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  3. I’ve had a similar awakening a few months when realising that GitHub shows you the cost of free-for-open-source Actions usage.

I’ve had a similar awakening a few months when realising that GitHub shows you the cost of free-for-open-source Actions usage.

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  • mms@mastodon.bsd.cafeM mms@mastodon.bsd.cafe

    @otfrom @janl there are plans for distributed compute for llm providers... so I guess all other ways will be outlawed soon.

    otfrom@functional.cafeO This user is from outside of this forum
    otfrom@functional.cafeO This user is from outside of this forum
    otfrom@functional.cafe
    wrote last edited by
    #21

    @mms @janl that... That... Ugh

    mms@mastodon.bsd.cafeM 1 Reply Last reply
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    • janl@narrativ.esJ janl@narrativ.es

      RE: https://grrl.me/@soph/116586772000163018

      I’ve had a similar awakening a few months when realising that GitHub shows you the cost of free-for-open-source Actions usage. On of my decidedly low-traffic but big test suite (173 checks) would cost thousands of dollars per month.

      I have come to the inevitable conclusion that they’ve played us all for fools. We all have infinitely fast dev machines, but we need to rent a dev machine’s worth of servers every month to run an open source project?

      Absolutely not.

      adingbatponder@fosstodon.orgA This user is from outside of this forum
      adingbatponder@fosstodon.orgA This user is from outside of this forum
      adingbatponder@fosstodon.org
      wrote last edited by
      #22

      @janl What confuses me is that there are TW of energy used in the social media in slagging off AI use for coding and attacking those who might admit to using it, but not a sausage of FOSS effort I can see on making a better tool than these expensive tech bro LLMs. Am really perplexed that FOSS efforts seems to have been defeated by next big thing: training & providing free models that compete with the expensive stuff in speed & quality & give users what they want: off-line, all params known.

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      • fedops@fosstodon.orgF fedops@fosstodon.org

        @OmegaPolice wonder why...

        What happened to Dagger specifically?

        @jwildeboer @janl

        omegapolice@hachyderm.ioO This user is from outside of this forum
        omegapolice@hachyderm.ioO This user is from outside of this forum
        omegapolice@hachyderm.io
        wrote last edited by
        #23

        @fedops @jwildeboer @janl Ah, I seem to have misremembered. They still advertise "local-first", even though they have a cloud offering. IIRC what interested me was their DSL which they abandoned.

        Earthly went commercial (which somewhat precludes local-first, doesn't it?) but apparently didn't make it. 🫤

        Haven't seen anything except Jenkins, GitLab, GitHub in the enterprise myself.

        fedops@fosstodon.orgF 1 Reply Last reply
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        • omegapolice@hachyderm.ioO omegapolice@hachyderm.io

          @fedops @jwildeboer @janl Ah, I seem to have misremembered. They still advertise "local-first", even though they have a cloud offering. IIRC what interested me was their DSL which they abandoned.

          Earthly went commercial (which somewhat precludes local-first, doesn't it?) but apparently didn't make it. 🫤

          Haven't seen anything except Jenkins, GitLab, GitHub in the enterprise myself.

          fedops@fosstodon.orgF This user is from outside of this forum
          fedops@fosstodon.orgF This user is from outside of this forum
          fedops@fosstodon.org
          wrote last edited by
          #24

          @OmegaPolice yeah. We did use Teamcity for a while, but of course nowadays most stuff is azure devops because msft. Plus Jenkins, but on a server and not on dev machines.

          @jwildeboer @janl

          omegapolice@hachyderm.ioO 1 Reply Last reply
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          • janl@narrativ.esJ janl@narrativ.es

            @diazona it’s a bit bursty, so averaging is tough

            diazona@techhub.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
            diazona@techhub.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
            diazona@techhub.social
            wrote last edited by
            #25

            @janl Ah yeah fair enough

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            • janl@narrativ.esJ janl@narrativ.es

              The consequence for me is working on and supporting CI solutions thay can be run anywhere and still provide a reliable build environment.

