starlark-go
caddy-l4
starlark-go | caddy-l4 | |
---|---|---|
21 | 20 | |
2,204 | 767 | |
0.4% | - | |
7.1 | 7.0 | |
9 days ago | 9 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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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.
starlark-go
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Python Is Easy. Go Is Simple. Simple = Easy
Starlark in go https://github.com/google/starlark-go is a great way to combine the best of both, the ease of use of Python and the simplicity of go.
I have been building a platform for deploying internal web applications using this approach https://github.com/claceio/clace. Use Starlark to configure the application, the platform itself is built in go.
- Show HN: Clace – Platform for secure internal web applications
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Examples of using task scheduler with Go?
The big unknown is your task definition: what does user-defined logic look like? If you're expecting go code, that's gonna need some cleverness because of the compiled nature of it. There's a node runtime implemented in go if you want to provide sandboxed javascript (check the source of k6.io, it's the main one I know that uses it). If you want to provide building blocks and let them compose them, starlark might be a good choice.
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Show HN: Gsubpy, an interpreter for subset of Python, written in Go
Another one of those (with broader language support) is the Starlark language, which has a Go implementation: https://github.com/google/starlark-go
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Looking for library to build composable actions from config file
Every config format gets as complex to be touring complete in the end. We had similar problems and eventually got rid of that complexity and switched to starlark (the bazel config language), was a huge benefit for the tools. https://github.com/google/starlark-go "Starlark is a dialect of Python intended for use as a configuration language. Like Python, it is an untyped dynamic language with high-level data types, first-class functions with lexical scope, and garbage collection."
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Looking for programming languages created with Go
Direct link to the Go implementation of Starlark: https://github.com/google/starlark-go
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Change go code behaviour at runtime
For a Python-like syntax, https://github.com/google/starlark-go is the language used in Babel. It's very mature, but since it is used in a massive mature project with a specific purpose, it doesn't move fast or drift from the spec of its Java-based sibling. It doesn't have exception try except blocks or some other features you might expect, but for short extension logic, it might be exactly what you want with the stability you can depend upon.
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Reserve 4 gigabytes and treat any pointer in that range as an integer value
Context: https://github.com/google/starlark-go/blob/cfacd890221418a2dc2c736f7b5e3476c38709b1/starlark/int_posix64.go
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A command-line tool to create development environments for AI/ML, based on Docker and buildkit
Thus envd is more like Dockerfile, while it uses a simplified python dialect starlark https://github.com/google/starlark-go as the build language.
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I'm building an experimental successor to Bazel™
Use Go (mostly for starlark-go)
caddy-l4
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Caddylike solution for SSH/SFTP
https://github.com/mholt/caddy-l4 and https://github.com/kadeessh/kadeessh can do SSH forwarding.
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Minecraft server with VPS as a proxy
3) Use a L4 TCP/UDP plugin for caddy. https://github.com/mholt/caddy-l4
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Nginx Reverse Proxy game hosting
Wireguard gives my service servers their own internal IP for the gateway to reference (nothing fancy done with it, no iptables modifications like you may see on other guides), and I use NGINX for the game server proxying, specifically linuxserver's nginx container. I love Caddy, but even with caddy-l4 I couldn't get it working right for Valheim (and thus UDP), but NGINX worked real quick.
- Help routing packets from a static public ip to tailscale device
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Accessing an IP camera stream through caddy
This may help: https://github.com/mholt/caddy-l4
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The Future of Nginx: Getting Back to Our Open Source Roots
Well, that's a bit off-topic from the parent comment, which was more about the Caddyfile supporting complex config (versus the underlying JSON config) and not really "complex usecases".
But that said, from a quick Google search... was this an RTMP stream? If so, I suppose you'd want to use https://github.com/mholt/caddy-l4 which is a plugin for Caddy that lets you do TCP-layer things. Caddy's standard distribution just ships an HTTP server (plus TLS and PKI, etc), which is layer-7
You might be able to use caddy-l4's "tee" handler to pipe into multiple "proxy" handlers. But I'm not sure anyone's tried this yet, I had no idea people did this sort of thing. I'd be interested to hear if it does work though.
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Brand new to this, have a few questions about DDNS, reverse proxies, etc
If you are only having your services accessible via LAN, HTTPS isn't totally necessary, but I would still recommend it. I think a reverse proxy will be easier than your described method. Just set it to listen to 443 and have all of your other services on random ports being proxied from the reverse proxy. If you want HTTPS from your reverse proxy to your services, most reverse proxies will have this kind of feature. Here is the caddy L4 raw TCP stream module: https://github.com/mholt/caddy-l4
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Alternative to SRV record?
I had a similar problem a while back and found this project (Caddy-L4). It had no releases or examples on how to build it so I forked it and added some Docker stuff.
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Show HN: Caddy v2.5.0
"Caddy L4" aka "Project Conncept" might be what you're looking for:
https://github.com/mholt/caddy-l4
"Project Conncept is an experimental layer 4 app for Caddy. It facilitates composable handling of raw TCP/UDP connections based on properties of the connection or the beginning of the stream."
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I'm Using SNI Proxying and IPv6 to Share Port 443 Between Webapps
Nice, this is kind of why I made Project Conncept. It's a powerful TCP and UDP stream multiplexer based on Caddy: https://github.com/mholt/caddy-l4
You can route raw TCP connections by using higher layer protocol matching logic like HTTP properties, SSH, TLS ClientHello info, and more, in composable routes that let you do nearly anything.
What are some alternatives?
cue - The home of the CUE language! Validate and define text-based and dynamic configuration
gateway-api - Repository for the next iteration of composite service (e.g. Ingress) and load balancing APIs.
cue - CUE has moved to https://github.com/cue-lang/cue
authelia - The Single Sign-On Multi-Factor portal for web apps
strictyaml - Type-safe YAML parser and validator.
ingress - WIP Caddy 2 ingress controller for Kubernetes
gopher-lua - GopherLua: VM and compiler for Lua in Go
nginx-proxy - Automated nginx proxy for Docker containers using docker-gen
jsonnet-libs - Grafana Labs' Jsonnet libraries
caddy-docker-proxy - Caddy as a reverse proxy for Docker
go-jsonnet
caddy-ssh - Caddy-SSH is a general-purpose, extensible, modular, memory-safe SSH server built in Go [Moved to: https://github.com/kadeessh/kadeessh]