A modern OS for Kubernetes. Talos is a modern OS for running Kubernetes: secure, immutable, and minimal. Talos is fully open source, production-ready, and supported by the people at Sidero Labs All system management is done via an API - there is no shell or interactive console. Benefits include: Security: Talos reduces your attack surface: It's minimal, hardened, and immutable. All API access is s
What is Talos Linux?Talos Linux is Linux designed for Kubernetes – secure, immutable, and minimal. Supports cloud platforms, bare metal, and virtualization platformsAll system management is done via an API. No SSH, shell or consoleProduction ready: supports some of the largest Kubernetes clusters in the worldOpen source project from the team at Sidero Labs
Introduction In the modern era, software is commonly delivered as a service: called web apps, or software-as-a-service. The twelve-factor app is a methodology for building software-as-a-service apps that: Use declarative formats for setup automation, to minimize time and cost for new developers joining the project; Have a clean contract with the underlying operating system, offering maximum portab
Isopod is an expressive DSL framework for Kubernetes configuration. Without intermediate YAML artifacts, Isopod renders Kubernetes objects as Protocol Buffers, so they are strongly typed and consumed directly by the Kubernetes API. With Isopod, configurations are scripted in Starlark, a Python dialect by Google also used by Bazel and Buck build systems. Isopod offers runtime built-ins to access se
Installing Alpine Linux on a FreeBSD Jail Alpine Linux is one of my favorite Linux distributions, particularly for specialized purposes. I recently faced the task of moving an Alpine Linux-based VPS onto a FreeBSD host and considered two approaches: 1. Moving the VPS to bhyve on FreeBSD The simplest and more conventional method involves transferring the VPS to the FreeBSD host and running it on bh
Ever wondered how Linux Containers worked ??? Currently, Docker is one of the most popular and prevalent container implementations. Containers run on top of the same Operating System kernel, but isolate the application processes running inside them from one another. One of the secret sauces behind containers is Namespaces. A Namespace abstracts global system resources, such as, host names, user ID
New List: Use --list to explore a Pack file, and it will print a list of all files.Partial Unpack: To unpack a specific file or folder in a Pack file, use --include.Pro notes: To list an specific folder, you can use --include together with --list.You can use multiple --include to unpack or list in one go. It will use an optimized algorithm to process each item just once.The --include command also
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