              I’m so done with everything we do is renting a variable markup on the cost of AWS, Azure or GCP.

              There is not reason we shouldn’t be able to (paraphrasing) run `brew install ci-server` and have a system stood up that can run tests under almost any OS/arch/env combination on any* dev box.

              *macOS licensing complicates things, but the point stands.

              varx@infosec.exchangeV This user is from outside of this forum
              varx@infosec.exchangeV This user is from outside of this forum
              varx@infosec.exchange
              wrote last edited by
              #26

              @janl Yeah, what the heck is up with Mac dev licensing? I wanted to cross-compile a Rust crate for Mac and found I would have to sign some sort of contract.

              ...so I just don't compile for Mac.

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • janl@narrativ.esJ janl@narrativ.es

                RE: https://grrl.me/@soph/116586772000163018

                I’ve had a similar awakening a few months when realising that GitHub shows you the cost of free-for-open-source Actions usage. On of my decidedly low-traffic but big test suite (173 checks) would cost thousands of dollars per month.

                I have come to the inevitable conclusion that they’ve played us all for fools. We all have infinitely fast dev machines, but we need to rent a dev machine’s worth of servers every month to run an open source project?

                Absolutely not.

                6@possum.city6 This user is from outside of this forum
                6@possum.city6 This user is from outside of this forum
                6@possum.city
                wrote last edited by
                #27

                @janl@narrativ.es I mean, the cloud's always been good only for wildly variable loads, if you have a stable load, then owning your own stuff's always better in the long run
                but "the cloud" shines in "oh dang I need 10x more resources this weekend for an event" sorta stuff (or "oh no the project got on HN/slashdot/youtube/whatever and blew up in popularity and now there's so many more people doing stuff")
                also some minor other benefits, like supposed 24/7 availability, but github's stuff doesn't have that anyway, lol, and unless you have a very busy project, having even a whole day of downtime is probably not gonna be all too bad anyway, lol

                and technically, having a multi-user build system is a more efficient use of resources but...you can afford a bit of waste when self-hosting, who cares that you have a machine idling 24/7 in the corner, the idle usage's pretty negligible generally

                janl@narrativ.esJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                • 6@possum.city6 6@possum.city

                  @janl@narrativ.es I mean, the cloud's always been good only for wildly variable loads, if you have a stable load, then owning your own stuff's always better in the long run
                  but "the cloud" shines in "oh dang I need 10x more resources this weekend for an event" sorta stuff (or "oh no the project got on HN/slashdot/youtube/whatever and blew up in popularity and now there's so many more people doing stuff")
                  also some minor other benefits, like supposed 24/7 availability, but github's stuff doesn't have that anyway, lol, and unless you have a very busy project, having even a whole day of downtime is probably not gonna be all too bad anyway, lol

                  and technically, having a multi-user build system is a more efficient use of resources but...you can afford a bit of waste when self-hosting, who cares that you have a machine idling 24/7 in the corner, the idle usage's pretty negligible generally

                  janl@narrativ.esJ This user is from outside of this forum
                  janl@narrativ.esJ This user is from outside of this forum
                  janl@narrativ.es
                  wrote last edited by
                  #28

                  @6 I’m older than the cloud, I don’t need it explained to me 🙂

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                  • otfrom@functional.cafeO otfrom@functional.cafe

                    @mms @janl that... That... Ugh

                    mms@mastodon.bsd.cafeM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mms@mastodon.bsd.cafeM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mms@mastodon.bsd.cafe
                    wrote last edited by
                    #29

                    @otfrom @janl Exactly...

                    and if this goes into fruition, I'm 99,999% sure they will pay with tokens 😜

                    otfrom@functional.cafeO 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • fedops@fosstodon.orgF fedops@fosstodon.org

                      @OmegaPolice yeah. We did use Teamcity for a while, but of course nowadays most stuff is azure devops because msft. Plus Jenkins, but on a server and not on dev machines.

