floathub 21 hours ago

For anyone emacs-curious, you can do a similar thing with org-babel

You can have a plaintext file which is also the program which is also the documentation/notebook/website/etc. It's extremely powerful, and is a compelling example of literate programming.

A good take on it here: https://osem.seagl.org/conferences/seagl2019/program/proposa...

  • zelphirkalt 15 hours ago

    Actually, in terms of capabilities, org-babel is among the most capable, if it is not the most capable, systems for literate programming. I have used it to great effect when learning from computer programming books. I can now go back to those literate programs, and understand again much faster, than originally when reading the books. The literate part of it answers my "silly" questions, that come from not remembering 100% of the reasoning or my own thoughts. That said, there is of course a learning curve, and people unwilling to learn something like that are better off not going that route.

  • spudlyo 19 hours ago

    Thanks for the shout-out! I think org-babel is really well suited for this task, and can make some really great documentation. You can check out the video[0] from the talk and a git repo[1] with a more advanced demonstration.

    [0]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0g9BcZvQbXU

    [1]: https://gitlab.com/spudlyo/orgdemo2

    • floathub 4 hours ago

      Thanks for making the presentation. I found it very useful when I first started messing around with babel, and I still come back to it from time to time.

  • kstrauser 20 hours ago

    Similar with BBEdit's Shell Worksheets, which mingle prose with commands you can run with a keypress.

amirathi 15 hours ago

I took a stab at this ~7 years ago - https://nurtch.com/

The idea has a lot of merit. We even gave a talk about it in JupyterCon Paris 2023 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TUYY2kHrTzs

When you have executable code in the documentation, folks want to follow PR-review workflow with the docs as well - which is a bit more team investment than editing a wiki.

Good luck!

  • wodenokoto 13 hours ago

    My first thought was also "why not jupyter"? Nice to see someone else had the same thought!

fitsumbelay an hour ago

This post reminded me how much I enjoy doodling with notebooks and UIs like observable and hacks like this -- https://gist.github.com/kahole/651990b888c19b84d5700422daa96.... In a really roundabout way, notebooks take me back to using crouton on my Chromebook and opening a terminal in a browser tab. Also just discovered Deno's Jupyter kernel and feel rather set for good times ...

huntaub 20 hours ago

This is exactly what I wanted for our team when I was at AWS. There are so many versions of operations which are just slightly too dangerous to automate, and this provides a path to iteratively building that up. Congratulations!

  • perpil 2 hours ago

    When I was at AWS, I built something so I could run things straight from the wiki. Think cloudwatch queries, aws cli commands etc with user inputs but without all the setup of securely getting the right credentials and formatting inputs. I've rebuilt to run stuff straight from GitHub. Here's it invoking a lambda function straight from a github wiki with user input in 4 lines of code: https://speedrun.nobackspacecrew.com/index.html#invoking-an-...

  • rochak 12 hours ago

    Preface: My opinions are my own and not my employer’s.

    Curious how long ago were you at AWS? For context, I spent the last few years in AWS working on an internal platform service whose entire purpose was to reduce operational toil by helping you codify your operational runbooks and execute them safely and automatically. Atuin Desktop is similar to that service in some sense but that service just offered much more features.

    • perpil 2 hours ago

      Not OP but was there 15 years (left Dec 2021) and surprised I wasn't aware of this. I was only aware of a few tools that acted like chatbots to automatically gather context or take action from chime/tt/alarms.

  • simsla 13 hours ago

    When I was at Amazon (pre covid), Eider could've been used for that.

    (Hosted notebooks with IAM integration.)

dheerkt a day ago

How is this different from a local Jupyter notebook? Can we not do this with ! or % in a .ipynb?

Genuine question. Not familiar with this company or the CLI product.

  • berkes 7 hours ago

    The main thing that keeps me from using Jupyter notebooks for anything that's not entirely Python, is Python.

    For me, pipenv/pyenv/conda/poetry/uv/dependencies.txt and the invitable "I need to upgrade Python to run this notebook, ugh, well, ok -- two weeks later - g####m that upgrade broke that unrelated and old ansible and now I cannot fix these fifteen barely held up servers" is pure hell.

    I try to stay away from Python for foundational stuff, as any Python project that I work on¹ will break at least yearly on some dependency or other runtime woe. That goes for Ansible, Build Pipelines, deploy.py or any such thing. I would certainly not use Jupyter notebooks for such crucial and foundational automation, as the giant tree of dependencies and requirements it comes with, makes this far worse.

    ¹ Granted, my job makes me work on an excessive amount of codebases, At least six different Python projects last two months, some requiring python 2.7, some requiring deprecated versions of lib-something.h some cutting edge, some very strict in practice but not documented (It works on the machine of the one dev that works on it as long as he never updates anything?). And Puppet or Chef - being Ruby, are just as bad, suffering from the exact same issues, only that Ruby has had one (and only one!) package management system for decades now.

  • hashstring 8 hours ago

    100% same question.

    Usually, I feel like Jupyter gives both worlds—- flexible scripting and support for os commands (either through !/% or even os.system()

  • RestartKernel 16 hours ago

    Jupyter Notebooks have always felt a bit hacky for terminal purposes to me, so I'm excited to give this a shot.

celera 19 hours ago

This looks super similar to https://runme.dev

  • sourishkrout 4 hours ago

    Thanks for the shout-out. Co-creator of Runme here .

