vscode-infracost
starter-workflows
vscode-infracost | starter-workflows | |
---|---|---|
27 | 262 | |
1,786 | 8,449 | |
0.0% | 1.4% | |
6.1 | 8.6 | |
about 1 month ago | 5 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
vscode-infracost
- Despliega una Infraestructura de Red AWS Robusta con Terraform
- Cutting down AWS cost by $150k per year simply by shutting things off
-
Show HN: Infracost (YC W21): Be proactive with your cloud costs
Hi, we are Ali, Hassan, and Alistair, co-founders of Infracost (https://www.infracost.io/). Infracost helps engineers see the cost of each Terraform change before launching resources. When changes are made, it posts a comment with the cloud cost impact. For example, “you’ve added 2 instances and volumes, and change an instance type from medium to large, your bill will increase by 25% next month, from $1000 to $1250 per month”.
We launched in February 2021 (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26064588), and Infracost is now being actively used by over 3,000 companies. However, there is a shift happening in the cloud cost management space. New teams, called FinOps teams (a combination of "Finance" and "DevOps"), are being formed within companies to manage cloud costs.
One of the first tasks assigned to these teams is to determine "who is using what" - that is, which teams, business units, products, etc. are spending the most on cloud. To accomplish this, they use tags. Tags are labels that all cloud resources should have and are key-value pairs. For example, a server could be tagged with: product=HackerNews; environment=production; team=blueTeam. So if resources are not tagged properly, then you can’t tell who is using what.
However, FinOps teams face challenges because their tools are reactive. These tools begin by analyzing cloud bills and providing visibility of tags from there. This means that they are looking at resources that are already running in production and costing money. A customer recently shared, “I want all resources to be properly tagged. But if they are not, I would rather a resource not be tagged at all than be tagged incorrectly.”
My "aha" moment! FinOps teams can define a tagging policy that can be validated in CI/CD before resources are launched. This is important because if code is shipped with the wrong tags, FinOps teams will have to fight for sprint time to fix them. Even if you shut down an untagged resource directly in the cloud, the next time Terraform runs, the resource will launch again with no tag. You need to fix the issue at its root.
I’d love your feedback on our solution to the tagging problem. You define your tag key-value policy in our SaaS product, and Infracost checks all Terraform resources per change. If anything fails the policy, it posts a comment with the details of which resources need tags, and what the allowed values are. Once fixed, it will let the code be shipped to production.
Try it out by going to https://dashboard.infracost.io/, setting up with the GitHub app or GitLab app, and defining your tagging policy. It will then scan your repository and inform you of any missing tags and their file and line number. You can use the free trial, but if you need more time, please message me and I’ll extend it for you.
I would also love to hear how others ensure that the correct tag keys and values are applied to all resources, and whether this is done proactively or reactively. Additionally, I would be interested in hearing about any lessons learned in the process.
Cheers
-
What is the best `as Code` tool in 2023?
Great toolchain, including Infracost or tfsec.
-
Top 4 Infrastructure as Code Open-Source Tools for 2023
Infracost is an open-source tool for estimating the cost of cloud infrastructure using Infrastructure as Code templates.
-
Enabling IPv6 on AWS using Terraform (Part 1)
Throughout this post, you will see me mention the cost of running this using an estimate. I have been using for a while, a tool called infracost which is an open source (with subscription based additions) cost estimator tool - https://www.infracost.io/. For this demonstration, using the sample code listed above, it would cost an estimated $76.65/month - so if you don't want rack up a bill, only deploy when you want to test, and use Terraform to destroy the services when you are done.
-
5 tools to supercharge your Terraform Development
Infracost : Infracost is an open-source tool that allows users to see the cost of running their infrastructure, such as AWS resources, in near real-time. It uses the AWS Price List API to determine the costs of resources, and can be integrated into CI/CD pipelines to provide cost feedback during the development process. This allows developers to make informed decisions about their infrastructure and optimize costs. Additionally, Infracost can be used to create alerts based on cost thresholds, so you can be notified when your infrastructure costs exceed a certain amount. This can be especially useful for teams that operate on a tight budget or need to manage costs closely.
-
Taming Cloud Costs with Infracost
An Infracost API key. You can get one by signing up for free at Infracost.io.
