That sounds really cool and perfect for the emacs crowd.
Instead of learning a limited DSL, you can leverage your existing Lisp skills to define tasks, manage data, and automate your workflows with ease
DevOps integrates and automates the work of software development (Dev) and IT operations (Ops) as a means for improving and shortening the systems development life cycle.
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That sounds really cool and perfect for the emacs crowd.
Instead of learning a limited DSL, you can leverage your existing Lisp skills to define tasks, manage data, and automate your workflows with ease
Hey all I have an experimental Docker/Podman build here, which you can take for a spin, it works well for me, I don't have any macOS devices to test on yet though, LMK.
Docker tarball hosted on 2 sites: https://limewire.com/d/IHVnx#Pz9q6EwDwL https://filebin.net/gevqik62yzwfxa8u/maak-docker.tar.gz
Once you downloaded this tarball, you can import it with docker load < my.tar.gz
Installing via Guix will always remain more convenient and powerful but docker/podman will work for cross-platform pretty good. Say for example you have a maak file with a task serve, at /home/joe/hacking/hygguile/maak.scm , you could run it as so:
docker container run -v /home/joe:/home/joe localhost/maak:latest maak -f /home/joe/hacking/hygguile/maak.scm serve
Due to popular demand :) Maak is now also available as an experimental Docker container, from DockerHub (also compatible with Podman).
https://hub.docker.com/repository/docker/jjba23/maak/general
You can also build images of maak yourself, using guix pack. See the maak.scm file for more. To load these tarball images, you can do podman load < my.tar.gz
Then you can run Maak from the container, and bind your local filesystem to give access, for example:
docker container run -v /home/joe:/home/joe
docker.io/jjba23/maak:latest maak -f /home/joe/hacking/maak/maak.scm --list