rekor
jj
rekor | jj | |
---|---|---|
29 | 88 | |
830 | 6,673 | |
0.2% | - | |
9.7 | 10.0 | |
8 days ago | 3 days ago | |
Go | Rust | |
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.
rekor
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Obtainium – Get Android App Updates Directly from the Source
There could be asset hashes in sigstore: https://sigstore.dev/
Is there a good way to run native mobile app GUI tests with GitHub Actions?
A VM/container emulator like anbox, waydroid, (or all of ChromeOS Flex in KVM) in a GitHub Action is probably enough to run GUI tests?
"Build your own SLSA 3+ provenance builder on GitHub Actions"
- Why SQLite Does Not Use Git
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PGP signatures on PyPI: worse than useless
I expect something like https://sigstore.dev
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An Overview of Kubernetes Security Projects at KubeCon Europe 2023
sigstore is another suite of tools that focuses on attestation and provenance. Within the suite are two tools I heard mentioned a few times at KubeCon: Cosign and Rekor.
- 50% new NPM packages are spam
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Spin 1.0 — The Developer Tool for Serverless WebAssembly
Since we can distribute Spin applications using popular registry services, we can also take advantage of ecosystem tools such as Sigstore and Cosign, which address the software supply chain issue by signing and verifying applications using Sigstore's new keyless signatures (using OIDC identity tokens from providers such as GitHub).
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Build and sign application containers
With containers being the heart of Cloud Native application development, it has become even more critical to ensure the integrity of the containers. One of the ways to do this to sign and verify the container images.sigstore is a open source project that empowers software developers to securely sign the container images.
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Ask HN: What is the most impactful thing you've ever built?
https://sigstore.dev - although its really not true to say I built it. I started it off, but very quickly smarter folks then me jumped on board and really took it to all sorts of new directions.
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Container Images for the Cloud Native Era
Powered by Wolfi, Chainguard Images are a suite of distroless images that consolidate the base features of the Wolfi undistro into end-user container images that can be integrated into existing workflows. Chainguard Images are fully declarative and reproducible, and include SBOMs that cover all image dependencies. In addition, Chainguard Images are signed via Sigstore, which attests the provenance of all artifacts. All images and corresponding signatures, as well as their SBOMs, are hosted in Chainguard's OCI registry cgr.dev.
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I am Mikko Hypponen, a global infosec expert! Ask me anything.
What's your thoughts on the sigstore project from the linux foundation?
jj
- Why Don't I Like Git More?
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Twenty Years Is Nothing
Jujutsu is along the lines of what you describe: https://github.com/martinvonz/jj
You can drop it in and work seamlessly from git repos
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Git Branches as a Social Construct
Pull Requests (or Merge Requests) are merged only when (1) all of the automated tests pass; and (2) enough necessary reviewers have indicated approval.
Git doesn't tell you when it's necessary to have full test coverage and manual infosec review in development cycles that produce releases, and neither do Pull Requests.
https://westurner.github.io/hnlog/#comment-19552164 ctrl-f hubflow
It looks like datasift's gitflow/hubflow docs are 404'ing, but the original nvie blog post [1] has the Git branching workflow diagrams; which the wpsharks/hubflow fork [3] of datasift/gitflow fork [2] of gitflow [1]has a copy of in the README:
[1] https://github.com/nvie/gitflow
[2] https://github.com/datasift/gitflow
[3] https://github.com/wpsharks/hubflow?tab=readme-ov-file
https://learngitbranching.js.org/ is still a great resource, and it could work on mobile devices.
The math of VCS deltas and mutable and immutable content-addressed DAG nodes identified by 2^n bits describing repo/$((2*inf)) bits ;
>> "ugit – Learn Git Internals by Building Git in Python" https://www.leshenko.net/p/ugit/
SLSA.dev is a social construct atop e.g. git, which is really a low-level purpose-built tool and Perl and now Python porcelain.
jj (jujutsu) is a git-compatible VCS CLI: https://github.com/martinvonz/jj
"Ask HN: Best Git workflow for small teams" (2016)
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PyPy has moved to Git, GitHub
You will probably like Jujutsu, which takes much inspiration from Mercurial: https://github.com/martinvonz/jj
It isn't a 1-to-1 clone, either. But tools like revsets are there, cset evolution is "built in" to the design, etc. There is no concept of phases, we might think about adding that, but there is a concept of immutable commits (so you don't overwrite public ones.)
It also has many novel features that make it stand out. We care a lot about performance and usability. Give it a shot. I think you might be pleasantly surprised.
Disclosure: I am a developer of Jujutsu. I do it in my spare time.
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Ask HN: Can we do better than Git for version control?
I have created a discussion. Thank you both
https://github.com/martinvonz/jj/discussions/2691
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I (kind of) killed Mercurial at Mozilla
> why don't version control systems (especially ones that can change history) have undo/redo functionality out of the box?
It's true. And Jujutsu has undo functionality out of the box, too. It's not just Sapling. :) https://github.com/martinvonz/jj
- Confusing Git Terminology
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Things I just don't like about Git
Git made the only choice a popular VCS can make. History rewrites will exist, period. If you're opposed to history rewrites, then git gives you the tools to ensure the repos you control are not rewritten, and that's all it can do in a world where people have control of their own computers.
If Fossil ever becomes as popular as git, people will create software that allows history rewriting in Fossil, and that's fine. People will do what they want on their own computer, and I think it's morally wrong to try and stop that.
Another user in this thread linked to jj [0], an alternative git client that does some pretty weird things. For example, it replaces the working tree with a working commit and commits quite often. I like git and that seems weird to me, but I'm not offended, people can do what they want on their own computer and I have the tools to ensure repos under my control are not effected. That's all I can hope for.
[0]: https://github.com/martinvonz/jj
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Pijul: Version-Control Post-Git • Goto 2023
I recently found out about another project called jj: https://github.com/martinvonz/jj. It takes inspiration from Pijul and others but is git-compatible.
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A beginner's guide to Git version control
https://github.com/martinvonz/jj
I think maybe both fossil and bitkeeper are more intuitive too.
Did you try any of those?
What are some alternatives?
sigstore-the-hard-way - sigstore the hard way!
git-branchless - High-velocity, monorepo-scale workflow for Git
fulcio - Sigstore OIDC PKI
Git - Git Source Code Mirror - This is a publish-only repository but pull requests can be turned into patches to the mailing list via GitGitGadget (https://gitgitgadget.github.io/). Please follow Documentation/SubmittingPatches procedure for any of your improvements.
cosign - Code signing and transparency for containers and binaries
forgit - :zzz: A utility tool powered by fzf for using git interactively.
kubeclarity - KubeClarity is a tool for detection and management of Software Bill Of Materials (SBOM) and vulnerabilities of container images and filesystems
EdenSCM - A Scalable, User-Friendly Source Control System. [Moved to: https://github.com/facebook/sapling]
Covenant - Covenant is a collaborative .NET C2 framework for red teamers.
pre-commit - A framework for managing and maintaining multi-language pre-commit hooks.
MEMZ - A trojan made for Danooct1's User Made Malware Series.
git-imerge - Incremental merge for git