workerd
helmfile
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workerd | helmfile | |
---|---|---|
37 | 39 | |
5,681 | 4,024 | |
5.6% | - | |
9.9 | 0.0 | |
2 days ago | almost 1 year ago | |
C++ | Go | |
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.
workerd
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Cloudflare acquires PartyKit to allow developers to build real-time multi-user
Standards bodies only standardize things after they've been proven to work. You can't standardize a new idea before offering it to the market. It's hard enough to get just one vendor to experiment with an idea (it literally took me years to convince everyone inside Cloudflare that we should build Durable Objects). Getting N competing vendors to agree on it -- before anything has been proven in the market -- is simply not possible.
But the Durable Objects API is not complicated and there's nothing stopping competing platforms from building a compatible product if they want. Much of the implementation is open source, even. In fact, if you build an app on DO but decide you don't want to host it on Cloudflare, you can self-host it on workerd:
https://github.com/cloudflare/workerd
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Python Cloudflare Workers
In any case, I welcome this initiative with my open hands and look forward all the cool apps that people will now build with this!
[1] https://pyodide.org/
[2] https://github.com/cloudflare/workerd/blob/main/docs/pyodide...
[3] https://github.com/cloudflare/workerd/pull/1875
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LLRT: A low-latency JavaScript runtime from AWS
For ref:
- https://blog.cloudflare.com/workerd-open-source-workers-runt...
- https://github.com/cloudflare/workerd
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A list of JavaScript engines, runtimes, interpreters
workerd
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WinterJS
I think this is for people who want to run their own cloudflare workers (sort of) and since nobody wants to run full node for that, they want a small runtime that just executes js/wasm in an isolated way. But I wonder why they don't tell me how I can be sure that this is safe or how it's safe. Surely I can't just trust them and it explicitly mentions that it still has file IO so clearly there is still work I need to do customize the isolation further. But then they don't show any info on that core usecase. But then that's probably because they don't really want you to use this to run it on your own, they are selling you on running things on their edge platform called "Wasmer Edge". So that's probably why this is so light on information.. the motivation isn't to get you to use this yourself, just to use this their hosted edge platform. But then I wonder why I wouldn't just use https://github.com/cloudflare/workerd which is also open source. Surely that is fast enough? If not then it should show some benchmarks?
- Cloudflare workers is adopting Ada URL parser
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Cap'n Proto 1.0
i love how the main reference for workerd can be just one capnp file.
https://github.com/cloudflare/workerd/blob/main/src/workerd/...
this changed my world how i think about computing on the web.
if there was just a good enough js library as for lua and you could directly send capnp messages to workerd instead of always going through files. I guess one day i have to relearn c++ and understand how the internals actually work.
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Cloudflare Workers Introduces Connect() API to Create TCP Sockets
A significant chunk of it is open source: https://github.com/cloudflare/workerd/
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JSON with multiline strings
Some of the configuration files for applications wind up being an entire language unto themselves, e.g., https://github.com/cloudflare/workerd/blob/1b5057f2bfcfedf146f6f79ff04e99903d55412b/src/workerd/io/compatibility-date.capnp
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Am I out of touch for trying to limit my stack to containers?
Edge runtimes are very good alternatives to containers that shouldn't be dismissed for "not being containers". They're often faster, more scalable, and cheaper than containers. Them being so lightweight also enable a "nanoservice architecture" – being able to run every service on a single computer instead of running different services on different computers and having to deal with network latency and unreliability.
helmfile
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Deploy IRIS Application to Azure Using CircleCI
What we’re going to install into the newly created AKS cluster is located in the helm directory. The descriptive Helmfile approach enables us to define applications and their settings in the helmfile.yaml file.
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[2022] [Updated] Alternative to Helmfile
Is there any alternative to https://github.com/roboll/helmfile you are currently using in your company.
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Projectsveltos: Manage Kubernetes addons in multiple clusters
Interesting, I have approached this problem using Helmfile (https://github.com/roboll/helmfile) to define a “platform release package.”
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How are you handling ILM on kubernetes?
To make managing the Helm deployments a little easier I used helmfile (https://github.com/roboll/helmfile).
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Helm Charts Microservices
But in general it's always easier to keep things quite separated. Meaning in separate helm releases. If you want to be able to manage things "together" at will, then you can use helmfile ( https://github.com/roboll/helmfile )
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How to Build Software Like an SRE
I agree; helm is too declarative.
Whenever I can, I use helmfile[0] for storing variables for helm since it does add a declarative layer on top of helm.
0 - https://github.com/roboll/helmfile
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helmfile sync vs helmfile apply
I went through the Helmfile repo Readme to figure out the difference between helmfile sync and helmfile apply. It seems like unlike the apply command, the sync command doesn't do a diff and helm upgrades the hell out of all releases 😃. But from the word sync, you'd expect the command to apply those releases that have been changed. There is also mention of the potential application of helmfile apply to periodically syncing of releases. Why not use helmfile sync for this purpose? Overall, the difference didn't become crystal clear, and I though there could probably be more to it. So, I'm asking.
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Managing multiple repos
helmfile is something i’ve used in the past for this https://github.com/roboll/helmfile
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Helm is both "package manager" and "templating engine" - probably the best package manager but horrible template engine
I always felt like dependencies in helm are for very simple non-coupled packages. I many times use Helmfile (https://github.com/roboll/helmfile) to manage dependencies instead of banging my head with vanilla Helm.
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So I've installed grafana, loki, and prometheus on the personal Kubernetes cluster via Terraform. Now what?
Once you do that, learn to create dynamic helm charts that use go templating and conditionals: https://github.com/roboll/helmfile
What are some alternatives?
cloudflare-docs - Cloudflare’s documentation
flux2 - Open and extensible continuous delivery solution for Kubernetes. Powered by GitOps Toolkit.
js-compute-runtime - JavaScript SDK and runtime for building Fastly Compute applications
cdk8s - Define Kubernetes native apps and abstractions using object-oriented programming
lagon - Deploy Serverless Functions at the Edge. Current status: Alpha
helmsman - Helm Charts as Code
fauna-schema-migrate - The Fauna Schema Migrate tool helps you set up Fauna resources as code and perform schema migrations.
kustomize - Customization of kubernetes YAML configurations
windmill - Open-source developer platform to turn scripts into workflows and UIs. Fastest workflow engine (5x vs Airflow). Open-source alternative to Airplane and Retool.
helm-operator - Successor: https://github.com/fluxcd/helm-controller — The Flux Helm Operator, once upon a time a solution for declarative Helming.
go - The Go programming language
terraform - Terraform enables you to safely and predictably create, change, and improve infrastructure. It is a source-available tool that codifies APIs into declarative configuration files that can be shared amongst team members, treated as code, edited, reviewed, and versioned.