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Sebastián Zaffarano

Docker Hub deprecation for v1.5 clients Nov 19. - sebas@zaffarano.com.ar - Correo de za... - 1 views

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    "This is a second reminder about the upcoming deprecation for support of clients versioned 1.5 earlier in Docker Hub. Pushes for these clients to Docker Hub will be disabled next Thursday, November 19."
Pablo Lalloni

robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh - 0 views

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    A community-driven framework for managing your zsh configuration. Includes 40+ optional plugins (rails, git, OSX, hub, capistrano, brew, ant, macports, etc), over 80 terminal themes to spice up your morning, and an auto-update tool so that makes it easy to keep up with the latest updates from the community.
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    Excelentes configuraciones de prompt y auto-completar para trabajo con git y git-flow!
Pablo Lalloni

Running Secured Docker Registry 2.0 - Container Solutions - 0 views

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    "The new Docker Registry 2.0 was released on April 16th, 2015. It was completely rewritten in Go with added support for the new Docker Registry HTTP API V2 (thus only working with Docker 1.6+), promising to provide faster and more secure distribution of images. If you work with Docker and for some reason decided not to use the public Docker Hub, a private Docker Registry is an essential part of your architecture. But even if you don't have private images, you will likely need to use your own registry in production/testing for efficiency. The default installation, however, runs without encryption and authentication. I was wondering what's involved in securing it. There is an official tutorial on how to configure TLS on a registry server. TLS/SSL is absolutely necessary for any secure setup, but I also wanted to enable an authentication mechanism. The Configuration Reference document describes two authentication options supported by Docker Registry itself: so-called silly and token solutions. The silly one is apparently only useful for very limited development use-cases. The token solution seems to be more serious, but because of the lack of documentation (at the time of writing), I decided to find an alternative approach to secure it. In this article I'm going to show you how to set up the Docker Registry 2.0 with username/password authentication and SSL using the official Docker Registry image and a custom configured nginx as a proxy server."
Pablo Lalloni

lyda/hdfs-docker-registry Repository | Docker Hub Registry - Repositories of Docker Images - 3 views

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    "This is an HDFS based docker-registry."
Pablo Lalloni

jwilder/nginx-proxy Repository | Docker Hub Registry - Repositories of Docker Images - 1 views

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    "Automated Nginx reverse proxy for docker containers"
Chancha Mazzoni

Jonathan Bergknoff: Building good docker images - 0 views

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    The [docker registry](https://registry.hub.docker.com/) is bursting at the seams. At the time of this writing, a search for "node" gets just under 1000 hits. How does one choose? ## What constitutes a good docker image? This is a subjective matter, but I have some criteria for a docker image that I consider good: * **working**.
Pablo Lalloni

Cloudbreak - 1 views

  • Docker is an open platform for developers and sysadmins to build, ship, and run distributed applications. Consisting of Docker Engine, a portable, lightweight runtime and packaging tool, and Docker Hub, a cloud service for sharing applications and automating workflows, Docker enables apps to be quickly assembled from components and eliminates the friction between development, QA, and production environments. As a result, IT can ship faster and run the same app, unchanged, on laptops, data center VMs, and any cloud. The main features of Docker are: Lightweight, portable Build once, run anywhere VM - without the overhead of a VM Each virtualised application includes not only the application and the necessary binaries and libraries, but also an entire guest operating system The Docker Engine container comprises just the application and its dependencies. It runs as an isolated process in userspace on the host operating system, sharing the kernel with other containers. Containers are isolated It can be automated and scripted
    • Pablo Lalloni
       
      Probablemente la mejor descripción corta de docker que he leído en solo un párrafo y una lista de features. Deberíamos usarla. 
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    "Cloudbreak is a RESTful Hadoop as a Service API. Once it is deployed in your favourite servlet container exposes a REST API allowing to span up Hadoop clusters of arbitrary sizes on your selected cloud provider. Provisioning Hadoop has never been easier. Cloudbreak is built on the foundation of cloud providers API (Amazon AWS, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Compute...), Apache Ambari, Docker containers, Serf and dnsmasq."
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