    Love runnable documentation. We don't have enough of it.

  • nathabonfim59 7 hours ago

    This is amazing!

    Exactly what I was looking for, thanks!

elAhmo 21 hours ago

Looks interesting!

We recently started using https://marimo.io/ as a replacement for Jupyter notebooks, as it has a number of great improvements, and this seems like a movement in a similar direction.

freedomben a day ago

Will this be open source like Atuin CLI and the sync server are? Is this going to be productized?

  • iamwil a day ago

    Are you worried about getting rug pulled by the platform?

    • freedomben 5 hours ago

      Yes, enshittification potential is top of mind for me now when considering adopting any product. If it's open source then I worry less.

  • gniting a day ago

    Most likely not free. Regardless, happy to see this be announced!

account-5 21 hours ago

I can't say I see the point in this. Can someone explain what I'm missing? Why would I use this over a simple shell script?

  • joh6nn 21 hours ago

    My experience with runbooks has been:

    - I am on a team that oversees a bunch of stuff, some of which I am very hands-on with and comfortable with, and some of which I am vaguely aware exists, but rarely touch

    - X, a member of the latter category, breaks

    - Everyone who actually knows about X is on vacation/dead/in a meeting

    - Fortunately, there is a document that explains what to do in this situation

    - It is somehow both obsolete and wrong, a true miracle of bad info

    So that is the problem this is trying to solve.

    Having discussed this with the creator some[1], the intent here (as I understand it) is to build something like a cross between Jupyter Notebooks and Ansible Tower: documentation, scripts, and metrics that all live next to each other in a way that makes it easier to know what's wrong, how to fix it, and if the fix worked

    [1]Disclosure: I help mod the atuin Discord

    • BLanen 20 hours ago

      If the fix/solution would be easily describable and automate-able, it wouldn't/shouldn't be a problem anyway. I don't see how this solves anything.

      • soupdiver 15 hours ago

        It shouldn't but often still is... and maybe a runbook like this is easier to handle than a script with possibly 1000 lines and not a single comment. Of course, in your ideal world maybe nothing of this applies and you never have any incidents ;)

    • mmooss 21 hours ago

      > It is somehow both obsolete and wrong, a true miracle of bad info

      How does Atuin solve that problem? It seems to me that inaccurate and obsolete information can be in an Atuin document as easily as in a text document, wiki, etc., but possibly I'm not seeing something?

      • joh6nn 21 hours ago

        I'm just a community mod, not a dev on the project, so take this with a grain of salt:

        I believe the intent is that you get bidirectional selective sync between your terminal and the docs, so that if what's in the docs is out of date or wrong, then whatever you did to actually fix things can be synced back to the docs to reduce the friction of keeping the docs updated.

        • metabagel 13 hours ago

          Thanks for this explanation. This makes sense.

      • roblh 21 hours ago

        To me, it seems like it's because the thing you're fixing is actually the "runbook" that's being run. Instead of separating the documentation from the code, they're married together so it's easier to keep them in sync because you aren't having to remind yourself to go edit this secondary location when you make a quick change.

        I'm cautiously curious about something like this, although I haven't tried it personally.

        • npodbielski 10 hours ago

          Yes, seems like right now pendulum is going in other way and separation is no longer in fashion and now fashionable thing is to have everything in one place.

          The idea seems interesting to me just cause I do not really like terminals and having something more visually appealing and with better history and comments is an improvement though I am also not sure if Atuin is best way to achieve all of that.

    • account-5 13 hours ago

      Ok I think I see where this is coming from. I actually think seeing you description that it might even be a benefit to none technical people with no knowledge of what's going on. They can follow instructions and easily execute the relevant code what with it all sitting together.

      However I don't see how it solves the obsolete or wrong documentation thing. You still have to make sure the runbook is correct, if it's not you've got the exact same problem.

      Having a centralised place for all your scripts is an advantage with inline docs. But then this is a local desktop version...

  • jimbokun 19 hours ago

    Seems like this is literate programming for shell scripts.

    Thus “Runbooks That Run.”

  • rc00 21 hours ago

    Because it's written in Rust and this is Hacker News.

    • account-5 21 hours ago

      I was going to talk about using powershell but just for the rust I also really like Nushell. I personally would take either one over this...

  • johnQdeveloper 17 hours ago

    Well, what is the purpose of deployments being built in ansible or deployer or whatever tooling as a general rule? And then packaging, say, extra python scripts to perform common tasks then dumping it all in a git repo?

    Some people just like a particular workflow or tooling flow and build it really. Maybe it works for enough people to have a viable market, maybe not.

    I am just using a PHP deployment process for no reason other than feeling like it for personal projects and it handles 60% of the work without me needing to do anything. But any runbooks for it are tasks built into the tool and in the same git repo for the entire server deployment. I'm not gonna put it in some random place or a shell script that I need to remember separate commands for.

    Code, for programmers, is inherently self-documenting if you keep a simple functional style without any complexity with comments on the occasional section that isn't just "Create a MySQL user, roll the MySQL user's password, update the related services with the new password/user combination, remove the old user that the fired employee has credentials to on the off chance we failed to block them at the VPN" kind of stuff.

