slack
Concourse
slack | Concourse | |
---|---|---|
13 | 47 | |
4,560 | 7,172 | |
0.6% | 0.3% | |
7.7 | 9.0 | |
6 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | 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.
slack
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Was learning Go hard for you?
Though I am thinking of converting my Python Bolt slackbot (very early in development anyway) over to using slack-go. Mainly wanted to rewrite some of it anyway and use socket-mode.
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Go team: honesty is the best policy?
code looks to be BSD licensed from https://github.com/slack-go/slack/blob/5a6b1b08ff8fa911e85bd582de643f7f0df0f0fb/chat.go
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Is there any crate to work with Slack in Rust and how to approach library/crate creation for third-party vendors like Slack/GCP?
I have created a Slack bot that acts on some slack events to create Jira tickets using Slack Go. It was a hobby project for me but it's being used for some teams on my company.
- Looking for projects to contribute
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2.7 - 83 issues closed
I have also tried to do this in Go, because I always would try to do something in Go given the opportinity, but the Go Slack API was using the outdated auth system, there was simply no documentation to follow at all. I see this in my second attempt at using Go, having no tools to use, or no instruction to follow. Oh well, maybe the next project...
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Creating a flexible Backoffice Tool in a Technical Company using Slack
We use this library github.com/slack-go/slack for the API calls and data model.
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Sending Slack Messages with Images using Go
The Slack Go SDK is a community SDK and not officially maintained by Slack. This means it doesn't get the same care or attention in terms of documentation and code examples.
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Parsing a Slack-Go socket mode response
I am using Slack-Go (https://github.com/slack-go/slack) to create a modal to allow my users to enter some information.
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Trying to build a Slack Bot in Go but can't figure out how to work with the Events API
Does the example in the repository for the Events API not useful? https://github.com/slack-go/slack/blob/master/examples/eventsapi/events.go
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Handler and Middleware design pattern in Golang
I came across the well-maintained slack-go library; I started coding my bot using the provided example. Everything worked fine; The code is producing the expected result. It is time to make another coffee and implements a few extra features.
Concourse
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Elm 2023, a year in review
Ableton ⬩ Acima ⬩ ACKO ⬩ ActiveState ⬩ Adrima ⬩ AJR International ⬩ Alma ⬩ Astrosat ⬩ Ava ⬩ Avetta ⬩ Azara ⬩ Barmenia ⬩ Basiq ⬩ Beautiful Destinations ⬩ BEC Systems ⬩ Bekk ⬩ Bellroy ⬩ Bendyworks ⬩ Bernoulli Finance ⬩ Blue Fog Training ⬩ BravoTran ⬩ Brilliant ⬩ Budapest School ⬩ Buildr ⬩ Cachix ⬩ CalculoJuridico ⬩ CareRev ⬩ CARFAX ⬩ Caribou ⬩ carwow ⬩ CBANC ⬩ CircuitHub ⬩ CN Group CZ ⬩ CoinTracking ⬩ Concourse CI ⬩ Consensys ⬩ Cornell Tech ⬩ Corvus ⬩ Crowdstrike ⬩ Culture Amp ⬩ Day One ⬩ Deepgram ⬩ diesdas.digital ⬩ Dividat ⬩ Driebit ⬩ Drip ⬩ Emirates ⬩ eSpark ⬩ EXR ⬩ Featurespace ⬩ Field 33 ⬩ Fission ⬩ Flint ⬩ Folq ⬩ Ford ⬩ Forsikring ⬩ Foxhound Systems ⬩ Futurice ⬩ FörsäkringsGirot ⬩ Generative ⬩ Genesys ⬩ Geora ⬩ Gizra ⬩ GWI ⬩ HAMBS ⬩ Hatch ⬩ Hearken ⬩ hello RSE ⬩ HubTran ⬩ IBM ⬩ Idein ⬩ Illuminate ⬩ Improbable ⬩ Innovation through understanding ⬩ Insurello ⬩ iwantmyname ⬩ jambit ⬩ Jobvite ⬩ KOVnet ⬩ Kulkul ⬩ Logistically ⬩ Luko ⬩ Metronome Growth Systems ⬩ Microsoft ⬩ MidwayUSA ⬩ Mimo ⬩ Mind Gym ⬩ MindGym ⬩ Next DLP ⬩ NLX ⬩ Nomalab ⬩ Nomi ⬩ NoRedInk ⬩ Novabench ⬩ NZ Herald ⬩ Permutive ⬩ Phrase ⬩ PINATA ⬩ PinMeTo ⬩ Pivotal Tracker ⬩ PowerReviews ⬩ Practle ⬩ Prima ⬩ Rakuten ⬩ Roompact ⬩ SAVR ⬩ Scoville ⬩ Scrive ⬩ Scrivito ⬩ Serenytics ⬩ Smallbrooks ⬩ Snapview ⬩ SoPost ⬩ Splink ⬩ Spottt ⬩ Stax ⬩ Stowga ⬩ StructionSite ⬩ Studyplus For School ⬩ Symbaloo ⬩ Talend ⬩ Tallink & Silja Line ⬩ Test Double ⬩ thoughtbot ⬩ Travel Perk ⬩ TruQu ⬩ TWave ⬩ Tyler ⬩ Uncover ⬩ Unison ⬩ Veeva ⬩ Vendr ⬩ Verity ⬩ Vnator ⬩ Vy ⬩ W&W Interaction Solutions ⬩ Watermark ⬩ Webbhuset ⬩ Wejoinin ⬩ Zalora ⬩ ZEIT.IO ⬩ Zettle
- The worst thing about Jenkins is that it works
- Show HN: Togomak – declarative pipeline orchestrator based on HCL and Terraform
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GitHub Actions could be so much better
> Why bother, when Dagger caches everything automatically?
