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swarm-cronjob
rd | swarm-cronjob | |
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29 | 5 | |
5,546 | 702 | |
1.7% | - | |
10.0 | 7.9 | |
3 days ago | 3 days ago | |
TypeScript | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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.
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- Rancher Desktop v1.11.0 with Snapshots, Container Dashboard and More
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K3s – Lightweight Kubernetes
So, please please solve this request here: https://github.com/rancher-sandbox/rancher-desktop/issues/18...
- Rancher Desktop 1.9 released with support for Docker Extensions
- Apple Virtualization Framework
- No docker options
- macOS Apple Silicon version is still Intel x86?
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Podman vs. Docker: Comparing the Two Containerization Tools – Linode
https://github.com/rancher-sandbox/rancher-desktop/releases
Then in Rancher Desktop you enable WSL integration as shown here:
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Nginx in KinD
If using rancher desktop: https://docs.rancherdesktop.io/tutorials/working-with-images/ https://github.com/rancher-sandbox/rancher-desktop/issues/952
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New Docker Desktop: Run WASM Applications Alongside Linux Containers in Docker
> docker desktop is pretty dead now that it's got restrictive licensing etc...
It would probably be nice to hear more about why you think this is! I've certainly heard of some having to move away from Docker Desktop.
However, at the scale where you need a license (250 employees or 10 million $ in annual revenue) it's not quite as big of an issue, especially at their current pricing per seat: https://www.docker.com/pricing/
> stick to standard open source tools like Colima etc...
Sticking to open source is a great idea!
I think mentioning that Colima runs on macOS and Linux only at the moment is also a good idea: https://github.com/abiosoft/colima
A large market share of the Docker Desktop installs are Windows in particular (since it's "the one way" how most install Docker nowadays, as opposed to not really needing a GUI or the supporting tools on Linux).
In another comment I mentioned Podman Desktop as a mostly viable alternative: https://github.com/containers/podman-desktop
Then there's also Rancher Desktop as well: https://github.com/rancher-sandbox/rancher-desktop
Regardless, it's nice to see reputable orgs behind the open source projects as well, which gives a bit more credence to their chances of surviving for the years to come.
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Finch: An open-source client for container development
Great, then can you speak to whether rancher-desktop supports the "--platform" argument to "run" the same way that finch does?
I wouldn't mind answering it myself, but it looks like rancher-desktop is an electron something or other: https://github.com/rancher-sandbox/rancher-desktop/blob/v1.6... and even downloading the 500MB release zip shows that there's `Rancher Desktop.app/Contents/Resources/resources/darwin/lima/bin/limactl` hidden in it, but I'm a distrustful sort and I don't want to crawl through unlimited lines of typescript to find out what this is going to do to my system
Maybe it's just that I'm not the right audience for this, since I am the polar opposite of "some gui fanciness," as I came up through the docker-machine universe, and now colima, and thus have a lot more comfort debugging CLI tooling when something inevitably goes toes up
swarm-cronjob
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Efficiency between docker restart and container with sleep
Anything from simple crontab entry to something like this: https://crazymax.dev/swarm-cronjob/
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How do you evaluate if a tool is trustworthy?
So, I found a really nice little tool that solves a problem I have in a really nice way. Specifically, cron jobs on Docker Swarm. This project: https://github.com/crazy-max/swarm-cronjob It uses labels on your services to schedule jobs. Thus it needs access to the docker api, and all the security concerns that go along with it...
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Rancher Desktop, a Docker Desktop Replacement
As i said, if it's not exposed to the outside world and doesn't work with untrusted data, that claim is not entirely valid.
Imagine something like this getting abandoned, or someone running a year old version of it: https://github.com/crazy-max/swarm-cronjob/blob/master/READM...
Its only job is to run containers on a particular schedule, no more no less. There are very few attack vectors for something like that, considering that it doesn't talk to the outside world, nor processes any user input data.
Then again, it's not my job to pass judgement on situations like that, merely acknowledge that they exist and therefore the consequences of those suddenly breaking cannot be ignored.
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Docker Swarm cron job manager
I also found swarm-cronjob and ofelia both seems promising. BUT , I really like the idea of an interface to watch log files etc.
What are some alternatives?
colima - Container runtimes on macOS (and Linux) with minimal setup
ofelia - A docker job scheduler (aka. crontab for docker)
lima - Linux virtual machines, with a focus on running containers
swarm-scheduler - A distributed scheduler for docker swarm mode using Compose and Cron
intellij-community - IntelliJ IDEA Community Edition & IntelliJ Platform
Airflow - Apache Airflow - A platform to programmatically author, schedule, and monitor workflows
multipass - Multipass orchestrates virtual Ubuntu instances
Diun - Receive notifications when an image is updated on a Docker registry
nerdctl - contaiNERD CTL - Docker-compatible CLI for containerd, with support for Compose, Rootless, eStargz, OCIcrypt, IPFS, ...
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes
remote-docker-aws - Remote Docker for local development hosted using AWS
longhorn - Cloud-Native distributed storage built on and for Kubernetes