whoami
black
whoami | black | |
---|---|---|
10 | 322 | |
923 | 37,425 | |
2.5% | 0.4% | |
4.8 | 9.4 | |
5 months ago | about 17 hours ago | |
Go | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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.
whoami
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Analyzing HTTPS traffic between traefik and services
What do you want to see? If it's about the request and the headers, you could run a whoami service as target to see the headers.
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Authentik Plex SSO
Testing the expression in the linked GH issue it definitely works when using a whoami type backend (https://github.com/traefik/whoami) which just shows all the headers that are being sent.
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AWS Lightsail Container Services with Reverse Proxy
An app called whoami. This is a dead simple go app that spits back header and IP information.
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What's the best beginners guide to self hosting Nextcloud?
Example ``` FROM golang:1-alpine as builder
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Forwarding real IP when running as a container
Use whoami to check yourself.
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Unable to attach services to traefik with docker swarm
Launch a simple test container with the labels to see if traefik picks it up and routes according to the domain.
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UDM NAT/Port-Forward not showing source IP
Unfortunately still doesn't work, even bypassing NGINX and just using a simple whoami go web server (https://github.com/traefik/whoami) directly running on linux (no docker) it's still reporting the RemoteAddr as 192.168.100.1:52061, this should be the IP address of the client.
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trying to get traefik to work.
version: '3.9' services: traefik: image: traefik:v2.6 command: - --providers.docker - --entrypoints.web.address=:80 - --entrypoints.websecure.address=:443 ports: - "80:80" - "443:443" volumes: - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock whoami: image: traefik/whoami # https://github.com/traefik/whoami command: -name whoami labels: traefik.http.routers.whoami.rule: Host(`whoami.localhost`)
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Basic Traefik configuration tutorial
version: "3.7" services: traefik: image: traefik:v2.6 command: # Entrypoints configuration - --entrypoints.web.address=:80 # Docker provider configuration - --providers.docker=true # Makes sure that services have to explicitly direct Traefik to expose them - --providers.docker.exposedbydefault=false # Use the secure docker socket proxy - --providers.docker.endpoint=tcp://socket_proxy:2375 # Default docker network to use for connections to all containers - --providers.docker.network=traefik_public # Logging levels are DEBUG, PANIC, FATAL, ERROR, WARN, and INFO. - --log.level=info ports: - 80:80 networks: - traefik_public - socket_proxy restart: unless-stopped depends_on: - socket_proxy # https://github.com/traefik/whoami whoami: image: traefik/whoami:v1.7.1 labels: # Explicitly instruct Traefik to expose this service - traefik.enable=true # Router configuration ## Listen to the `web` entrypoint - traefik.http.routers.whoami_route.entrypoints=web ## Rule based on the Host of the request - traefik.http.routers.whoami_route.rule=Host(`whoami.karvounis.tutorial`) - traefik.http.routers.whoami_route.service=whoami_service # Service configuration ## 80 is the port that the whoami container is listening to - traefik.http.services.whoami_service.loadbalancer.server.port=80 networks: - traefik_public # https://github.com/Tecnativa/docker-socket-proxy # Security-enhanced proxy for the Docker Socket socket_proxy: image: tecnativa/docker-socket-proxy:latest restart: unless-stopped environment: NETWORKS: 1 SERVICES: 1 CONTAINERS: 1 TASKS: 1 volumes: - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock:ro networks: - socket_proxy networks: traefik_public: external: true socket_proxy: external: true
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How to Bake A Python Package Cake🐍+📦=🎂
Pywhoami is inspired by the whoami Go server by Traefik Labs. Send a request to one of the endpoints to get back details from your HTTP request. With pywhoami you can help answer questions like, what headers were added to my original request by a proxy server.
black
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How to setup Black and pre-commit in python for auto text-formatting on commit
$ git commit -m "add pre-commit configuration" [INFO] Initializing environment for https://github.com/psf/black. [INFO] Installing environment for https://github.com/psf/black. [INFO] Once installed this environment will be reused. [INFO] This may take a few minutes... black................................................(no files to check)Skipped [main 6e21eab] add pre-commit configuration 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+)
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Enhance Your Project Quality with These Top Python Libraries
Black: Known as “The Uncompromising Code Formatter”, Black automatically formats your Python code to conform to the PEP 8 style guide. It takes away the hassle of having to manually adjust your code style.
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Uv: Python Packaging in Rust
black @ git+https://github.com/psf/black
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Let's meet Black: Python Code Formatting
In the realm of Python development, there is a multitude of code formatters that adhere to PEP 8 guidelines. Today, we will briefly discuss how to install and utilize black.
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Show HN: Visualize the Entropy of a Codebase with a 3D Force-Directed Graph
Perfect, that worked, thank you!
I thought this could be solved by changing the directory to src/ and then executing that command, but this didn't work.
This also seems to be an issue with the web app, e.g. the repository for the formatter black is only one white dot https://dep-tree-explorer.vercel.app/api?repo=https://github...
- Introducing Flask-Muck: How To Build a Comprehensive Flask REST API in 5 Minutes
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Embracing Modern Python for Web Development
Ruff is not only much faster, but it is also very convenient to have an all-in-one solution that replaces multiple other widely used tools: Flake8 (linter), isort (imports sorting), Black (code formatter), autoflake, many Flake8 plugins and more. And it has drop-in parity with these tools, so it is really straightforward to migrate from them to Ruff.
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Auto-formater for Android (Kotlin)
What I am looking for is something like Black for Python, which is opinionated, with reasonable defaults, and auto-fixes most/all issues.
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Releasing my Python Project
1. LICENSE: This file contains information about the rights and permissions granted to users regarding the use, modification, distribution, and sharing of the software. I already had an MIT License in my project. 2. pyproject.toml: It is a configuration file typically used for specifying build requirements and backend build systems for Python projects. I was already using this file for Black code formatter configuration. 3. README.md: Used as a documentation file for your project, typically includes project overview, installation instructions and optionally, contribution instructions. 4. example_package_YOUR_USERNAME_HERE: One big change I had to face was restructuring my project, essentially packaging all files in this directory. The name of this directory should be what you want to name your package and shoud not conflict with any of the existing packages. Of course, since its a Python Package, it needs to have an __init__.py. 5. tests/: This is where you put all your unit and integration tests, I think its optional as not all projects will have tests. The rest of the project remains as is.
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Lute v3 - installed software for learning foreign languages through reading
using pylint and black ("the uncompromising code formatter")
What are some alternatives?
traefik-tutorial-docker-compose-files
autopep8 - A tool that automatically formats Python code to conform to the PEP 8 style guide.
traefik - The Cloud Native Application Proxy
prettier - Prettier is an opinionated code formatter.
docker-socket-proxy - Proxy over your Docker socket to restrict which requests it accepts
yapf - A formatter for Python files
make-my-server - Docker Compose with Traefik and lots of services
Pylint - It's not just a linter that annoys you!
sampleproject - A sample project that exists for PyPUG's "Tutorial on Packaging and Distributing Projects"
ruff - An extremely fast Python linter and code formatter, written in Rust.
pywhoami - A Simple HTTP Request Analysis Server
isort - A Python utility / library to sort imports.