                      @jwildeboer @janl

                      omegapolice@hachyderm.ioO This user is from outside of this forum
                      omegapolice@hachyderm.ioO This user is from outside of this forum
                      omegapolice@hachyderm.io
                      wrote last edited by
                      #30

                      @fedops @jwildeboer @janl Never got to use TeamCity, unfortunately.

                      Ugh, AZDO ... had to touch that briefly, what a shit experience.

                      Tekton et al may be interesting in this context. While representing full Kubernetes buy-in, you can self-host a small cluster, even on your dev machine. It's just ... no layer of abstraction regarding builds/pipelines at all, and lots of infra instead.

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • janl@narrativ.esJ janl@narrativ.es

                        RE: https://grrl.me/@soph/116586772000163018

                        I’ve had a similar awakening a few months when realising that GitHub shows you the cost of free-for-open-source Actions usage. On of my decidedly low-traffic but big test suite (173 checks) would cost thousands of dollars per month.

                        I have come to the inevitable conclusion that they’ve played us all for fools. We all have infinitely fast dev machines, but we need to rent a dev machine’s worth of servers every month to run an open source project?

                        Absolutely not.

                        david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
                        david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
                        david_chisnall@infosec.exchange
                        wrote last edited by
                        #31

                        @janl

                        On of my decidedly low-traffic but big test suite (173 checks) would cost thousands of dollars per month.

                        That's at GitHub's prices though. GitHub uses Azure. Even from the MS financials, calculating the exact price that the VMs cost to operate vs the cost to buy is hard, but the estimates I've read place the markup on the reserved pricing at around 200% (spot price is a lot lower). GitHub's markup is wild: it's close to a factor of ten over the raw VM price. This is why there's such a thriving ecosystem of third-party CI providers around GitHub: it's easy to undercut them.

                        All of this means, that thousands-of-dollars-per-month cost may only be costing tens of dollars to provide.

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                        • mms@mastodon.bsd.cafeM mms@mastodon.bsd.cafe

                          @otfrom @janl Exactly...

                          and if this goes into fruition, I'm 99,999% sure they will pay with tokens 😜

                          otfrom@functional.cafeO This user is from outside of this forum
                          otfrom@functional.cafeO This user is from outside of this forum
                          otfrom@functional.cafe
                          wrote last edited by
                          #32

                          @mms @janl sold my soul at the company store 🎶

                          1 Reply Last reply
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                          • fedops@fosstodon.orgF fedops@fosstodon.org

                            @cararemixed number of builds run is a terrible metric, not only due to resource waste.
                            @janl

                            cararemixed@mastodon.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                            cararemixed@mastodon.socialC This user is from outside of this forum
                            cararemixed@mastodon.social
                            wrote last edited by
                            #33

                            @fedops @janl I'm not suggesting this as much as refocusing. So much is placed on sophisticated CI infrastructure when there might be ways to stage release processes more gradually. We aren't deploying into production from the main branch of most OSS (and if we were we'd probably have our own validation, ie Cloudant services vs official Apache CouchDB releases).

                            I don't want to trivialize the effort either. Software is hard. We still don't need to assume one right way.

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • janl@narrativ.esJ janl@narrativ.es

                              RE: https://grrl.me/@soph/116586772000163018

                              I’ve had a similar awakening a few months when realising that GitHub shows you the cost of free-for-open-source Actions usage. On of my decidedly low-traffic but big test suite (173 checks) would cost thousands of dollars per month.

                              I have come to the inevitable conclusion that they’ve played us all for fools. We all have infinitely fast dev machines, but we need to rent a dev machine’s worth of servers every month to run an open source project?

                              Absolutely not.

                              jfro@social.lolJ This user is from outside of this forum
                              jfro@social.lolJ This user is from outside of this forum
                              jfro@social.lol
                              wrote last edited by
                              #34

                              @janl tho not OSS related, at work we’ve had self hosted runners for our CI for a while now because LOL @ the pricing for minutes specially for macOS or windows CI runners. Being mostly rust builds our minutes add up fast.

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