0xbadcafebee 21 hours ago

If it's local-first then it's already subject to rot. Unless they're running it all in containers? In which case local doesn't matter.

If you want to record a runbook, then record a runbook. You can do that a million ways. Text file, confluence doc, screen recording, shell script, etc. People already don't do that; they're not gonna suddenly start doing it more because your UI is fancier.

Personally, I don't want to sit around all day writing code (or docs) to try to get the system to be like X state. I want to manually make it have X state, and then run a tool to dump the state, and later re-run the tool to create (or enforce) that state again. I do not want to write code to try to tell the computer how to get to that state. Nor do I want to write "declarative configuration", which is just more code with a different name. I want to do the thing manually, then snapshot it, then replay it. And I want this to work on any system, anywhere, without dependence on monitoring a Bash shell for commands or something. Just dump state and later reapply state.

  • LinXitoW 18 hours ago

    So you then have binary blobs of state without any documentation of how or why it is the way it is? That doesn't seem maintainable.

    Dockerfiles are basically this, but with a file documenting the different steps you took to get to that state.

    • dewey 16 hours ago

      That’s not what they are saying. They are saying that the system where you have to declare everything manually is annoying (which it is), ideally it would record the changes while you make changes and then deduplicate them, remove unnecessary ones to arrive at the final playbook that can be replayed if needed.

      • naikrovek 9 hours ago

        yes it would be nice to have a computer that could read your mind flawlessly.

  • pram 18 hours ago

    Sounds like you want autoexpect!

    https://linux.die.net/man/1/autoexpect

    • 0xbadcafebee 5 hours ago

      Actually no, that's still just monitoring a series of steps to eventually lead to a thing. I don't want to record a series of steps, I just want to dump existing state of a thing.

  • zelphirkalt 14 hours ago

    Such a process is rarely portable though, and will need to be repeated for each different system, at which point it would be great to already have a declarative description, that can automatically be translated into those steps required to get to state X.

  • jimbokun 19 hours ago

    That was the Docker manifesto.

    • x-complexity 18 hours ago

      > That was the Docker manifesto.

      It essentially still is.

      Unless the Dockerfiles are kept secret, any container can be replicated from the given Dockerfile. Barring extreme (distro/system/hardware)-level quirks, a Docker container should be able to run anywhere that Linux can.

      • manquer 17 hours ago

        You are mixing build time reproduction with run time ones.

        Docker images (not files) help with the run time consistency .

        Docker (files) barely scratch the surface of build reproducibility. Most applications depend on the distribution package manager ( apt, apk etc) and language package manager (npm, cargo, etc), both sets of them have various challenges in consistent dependency resolution.

        In addition build steps might have ordering challenges RPC calls to remote services no longer running and so on.

        Anyone trying to to build a docker image from 10 years back experiences this problem

        • wink 11 hours ago

          You're right in the absolute form, but I've yet to see a Dockerfile where (with a little thinking and elbow grease) I couldn't "easily" port it or update it, even after years.

          It's basically the best and easiest "I am documenting how it works now" thing without any arcane "works on my machine" quirks I have yet found.

          So I'm still agreeing here that it's a very good approximation of this idea.

          Real reproducability is miles better, but usually cannot be formulated in a ~20 line single file "recipe". (and before anyone mentions Nix.. no, there's so much inherent complexity involved, that doesn't count like "apt-get install docker && docker build ."

      • spott 17 hours ago

        A container can very rarely be reproduced by a dockerfile.

        I imagine with a lot of discipline (no apt update, no “latest” tag, no internet access) you can make a reproducible docker file…. But it is far from normal.

        • angra_mainyu 3 hours ago

          People rarely mean 100% build reproducibility, but simply within a reasonable limit, Dockerfiles are mostly "run stable" and provide the same OS abstraction and process encapsulation.

        • taberiand 16 hours ago

          Well sure, making a 100% reproducible build is hard - but Docker makes it easier, not harder. If 100% reproducible is the goal, what's easier than docker?

          • soraminazuki 9 hours ago

            A Dockerfile is essentially a shell script with access to the outside world. It has unconstrained network access. It can access local hardware and filesystem if instructed to. However, it doesn't verify that whatever stuff it took from the outside remains the same across builds. Docker doesn't care if the same Dockerfile builds Apache httpd in one build and Nginx in another. It literally can't get more irreproducible than that.

            But mysteriously, people say that Docker is reproducible because, uh, you can download gigabyte-sized binary blobs from the Docker registry. I wonder, what's not reproducible by that metric?

            Docker images may be portable compared to binaries targeting traditional FHS distros. But it's not reproducible whatsoever.

          • jpgvm 11 hours ago

            Full reproducibility isn't easy, there is a cost to it.

            However the payoff is rather significant so if you can temper that cost a bit and make it less inconvenient to achieve then you have a winning solution.

            I have cooked this up based on Bazel, rules_oci and rules_distroless: https://github.com/josephglanville/images Specifically this file is a busybox based image with some utilities included from a Debian snapshot: https://github.com/josephglanville/images/blob/master/toolbo...

            More difficult than Dockerfile? Sure. However better in pretty much every way otherwise including actual simplicity.

          • zelphirkalt 14 hours ago

            Tools that have been designed with reproducibility in mind. Like Guix.

