depot
This repository is the monorepo for my personal tools and infrastructure. Everything in here is built using Nix with an automatic attribute-set layout that mirrors the filesystem layout of the repository (this might feel familiar to users of Bazel).
This repository used to be hosted on GitHub, but for a variety of reasons I have decided to take over the management of personal infrastructure - of which this repository is a core component.
If you've ended up here and have no idea who I am, feel free to follow me on Twitter.
Highlights
Tools
tools/emacs
contains my personal Emacs configuration (packages & config)fun/aoc2019
contains solutions for a handful of Advent of Code 2019 challenges, before I ran out of interesttools/blog_cli
contains my tool for writing new blog posts and storing them in the DNS zoneops/kms_pass.nix
is a tiny tool that emulates the user-interface ofpass
, but actually uses Google Cloud KMS for secret decryptionops/kontemplate
contains my Kubernetes resource templating tool (with which the services in this repository are deployed!)
Packages / Libraries
nix/buildGo
implements a Nix library that can build Go software in the style of Bazel'srules_go
. Go programs in this repository are built using this library.tools/emacs-pkgs
contains various Emacs libraries that my Emacs setup uses, for example:dottime.el
provides dottime in the Emacs modelinenix-util.el
provides editing utilities for Nix filesterm-switcher.el
is an ivy-function for switching between vterm buffers
net/alcoholic_jwt
contains an easy-to-use JWT-validation library for Rustnet/crimp
contains a high-level HTTP client using cURL for Rust
Services
Services in this repository are deployed on a Google Kubernetes Engine cluster using Nixery.
web/tazblog
contains my blog software (serving at tazj.in)web/cgit-taz
contains a slightly patched version ofcgit
that serves my git web interface at git.tazj.inops/sync-gcsr
contains a tiny service that synchronises a Google Cloud Source Repository with a local disk path. Mycgit
setup uses this under-the-hood.ops/journaldriver
contains a small Rust daemon that can forward logs from journald to Stackdriver Logging
Miscellaneous
Presentations I've given in the past are in the presentations
folder, these
cover a variety of topics and some of them have links to recordings.
There's a few fun things in the fun/
folder, often with context given in the
README. Check out my list of the best tools for example.
Contributing
If you'd like to contribute to any of the tools in here, please check out the contribution guidelines.