swarmpit
hbm
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swarmpit | hbm | |
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8 | 1 | |
2,887 | 42 | |
1.7% | - | |
4.2 | 0.0 | |
16 days ago | almost 5 years ago | |
Clojure | Go | |
Eclipse Public License 1.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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swarmpit
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Docker Storm – Container Visualizaiton
So I need to setup prometheus, granfana, node exporter, and cadvisor before running this? All of the above give me everything I need to monitor a swarmcluster. And if I want multi-user access to the graphs, I’d configure auth in Grafana.
Further, if I were to monitor Swarm without the Prom+Grafana stack, I’d be looking at:
https://github.com/swarmpit/swarmpit
What is the value-add of Storm?
- Show HN: SetOps – Run containers, databases and more in your own AWS account
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I self-host around 15 projects, should I use docker-compose, kubernetes or something else?
Kubernetes is a bit overkill. For my homegrown usage i use docker swarm. And use https://swarmpit.io to manage it
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Harbormaster: The anti-Kubernetes for your personal server
> There is gap in the market between VM oriented simple deployments and kubernetes based setup.
In my experience, there are actually two platforms that do this pretty well.
First, there's Docker Swarm ( https://docs.docker.com/engine/swarm/ ) - it comes preinstalled with Docker, can handle either single machine deployments or clusters, even multi-master deployments. Furthermore, it just adds a few values to Docker Compose YAML format ( https://docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/compose-file-v3... ) , so it's incredibly easy to launch containers with it. And there are lovely web interfaces, such as Portainer ( https://www.portainer.io/ ) or Swarmpit ( https://swarmpit.io/ ) for simpler management.
Secondly, there's also Hashicorp Nomad ( https://www.nomadproject.io/ ) - it's a single executable package, which allows similar setups to Docker Swarm, integrates nicely with service meshes like Consul ( https://www.consul.io/ ), and also allows non-containerized deployments to be managed, such as Java applications and others ( https://www.nomadproject.io/docs/drivers ). The only serious downsides is having to use the HCL DSL ( https://github.com/hashicorp/hcl ) and their web UI being read only in the last versions that i checked.
There are also some other tools, like CapRover ( https://caprover.com/ ) available, but many of those use Docker Swarm under the hood and i personally haven't used them. Of course, if you still want Kubernetes but implemented in a slightly simpler way, then there's also the Rancher K3s project ( https://k3s.io/ ) which packages the core of Kubernetes into a smaller executable and uses SQLite by default for storage, if i recall correctly. I've used it briefly and the resource usage was indeed far more reasonable than that of full Kubernetes clusters (like RKE).
hbm
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Harbormaster: The anti-Kubernetes for your personal server
Beware that harbormaster is also the name of a program for adding RBAC to docker: https://github.com/kassisol/hbm
It's kind of abandonware because it was the developer's PhD project and he graduated, but it is rather unfortunately widely used in one of the largest GEOINT programs in the US government right now because it was the only thing that offered this capability 5 years ago. Raytheon developers have been begging to fork it for a long time so they can update and make bug fixes, but Raytheon legal won't let them fork a GPL-licensed project.
What are some alternatives?
Portainer - Making Docker and Kubernetes management easy.
swarmlet - A self-hosted, open-source Platform as a Service that enables easy swarm deployments, load balancing, automatic SSL, metrics, analytics and more.
Dokku - A docker-powered PaaS that helps you build and manage the lifecycle of applications
https-portal - A fully automated HTTPS server powered by Nginx, Let's Encrypt and Docker.
watchtower - A process for automating Docker container base image updates.
harbormaster
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes
traefik-training - Traefik Training course resources
Juju - Orchestration engine that enables the deployment, integration and lifecycle management of applications at any scale, on any infrastructure (Kubernetes or otherwise).
Nomad - Nomad is an easy-to-use, flexible, and performant workload orchestrator that can deploy a mix of microservice, batch, containerized, and non-containerized applications. Nomad is easy to operate and scale and has native Consul and Vault integrations.
Fast-Docker - This repo covers containerization and Docker Environment: Docker File, Image, Container, Commands, Volumes, Networks, Swarm, Stack, Service, possible scenarios.
docker-box - A lightweight docker application platform for single servers.