            Beware, I am definitely not claiming those are easy to use in general. Just that you can get to reproducibility using them more reliably and maybe easier than with docker.

          • otabdeveloper4 14 hours ago

            > but Docker makes it easier, not harder

            Incorrect. Step one of reproducibility is "disable unconstrained downloading from the internet". Docker does the opposite.

            • taberiand 9 hours ago

              Presumably if your goal is a reproducible build you just wouldn't do any unconstrained downloading in the process of designing the dockerfile and building the image. Making a choice to use a tool poorly for you requirements isn't a problem with the tool.

              • soraminazuki 5 hours ago

                The claim the parent was addressing was that Docker helps with reproducibility. It doesn't. Docker does nothing at all in this regard.

                If you want a reproducible Docker image, you're on your own. For example, the most common problem is that many build scripts out in the wild download stuff willy nilly without verifying anything. I've seen NPM package post install scripts do the craziest things. Catching all of that is harder than most would give credit for at first glance, considering that tons of build scripts are written in Turing complete languages. Help from tooling is essential.

                When you have to fight the tool to achieve reproducibility, not choosing to do so isn't "using a tool poorly." It's simply using the tool as is. Especially when the vast majority of Dockerfiles out there happily run something along the lines of `apt install foo`, again, without verifying anything.

  • retrochameleon 14 hours ago

    It kind of sounds like you're describing Ansible. You use modules for common tasks like ensuring a package is installed, a file is present or has certain content, etc. It's declarative and imdempotent.

    • 0xbadcafebee 5 hours ago

      No, I don't want to write Ansible configuration. I don't want to write any configuration. I just want to dump state and restore it. (To put it another way: I want to auto-generate ansible configuration based on an existing system, and then apply that configuration again later)

    • bobthecowboy 12 hours ago

      I've written some fairly complex stuff in Ansible. It is mostly declarative but you should be careful with assumptions about its idempotency, especially if you reach out for community modules.

  • sorrythanks 7 hours ago

    > If it's local-first then it's already subject to rot.

    Can you expand on this?

    • 0xbadcafebee 5 hours ago

      When most people say "local" what they mean is "i'm running something on my laptop". That is to say, it's a random operating system, with a randomly set-up environment, with randomly installed tools. Could be different tools that have the same name but incompatible options. Could be any version (version 3 might be incompatible with version 4, but it's the same name for the command). And it will definitely change over time.

      This will lead whatever steps you've recorded to 1) stop working on the existing "local" machine, and 2) be incompatible with other people's "local" machines. So the instructions have "rotted".

      To avoid this you could write Ansible/Puppet to install and configure all the same tools, but that will break too over time too, and be a maintenance hassle. The only reliable solution is to use containers to run it all in; that guarantees the same version of everything. But at that point it's not really "running locally" anymore, it's running in the container, which is sort of its own bag of issues.

      At that point you might as well have a SaaS tool to run your runbook in a cloud environment in containers or something, as that's way easier to set up and manage than either ansible/puppet, or Docker on everyone's machine (there's still a million tech "engineers" out there who don't understand containers).

      • IOT_Apprentice an hour ago

        Pre Cloud at eBay we managed 30k windows servers via a tool called site controller that referenced ALL servers as objects with properties of configuration state, build version and operational state.

        ALL databases had their startup configuration parameters defined per instance across datacenters.

        Furthermore SRE had tools to rate limit connections or restart of a database so that it was not overwhelmed by incoming connection requests. We also built tools to do fine grained definition of load balancers and what services were behind them to be able to redirect traffic on the fly and then reset to the original mappings once connectivity of the LBs was resolved.

        These tools weee centralized and available to both SRE and senior system administrators.

        These things evolved to new tools which accommodated a private cloud, then docker then Kubernetes. I left prior to kubernetes implementation.

  • milkshakes 21 hours ago

    what happens when you want to tweak something you did in the middle of this process? do you have to go through the whole flow again manually to make a single change?

    • 0xbadcafebee 21 hours ago

      I imagine you could either A) just modify the dumped state, B) paramaterize it, C) have the program split up the state into transactions and modify those. The program will probably have to take more than one step, in order, in order to accomplish everything. If it fails, you'd want it to try to undo it, ala transactions. And since it can do all that, it can stop, start, or resume at specific steps.

      Like, Terraform has always sucked because there was no way to dump existing resources as new code. So a team at Google made a tool to do it (Terraform-er). If Terraform had already had that feature, and if it didn't rely on having pre-existing state to manage resources, that would be like 90% of the way to what I'd want. Just dump resources as code, then let me re-run the code, and if I want I can modify the code to ask me for inputs or change things. (People think of Terraform as only working on Cloud resources, but you could (for example) make an Ubuntu Linux provider that just configures Ubuntu for you, if you wanted)

      • kiitos 17 hours ago

        Any notion of state that satisfies requirements like

        > Just dump state and later reapply state

        is necessarily declarative.

        > Just dump resources as code,

        What is the code for this resource?

