telepresence
rupy
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telepresence | rupy | |
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37 | 31 | |
6,340 | 136 | |
1.0% | - | |
9.8 | 1.1 | |
about 6 hours ago | about 1 year ago | |
Go | Java | |
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.
telepresence
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New job has no way of coding locally?
I trialled Telepresence[0] for my company 2 or 3 years ago, that does this sort of thing very slickly. It didn't quite work for us back then, I forget why, but I imagine it's come along a way since then.
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Introducing a tool for running diagnostic and administrative tools locally on your machine, but with outgoing network connectivity as if they're running in your k8s cluster.
How does this compare to Telepresence?
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Let's debug a kubernetes pod locally
seems to be very similar to https://www.telepresence.io
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Is it ok not to be able to run application locally?
If they're web services you work on, you might try https://www.telepresence.io/ (Requires something to be installed in the cluster though, easily done).
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Best Neovim PHP IDE option?
Depending on the context, the type of code you do, you may want to also look into the sister protocol to LSP, DAP—debug adaptor protocol. It really depends on your context whether local dev, dev against a remote server, and if the latter whether you run under GCP and thus have the “Snapshot Debugger”, or under Kubernetes with something like Ambassadar/Emissary and thus can run Telepresence, whether you do local or remote Docker and thus most IDEs don't necessarily magically work especially if the containers are competently locked down, etc.
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LXD containers on macOS at near-native speeds
If you're on Kubernetes remotely, Telepresence [0] might be worth a look.
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I wrote an OSS tool to tunnel your IDE to Kubernetes
Sounds Like Telepresence (https://github.com/telepresenceio/telepresence) which intercepts traffic to a service on the cluster and directs it to your local environment.
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mirrord 3.0 is out - run/debug your code in the context of your k8s cluster
This seems to be very similar to Telepresence, which I just couldn't get to work for us.
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Connecting a local container with a Kubernetes cluster
What the difference with okteto and telepresence ?
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telepresence VS mirrord - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 4 Oct 2022
rupy
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Considerations for a long-running Raspberry Pi
I have been running a Raspberry 2 cluster for 10 years: http://host.rupy.se
A few weeks back the first SD card to fail got so corrupted it failed to reboot!
My key learning is use oversized cards, because then the bitcycle will wear slower!
I'm going from 32GB to 256/512/1024!
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What Kind of Asynchronous Is Right for You?
How this article does not mention SSE, comet or chunking escapes me.
What does their definition of event-driven really look like in practice.
Nobody has a clue.
Here is the ideal event driven system, it's async-to-async: https://github.com/tinspin/rupy/wiki/Fuse
The example is not working because I had to shut down the services for multiple reasons, but the high level of it is that you use 4 (potentially different) threads to do one request/response middle man transaction.
That way you have _zero_ io-wait or idling. I'm surprised nobody has copied this approach since I invented it 10 years ago. I understand why though you need your entire chain to be async and that means rewriting everything and that is a big risk when it's hard to debug.
But if you succeed you can build something that is 10x perf/watt than all other implementations. Which is going to be important when interest rates go higher and crash our entire industry.
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An unknown Swedish startup’s €3B bid to build a green rival to AWS
The hardware is peaking.
So software is where you can make the difference: http://host.rupy.se
- Sandstorm: Open-source platform for self-hosting web app
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You Want Modules, Not Microservices
I think we're all confused over the definition. Also one might understand what all the proponents are talking about better if they think about this more as a process and not some technological solution:
https://github.com/tinspin/rupy/wiki/Process
All input I have is you want your code to run on many machines, in fact you want it to run the same on all machines you need to deliver and preferably more. Vertically and horizontally at the same time, so your services only call localhost but in many separate places.
This in turn mandates a distributed database. And later you discover it has to be capable of async-to-async = no blocking ever anywhere in the whole solution.
The way I do this is I hot-deploy my applications async. to all servers in the cluster, this is what a cluster node looks like in practice (the name next to Host: is the node): http://host.rupy.se if you click "api & metrics" you'll see the services.
With this not only do you get scalability, but also redundancy and development is maintained at live coding levels.
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I wish my web server were in the corner of my room
I have hosted my own web server both physically and codevise since 2014.
It's on a Raspberry 2 cluster:
Since 2016 i have my own database also coded from scratch:
We need to implement HTTP/1.1 with less bloat, a C non-blocking web server that can share memory between threads is probably the most interesting project for humans right now, is anyone working on that?
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Ask HN: Free and open source distributed database written in C++ or C
I have one in Java: https://github.com/tinspin/rupy
Here is the 2000 lines of code of the entire database: http://root.rupy.se/code?path=/Root.java
And here you can try it out: http://root.rupy.se
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Dokku – Free Heroku Alternative
The smallest PaaS you have ever seen is one order of magnitude larger than mine: https://github.com/tinspin/rupy
And I bet you the same goes for performance, if not two!
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Server-Sent Events: the alternative to WebSockets you should be using
The data is here: http://fuse.rupy.se/about.html
Under Performance. Per watt the fuse/rupy platform completely crushes all competition because of 2 reasons:
- Event driven protocol design, averages at about 4 messages/player/second (means you cannot do spraying or headshots f.ex. which is another feature in my game design opinion).
- Java's memory model with atomic concurrency which needs a VM and GC (C++ copied that memory model in C++11, but it failed completely because they lack both VM and GC, but that model is still to this day the one C++ uses), you can read more about this here: https://github.com/tinspin/rupy/wiki
You can argue those points are bad arguments, but if you look at performance per watt with some consideration for developer friendlyness, I'm pretty sure in 100 years we will still be coding minimalist JavaSE on the server and vanilla C (compiled with C++ compiler) on the client.
- Jodd – The Unbearable Lightness of Java
What are some alternatives?
devspace - DevSpace - The Fastest Developer Tool for Kubernetes ⚡ Automate your deployment workflow with DevSpace and develop software directly inside Kubernetes.
huproxy
tilt - Define your dev environment as code. For microservice apps on Kubernetes.
cmdg - Command line Gmail client
Gravitational Teleport - Protect access to all of your infrastructure
Nullboard - Nullboard is a minimalist kanban board, focused on compactness and readability.
skaffold - Easy and Repeatable Kubernetes Development
dbmate - :rocket: A lightweight, framework-agnostic database migration tool.
teleport - A WebXR teleport for three.js
GoJS, a JavaScript Library for HTML Diagrams - JavaScript diagramming library for interactive flowcharts, org charts, design tools, planning tools, visual languages.
garden - Automation for Kubernetes development and testing. Spin up production-like environments for development, testing, and CI on demand. Use the same configuration and workflows at every step of the process. Speed up your builds and test runs via shared result caching
cakephp-swagger-bake - Automatically generate OpenAPI, Swagger, and Redoc documentation from your existing CakePHP code.