- Infracost – Estimate infrastructure cost based on Terraform
-
Wing: A cloud-oriented programming language
Since Wing compiles to Terraform, you should be able to manually run Infracost (https://www.infracost.io) to get an idea of costs.
Having that capability baked into the language/compiler would be a great addition.
starter-workflows
- Say Goodbye to Manual Deployments: Automate Your EC2 Autoscaling with CodeDeploy and GitHub Actions
-
Level Up Your Projects with GitHub Actions & CI/CD
GitHub, as one of the leading web-based Git repository hosting service, provides a powerful suite of CI/CD tools in the form of GitHub Actions. These are directly integrated into the platform which empowers developers to increase the speed, efficiency and reliability of delivering products. In this brief article, we will take a look at what CI/CD is, why we should use it, as well as some of its applications in my projects.
-
How to Manage Terraform with GitHub Actions
GitHub Actions is a modern CI/CD tool integrated natively on GitHub. Itenables the rapid automation of build, test, deployment, and other custom workflows on GitHub with no need for external tools.
-
Kubernetes CI/CD Pipelines
GitHub Actions is GitHub's CI/CD solution. You can use it to run automated tasks each time you change your code. Although the platform lacks a built-in Kubernetes integration, third-party plugins such as Azure's Deploy to Kubernetes Cluster action can automate deployments and manage different rollout strategies.
-
Most Useful CI/CD Tools for DevOps
GitHub Actions is a feature-rich CI/CD platform embedded within GitHub, enabling developers to automate, customize, and execute software development workflows directly in their repositories. An Action inside GitHub Actions is a discrete unit of automation that performs a specific task within a workflow. All the Actions are reusable, and there are many to choose from. You can even create your own reusable ones.
-
Awesome GitHub Action Workflows
actions/starter-workflows
-
Laravel code-quality tools
The real power of using PHP code-quality tools is when it’s added to your continuous integration process, which means it automatically checks the code every time someone makes a push or pull request to your project repo. In this section, we'll be looking at how to do just that. GitHub actions is available for free so we'll use it for demo purposes. Note that there are some limits to private repos, so set your test repo to public if you can.
-
Elevate Your GitHub README Game
You can even automate the running of this script — hence the directory name automation — to happen every time the data changes, using GitHub Actions.
-
GitHub Status Checks and Branch Protection Made Easy
# Based on https://github.com/actions/starter-workflows/blob/main/ci/node.js.yml name: CI on: pull_request: branches: - main jobs: ci: runs-on: ubuntu-latest steps: - uses: actions/checkout@v2 - uses: actions/setup-node@v2 with: node-version: lts/* cache: 'npm' - run: npm ci - run: npm run build --if-present - run: npm test
-
GitHub Actions for Perl Development
You might remember that I’ve been taking an interest in GitHub Actions for the last year or so (I even wrote a book on the subject). And at the Perl Conference in Toronto last summer I gave a talk called “GitHub Actions for Perl Development” (here are the slides and the video).
What are some alternatives?
infracost - Cloud cost estimates for Terraform in pull requests💰📉 Shift FinOps Left!
argocd-image-updater - Automatic container image update for Argo CD
GPU-Puzzles - Solve puzzles. Learn CUDA.
CppCon2020 - Slides and other materials from CppCon 2020
cloud-pricing-api - GraphQL API for cloud pricing. Contains over 3M public prices from AWS, Azure and GCP. Self-updates prices via an automated weekly job.
NewPipe - A libre lightweight streaming front-end for Android.
infracost-azure-devops - Azure DevOps integration for Infracost. Shows cloud cost estimates for Terraform in pull requests for Azure DevOps repos and GitHub repos.
react-native-dotenv - Load react native environment variables using import statements for multiple env files.
infracost - Cloud cost estimates for Terraform in your CLI and pull requests 💰📉 [Moved to: https://github.com/infracost/infracost]
nnn - nÂł The unorthodox terminal file manager
google-cloud-pricing-cost-calculator - đź’¸ Calculate estimated monthly costs of Google Cloud Platform products and resources via YAML files and CLI program (Linux, macOS, Windows)
Real_Time_Image_Animation - The Project is real time application in opencv using first order model