            VM foo1
                Memory  16GiB
                Network mynet1
        
        It depends on the current state of the system where the resource is applied. If VM foo1 already exists, with 16GiB of memory, and connected to network mynet1, then the code is a no-op, no code at all. Right? Anything else would be a mistake. For example if the code would delete any matching VM and re-create it, that would be disastrous to continuity and availability, clearly a non-starter. Or, if VM foo1 exists, with 16GiB of memory, but connected to anothernet3, then the code should just change the network for that VM from anothernet3 to mynet1, and should definitely not destroy and re-create the VM entirely. And so on.
        • 0xbadcafebee 9 hours ago

          It depends what you're talking about; Terraform specifically has a flawed model where it assumes nothing in the world exists that it didn't create itself. Other configuration management tools don't assume that; they assume that you just want an item to exist; if it does exist, great, if it doesn't exist, you create it. But for a moment I'll assume you're talking about the other problem with configuration management tools, which is "which of the existing resources do I actually want to exist or modify?"

          That's a solved problem. Anything that you use on a computer that controls a resource, can uniquely identify said resource, through either a key or composite key. This has to be the case, otherwise you could create things that you could never find again :) (Even if you created an array of things with no name, since it exists as an item in a list, the list index is its unique identifier)

          Taking Terraform as example again, the provider has code in it that specifies what the unique identifier is, per-resource. It might be a single key (like 'id', 'ASN', 'Name', etc) or a composite key ( {'id' + 'VPC' + 'Region'} ).

          If the code you've dumped does not have the unique identifier for some reason, then the provider has to make a decision: either try to look up existing resources that match what you've provided and assume the closest one is the right one, or error out that the unique identifier is missing. Usually the unique identifier is not hard to look up in the first place (yours has a composite identifier: {VM:"foo1", Network:"mynet1"}). But it's also (usually) not fool-proof.

          Imagine a filesystem. You actually have two unique identifiers: the fully-qualified file path, and the inode number. The inode number is the actual unique identifier in the filesystem, but we don't tend to reference it, as 1) it's not that easy to remember/recognize an inode number, 2) it can be recycled for another file, 3) it'll change across filesystems. We instead reference the file path. But file paths are subtly complex: we have sym-links, hard-links and bind-mounts, so two different paths can actually lead to the same file, or different files! On top of that, you can remove the file and then create an identically-named file. Even if the file had identical contents, removing it and creating a new one is technically a whole new resource, and has impact on the system (permissions may be different, open filehandles to deleted files are a thing, etc).

          So what all of us do, all day, every day, is lie to ourselves. We pretend we can recognize files, that we have a unique identifier for them. But actually we don't. What we do is use a composite index and guess. We say, "well it looks like the right file, because it's in the right file path, with the right size, and right name, and right permissions, and (maybe) has the right inode". But actually there's no way to know for sure it's the same file we expect. We just hope it is. If it looks good enough, we go with it.

          So that's how you automate managing resources. For each type of resource, you use whatever you can as a unique (or composite) identifier, guesstimate, and prompt the user if it's impossible to get a good enough guess. Because that's how humans do it anyway.

          • kiitos 5 hours ago

            > Terraform specifically has a flawed model where it assumes nothing in the world exists that it didn't create itself.

            I don't think this is accurate. Terraform operates against a state snapshot, which is usually local but can also be remote. But it has several mechanisms to update that state, based on the current status of any/all defined resources, see e.g. `terraform refresh` (https://developer.hashicorp.com/terraform/cli/commands/refre...) -- and there are other, similar, commands.

            > But for a moment I'll assume you're talking about the other problem with configuration management tools, which is "which of the existing resources do I actually want to exist or modify?"

            I'm not really talking about that specific thing, no. That problem is one of uncountably many other similar sub-problems that configuration management tools are designed to address. And, for what it's worth, it's not a particularly interesting or difficult problem to solve, among all problems in the space.

            If you have a desired state X, and an actual state Y, then you just diff X and Y to figure out the operations you need to apply to Y in order to make it end up like X. Terraform does this in `terraform plan` via a 3-way reconciliation merge/diff. Pretty straightforward.

            > you just want an item to exist; if it does exist, great, if it doesn't exist, you create it

            It's not as simple as whether or not an item should exist. Being able to uniquely identify a resource is step one for sure. But a single resource, with a stable identifier, can have different properties. The entire resource definition -- identifier, properties, and everything else -- is what you type and save and commit and push and ultimately declare as the thing you want to be true (X). That's not code, it's state (definitions). Code is what's executed to diff that declarative state (X) against actual state (Y) to produce a set of delta operations. Or, it's those delta operations themselves.

            > If the code you've dumped does not have the unique identifier for some reason, then the provider has to make a decision: either try to look up existing resources that match what you've provided and assume the closest one is the right one...

            First, you "dump" state, not code. More importantly, no configuration management system would ever take one identifier and "guesstimate" that it should match a different identifier, because it's "close", whatever that means.

            > or error out that the unique identifier is missing. Usually the unique identifier is not hard to look up in the first place (yours has a composite identifier: {VM:"foo1", Network:"mynet1"}). But it's also (usually) not fool-proof.

            I really don't understand what you mean, here, nor do I understand your mental model of these systems. It's certainly not the case that my example VM has the composite identifier {vm:foo1 network:mynet1}. The identifier is, intuitively, just foo1. Even if we were to say the identifier were an object, the object you propose is missing the memory size. But more importantly, changing the foo1 VM from network:mynet1 to network:othernet2 probably should not have the effect of destroying the existing VM, and re-provisioning a brand new VM with the new network. Sometimes configuration changes require this kind of full teardown/spinup, but these conditions are generally rare, and all modern configuration management tools avoid this kind of destructive work whenever possible and most of the time.

