From Azure Functions to FreeBSD
Posted by todsacerdoti 7 days ago
Comments
Comment by adamddev1 6 days ago
I moved away from FreeBSD to Debian for hosting my things because the process/daemon management was too tricky. You seem to have figured out a good solution, but I wanted something simpler like PM2 for automatic process management/restarting/logs. Unfortunately PM2 has an issue [1] that makes it unworkable with FreeBSD. It would be so nice if FreeBSD had a smooth, more declarative way of managing processes.
Comment by jmmv 6 days ago
> I moved away from FreeBSD to Debian for hosting my things because the process/daemon management was too tricky.
It indeed is tricky. To be honest, I wasn't "put off" by it because I've been using BSDs and old-style Linux startup systems for almost 30 years now... but the lack of abstraction shows, and I don't think it's great.
The daemon(8) wrapper is neat to integrate pre-existing servers into rc.d, but I do not fancy having to deal with that "by hand" nor to create a shell script to manage my own service (related from a few years ago: https://jmmv.dev/2020/08/rcd-libexec-etc.html) nor to have something entirely separate to manage log rotation.
As much hate as systemd gets, I do think being declarative (and doing so in a DSL that's not a programming language) and having a true process "supervisor" is a better model. BUT, as I mentioned in this article, I also like the "no churn" of the BSDs because what I learned and refined over ~30 years is still similar to this day and that I won't be bitten by surprises.
Comment by skydhash 1 day ago
I do like the Unix way of having different components handling different tasks instead of having different things which are entangled with each other. It encourages transparency.
Comment by networked 1 day ago
My service has been managed by runit and, most recently, nitro (https://github.com/leahneukirchen/nitro). Both have run as the service's user. They supervise the process and handle logging. I have found the design of daemontools and its derivatives runit and nitro elegant; it lives up to the reputation.
Comment by adrian_b 1 day ago
Now there are several daemontools derivatives that bring it more up-to-date, but even the ancient original version did most of one would need for reliable service management.
Comment by yjftsjthsd-h 1 day ago
I've been playing with dinit for a bit now; it combines a lot of the nice advantages of systemd with a finite scope and being portable across OSs.
Comment by PunchyHamster 1 day ago
Systemd might add a bunch of unnecessary complexity in places, but for a sysadmin it's a fucking blessing. Just write one simple file, set binary, user, done, add some limitations and dependencies if you want to be fancy, set auto restart to true and It Just Works.
Can even set some memory limits if you want to be fancy so any memory leak won't get you into too much trouble but just gets the service restarted
Comment by FreezeInTheDark 1 day ago
The AWS Rust SDK also seemed very mature to me when I was using it ... compare to:
>the only option for a database instance with a free plan was [...] serverless Microsoft SQL Server (MSSQL)
>the MSSQL connection required TLS and this hadn’t been implemented in the sqlx connector I chose to use for my Rust-based functions. I wasted two weeks implementing TLS support in sqlx
That is insane. Not to mention the later bit with sudden, unexplained availability and the only hint that it might to be related to a _future_ deprecation? Like, imagine if this were a critical service for you. Professional malpractice on Microsoft's part.
This isn't really the main point of the article, and I did find the stuff on self-hosting interesting, but it does seem like this could have been avoided if Azure had lived up to its peers.
Comment by Kwpolska 1 day ago
Comment by CodeCompost 23 hours ago
Comment by p_ing 1 day ago
I don't see why one would want to run in-the-clear over the Azure network for SQL connections.
The author was doing hobby projects. Granted, hobby projects should run on any platform, but Azure seems to have less of that free tier you can get elsewhere.
Comment by PunchyHamster 1 day ago
It's the MS way. I remember writing some code for MS graph and wondering why the hell it isn't working, I'm doing near same thing that doc example did. Nonsense generic error message. Left for the day, ran code next morning, everything works fine.
No message saying "hey the thing behind it is down", just error that was generic enough that it could be my inputs being wrong.
Comment by p_ing 23 hours ago
Comment by FreezeInTheDark 1 day ago
Comment by hirsin 1 day ago
Comment by rootsofallevil 1 day ago
Solution:
1. Delete Function App
2. Deploy again
3. Profit?
Comment by killingtime74 1 day ago
I never worked at Amazon but understand they give you generally open ended access for learning/testing?
Surely there plenty of business value in getting someone like the author to ensure Rust applications run smoothly with all their products.
Comment by fib11235 1 day ago
Comment by brikym 14 hours ago
Comment by killingtime74 1 day ago
Comment by hirsin 23 hours ago
https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/pricing/member-offers/cred...
Comment by CodeCompost 23 hours ago
Comment by hirsin 11 hours ago
I've had mine for over a decade.
Comment by brikym 1 day ago
I'm now thinking something like Supabase or Convex may be the way to go for personal projects. Any experiences?
Comment by ahachete 23 minutes ago
We're constantly striving to improve the user experience and the quality of StackGres. Would you mind sharing some feedback as to what made your experience not good with it?
Did you join the Slack Community (https://slack.stackgres.io/) to ask if you were facing some trouble? It always helps, even if it is just by sharing your troubles.
(If you'd like to share feedback and do so privately, please DM on the Slack Community)
Your feedback will be much appreciated.
[edit]: typo
Comment by jasonjayr 1 day ago
Comment by garganzol 1 day ago
Needless to say that those details weren't rewarding at all. Knowing them just served the ego of specific vendors, who were more than happy to pull a rug under your feet with deprecations, migrations, and "required actions" I had to manually follow in order to keep the services just running.
Enough is enough. One sunny day in 2021, I started to migrate the infrastructure using a garage inspired approach. Dockerfile became a breath of fresh air, a relieve after the years of convoluted dictatorships. No more dependencies on ever-changing whims of individual cloud vendors, no rug pulls. Just you, your services, and freedom.
I had no prerogative of keeping my servers near me, instead I found a good home at fly.io. I still use Azure, this time not as a swiss-knife almighty cloud, but as an interchangeable commodity supplier (storage).
Comment by notepad0x90 1 day ago
Comment by DeathArrow 1 day ago