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Coolify
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Based on our record, Coolify should be more popular than StackGres. It has been mentiond 96 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Coolify puts those tasks behind a web interface. It is an open-source, self-hosted platform for deploying applications and databases to infrastructure you control. - Source: dev.to / 1 day ago
That's the gap Coolify walks into. It promises the thing a lot of teams have been quietly thinking: why pay $20 per seat or $25 per process to a US platform when a $6 server hosts the same app? The answer isn't "never" and it isn't "always." It's a calculation โ and that calculation has one line item both sides conveniently leave off the landing page. - Source: dev.to / 3 days ago
Install Coolify (free, open source) on a VPS and deploy Memos from its catalog. You get a web UI and auto-updates, but Coolify itself wants ~2 GB of RAM, which is heavier than the app it is managing. Worth it only if you are already running Coolify for other apps. - Source: dev.to / about 1 month ago
Coolify is a self-hosted PaaS. Deploy from git, automatic SSL, databases โ basically Vercel/Heroku but on your own $5/month VPS. - Source: dev.to / 3 months ago
Before getting to know why we switch from cloud to coolify, ask yourself "what is the cloud?". - Source: dev.to / 5 months ago
At StackGres [1] we find Timescale to be one of the most used extensions. Timescale is quite a successful project! StackGres is actually the first solution recommended by Timescale for self-hosting with Kubernetes operators [2]. So if you are into Kubernetes (or if not, consider it, using something like K3s [3] is quite straightforward and lightweight on resources), this is probably a great option to self-host... - Source: Hacker News / 20 days ago
* Latency. Yes, yes, yes, they add "microseconds" vs "milliseconds for queries", and that's true, but just part of the story. There's an extra hop. There's two extra sets of TCP layers being traversed. If the hop is local (say a sidecar, as we do in StackGres) it adds complexity in its deployment and management (something we solved by automation, but was an extra problem to solve) and consumes resources. If it's a... - Source: Hacker News / 5 months ago
This is conceptually similar to what we did for Postgres extensions at the StackGres [1] project. I gave a talk at a Kubecon about it [2]. However, this scheme is not perfect. Some Kubernetes security solutions enforce immutable containers, and once the agent pulls any additional file into the container, it will be flagged. It's also harder to reason about the security of the image (think CVEs, etc), given that... - Source: Hacker News / 11 months ago
I applaud the decision to use AGPL-3.0. For me, it's a license that provides forward guarantees to the Community: no proprietary forks can happen, so any fork will be an OSS fork from which the upstream project may benefit too, which benefits all users. That's the reason we chose this license for StackGres [1], another project in the Postgres space. [1]: https://stackgres.io. - Source: Hacker News / about 2 years ago
This is good and interesting recipe to get Keycloak and Postgres on Kubernetes. There is an important improvement, though: the Postgres deployed here is not production ready (high availability, backups, monitoring, etc). We run Keycloak on StackGres [1] which gives us production-ready Postgres setup (disclaimer: it's dogfooding). Happy to share the YAML manifests used to deploy Keycloak with StackGres. Maybe we... - Source: Hacker News / about 3 years ago
Railway - Made for any language, for projects big and small.
Kubernetes - Kubernetes is an open source orchestration system for Docker containers
Netlify - Build, deploy and host your static site or app with a drag and drop interface and automatic delpoys from GitHub or Bitbucket
TiDB - A distributed NewSQL database compatible with MySQL protocol
Heroku - Agile deployment platform for Ruby, Node.js, Clojure, Java, Python, and Scala. Setup takes only minutes and deploys are instant through git. Leave tedious server maintenance to Heroku and focus on your code.
Google Cloud Spanner - Google Cloud Spanner is a horizontally scalable, globally consistent, relational database service.