Stars
Monorepository with libraries used by the containers projects.
Database for AI. Store Vectors, Images, Texts, Videos, etc. Use with LLMs/LangChain. Store, query, version, & visualize any AI data. Stream data in real-time to PyTorch/TensorFlow. https://activelo…
Continuous delivery and package management for Kubernetes.
A very fast, portable and hackable fuzzy finder for the terminal.
A solution for implementing efficient and consistent software delivery to Kubernetes facilitating best practices.
Not UFO in the sky, but an ultra fold in Neovim.
A markup-based typesetting system that is powerful and easy to learn.
The missing glue to put together large Kubernetes deployments, composed of multiple smaller parts (Helm/Kustomize/...) in a manageable and unified way.
A Kubernetes controller to watch changes in ConfigMap and Secrets and do rolling upgrades on Pods with their associated Deployment, StatefulSet, DaemonSet and DeploymentConfig – [✩Star] if you're u…
Performant, batteries-included completion plugin for Neovim
A fully-featured 🤏 HTTP-client 🐼 interface 🖥️ for Neovim ❤️.
Gateway API Benchmarks provides a common set of tests to evaluate a Gateway API implementation.
⎈ Streamline your Kubernetes management within Neovim—control and monitor your cluster seamlessly, all without leaving your coding environment.
Kamaji is the Hosted Control Plane Manager for Kubernetes.
An open-source, next-generation "runc" that empowers rootless containers to run workloads such as Systemd, Docker, Kubernetes, just like VMs.
Go library and CLIs for working with container registries
Karpenter is a Kubernetes Node Autoscaler built for flexibility, performance, and simplicity.
We write your reusable computer vision tools. 💜
How to implement Stripe without going mad
Learn the basics of robotics through hands-on experience using ROS 2 and Gazebo simulation.
A modern Anki custom scheduling based on Free Spaced Repetition Scheduler algorithm
Karpenter is a Kubernetes Node Autoscaler built for flexibility, performance, and simplicity.
A discussion between John Ousterhout and Robert Martin about differences between John's book "A Philosophy of Software Design" and Bob's book "Clean Code".