xmonad
hadolint
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xmonad | hadolint | |
---|---|---|
76 | 24 | |
3,236 | 9,677 | |
0.6% | 1.5% | |
7.9 | 2.3 | |
about 1 month ago | 29 days ago | |
Haskell | Haskell | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
xmonad
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Installing Xmonad on Arch
The official guide and the archwiki do say that it's okay to just install it via pacman, but I've also found some issues on the official repo that strongly suggest against installing via pacman and to use stack instead, as sometimes pacman breaks dependencies.
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Is it just me or it nix becoming more common
Especially Haskell tools often live in proximity to nix as well, e.g., pandoc or xmonad.
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[Media] shrs: a shell that is configurable and extensible in rust
Hey everyone đź‘‹ ! I'm currently working on a rust library for building and configuring your own shell! It's inspired by projects like xmonad and penrose where the configuration of the program is done in code. This means that for example, instead of using Bash's arcane syntax for configuring the prompt, it can be configured instead using a rust builder pattern! The project itself is still at a very young stage, so there are plenty of bugs and unimplemented features. However, some things that are (partially) implemented are:
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Genuine question: how do you all use Haskell IRL?
Daily, because xmonad
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MultiToggle is toggling layout on all workspaces when using WorkspaceCursors
If the problem is as described in the reply linked below, then this isn't a fundamental issue, but just a matter of how sendMessage is written. In fact, the fix already exists in xmonad/432:2fff2a0.
- home | xmonad - the tiling window manager that rocks
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What LaTeX setup do you use?
There are a few other things I could mention, but there are more like side issues, and not relevant to my actual LaTeX setup. First and foremost—and thus perhaps noteworthy after all—is bibliography management with arxiv-citation (see here for more words). This is integrated very well with the XMonad window manager, which makes it even more of a joy to use.
- Developers How Do You Organize your Windows
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Floating Steam windows slide off the screen
The tl;dr is that this is a bug in steam, see https://github.com/xmonad/xmonad/issues/423
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My Arch linux desktop configuration
And here is my Xmonad configuration
hadolint
- Dockerfile Linter
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Writing a Minecraft server from scratch in Bash (2022)
To skip the "move your scripts to standalone files" step some devs don't like, consider something like https://github.com/hadolint/hadolint which runs Shellcheck over inline scripts within Containerfiles.
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I reduced the size of my Docker image by 40% – Dockerizing shell scripts
This is neat :)
I love going and making containers smaller and faster to build.
I don't know if it's useful for alpine, but adding a --mount=type=cache argument to the RUN command that `apk add`s might shave a few seconds off rebuilds. Probably not worth it, in your case, unless you're invalidating the cached layer often (adding or removing deps, intentionally building without layer caching to ensure you have the latest packages).
Hadolint is another tool worth checking out if you like spending time messing with Dockerfiles: https://github.com/hadolint/hadolint
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Top 10 common Dockerfile linting issues
With Depot, we make use of two Dockerfile linters, hadolint and a set of Dockerfile linter rules that Semgrep has written to make a bit of a smarter Dockerfile linter.
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hadolint - Dockerfile linter
# Download hadolint wget https://github.com/hadolint/hadolint/releases/download/v2.12.0/hadolint-Linux-x86_64 # Download SHA256 checksum wget https://github.com/hadolint/hadolint/releases/download/v2.12.0/hadolint-Linux-x86_64.sha256 # Validate the checksum sha256sum -c hadolint-Linux-x86_64.sha256 # Make the file executable chmod + ./hadolint-Linux-x86_64 # Rename the file mv hadolint-Linux-x86_64 hadolint
- Haskell Dockerfile Linter
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Is adding a USER best practice?
The most common linter I've seen and used it Hadolint, which does: https://github.com/hadolint/hadolint/wiki/DL3002 I didn't bother checking to see if alternatives also support this as well though.
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Checkmake: Experimental Linter/Analyzer for Makefiles
Some discussion on that here:
https://github.com/koalaman/shellcheck/issues/58
The hadolint project does shell checking for Dockerfiles and it uses shellcheck:
https://github.com/hadolint/hadolint
So the approach is definitely feasible, but you do need a new project and probably it needs to be written in Haskell.
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Dokter: the doctor for your Dockerfiles
how does this compare to something like hadolint?
Also, have you run across Hadolint for linting? https://github.com/hadolint/hadolint
What are some alternatives?
Hyprland - Hyprland is a highly customizable dynamic tiling Wayland compositor that doesn't sacrifice on its looks.
trivy - Find vulnerabilities, misconfigurations, secrets, SBOM in containers, Kubernetes, code repositories, clouds and more
i3 - A tiling window manager for X11
dockle - Container Image Linter for Security, Helping build the Best-Practice Docker Image, Easy to start
dotfiles-2.0 - XMonad™️. Widgets go brr.
docker-bench-security - The Docker Bench for Security is a script that checks for dozens of common best-practices around deploying Docker containers in production.
Arch-Linux-xmonad-setup-guide
stan - 🕵️ Haskell STatic ANalyser
dotfiles
hlint - Haskell source code suggestions
xmonad-contrib - Contributed modules for xmonad
grype - A vulnerability scanner for container images and filesystems