            > So that's how you automate managing resources. For each type of resource, you use whatever you can as a unique (or composite) identifier, guesstimate, and prompt the user if it's impossible to get a good enough guess. Because that's how humans do it anyway.

            Just to reiterate, I'm not aware of any configuration management tool that "guesstimates" when making changes in this way. For good reason.

            • 0xbadcafebee 4 hours ago

              `terraform refresh` (which is now `terraform apply -refresh-only`) is an exception to the rule. Terraform doesn't know what's going on in the outside world. If you write configuration to create a Security Group named "foobar", and do a `terraform plan`, it will say it's about to create "foobar". When you go to apply, it will error out, saying "foobar already exists".

              If Terraform wasn't completely idiotic, it could have just checked if it existed in the planning stage. If Terraform was even mildly helpful, it would have suggested to the user at either plan or apply time that the security group already exists, and do you want to manage that with your code? But it doesn't do those things, because it's a completely dumb-ass design.

              > I'm not aware of any configuration management tool that "guesstimates" when making changes. Thank God.

              Many of them do. Ansible does, Puppet does, Terraform does. They have to, for the same reason as my filesystem example: it's often impossible to know that a resource is unique, because there aren't actually unique identifiers. My definition of "Guesstimation" is specifically "using the identifiers you have available to select an entry from a list of potential options with the closest match". Ansible does this all the time. Puppet and Terraform do this for every provider that doesn't have a totally unique identifier (there basically are no totally unique identifiers, as I pointed out in my filesystem example)

pm90 20 hours ago

My dream tooling is for every tool to have an terminal interface so that I can create comprehensive megabooks to get all the context that lives in my head. i.e. jira, datadog, github etc, all in one pane.

  • npodbielski 10 hours ago

    IMHO just an API would be enough, tool could be written on top of that. My ideal world would be every service, tool and application to have API that I can use i.e. if fridge is open too long (API polling or API webhook) I can send roomba to close it (using API of roomba). Because why not?!

    World of API...

  • rochak 12 hours ago

    +1. Personally, I’m a fan of TUIs too that make things a bit more user friendly. Just imagine an internal TUI framework that has components for each internal service that you can lego-build into personalised TUI dashboard. Hmm, seems like something I could work on the side at work. Would be a huge undertaking but very interesting.

    • pm90 6 hours ago

      Yes this is what I was thinking. This is how terraform became the lingua franca of iac, I was hoping that something like this would happen with TUIs too, so instead of all vendors creating their own bespoke cli, they all implemented a plugin of some generic TUI framework.

  • tecleandor 17 hours ago

    Maybe something like wtfutil? (Although wtf development has been stuck for a year, but I guess that's the general idea...)

    https://wtfutil.com/

  • buremba 20 hours ago

    You might like MCP then.

    • x-complexity 19 hours ago

      > You might like MCP then.

      That's entirely different to what's being desired by GP.

      > > My dream tooling is for every tool to have an terminal interface so that I can create comprehensive megabooks to get all the context that lives in my head. i.e. jira, datadog, github etc, all in one pane.

      My perspective on this is essentially having jira/datadog/github/etc be pluggable into the CLI, and where standard bash commands & pipes can be used without major restrictions. (Something akin to Yahoo Pipes)

      MCP is highly centered around LLMs analyzing user requests & creating queries to be run on MCP servers. What's being desired here doesn't centralize around LLMs in any sense at all.

      • omneity 17 hours ago

        It’s actually not too far off. Yes MCP is designed for LLM interactions, but we observed that it’s an invocation API that’s pretty generic. So we built a package format that encapsulates computations and makes them accessible from any of MCP, REST, JSON-RPC over WS (the generic cousin of MCP)..

        We build logic once and make it automatically accessible from any of these consumption methods, in a standardized way to our clients, and I am indeed piping some of these directly in the CLI to jq and others for analysis.

nikolay 12 hours ago

It's kind of sad the direction they took. The last thing I want is my runbooks being held hostage by my desktop with proprietary and possibly paid software.

  • SomaticPirate 4 hours ago

    What do you mean? This looks like open-source

nu11ptr a day ago

Looks neat. What tech stack is used for this? Is it open source by chance?

  • ellieh a day ago

    Thanks! We're using Tauri (https://v2.tauri.app/) on the client, and Elixir + Phoenix (with a little bit of Rust via Rustler) on the server

    Tauri means we can reuse a lot of the Rust we already have, easily do the systems stuff we need, and have something light + fast. Elixir has been awesome and makes a realtime sync backend easier

    Not currently open source while it's under heavy early development, we will be opening up the desktop app later on

    • paradox460 20 hours ago

      Are there any plans to add an integration to something like Phoenix LiveBook?

    • benatkin 20 hours ago

      > we will be opening up the desktop app later on

      This leaves room for stuff like the Functional Software License.

    • tymscar 21 hours ago

      Amazing. Im very happy this is not yet another electron app

      • Philpax 17 hours ago

        Tauri wraps around the system's web view, so it's semantically equivalent to Electron.

