rpi-clone
Node RED
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rpi-clone | Node RED | |
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30 | 200 | |
2,437 | 18,558 | |
- | 1.5% | |
0.0 | 9.3 | |
about 1 month ago | about 12 hours ago | |
Shell | JavaScript | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | Apache License 2.0 |
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rpi-clone
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Considerations for a long-running Raspberry Pi
I've been running a bunch of Pi's for years now, and the biggest problem I've had is the Pi itself dying: 24/7 usage is hard on a small device. I've also found that stable power is essential, and to that end I've always used 5v 3a branded power cubes, plugged into a pure sine wave UPS. Choice of micro-SDHC cards is important and I ended up getting ATP industrial cards (https://www.atpinc.com/products/industrial-sd-cards) - expensive but really long-lived. Finally, using RPi-clone (https://github.com/billw2/rpi-clone) on a regular basis has been a life-saver. I clone to Sandisk Extreme micro-SDHCs and can recover from an outage in minutes.
- Cloning SD card in CLI to use in another pi question.
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Boot Pi4 from an SSD, not the MicroSD card
I would normally use the Pi SD-Card copier to duplicate the SD-Card to an SSD but I'm unsure if this is available on the Ubuntu image - you could possibly use this program [Github] if you are not keen on using dd with a running system.
- DIY Raspberry / Orange Pi NAS That Looks Like a NAS β 2023 Edition
- 2022 Oct 31 π Stickied π ΅π °π & ππππππππ thread - Boot problems? Power supply problems? Display problems? Networking problems? Need ideas? Get help with these and other questions! π¨πΊπ² π―π¬πΉπ¬ ππ°πΉπΊπ»
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Help needed on setting up Pi to boot from SSD
Then you will need to clone the SD to the SSD, you can use many tools that are available from your desktop computer or you can try with rpi-clone, just connect the SSD with Pi booted from SD, stop any possible service/docker to prevent any copy error and run, adapting device naming but usually will be (check device with dmesg):
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Help needed on setting up Pi to boot from SSD..
I used rpi-clone, it was super easy. Whole process took 10 minutes. https://github.com/billw2/rpi-clone
- I wish I wouldβve switched to SSD Boot years ago
- Is it possible to convert an bootable sd to a bootable usb-ssd?
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Finished my very own Smart Mirror!
rpi-clone
Node RED
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Devin, the First AI Software Engineer
Good question.
I expect that we're moving into a phase of AIs talking to AIs, and initially it'll be wasteful (because it'll be mostly English), but eventually, they'll derive their own language and seamlessly upgrade protocols when they determine they're talking to an AI. No clue how that will come about or what that language will look like, but honestly, it's kind of exciting.
Really interesting to think about how they might handle context, as well. Even though we have much bigger context windows (and they'll only get larger), context management is still a resource-management issue, which we'll probably continue to refine, as well. Imagine different strategies for managing both what is brought into the context of each request, as well as what form it could take (level of detail, additional references or commentary on it, etc). Things could get really unreadable even in English, and still be very interpretable for an LLM.
W.r.t. the graph-oriented interfaces, are you thinking something like Node-RED [1]? I'm seeing more and more people mention having LLMs produce non-text or structured outputs, like JSON, UI, and other things. Easy to imagine an LLM that wires together various open-source platforms, on-demand. Something like Node-RED for pipelines/functions, some UI tools for visualization/interactivity, other platforms for messaging, etc...
[1] https://nodered.org/
- IFTTT is killing its pay-what-you-want Legacy Pro plan
- Node-RED: Low-code programming for event-driven applications
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Pipe Dreams: The life and times of Yahoo Pipes
I skipped to chapter 9 in the article ("Clogged"), and it looked like Pipes failed because it didn't have a large enough team or a well-defined mission. As a result they couldn't offer a super robust product that would lure in enterprise users. "You could not purchase some number of guaranteed-to-work Pipes calls per month" is the quote from the article.
The reason I think that interesting is because that's the model these days for everything from AI tokens to Monday.com seats. It makes me feel like Pipes was before its time.
That said I've been collecting different "business glue" products that are similar to Pipes. To me, like you say, they aren't as interesting, exciting and intuitive as Pipes was, but maybe it just takes a little more digging. I tried to focus on open source tools but some aren't.
- n8n io: https://n8n.io/integrations/mondaycom/
- Node-RED: https://nodered.org/ (just read about this one in this thread)
- trigger dev: trigger.dev
- automatisch.io: https://automatisch.io/docs/
- Activepieces: https://www.activepieces.com/docs/getting-started/introducti...
- Huginn: https://github.com/huginn/huginn
- budibase: https://budibase.com/
- windmill: https://www.windmill.dev/
- tooljet: https://www.tooljet.com/workflows
- Bracket: https://www.usebracket.com/pricing (just SalesForce <-> PostgreSQL)
- Zapier: zapier.com/
Anyway I hope some of these are fun!
- Open source IPaaS With Drag and Drop integration
- Ask YC: tracking events platform and no-code workflow
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#OpenSourceDiscovery 84 - Node-RED, alternative to IFTTT or Zapier, a workflow automation tool
Source: https://github.com/node-red/node-red
- Low-code programming for event-driven applications
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n8n.io - A powerful workflow automation tool
I believe Node-RED (https://nodered.org/) the way to go. It's just an NPM package to install and you can run it how ever you wish (even on Windows). It has a friendly and helpful community with even the main developers tirelessly answering even beginner level questions. In fact the community forum its THE friendliest forum I've ever been a member of by a large margin. Node-RED's development is supported by the JS Foundation and it's completely free and open source. It's widely used in the industrial automation industry and even integrated by some PLC manufacturers such as Siemens.
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Loops and conditional branching (IF then else) in ComfyUI?
Does anyone know if their are plans to implement something like this (or if there are already custom nodes out there). I'd like to experiment with things like looping and incrementing values (like a for loop) for a Ksampler for example. It's only an example though, so I am not looking for a ksampler specific solution; just a generic way to have a variable (e.g. Seed value), run some nodes that use that value, increment the value, and then loop back to the beginning until some sort of condition is met. Node-Red (an event driven node based programming language) has this functionality so it could defintely work in a node based environment such as ComfyUI (see here).
What are some alternatives?
TimeShift - System restore tool for Linux. Creates filesystem snapshots using rsync+hardlinks, or BTRFS snapshots. Supports scheduled snapshots, multiple backup levels, and exclude filters. Snapshots can be restored while system is running or from Live CD/USB.
Home Assistant - :house_with_garden: Open source home automation that puts local control and privacy first.
DietPi - Lightweight justice for your single-board computer!
n8n - Free and source-available fair-code licensed workflow automation tool. Easily automate tasks across different services.
86Box - Emulator of x86-based machines based on PCem.
openHAB - Add-ons for openHAB 1.x
PiShrink-to-Crontab - Raspberry; PiShrink to Crontab
Huginn - Create agents that monitor and act on your behalf. Your agents are standing by!
Rufus - The Reliable USB Formatting Utility
esphome - ESPHome is a system to control your ESP8266/ESP32 by simple yet powerful configuration files and control them remotely through Home Automation systems.
log2ram - ramlog like for systemd (Put log into a ram folder)
blockly - The web-based visual programming editor.