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I have a lot of open source projects. Even more with Glider Labs. Some of them are fairly popular. All of them get me excited. But most of them also bum me out. I'm going to share one of the reasons I've had to take a break for the past couple months, and why all my repositories are now looking for more maintainers. Open source is hard. It seems easy, though. You just write a piece of software and
Today I'm excited to announce that Dokku is now sponsored by my friends of the Deis project. This means that OpDemand, the company behind Deis, will be funding part-time development of Dokku and its components. Remember Dokku? A little over a year ago, I announced Dokku as an open source "Docker powered mini-Heroku." It quickly became the first killer application for Docker. Designed to be simple
You're reading the blog of Jeff Lindsay (@progrium). There is also his wiki. No matter which service discovery system you use, it will not likely know how to register your services for you. Service discovery requires your services to somehow announce themselves to the service directory. This is not as trivial as it sounds. There are many approaches to do this, each with their own pros and cons. In
You're reading the blog of Jeff Lindsay (@progrium). There is also his wiki. Consul is a powerful tool for building distributed systems. There are a handful of alternatives in this space, but Consul is the only one that really tries to provide a comprehensive solution for service discovery. As my last post points out, service discovery is a little more than what Consul can provide us, but it is pr
You're reading the blog of Jeff Lindsay (@progrium). There is also his wiki. Over the next few posts, I'm going to be exploring the concepts of service discovery in modern service-oriented architectures, specifically around Docker. Many people aren't familiar with service discovery, so I have to start from the beginning. In this post I'm going to be explaining the problem and providing some histor
You're reading the blog of Jeff Lindsay (@progrium). There is also his wiki. Back in 2007 I started thinking and talking a lot about an idea called webhooks. Over the following few years I started evangelizing it. I spent a lot of my free time giving talks and building tools around the idea of webhooks. Some of these tools are still around today, including Localtunnel and RequestBin (originally Po
You're reading the blog of Jeff Lindsay (@progrium). There is also his wiki. Dokku is a mini-Heroku powered by Docker written in less than 100 lines of Bash. Once it's set up on a host, you can push Heroku-compatible applications to it via Git. They'll build using Heroku buildpacks and then run in isolated containers. The end result is your own, single-host version of Heroku. Dokku is under 100 li
$ gem install localtunnel $ localtunnel 8000 share this url: http://xyz.localtunnel.com STEP 1: Install localtunnel using RubyGems. Check the full README if you don't have Ruby or RubyGems. $ sudo gem install localtunnel STEP 2: Run your local web server on any port! Let's say you're running Apache on port 8080. STEP 3: Now run localtunnel passing it the port to share. The first time you run local
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