werf
sops
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werf | sops | |
---|---|---|
15 | 150 | |
3,909 | 15,069 | |
1.2% | 2.4% | |
9.8 | 9.2 | |
7 days ago | 10 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | Mozilla Public 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.
werf
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Is there a CD solution that can be (painlessly) fully automated between stages?
I am looking as well for this kind of tool. I just took a look today by exploring the CNCF landscape this tool : https://werf.io/ , I haven't used it, but it seems to take care of painful stuff like automatic versioning for example. (If someone here tried it, I will be happy to listen to your feedbacks)
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Phabricator replacement? | Or OpenProject alternative? | issue tracking/code
Werf - um ok
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Top 200 Kubernetes Tools for DevOps Engineer Like You
HybridK8s Droid - Intelligence foor your favourite Delivery Platform Devtron - Software Delivery Workflow for Kubernetes Skaffold - Easy and Repeatable Kubernetes Development Apollo - Apollo - The logz.io continuous deployment solution over kubernetes Helm Cabin - Web UI that visualizes Helm releases in a Kubernetes cluster flagger - Progressive delivery Kubernetes operator (Canary, A/B Testing and Blue/Green deployments) Kubeform - Kubernetes CRDs for Terraform providers https://kubeform.com Spinnaker - Spinnaker is an open source, multi-cloud continuous delivery platform for releasing software changes with high velocity and confidence. http://www.spinnaker.io/ werf - GitOps tool to deliver apps to Kubernetes and integrate this process with GitLab and other CI tools Flux - GitOps Kubernetes operator Argo CD - Declarative continuous deployment for Kubernetes Tekton - A cloud native continuous integration and delivery (CI/CD) solution Jenkins X - Jenkins X provides automated CI+CD for Kubernetes with Preview Environments on Pull Requests using Tekton, Knative, Lighthouse, Skaffold and Helm KubeVela - KubeVela works as an application delivery control plane that is fully decoupled from runtime infrastructure ksonnet - A CLI-supported framework that streamlines writing and deployment of Kubernetes configurations to multiple clusters CircleCI - A cloud-based tool that helps build continuous integration and continuous delivery pipelines to Kubernetes.
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Deployment Watching Tool
Check out https://werf.io/ tool. It features giterminism which is somewhat similar to gitops, but it does not require pull model. Giterminism aims to improve reproducibility of your build and deploy configuration. werf also features content-based-tagging out of the box, which allows creating immutable images, stored in the container-registry, shared between multiple runners (werf uses distributed locking to prevent overriding image which is already published). Giterminism and content-based-tagging enables easy rollbacks to any git-commit in the history of your project. By design werf could be embedded into any ci/cd system.
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werf is a CLI tool for implementing CI/CD with Kubernetes; its v1.2 became stable
Rename of dapp to werf was in Jan'19 to be precise (https://github.com/werf/werf/pull/1213).
- Werf
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11 Open Source Kubernetes Ci Cd Tools To Improve Your Devops
Werf
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Alternative to helmfile that works well with Github Actions
You can try werf, it has Helm under the hood and there are github actions available for it: https://github.com/werf/actions
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werf as [yet another] way to build Docker images
As you know, there's plenty of tools that can be used to build your Docker images, besides the docker build itself. werf is an Open Source project with a long history (started in 2016 as a simple wrapper around Docker CLI). Still being a CLI tool, today it is focused not just on the building but also delivering these images to Kubernetes — and this is what makes it really different.
- Podman: A tool for managing OCI containers and pods
sops
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Pico.sh – Hacker Labs
My script just sets up default .sops.yaml for https://github.com/getsops/sops
You can further edit .sops.yaml(eg have multiple of them) and decide how you split secrets in your directory tree to further customize who can decrypt the secrets.
It works pretty well for prod/dev splits, etc
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Encrypting your secrets with Mozilla SOPS using two AWS KMS Keys
Mozilla SOPS (Secrets OPerationS) is an open-source command-line tool for managing and storing secrets. It uses secure encryption methods to encrypt secrets at rest and decrypt them at runtime. SOPS supports a variety of key management systems, including AWS KMS, GCP KMS, Azure Key Vault, and PGP. It's particularly useful in a DevOps context where sensitive data like API keys, passwords, or certificates need to be securely managed and seamlessly integrated into application workflows.
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An opinionated template for deploying a single k3s cluster with Ansible backed by Flux, SOPS, GitHub Actions, Renovate, Cilium, Cloudflare and more!
Encrypted secrets thanks to SOPS and Age
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Tracking SQLite Database Changes in Git
We do the exact same thing to keep track of some credentials we use sops[1] and AWS KMS to separate credentials by sensitivity, then use the git differ to view the diffs between the encrypted secrets
Definitely not best practice security-wise, but it works well
[1] https://github.com/getsops/sops
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The Twelve-Factor App
For anyone new to SOPS like I was - https://github.com/getsops/sops
- Storing and managing private keys
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Show HN: Shello – Wrangle Environment Variables
I've found this is largely solved by strictly separating plain config and secrets, and then having secrets pull from GCP secret manager / vault / whatever.
You can then commit all the config (including the secret identifiers) and it all just works so long as you're authenticated with your secret storage system.
We do this for the live configuration as well in line with Gitops and find it to work well.
If you don't want to use a cloud secret manager you can also use something like https://github.com/getsops/sops to commit the encrypted secrets safely
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Check your secrets into Git [video]
Basically, the simpler the better --just encrypt your secrets and check them in to version control.
We use SOPS[0] for this, and have found it to be pretty nice.
[0]: https://github.com/getsops/sops
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How to secure secrets of docker-compose stacks with git?
The answer is that secrets shouldn't be stored in the git repo at all, but somewhere safe like a password manager or Mozilla's SOPS which people seem to love.
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Is it safe to commit a Terraform file to GitHub?
Unfortunately, the SOPS project is in some sort of a limbo state and there has been quite a long period with limited maintenance and unclear position from Mozilla. Despite the project being accepted into the CNCF, it's still unclear what will happen with it going forward.
What are some alternatives?
argo-cd - Declarative Continuous Deployment for Kubernetes
sealed-secrets - A Kubernetes controller and tool for one-way encrypted Secrets
flux2 - Open and extensible continuous delivery solution for Kubernetes. Powered by GitOps Toolkit.
Vault - A tool for secrets management, encryption as a service, and privileged access management
terraform-controller - Use K8s to Run Terraform
age - A simple, modern and secure encryption tool (and Go library) with small explicit keys, no config options, and UNIX-style composability.
kaniko - Build Container Images In Kubernetes
git-crypt - Transparent file encryption in git
Fabric - Simple, Pythonic remote execution and deployment.
terraform-provider-sops - A Terraform provider for reading Mozilla sops files
fleet - Deploy workloads from Git to large fleets of Kubernetes clusters
vault-secrets-operator - Create Kubernetes secrets from Vault for a secure GitOps based workflow.