I really like seeing people’s interesting projects. Even if they are generic or were started just to learn something.

And on top of that, I consider Go to be one of those languages that you can find projects on a pretty diverse range of topics.

So, is there any interesting (or not too) personal Go projects that is in the making, or is already finished?

  • Arghblarg@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Thanks, glad you checked them out! Don’t worry about triggering jobs, it’s a demo instance, doesn’t hurt if you do some builds. There’s a rate limit of 8 jobs concurrently and the build artifacts are cleaned up pretty frequently.

    If you wanted to use it as a local build manager thingie, it would be pretty easy to set up in a container (ugh) or locally and just point at localhost:<port> … with your web browser. But go stuff is usually so easy to build it might not be worth it :)

    Unsure what you mean about the recent job status idea – can you elucidate more? I’m open to cool ideas…

    • whou@lemmy.mlOPM
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      1 year ago

      I meant kinda like what GitHub and GitLab have in its UI, showing the job status from the most recent commit:

      Though it doesn’t even have to be a part of the git repo UI. You can link an image badge in the projects README markdown that fetches the status of the most recent job.

      Almost every Big™ Modern™ project on GitHub/GitLab has something like this. For example, bubbletea has a “build passing” badge that is linked with its most recent job from GitHub CI. shields.io has them too.

      • Arghblarg@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        BTW please have a barf bucket beside you if you examine the source code for bacillus … it’s all inline, raw ad-hoc HTML and javascript to build the UI :). I was thinking of redoing it someday with htmx, without getting too fancy (I am not a web developer and loathe JS in general), but it might add some graceful degradation for non-javascript use of the CI interface (though I don’t know if live updates of build status would even be possible/practical without at least some JS).

      • Arghblarg@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Update: done! I added two endpoints that a page (like a github repo’s README.md) can fetch to get a simple text/plain “lastStatus:n” or image/jpeg pass/fail icon.

        README.md update

        I find my browser doesn’t always show the newest CI status right away though, even though the server sends the JPG with an HTTP Cache-Control: no-cache. Hmmm.

        It’s primitive and doesn’t give all the nice status in your screenshot above like build time, branch name… I should think about it more I suppose.

        Thanks for the idea!