The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning. Learn more →
Oryx Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to Oryx
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pages-gem
A simple Ruby Gem to bootstrap dependencies for setting up and maintaining a local Jekyll environment in sync with GitHub Pages
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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blog.johnnyreilly.com
This is the source code for https://johnnyreilly.com
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
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actions-hugo
GitHub Actions for Hugo ⚡️ Setup Hugo quickly and build your site fast. Hugo extended, Hugo Modules, Linux (Ubuntu), macOS, and Windows are supported.
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setup-python
Set up your GitHub Actions workflow with a specific version of Python
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MSBuild
The Microsoft Build Engine (MSBuild) is the build platform for .NET and Visual Studio.
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nvma
Tool that behaves like nvm-for-windows, but does not require administrative rights
Oryx reviews and mentions
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Azure Static Web App deploying an Angular 16 App
``` App Directory Location: 'src' was found. Looking for event info Starting to build app with Oryx Azure Static Web Apps utilizes Oryx to build both static applications and Azure Functions. You can find more details on Oryx here: https://github.com/microsoft/Oryx ---Oryx build logs---
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Azure Static Web Apps: build app externally
One of the things I like about Azure Static Web Apps is that they can build themselves. You can just push your code to GitHub and they'll build it using a tool called Oryx. This is great for simple scenarios. Actually, it's good for medium to complex scenarios too. However, if you ever get to that "break glass" moment where you need to do something unusual with your build, you can.
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Deploy Azure Static Web Apps using Python
Azure uses a system called Oryx. You don't need to know too much about how it works but it looks for specific files and chooses build specs based on them. If you have a requirements.txt, Oryx will know to use Python. 1
- Microsoft Oryx
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Azure App Service Getting error while deploying REACT JS application
4:48:55 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Starting deployment...4:48:56 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Creating zip package...4:49:00 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Zip package size: 1.09 MB4:49:04 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Fetching changes.4:49:06 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Updating submodules.4:49:06 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Preparing deployment for commit id '2a73dbd291'.4:49:06 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Repository path is /tmp/zipdeploy/extracted4:49:06 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Running oryx build...4:49:06 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Command: oryx build /tmp/zipdeploy/extracted -o /home/site/wwwroot --platform nodejs --platform-version 10 -i /tmp/8d856447f426192 -p compress_node_modules=tar-gz --log-file /tmp/build-debug.log 4:49:07 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Operation performed by Microsoft Oryx, https://github.com/Microsoft/Oryx4:49:07 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: You can report issues at https://github.com/Microsoft/Oryx/issues4:49:07 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Oryx Version: 0.2.20200805.1, Commit: e7c39ede513143e9d80fd553f106f04268d770d4, ReleaseTagName: 20200805.14:49:07 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Build Operation ID: |lvjLop9mFGA=.426fac1c_4:49:07 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Repository Commit : 2a73dbd2834715ba1fee5082d13b604:49:07 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Detecting platforms...4:49:07 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Could not detect any platform in the source directory.4:49:07 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Error: Couldn't detect a version for the platform 'nodejs' in the repo.4:49:09 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Error: Couldn't detect a version for the platform 'nodejs' in the repo.\n/opt/Kudu/Scripts/starter.sh oryx build /tmp/zipdeploy/extracted -o /home/site/wwwroot --platform nodejs --platform-version 10 -i /tmp/8d856447f4292 -p compress_node_modules=tar-gz --log-file /tmp/build-debug.log 4:49:20 pm ppdedsrftwu2-appservice1: Deployment failed. Have defined all the necessary settings in the portal.
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How to run post-build actions in a python/linux webapp?
I need to add post-build actions to complete the deployment; the exceeding common Django task of running "manage.py". Following the general and python-specific docs I have added the an app setting of POST_BUILD_SCRIPT_PATH=postbuild.sh
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Azure Static Web Apps – Custom build and deployments
What exactly StaticSitesClient does is shrouded with mystery, but upon successful build (using Oryx) it creates two zip files: app.zip and api.zip. Then it uploads both to Blob storage and submits a request for ContentDistribution endpoint to pick the assets up.
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Hugo on Azure with Static Web Apps
The GitHub Actions workflow, created in the project repository, does use the Azure Static Web Apps Deploy GitHub action from the marketplace. This reusable Action utilizes Oryx system to build both static applications and Azure Functions for API and then deploys it. You can find more information on Oryx repository at https://github.com/microsoft/Oryx and on how it does detect & build Hugo applications.
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A note from our sponsor - WorkOS
workos.com | 18 Apr 2024
Stats
microsoft/Oryx is an open source project licensed under GNU General Public License v3.0 or later which is an OSI approved license.
The primary programming language of Oryx is C#.