Task
goreleaser
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Task | goreleaser | |
---|---|---|
113 | 59 | |
9,845 | 12,823 | |
4.8% | 2.3% | |
9.6 | 9.8 | |
2 days ago | 3 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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.
Task
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Show HN: Workflow Orchestrator in Golang
So many tools in this space! This one looks a little bit like go-task, but it seems maybe better for production workflows because if timeout support, while go-task seems more aimed to command line work/makefile replacement.
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Essential Command Line Tools for Developers
Task Task is a task runner / build tool that aims to be simpler and easier to use than, for example, GNU Make. Installation | Documentation | Twitter | Mastodon | Discord
View on GitHub
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Using Make – writing less Makefile
A similar tool is `task` https://taskfile.dev/ . It is quite capable and also a single executable. I've grown to quite like it.
If you're looking to an alternative, you could take a look at Task:
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What’s with DevOps engineers using `make` of all things?
check out tasks - a bit of a learning curve but arguably more powerful imo
https://taskfile.dev/ - a mix of build tool and command runner. YAML for the Taskfiles which you might consider either a pro or con. :)
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Go Development with Hot Reload Using Taskfile
That's when I came across taskfile.dev. Task is an automation tool designed to be more accessible than other options, such as GNU Make.
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Poetry (Packaging) in motion
Full disclosure, I did not review Conda or Hatch fully. Not that there is anything explicitly wrong with either of them. Conda is too specific to the scientific community for my general taste. Hatch seems to go well with Conda and also uses the PyProject manifest as well. It's nice that it gives you several built in tools, similar to commit hooks, but I tend to like to roll my own via a Taskfile and run them with Poetry.
goreleaser
- Distribuindo uma aplicação Go sem o Docker
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Build an Open Source Project: Behind the Scenes
With "xq", I went even further and automated the release process using GoReleaser. To publish a new release, the only thing I need is to create and push the Git tag. The corresponding GitHub Action will trigger a release process, and GoReleaser prepares the binaries and changelog based on declared conventions. The result has a high level of predictability, and no manual work is required.
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How to start a Go project in 2023
Things I can't live without in a new Go project in no particular order:
- https://github.com/golangci/golangci-lint - meta-linter
- https://goreleaser.com - automate release workflows
- https://magefile.org - build tool that can version your tools
- https://github.com/ory/dockertest/v3 - run containers for e2e testing
- https://github.com/ecordell/optgen - generate functional options
- https://golang.org/x/tools/cmd/stringer - generate String()
- https://mvdan.cc/gofumpt - stricter gofmt
- https://github.com/stretchr/testify - test assertion library
- https://github.com/rs/zerolog - logging
- https://github.com/spf13/cobra - CLI framework
FWIW, I just lifted all the tools we use for https://github.com/authzed/spicedb
We've also written some custom linters that might be useful for other folks: https://github.com/authzed/spicedb/tree/main/tools/analyzers
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What is recommended build tool and process for go project that contains multiple libraries, apis and executables?
Goreleaser is nice. https://goreleaser.com/
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Best practices for distributing and updating a Go CLI on Linux?
I use goreleaser for packaging my binaries. I'm not currently doing RPM, but it does a lot of services and if you don't hunker down on a single solution, it might help with keeping your releases up to date/in sync.
We also started using goreleaser to build our binaries and package them for linux (and mac universal binaries). Makes building and packaging releases easy.
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Looking for projects ideas for experienced devops engineers
There's some packaging issues, for example, we've always wanted to publish deb/rpm packages, but never got around to adding it to either promu or completely switching our build tooling over to GoReleaser.
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Can you help me make my makefile for go projects better or suggest an alternative?
The project is at https://github.com/goreleaser/goreleaser - It can create homebrew taps and all that sort of stuff to make distribution easier.
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K3S Binary, How does that work?
Building binaries works easily by cross-compiling (just set `GOOS=`) to build for other OSes. If you want a tool to help you with that (and automate more of the release process), you could take a look at https://goreleaser.com/.
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Go port of SQLite without CGo
More recently, a lot of my pipeline pain is handled by GoReleaser, but before GoReleaser matured, I got up to all sorts of shenanigans to get a workable toolchain, e.g. neilotoole/xcgo.
What are some alternatives?
just - 🤖 Just a command runner
doit - task management & automation tool
gron - gron, Cron Jobs in Go.
boilr - :zap: boilerplate template manager that generates files or directories from template repositories
JobRunner - Framework for performing work asynchronously, outside of the request flow
taskctl - Concurrent task runner, developer's routine tasks automation toolkit. Simple modern alternative to GNU Make 🧰
spinner - Go (golang) package with 90 configurable terminal spinner/progress indicators.
go-torch
godropbox - Common libraries for writing Go services/applications.
hub - A command-line tool that makes git easier to use with GitHub.
goreporter - A Golang tool that does static analysis, unit testing, code review and generate code quality report.
goreq