        (nb: system web views are very inconsistent, so they're considering adding a Chromium renderer, which will bring everything full circle)

        • ellieh 5 hours ago

          > nb: system web views are very inconsistent

          we've found they're generally ok between mac/windows, with some issues on Linux. Nothing insurmountable, however.

          Anything super complex (terminals, charts) we can render with canvas or webgl anyway

      • benatkin 20 hours ago

        This is one place where it would be more likely to make sense to have an electron app, because with user code, you'd already have a lot of variables out of your control, and having a standard browser engine would help. Also unlike other apps, you hopefully wouldn't have 5 code notebook apps running.

    • sneak 20 hours ago

      It is bothersome to see people who obviously don’t believe in free software ideology and software freedoms (otherwise you would never produce nonfree software) (ab)using the open source community in this way.

      Software freedoms exist as a concept for a reason, not just a bullet point to get people to click a download link that doesn’t even include source anyway.

      I call such projects “open source cosplay”. It’s an outfit you put on for conferences, then take off when back at the office working on the nonfree valuable parts.

      • danenania 18 hours ago

        Atuin's CLI for shell history is open source, has been free for years, and is a very useful tool. If the author now wants to build a product on top so she can make a living, that's a win for everyone: the author, the open source users (since the project will keep being maintained), and people who get value out of the new product she's building.

        The irony of this purist mindset is that it's actually very corporatist, big-tech, and proprietary in its implications. If open source devs are discouraged by the culture from building products and making a living independently, it means that the only people who can devote significant time to open source are employees of established companies (who themselves often sell closed source proprietary products) and people who are wealthy enough to work for free. Is that the world you want?

        • sneak 5 hours ago

          This only logically follows if you believe in the mistaken premise and false dichotomy that it is impossible to make money with foss software.

      • shawabawa3 6 hours ago

        This kind of attitude is why less and less people are open sourcing software

        Why would I waste my time releasing any of my projects for free when people will attack me and call me a poser anyway

        Might as well charge people money, who by the way will actually be grateful to do so, that try to keep up with the open source community's purity treadmill

        • freedomben 5 hours ago

          I agree GP's attitude is ridiculous, but if a very small number of purists on the internet is the reason less people are open sourcing software, then those people are just as guilty of bad reasoning/judgment as the purists.

          IMHO the real reason is that the threat of hostile/competing forks has gone up. It used to be gauche at best, evil at worst, to take somebody's open source code and compete with them, but increasingly the landscape is changing. I think that's the real problem, and IMHO the answer to that is the AGPL, not to go proprietary.

        • sneak 5 hours ago

          There’s no treadmill. Belief in software freedoms has always been belief in software freedoms.

          It’s ok if you don’t believe in software freedoms, but you shouldn’t pretend to be someone who does by releasing some software that respects users’ software freedoms. It’s deceptive.

          Either you care about software freedoms, or you don’t. If you don’t, why are you releasing any software under free software licenses? If you do, why are you releasing any nonfree software?

          Also, do you have a single bit of backing data to suggest that your first sentence is true? I don’t believe that it is. It seems to me there is more free software than ever before.

          • freedomben 5 hours ago

            > It’s ok if you don’t believe in software freedoms, but you shouldn’t pretend to be someone who does by releasing some software that respects users’ software freedoms. It’s deceptive.

            As long as the different parts are clearly marked/indicated as such, why would you impose such a ridiculous standard? In your world, if a company makes 99% of their software GPL, and then releases some proprietary tool, they're suddenly being deceptive? Would you prefer to just lose the 99%?

  • iamwil a day ago

    Do you want it to be open source because of the price or because you’re afraid of being rug pulled by the platform or you want to contribute?

    • nu11ptr 21 hours ago

      If I use something I like the idea that I can fix bugs should the need arise.

stevelacy a day ago

Have been following along with the development, glad to see it announced!

sudomateo 15 hours ago

Congratulations on the launch! I've been following Atuin for a bit and, while I'm not necessarily the intended audience for this runbook feature, love seeing people build fun new things.

gitroom 3 hours ago

i think lots of tools try to solve the same mess and i always end up just wanting my stuff all in one place with less hassle, so seeing more takes on this is cool

exiguus 2 hours ago

Is it opensource?

sleepybrett 2 hours ago

This reminds me of xiki which seems to have kind of died on the vine.

oscribinn 2 hours ago

pretty sure obsidian already has an extension for this

InvisGhost 21 hours ago

This sort of slogan says nothing about what actually makes it worth looking into.

  • rc00 18 hours ago

    What more do you need than "written in Rust"?

OhSoHumble 19 hours ago

This makes me think of using org mode to build runbooks.

axegon_ 11 hours ago

Oh, that's really neat! Thanks for sharing!

kunley 11 hours ago

Cool name, a reference to well known books

moonlion_eth a day ago

the waitlist social media jump the list mechanic is kinda sus, regardless joined the waitlist

scubbo 20 hours ago

I'm really confused by products like this and Warp Drive[0]. What does this add over a shell script?

There is a response elsewhere in comments[1] which claims that this is trying to fix the problem of bad documentation, but this has the same fundamental problem. If you a) are responsible for fixing something, b) are unfamiliar with it, and c) the "fixing resources" - whether those are scripts, documentation, or a Runbook/Workflow - you were provided with by the experts are out-of-date; you're SOL and are going to have to get to investigating _anyway_. A runbook and a script are just different points along the spectrum of "how much of this is automated and how much do I have to copy-paste myself?"[2] - both are vulnerable to accuracy-rot.

