sdk-container-builds
conda-docker
sdk-container-builds | conda-docker | |
---|---|---|
7 | 1 | |
170 | 60 | |
1.2% | - | |
4.8 | 0.0 | |
6 days ago | 9 months ago | |
C# | Python | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
sdk-container-builds
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.NET 8 Standalone 50% Smaller On Linux
You can also publish .NET apps/services directly as container images [1].
Or you can distribute them as a single file, standalone, "ready to run" application, which precompiles your methods and includes the JIT. This results in a larger executable, but keeps all the functionality, including reflection and runtime code generation, intact.
And, of course, you can install .NET core directly on your Linux system, just as you would for Python or Ruby (where you also don't usually rely on the default installation).
[1] https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/core/docker/publish...
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Secure your .NET cloud apps with rootless Linux Containers
If you're using the https://github.com/dotnet/sdk-container-builds tech to build containers, we're working on a 0.4 version of that package that applies this rootless user by default - the goal is that the SDK tooling is the smoothest, least-effort pathway to secure, correct, best-practice containers for all .NET applications!
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Dockerize .NET Applications without Dockerfile! - Built-In Container Support for .NET 7
Alternatively, here's Microsoft's own documentation about how to do all of the above: https://github.com/dotnet/sdk-container-builds/blob/main/docs/GettingStarted.md
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Crafting container images without Dockerfiles
We've been baking this functionality directly into the .NET SDK for a couple releases now: https://github.com/dotnet/sdk-container-builds
It's really nice to derive mostly-complete container images from information your build system already has available, and the speed/UX benefits are great too!
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Announcing built-in container support for the .NET SDK
Funny you should mention scaffolding out a Dockerfile - internally we'd been talking about that as a bridge to other services that are highly Dockerfile-based. I just logged https://github.com/dotnet/sdk-container-builds/issues/146 to track this request. We likely won't prioritize it for the 7.0 release unless we get huge amounts of feedback that it would be helpful, but it is something we'd like to do.
conda-docker
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Crafting container images without Dockerfiles
For creating images without docker from conda/mamba environments, there's also the existing `conda-docker` tool https://github.com/conda-incubator/conda-docker.
What are some alternatives?
sdk-container-demo - Example projects and GitHub Actions Workflows using the .NET SDK to create containers
apko - Build OCI images from APK packages directly without Dockerfile
Cocona - Micro-framework for .NET console application. Cocona makes it easy and fast to build console applications on .NET.
rules_docker - Rules for building and handling Docker images with Bazel
cargo-chef - A cargo-subcommand to speed up Rust Docker builds using Docker layer caching.
bazel-nix-example
interactive - .NET Interactive combines the power of .NET with many other languages to create notebooks, REPLs, and embedded coding experiences. Share code, explore data, write, and learn across your apps in ways you couldn't before.
crane - A Nix library for building cargo projects. Never build twice thanks to incremental artifact caching.
dinker - Dinker, dinky Docker images
nix-ci
buildah - A tool that facilitates building OCI images.
manifest-tool - Command line tool to create and query container image manifest list/indexes