask us about our new products and features
GA: automatic token mapping and aliasing in the bridge, which we're now using to simplify the resources.go file in bridged providers
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Converting Full Terraform Programs to Pulumi
Yes, pulumi is just wrapping terraform[1]. So you need to understand both the quirks of that and the quirks of pulumi. And I'm lazy so I just want to deal with one quirk at the time.
[1] https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-terraform-bridge
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Weird warning after running pulumi preview
After digging, I saw python libraries in my venv directory that is related to Terraform Bridge and the tool that was used to generate code - https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-terraform-bridge
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CDKTF
They have an open source tool that translates the TF providers into Pulumi providers, so people could continue to build updated providers - https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-terraform-bridge
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Terraform 1.0 Release
> If Pulumi didn't bless it, it doesn't exist in Pulumi's world.
That has not been my experience. I have personally ported a Sentry TF provider into Pulumi, and I will grant you that their docs and examples are bordering on active user hatred for exercising the process, but it does work:
https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-terraform-bridge#adapting-a...
https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-tf-provider-boilerplate#rea...
What mystifies me about that situation is that I do actually appreciate the amount of silliness that is required to avoid using Pulumi cloud: they are not financially incentivized to make that easy, but I'd guess a lot more folks would nope right out if they didn't make it possible
However, I would think they'd want to make ingesting a TF provider into Pulumi as smooth and reliable as possible, so they don't have people close their browser tab when they don't find a supported provider for Pulumi but it exists in TF
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Is AWS Cloud Development Kit (CDK) right for you?
For provisioning infrastructure in AWS, there are other tools besides those provided by AWS themselves. This includes Terraform and Pulumi. Both of these are not tied to any particular public cloud provider, or not even to public cloud providers only. Any kind of Software-as-a-service (SaaS) provider that can provide some service or infrastructure via programming interfaces can in theory be provisioned by these tools. Terraform has a long list of providers, and Pulumi can use Terraform providers in addition to its providers.
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For IaC: Pulumi or Terraform?
I think they might use their (pulumi-terraform-bridge)[https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-terraform-bridge] to generate some of their provider code from the corresponding Terraform providers? (This page mentioned some of their "most interesting providers" are created like this)[https://www.pulumi.com/docs/intro/vs/terraform/#using-terraform-providers].
copilot-cli
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Use AWS Graviton processors on AWS Fargate with Copilot
AWS Copilot CLI is an open source command line interface for running containers on AWS App Runner, Amazon Elastic Container Service (ECS), and AWS Fargate.
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AI Chatbot powered by Amazon Bedrock 🚀🤖
sudo curl -Lo /usr/local/bin/copilot https://github.com/aws/copilot-cli/releases/latest/download/copilot-linux && sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/copilot
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Launch HN: Nullstone (YC W22) – An easier way to deploy and manage cloud apps
Check out AWS Copilot CLI: https://aws.github.io/copilot-cli/
This is by far the best way to deploy compute into AWS in containerized workloads.
The abstraction you want is Jobs: ttps://aws.github.io/copilot-cli/docs/concepts/jobs/
Building this any other way on AWS would require provisioning multiple artifacts. The Copilot Jobs abstraction basically encapsulates the provisioning of those artifacts into one repeatable pattern.
- Support of Lambda web adapter on AWS Copilot
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AWS ECS Basics and Tips
AWS Copilot CLI is a tool that lets you deploy production-ready, scalable services on AWS from a Dockerfile in one command.
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Need some help understanding pulling git code to ECS.
and here is the copilot page if you are interested https://aws.github.io/copilot-cli/
- AWS Copilot CLI
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What is your production environment?
For larger high availability required things, AWS ECS with RDS, ElastiCache, CloudFront, S3, etc.. Really like Copilot for deployment/env/secret/sidecar management (probably needs a rename now): https://aws.github.io/copilot-cli/
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Heroku Status – Dashboard/API Offline
We are spending about 60% less. Workload has actually lessened since AWS is so much more stable. Getting to a similar DX as Heroku was quite the lift, but once it's done, it's done. These days we generally only have outages when we screw something up ourselves. I recommend https://github.com/aws/copilot-cli for starting out on ECS.
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Deploying on ECS
I'd recommend checking out AWS Copilot (https://aws.github.io/copilot-cli/)
What are some alternatives?
Pulumi - Pulumi - Infrastructure as Code in any programming language. Build infrastructure intuitively on any cloud using familiar languages 🚀
TabNine - AI Code Completions
terraform-ls - Terraform Language Server
terraform-cdk - Define infrastructure resources using programming constructs and provision them using HashiCorp Terraform
pulumi-provider-boilerplate - Boilerplate showing how to create a native Pulumi provider
terraforming - Export existing AWS resources to Terraform style (tf, tfstate) / No longer actively maintained
porter - Porter enables you to package your application artifact, client tools, configuration and deployment logic together as an installer that you can distribute, and install with a single command.
awesome-cdk - A collection of awesome things related to the AWS Cloud Development Kit (CDK)
terraform-provider-spacelift - Terraform provider to interact with Spacelift
terraform - Terraform enables you to safely and predictably create, change, and improve infrastructure. It is a source-available tool that codifies APIs into declarative configuration files that can be shared amongst team members, treated as code, edited, reviewed, and versioned.
aws-cloudformation-res