[0]: https://www.warp.dev/warp-drive

[1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43766842

[2]: https://blog.danslimmon.com/2019/07/15/do-nothing-scripting-...

  • brunoqc 19 hours ago

    > I'm really confused by products like this and Warp Drive[0]. What does this add over a shell script?

    Because everything is a start-up now.

nsonha 17 hours ago

Kinda related but just the other day I was thinking of the notebook/runbook workflow and wonder if there is a tool like this that also incorporates git checkpoints (either commit or stash) into it. Like top to bottom, associate all the blocks and resulting artifacts with a commit hash. Might be something to vibe code over the weekend.

gyrovagueGeist a day ago

All the problems of reproducibility in Python notebooks (https://arxiv.org/abs/2308.07333, https://leomurta.github.io/papers/pimentel2019a.pdf) with the power of a terminal.

  • milkshakes a day ago

    what are the problems you're talking about? your references seem to refer to reproducing scientific publications, dependency issues, and cell execution ordering.

    this project appears to be intended for operational documentation / living runbooks. it doesn't really seem like the same use case.

    • rtpg 21 hours ago

      I mean it feels pretty obvious to me that cell execution order is a pretty real issue for a runbook with a bunch of steps if you're not careful.

      I do think that given the fragile nature of shell scripts people tend to write their operation workflows in a pretty idempotent way, though...

      • ellieh 20 hours ago

        agreed - we actually have a dependency system in the works too!

        you can define + declare ordering with dependency specification on the edges of the graph (ie A must run before B, but B can run as often as you'd like within 10 mins of A)

        • nine_k 20 hours ago

          There of course should be a way to override the dependency, by explicitly pressing a big scary "[I know what I'm doing]" button.

          Another thing is that you'll need branches. As in:

            - Run `foo bar baz`
            - If it succeeds, run `foo quux`,
              Else run `rm -rf ./foo/bar` and rerun the previous command with `--force` option.
            - `ls ./foo/bar/buur` and make certain it exists.
          
          Different branches can be separated visually; one can be collapsed if another is taken.

          Writing robust runbooks is not that easy. But I love the idea of mixing the explanatory text and various types of commands together.

      • noodletheworld 17 hours ago

        I mean, is it worse than having it:

        - in excel

        - in a confluence document

        - in a text file on your desktop

        The use case this addresses is 'adhoc activites must be performed without being totally chaotic'.

        Obviously a nice one-click/trigger based CI/CD deployment pipeline is lovely, but uh, this is the real world. There are plenty of cases where that's simply either not possible, or not worth the effort to setup.

        I think this is great; if I have one suggestion it would just be integrated logging so there's an immutable shared record of what was actually done as well. I would love to be able to see that Bob started the 'recover user profile because db sync error' runbook but didn't finish running it, and exactly when that happened.

        If you think it's a terrible idea, then uh, what's your suggestion?

        I'm pretty tired of copy-pasting commands from confluence. I think that's, I dunno, unambiguously terrible, and depressingly common.

        One time scripts that are executed in a privileged remote container also works, but at the end of that day, those script tend to be specific and have to be invoked with custom arguments, which, guess what, usually turn up as a sequence of operations in a runbook; query db for user id (copy-paste SQL) -> run script with id (copy paste to terminal) -> query db to check it worked (copy paste SQL) -> trigger notification workflow with user id if it did (login to X and click on button Y), etc.

        • rtpg 14 hours ago

          I'm not against this notebook style, I have runbooks in Jupyter notebooks.

          I just think it's pretty easy to do things like start a flow back up halfway through the book and not fix some underlying ordering issues.

          With scripts that you tend to have to run top to bottom you end up having to be more diligent with making sure the initial steps are still OK because on every test you tend to run everything. Notebook style environments favor running things piecemeal. Also very helpful! It introduces a much smaller problem in the process of solving the larger issue of making it easier to do this kind of work in the first place.

    • shadowgovt a day ago

      Agreed. The problem with reproducing Jupyter runbooks in academia is that someone thought a Jupyter runbook is a way to convey information from one person to another. Those are an awful model for that.

      As an on-the-fly debugging tool, they're great: you get a REPL that isn't actively painful to use, a history (roughly, since the state is live and every cell is not run every time) of commands run, and visualization at key points in the program to check as you go your assumptions are sound.

  • packetlost a day ago

    This is more like literate programming (but for shells) than jupyter notebooks.

    • mananaysiempre a day ago

      Literate programming really needs the ability to reorder, otherwise it’s just sparkling notebooks. (Except for Haskell, which is order-independent enough as it is that the distinction rarely matters.)

  • theLiminator 19 hours ago

    Give marimo a try, it's much better for reproducibility.

    • mdaniel 16 hours ago
      • ugiox 14 hours ago

        From their repo:

        “A reactive notebook for Python — run reproducible experiments, query with SQL, execute as a script, deploy as an app, and version with git. *All in a modern, AI-native editor.*

        Why does it need to be in a “modern, AI-native editor”?

        (Closing tab, flashing marimo out of brain)