terraform-provider-docker
tofu-controller
Our great sponsors
terraform-provider-docker | tofu-controller | |
---|---|---|
3 | 14 | |
532 | 1,149 | |
3.6% | 10.4% | |
0.0 | 9.6 | |
7 days ago | 10 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
terraform-provider-docker
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HELM vs KUSTOMIZE
... and if you're an opinionated person, like me, and you value consolidated infrastructure atomicity as a whole along side locks for everything. You'd port cherry-picked helm charts as terraform modules with k2tf, and build every docker container from scratch, with forced layer invalidation to perform security updates for every image, using the docker and kubernetes providers respectively.
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Deploying Go application on AWS with terraform
For the docker management, we are going to use terraform module kreuzwerker/docker. It provides us an opportunity to build and upload docker image to a docker repository.
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Maintaining the terraform provider for docker
Communication is crucial; that's why we want to keep it public, even if we receive private requests through other channels such as @gophers/terraform-provider-docker in Slack. We encourage engineers to open an issue or use the recently released discussions feature from GitHub. The code of conduct helped us set the etiquette guidelines, how we want to work together, and which tone and politeness we expect.
tofu-controller
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Self-service infrastructure as code
We stumbled upon a project for maintaining Terraform with CRDs that we could deploy with Helm. That project is now called Tofu-Controller - another WeaveWorks project, so it integrated great with our existing Flux setup.
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Weaveworks Seems to Be Disintegrating
https://github.com/weaveworks/tf-controller/issues/1166#issu...
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Disaster Recovery for AWS EKS Infra
Weave's TF-Controller, which also has fewer bugs, much better adoption, and it looks like it's actually being developed by someone. But requires a weird argocd <-> flux interop boilerplate. It's a "controller for flux" and not a Kubernetes controller, and I don't really get such ambiguous targeting , but meh...
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Migrate from terragrunt to terraform
Wrt tools, I wanted to integrate terraform with Flux thanks to their tf-controller. Conciling the core gitops features with terraform would be great imho.
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My recently deployed media apps in ArgoCD, migrating from Terraform.
I'm using Flux instead of Argo which has support for running terraform from a given Git Repo or OCI artifact so essentially I still fall back on Terraform when needed and it's applied via GitOps.
- Looking for teammate to join project (not a job posting)
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MySQL operators without the cluster
tf-controller which is integrated with Flux GitOps and reconciles Terraform files in a control loop
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Automate your Terraform using GitOps with Flux
While searching for alternatives for running Terraform using Kubernetes, I found several controllers and operators, but none that I felt had as much potential as the tf-controller from Weaveworks. We are already using Flux as our GitOps tool, and the tf-controller works by utilizing some of the core functionality from Flux, and has a custom resource for Terraform deployments. The source controller takes care of fetching our modules, the kustomize controllers apply the Terraform resources, and then the controller spin up static pods (called runners) that runs your Terraform commands.
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2022 was a great year for GitOps
For us, GitOps is a vital part of how we operate, and it is the magic sauce that fuels our platform offering. Not only do we use it for application deployments, but by utilizing the Weaveworks tf-controller, we can create services using Terraform to automate our infrastructure deployments.
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Terraform to deploy and KEDA to scale - will it work?
Some further research brought me to Weaveworks' TF-Controller which appears to be able to do what I want at least for the initial deployment step. Flux CD (also by Weaveworks) integrates with KEDA now, so it would be great if it could also integrate with KEDA to manage terraform-deployed Azure resources.
What are some alternatives?
git-chglog - CHANGELOG generator implemented in Go (Golang).
crossplane - The Cloud Native Control Plane
terraform-plugin-sdk - Terraform Plugin SDK enables building plugins (providers) to manage any service providers or custom in-house solutions
atlantis - Terraform Pull Request Automation
helm-operator - Successor: https://github.com/fluxcd/helm-controller — The Flux Helm Operator, once upon a time a solution for declarative Helming.
adeploy - Universal deployment tool for Kubernetes that supports rendering and deployment of lightweight Jinja templated k8s manifests as well as complex Helm charts.
jsonnet-controller - A fluxcd controller for managing manifests declared in jsonnet
terraform-provider-docker - As part of our introduction to self-service publishing in the Terraform Registry, this copy of the provider has been archived, and ownership has been transferred to active maintainers in the community. Please see the new location on the Terraform Registry: https://registry.terraform.io/providers/kreuzwerker/docker/latest
documents - 📑 Lasting documents from the GitOps Working Group which are versioned and released together (including the GitOps Principles and Glossary)
elastic-beanstalk-roadmap - AWS Elastic Beanstalk roadmap
flux2 - Open and extensible continuous delivery solution for Kubernetes. Powered by GitOps Toolkit.