The fear with needing to run `npm ci` (or better, `pnpm install`) before running dagger is on the amount of time required to get this step to run. Sure, in the early days, trying out toy examples, when the only dependencies are from dagger upstream, very little time at all. But what happens when I start pulling more and more dependencies from the Node ecosystem to build the Dagger pipeline? Your documentation includes examples like pulling in `@google-cloud/run` as a dependency: https://docs.dagger.io/620941/github-google-cloud#step-3-cre... and similar for Azure: https://docs.dagger.io/620301/azure-pipelines-container-inst... . The more dependencies brought in - the longer `npm ci` is going to take on GitHub Actions. And it's pretty predictable that, in a complicated pipeline, the list of dependencies is going to get pretty big - at least a dependency per infrastructure provider we use, plus inevitably all the random Node dependencies that work their way into any Node project, like eslint, dotenv, prettier, testing dependencies... I think I have a reasonable fear that `npm ci` just for the Dagger pipeline will hit multiple minutes, and then developers who expect linting and similar short-run jobs to finish within 30 seconds are going to wonder why they're dealing with this overhead.
It's worth noting that one of Concourse's problems was, even with webhooks setup for GitHub to notify Concourse to begin a build, Concourse's design required it to dump the contents of the webhook and query the GitHub API for the same information (whether there were new commits) before starting a pipeline and cloning the repository (see: https://github.com/concourse/concourse/issues/2240 ). And that was for a CI/CD system where, for all YAML's faults, for sure one of its strengths is that it doesn't require running `npm ci`, with all its associated slowness. So please take it on faith that, if even a relatively small source of latency like that was felt in Concourse, for sure the latency from running `npm ci` will be felt, and Dagger's users (DevOps) will be put in an uncomfortable place where they need to defend the choice of Dagger from their users (developers) who go home and build a toy example on AlternateCI which runs what they need much faster.
> I will concede that Dagger’s clustering capabilities are not great yet
Herein my argument. It's not that I'm not convinced that building pipelines in a general-purpose programming language is a better approach compared to YAML, it's that building pipelines is tightly coupled with the infrastructure that runs the pipelines. One aspect of that is scaling up compute to meet the requirements dictated by the pipeline. But another aspect is that `npm ci` should not be run before submitting the pipeline code to Dagger, but after submitting the pipeline code to Dagger. Dagger should be responsible for running `npm ci`, just like Concourse was responsible for doing all the interpolation of the `((var))` syntax (i.e. you didn't need to run some kind of templating before submitting the YAML to Concourse). If Dagger is responsible for running `npm ci` (really, `pnpm install`), then it can maintain its own local pnpm store / pipeline dependency caching, which would be much faster, and overcome any shortcomings in the caching system of GitHub Actions or whatever else is triggering it.
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We built the fastest CI in the world. It failed
> Imagine you live in a world where no part of the build has to repeat unless the changes actually impacted it. A world in which all builds happened with automatic parallelism. A world in which you could reproduce very reliably any part of the build on your laptop.
That sounds similar to https://concourse-ci.org/
I quite like it, but it never seemed to gain traction outside of Cloud Foundry.
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Ask HN: What do you use to run background jobs?
I used Concourse[0] for a while. No real complaints, the visibility is nice but the functionality isn't anything new.
[0] https://concourse-ci.org/
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How to host React/Next "Cheaply" with a global audience? (NGO needs help)
We run https://concourse-ci.org/ on our own hardware at our office. (as a side note, running your own hardware, you realise just how abysmally slow most cloud servers are.)
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What are some good self-hosted CI/CD tools where pipeline steps run in docker containers?
Concourse: https://concourse-ci.org
- JSON vs XML
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Cicada - Build CI pipelines using TypeScript
We use https://concourse-ci.org/ at the moment and have been reasonably happy with it, however it only has support for linux containers at the moment, no windows containers. (MacOS doesn't have a containers primitive yet unfortunately)
What are some alternatives?
lakeFS - lakeFS - Data version control for your data lake | Git for data
drone - Gitness is an Open Source developer platform with Source Control management, Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery. [Moved to: https://github.com/harness/gitness]
rosterbot - Slackbot for rostering, sends messages when someone new is rostered on
GitlabCi
enhancements - Enhancements tracking repo for Kubernetes
woodpecker - Woodpecker is a simple yet powerful CI/CD engine with great extensibility.
gopher-stickers - gopher stickers
Jenkins - A static site for the Jenkins automation server
fission - Fast and Simple Serverless Functions for Kubernetes
Jenkins - Jenkins automation server
esbuild - An extremely fast bundler for the web
Buildbot - Python-based continuous integration testing framework; your pull requests are more than welcome!