springboot-keycloak-openldap
mtg-deck-builder
springboot-keycloak-openldap | mtg-deck-builder | |
---|---|---|
2 | 1 | |
134 | 0 | |
- | - | |
5.9 | 7.8 | |
about 1 month ago | over 2 years ago | |
Java | Java | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
springboot-keycloak-openldap
-
A detailed guide to SSO on Kubernetes
Okaaay, now I have a keycloak server and an ldap server running. I guess my next step is to shell in to the ldap host, wget https://github.com/ivangfr/springboot-keycloak-openldap/blob..., edit it to me needs, look up how to generate openldap password hashes, go back in to keycloak, and try to configure that to talk to my ldap server.
So now I need to look up the default values for
Vendor, Username LDAP attribute, RDN LDAP attribute, UUID LDAP attribute, User Object Classes, Connection URL, Users DN, Custom User LDAP Filter, Search Scope, Bind Type, Bind DN, Bind Credential
If I knew what vendor openldap was considered setting the Vendor would fill a bunch of of those in. Well let's try following through this this random blog post and hope it works: https://geek-cookbook.funkypenguin.co.nz/recipes/keycloak/au...
Compare that to the experience of deploying say, wordpress. And hey look, it already comes with an authentication backed!
Sure, you can build something that does more or less the same thing but you have to do a fair bit of work to get to that point. Realistically if you haven't done it before, and if you don't have any ldap experience, you're looking at a solid couple of hours to get that set up.
And it's still apparently going to use 100s of MB of ram.
mtg-deck-builder
-
Beginner here: Is there an app which can tell me which decks I can build with my cards based on a csv (I scanned all my cards with Delver Lens). Sorry for this basic question but I couldn't find anything with Google
Hey! I'm actually working on exactly that! But my project is still very much work in progress 😂 if you're a programmer, you can already ingest the scryfall dataset and interact with it in Jupiter. https://github.com/phughk/mtg-deck-builder The idea is that this will not only make decks, but cubes as well. I don't really expect you to use it, but I am plugging it for people in the future
What are some alternatives?
SuperTokens Community - Open source alternative to Auth0 / Firebase Auth / AWS Cognito
mage - Magic Another Game Engine
testcontainers-spring-boot - Container auto-configurations for Spring Boot based integration tests
glauth-ui - Glauth management ui created with python/flask
deckscraper - Magic the Gathering (MTG) reverse deck search tool.
spring-boot-web-application-sample - Real World Spring Boot Web Application Example with tons of ready to use features
Ebean ORM - Ebean ORM
keycloak-mail-whitelisting - Keycloak extension to whitelist email adresses domain when users register
Internship - A simple eCommerce💲web app I made during my internship at SPIE.
alovoa - Free and open-source dating platform that respects your privacy
urlshortner - Sample application to expose Spring Native Capabilities. Abbreviated version of something like bitly.