talos
arkade
talos | arkade | |
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43 | 23 | |
5,372 | 4,101 | |
4.0% | - | |
9.7 | 8.8 | |
5 days ago | 11 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | MIT License |
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talos
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There are only 12 binaries in Talos Linux
Super cool. I always enjoy reading about systems that challenge, well, "ossified" assumptions. An OS not providing a shell, for example? Madness! ... or is it genius, if the OS has a specific purpose...? It's thought-provoking, if nothing else.
I'm a bit skeptical of parts. For instance, the "init" binary being less than 400 lines of golang - wow! And sure, main.go [1] is less than 400 lines and very readable. Then you squint at the list of imported packages, or look to the left at the directory list and realize main.go isn't nearly the entire init binary.
That `talosctl list` invocation [2] didn't escape my notice either. Sure, the base OS may have only a handful of binaries - how many of those traditional utilities have been stuffed into the API server? Not that I disagree with the approach! I think every company eventually replaces direct shell access with a daemon like this. It's just that "binary footprint" can get a bit funny if you have a really sophisticated API server sitting somewhere.
[1]: https://github.com/siderolabs/talos/blob/main/internal/app/m...
[2]: https://www.talos.dev/v1.6/reference/cli/#talosctl-list
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Show HN: Workout Tracker – self-hosted, single binary web application
Where `kube.cue` sets reasonable defaults (e.g. image is /). The "cluster" runs on a mini PC in my basement, and I have a small Digital Ocean VM with a static IP acting as an ingress (networking via Tailscale). Backups to cloud storage with restic, alerting/monitoring with Prometheus/Grafana, Caddy/Tailscale for local ingress.
[1] https://www.talos.dev/
[2] https://cuelang.org/
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Google/Gvisor: Application Kernel for Containers
Looks somewhat similar to the talos Linux project[1]
[1] https://www.talos.dev/
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Gokrazy – Go Appliances
Talos Linux basically implements their entire userspace in Go and its similar to BottleRocketOS, because it is designed to host Kubernetes.
https://www.talos.dev/
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Old Unix programs running on modern computers
You might be surprised to find that Talos os (linux distro for kubernetes) mostly uses Go: https://github.com/siderolabs/talos
- Talos Linux – a minimal, hardened Linux distro for running Kubernetes
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K3s – Lightweight Kubernetes
I've been using a 3 nuc (actually Ryzen devices) k3s on SuSE MicroOS https://microos.opensuse.org/ for my homelab for a while, and I really like it. They made some really nice decisions on which parts of k8s to trim down and which Networking / LB / Ingress to use.
The option to use sqlite in place of etcd on an even lighter single node setup makes it super interesting for even lighter weight homelab container environment setups.
I even use it with Longhorn https://longhorn.io/ for shared block storage on the mini cluster.
If anyone uses it with MicroOS, just make sure you switch to kured https://kured.dev/ for the transactional-updates reboot method.
I'd love to compare it against Talos https://www.talos.dev/ but their lack of support for a persistent storage partition (only separate storage device) really hurts most small home / office usage I'd want to try.
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Bottlerocket – Minimal, immutable Linux OS with verified boot
If you’re interested in something not AWS check out Talos https://www.talos.dev/
It’s been around longer than Bottlerocket
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What kubernetes platforms do you use in your production environment?
Can't talk about work, but my homelab is Azure and Oracle managed k8s (AKS/OKE), with onprem Talos soon (Turing Pi 2). My Flux monorepo has the details. OKE performs noticably worse (update cycle, features, control plane performance), but it provides 4 ARM cores and 24GB RAM free so I can't complain
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Help with Kubernetes the hard way V1.26
Talos
arkade
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Understand your usage of GitHub Actions
If you omit sudo, then you can move the binary yourself.
And of course, there's nothing stopping you visiting the releases page - or installing my tap and getting it from Brew!
https://github.com/alexellis/arkade/releases
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is their any tools that simplifies the process of adding tools inside kuberneetes
I strongly discourage actually using such a tool in a professional setting for a host of reasons but that is exactly what https://github.com/alexellis/arkade appears to be going for.
- Kubernetes, Ansible and Terraform tooling in one docker image.
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OpenFaaS con K3S en un servidor ARM64
https://docs.oracle.com/iaas/Content/FreeTier/freetier_topic-Always_Free_Resources.htm https://rancher.com/docs/k3s/latest/en/ https://helm.sh/docs/intro/install/ https://github.com/alexellis/arkade https://cert-manager.io/docs/tutorials/acme/nginx-ingress/ https://docs.openfaas.com/deployment/kubernetes/ https://docs.openfaas.com/cli/install/
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Hands-On with Arkade: K8s Marketplace - Alistair Hey & Alex Ellis
If you've not yet heard of or used arkade - check it out on GitHub https://github.com/alexellis/arkade/
- alexellis/arkade: Open Source Kubernetes Marketplace
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Switching from macOS to Pop _OS
For the CNCF landscape of tooling there's Arkade, which would at least cover you on the k9s front. [1]
[1] https://github.com/alexellis/arkade
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Ask HN: Best Alternative to Homebrew in 2021?
I built a feature in arkade [1] to pull in binaries for CLIs for infrastructure and developer tooling that I wanted to use - it now has 72 CLIs that you can pull down with a single command and most importantly, as near to instantly as you're going to get.
For instance: arkade get [email protected] yq helm faas-cli
It's not got anywhere near the catalog of brew, and doesn't compile software, or help you find lib-xyz for your Yubikey, but it is really fast and has a growing community behind it.
It works on MacOS, Linux, Windows and arm hosts to determine the correct download URL and pull in a binary.
[1] https://github.com/alexellis/arkade
Contributions are welcome.
- Show HN: Arkade (0.8.7) New os/arch override flags and fix for krew
What are some alternatives?
k3sup - bootstrap K3s over SSH in < 60s 🚀
truecharts - Community App Catalog for TrueNAS SCALE [Moved to: https://github.com/truecharts/charts]
microk8s - MicroK8s is a small, fast, single-package Kubernetes for datacenters and the edge.
kubespray - Deploy a Production Ready Kubernetes Cluster
vcluster - vCluster - Create fully functional virtual Kubernetes clusters - Each vcluster runs inside a namespace of the underlying k8s cluster. It's cheaper than creating separate full-blown clusters and it offers better multi-tenancy and isolation than regular namespaces.
rke2
azure-k3s-cluster - An Azure template to deploy a lightweight Kubernetes cluster using k3s.io
ansible-role-k3s - Ansible role for deploying k3s cluster
minikube - Run Kubernetes locally
Flatcar - Flatcar project repository for issue tracking, project documentation, etc.
homebrew-core - 🍻 Default formulae for the missing package manager for macOS (or Linux)