Gravitational Teleport
hackclub
Gravitational Teleport | hackclub | |
---|---|---|
62 | 41 | |
16,543 | 2,354 | |
2.3% | 0.1% | |
10.0 | 6.0 | |
7 days ago | 11 days ago | |
Go | JavaScript | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | 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.
Gravitational Teleport
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List of ngrok/Cloudflare Tunnel alternatives and other tunneling software and services. Focus on self-hosting.
Teleport - Comprehensive control plane tool, but also supports accessing apps behind NATs. Written in Go.
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Apache Guacamole: a clientless remote desktop gateway
https://github.com/gravitational/teleport/blob/master/rfd/00...
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Parsing the Postgres protocol β logging executed statements
I ordinarily would have said you reinvented Teleport <https://github.com/gravitational/teleport/tree/v14.3.7#readm...> but now that they've gone AGPL with v15 I'm guessing there's a market for MIT licensed stuff, although for sure since Teleport has been around for so long it has encountered more edge cases and undergone more security reviews. I was surprised while digging up the link that Gravatational is still releasing v13 and v14 updates under Apache 2, so maybe even Teleport will continue to have legs for those who cannot deploy AGPL stuff
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π Top Open Source Projects of 2023 π
Teleport is an SSH for Clusters and Teams and aims to be the drop-in replacement for OpenSSH.
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Release Radar β’ February 2024 Edition
Are you looking to set up SSO for your cloud infrastructure? Or maybe establish tunnels to access services behind NATs and firewalls. Then Teleport is for you. It provides connectivity, authentication, access controls and audit for infrastructure. The newest update has a tonne of new features and improvements including enhanced device trust support, SSH connection resumption, MFA for admin actions, improved provisioning for Okta, and heaps. more. Check out all the changes in the Teleport release notes.
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OpenBao β FOSS Fork of HashiCorp Vault
In case you didn't see it: https://goteleport.com/blog/teleport-oss-switches-to-agpl-v3... and https://github.com/gravitational/teleport/pull/35259
I readily admit it's not the same amount of :fu: as BuSL or whatever the fuck is going on over at Sentry but still :-( as compared to their much friendlier Apache 2
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Who's hiring developer advocates? (December 2023)
Link to GitHub -->
- Teleport relicenses from Apache 2.0 to AGPLv3
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Gravitational Teleport alternatives - netbird, ZeroTier, and awl
4 projects | 29 Jun 2023
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Passkeys for Infrastructure
OP here, thanks for posting! Happy to Answer any questions. I have to give our a shoutout to Alan at Teleport for all his work on Passwordless and his work to make Passwordless / TouchID work with MacOS CLI https://github.com/gravitational/teleport/blob/master/rfd/00...
hackclub
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iMessage Explained
OMG I love this. Go get em! Also, this is perfect material for Hack Club. You should join! https://hackclub.com/
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Show HN: I'm 17 and wrote this guide on how CPUs run programs
Hi! I'm Lexi, I wrote this article/mini-book. There's a classic question of "what happens when you load a website?", but I've always been more interested in "what happens when you run a program?". About 3 months ago, I was really annoyed at myself for not knowing how to answer that question so I decided to teach myself.
I taught myself everything else I know in programming, so this should be easy, right? NOPE! Apparently everything online about how operating systems and CPUs work is terrible. There are, like, no resources. Everything sucks. So while I was teaching myself I realized, hey, I should make a really good resource myself. So I started taking notes on what I was learning, and ended up with a 60-page Google Doc. And then I started writing.
And while I was writing, it turned out that most of the stuff in that giant doc was wrong. And I had to do more research. And I iterated and iterated and iterated and the internet resources continued to be terrible so I needed to make the article better. Then I realized it needed diagrams and drawings, but I didn't know how to do art, so I just pulled out Figma and started experimenting. I had a Wacom tablet lying around that I won at some hackathon, so I used that to draw some things.
Now, about 3 months later, I have something I'm really proud of! I'm happy to finally share the final version of Putting the "You" in CPU. I built this as part of Hack Club (https://hackclub.com), which is a community of other high schoolers who love computers.
It was cool seeing some (accidental) reception on HN a couple weeks ago while this was still a WIP, I really appreciated the feedback I got. I took some time to substantially clean it up and I'm finally happy to share with the world myself.
The website is a static HTML/CSS project, I wrote everything from scratch (I'm especially proud of the navigation components).
I hope you enjoy and learn something!
- A Home for High School Hackers β Hack Club
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Putting the βYouβ in CPU
Hi! I'm the person who made this thing!
Some backstory on me: I'm 17 and left high school a year ago to work full-time at Hack Club (https://hackclub.com/). I've been programming for as long as I can remember, and started homeschooling about 6 years ago to focus more on that (and my other interests).
Since I'm entirely self-taught, I haven't taken any college systems classes β and while I had picked up a lot, I wasn't happy with my answer to "what happens when you run a thing." So I let myself spend a shit ton of time actually learning as much as possible. What I found was that:
1. Operating systems and hardware are really fun to learn about!
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Free nonprofit status for relief efforts
In the face of the recent devastating floods in Vermont, Hack Club, a Vermont-based nonprofit, is offering free use of Hack Club Bank for any flood relief efforts in Vermont, New York State, and New Hampshire.
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Join Hands with Hack Club Bank for Vermont Flood Relief
Facing recent floods, Hack Club is offering free use of Hack Club Bank for relief efforts in VT, NY, and NH. Collect tax-deductible donations easily through various platforms, including GoFundMe. Manage funds collaboratively on our easy-to-use online platform, and issue physical or virtual cards for your charitable expenses. As Vermonters, weβre eager to assist fellow Vermonters. Start within 24 hours by emailing [[email protected]](mailto:[email protected]) or filling out the form on https://hackclub.com/bank.
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Got both my kids areas and builds all set. Bonus picture of my setup.
Something like https://hackclub.com/
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Does your team manage your own money?
FIRST alumni and founder of Hack Club here.
- Hack Club: A Home for High School Hackers
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Ask HN: Free Email Hosting for Nonprofits?
Hack Club is a nonprofit network of hackathons, student-led coding clubs, and open source projects. Our website is https://hackclub.com and our GitHub is https://github.com/hackclub.
We have been receiving free email hosting from Google Workspace and providing it to the Hack Club network, but we recently hit the domain limit (600 domains) on Google Workspace for Nonprofits. Each domain is typically a hackathon or a chapter at a high school.
Does anyone have any recommendations for email hosts that we could look into? As a mostly volunteer-driven nonprofit, we can't afford pay per-user pricing as there are thousands and thousands of accounts.
What are some alternatives?
Pomerium - Pomerium is an identity and context-aware reverse proxy for zero-trust access to web applications and services.
canarytokens - Canarytokens helps track activity and actions on your network.
KeyBox - Bastillion is a web-based SSH console that centrally manages administrative access to systems. Web-based administration is combined with management and distribution of user's public SSH keys.
tailscale - The easiest, most secure way to use WireGuard and 2FA.
vouch-proxy - an SSO and OAuth / OIDC login solution for Nginx using the auth_request module
nexe - π create a single executable out of your node.js apps
telepresence - Local development against a remote Kubernetes or OpenShift cluster
BetterMeet - An open community platform
Mosh - Mobile Shell
design-system - Hack Club's (old) design system
Multi SSH Config - Mirror of https://gitlab.com/osiux/multi-ssh-config
proposals - Temporal proposals