judo

Simple orchestration & configuration management (by rollcat)

Judo Alternatives

Similar projects and alternatives to judo

NOTE: The number of mentions on this list indicates mentions on common posts plus user suggested alternatives. Hence, a higher number means a better judo alternative or higher similarity.

judo reviews and mentions

Posts with mentions or reviews of judo. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2024-01-24.
  • Ask HN: Why Free Open Source Software?
    2 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 24 Jan 2024
    I maintain two projects that I use daily for both work and personal stuff, that have attracted a modest, but appreciable amount of contributions. In both cases, the codebases are relatively small (500-1k sloc), and laser-focused on doing exactly one thing well.

    I'm very grateful for every contribution, no matter how small - people have found bugs, fixed real problems, done cleanups. The hardest part is telling someone that a feature/idea does not have a place in this project. I think the general emphasis on minimalism tends to help here - I've never had to deal with any drama.

    In terms of workload, again - the minimalist design and extremely clear goals have helped so much. I got trapped by that once before - I volunteered to build an internal automation tool (that saved someone else from doing like 1h/d of work), but literally couldn't spare 1h/mo to maintain it; the cause of the maintenance burden was an influx of changes in the APIs of the external services it integrated. So now I'm much more careful about volunteering to maintain integrations with external tools; in case of these two projects, the targets are SSH and ZFS - both have extremely stable interfaces.

    In both cases it was absolutely worth it to publish and (very lightly) promote the projects; since these are "devops" tools that theoretically have unlimited potential for causing great harm, having any response at all helped reassure me that the code I'm running against production infrastructure has fewer unknown bugs. https://i.pinimg.com/474x/2f/e0/87/2fe08785e8eb112cada6da789...

    The projects: <https://github.com/rollcat/judo>; <https://github.com/rollcat/zfs-autosnap>.

  • Show HN: My Single-File Python Script I Used to Replace Splunk in My Startup
    6 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 21 Sep 2023
    "This simple tool solves X at my org" is probably the most underrated type of project. There's not enough room to overcomplicate something that isn't a core part of the business, it must be practical to maintain, simple&stupid enough so that onboarding is not a hurdle, etc.

    I encourage everyone to share your "splunk in 1kloc of Python" projects! Some of my own:

    - https://github.com/rollcat/judo is Ansible without Python or YAML

    - https://github.com/rollcat/zfs-autosnap manages rolling ZFS snapshots

  • Ask HN: Most interesting tech you built for just yourself?
    149 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 27 Apr 2023
    I've written a minimalist replacement for Ansible. It started as a weekend hack, and I'm still using it daily after 7 years. Perhaps it's not technically impressive, but so wasn't the original UNIX, which served as a direct inspiration: how much work can you do with the simplest design and the least amount of code?

    https://github.com/rollcat/judo

  • The YAML Document from Hell
    19 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 12 Jan 2023
    Ansible and YAML were my primary (de)motivators to create Judo (https://github.com/rollcat/judo). This combo is extremely frustrating: for every line in a (hypothetical) shell script that would do one thing, I needed 3-5 (sometimes many more) lines of YAML. Most people on the team who were just getting started with Ansible, would often do half of their work just shelling out. I would usually push to do things "the Ansible way", but even I had to acknowledge the mental overhead of translating back & forth. I think what finally pushed me over the edge was when we started venturing into compose & k8s, and had to mix & juggle YAML+Jinja in two entirely different contexts, each with its own quirks, bugs, gotchas and brain damage.

    I figured I just need a layer of glue to run shell scripts across a bunch of remote hosts (hence Judo), and otherwise resort to other tooling (like Terraform, AWS CLI, k8s CLI, etc) for problems that don't map to SSH.

  • Quick Tip: Enable Touch ID for Sudo
    8 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 15 Jun 2022
    You're right, once an adversary gains physical access (or even remote access as your main login account), all bets are off. This is the area where the traditional UNIX security model has failed to adapt at all: you need a password to install a random game from apt (a vetted and trusted source), but you don't need a password to install a cryptolocker, or exfiltrate personal data.

    However I like having a password (or some other form of confirmation), just so that I can stop to think for a second, whether what I'm about to do is a good idea.

    What's annoying is that I effectively need two different policies on workstations and on servers, since I still want to be able to escalate privileges from maintenance scripts[1].

    [1]: https://github.com/rollcat/judo/issues/9

  • sake - like make but for servers
    2 projects | /r/golang | 9 Jun 2022
    Hi! I'm the author of judo - it seems like our projects share a lot in common, all the way down to implementation language and license ;) feel free to borrow some inspiration or solutions (e.g. master mode for SSH connections might be useful).
  • Ansible 2.13
    9 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 16 May 2022
  • Ask HN: Have you created programs for only your personal use?
    104 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 13 Apr 2022
    I wrote judo[1] because I was frustrated with Ansible. I wanted a very basic tool that could do 80% of the work in 1% of the code. It has one or two bugs, but I've been using it for personal and work stuff since 2016 and I'm not looking back.

    [1]: https://github.com/rollcat/judo

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Stats

Basic judo repo stats
8
136
0.0
over 1 year ago

rollcat/judo is an open source project licensed under MIT License which is an OSI approved license.

The primary programming language of judo is Go.


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