recognize-anything-api
certmaster
recognize-anything-api | certmaster | |
---|---|---|
2 | 4 | |
25 | 76 | |
- | - | |
5.0 | 6.5 | |
2 months ago | about 2 months ago | |
Python | Go | |
MIT License | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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.
recognize-anything-api
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Ask HN: What was an interesting project you started and finished over a weekend?
I've not cleaned it up enough to push yet, but I packaged up an open source image recognition model (https://github.com/mnahkies/recognize-anything-api) and then wrote a script to crawl my photo library, run inference over each image and then write the results into the tag tables of digikams sqlite database (https://www.digikam.org/)
One thing I was fairly proud of was how scrappy the script was - I wrote it in typescript for the familiarity with the sqlite driver, but I used find and curl to actually do the crawling and API submission.
Is it hard to do that in pure typescript/node? No, but I was in a "how can I validate if this is even an interesting thing to be doing mode" and execing out to these tools was a way to get there slightly faster.
I've found that this attitude has been a great way to make weekend projects more fun and feel less like work.
Getting to some kind of tangible value sooner has also made easier to not lose interest halfway through and has been yielding me more semi-complete weekend projects (the word semi is doing a lot of work here tbf, but it's all relative)
- Show HN: FastAPI wrapper for recognize-anything image recognition models
certmaster
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Ask HN: What was an interesting project you started and finished over a weekend?
I built a tool that generates and renews letsencrypt certs, automatically verifies via dns, and uploads to your destination (for example, a load balancer.)
https://github.com/poundifdef/certmaster
I want to turn it into a service but haven’t gotten any feedback that people want it!
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Why Certificate Lifecycle Automation Matters
Shameless plug: I've built a tool that automatically generates certs and uploads to destinations. https://github.com/poundifdef/certmaster
It uses Lego under the hood to issue certs, and then has custom connectors to upload to destinations. Right now those are email, sftp, and hetzner load balancers.
I'm working on adding the ability for it to automatically renew and re-upload when certs are 30 days from expiration.
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Show HN: Certmaster – Automatically issue and install Let's Encrypt certificates
Noted! In fact I've made it issue #1 https://github.com/poundifdef/certmaster/issues/1
Happy to look over PRs if you want to take a crack at it.
What are some alternatives?
craft-jitter - Jitter: the just in time image transformer for Craft CMS.
labca - A private Certificate Authority for internal (lab) use, based on the open source ACME Automated Certificate Management Environment implementation from Let's Encrypt (tm).
headless-recorder - Chrome extension that records your browser interactions and generates a Playwright or Puppeteer script.
cert-manager - Automatically provision and manage TLS certificates in Kubernetes
words - A set of word-based puzzle games for the CLI while you wait for the build to run
cert-manager - Automatically provision and manage TLS certificates in Kubernetes [Moved to: https://github.com/cert-manager/cert-manager]
plainoldrecipe - Takes a recipe website URL and transforms it to a plain-text version for reading or printing.
lego - Let's Encrypt/ACME client and library written in Go
BLE_LED_strip - A relatively short reverse engineering of a 12V LED strip controller based on XC610 chip
valoserveri
sleep-machine - An RP2040-based project for generating brown noise for sleeping