Showing 5 open source projects for "cluster management software"

View related business solutions
  • Full-stack observability with actually useful AI | Grafana Cloud Icon
    Full-stack observability with actually useful AI | Grafana Cloud

    Our generous forever free tier includes the full platform, including the AI Assistant, for 3 users with 10k metrics, 50GB logs, and 50GB traces.

    Built on open standards like Prometheus and OpenTelemetry, Grafana Cloud includes Kubernetes Monitoring, Application Observability, Incident Response, plus the AI-powered Grafana Assistant. Get started with our generous free tier today.
    Create free account
  • Go from Code to Production URL in Seconds Icon
    Go from Code to Production URL in Seconds

    Cloud Run deploys apps in any language instantly. Scales to zero. Pay only when code runs.

    Skip the Kubernetes configs. Cloud Run handles HTTPS, scaling, and infrastructure automatically. Two million requests free per month.
    Try it free
  • 1
    future

    future

    R package: future: Unified Parallel and Distributed Processing in R

    The future package in R provides a unified abstraction for asynchronous and/or parallel computation. It allows R expressions to be scheduled for future evaluation, with the result retrieved later, in a way decoupled from the specific backend used. This lets code be written in a way that works with sequential execution, multicore, multisession, cluster, or remote compute backends, without changing the high-level code. It handles automatic exporting of needed global variables/functions,...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    renv

    renv

    renv: Project environments for R

    renv is an R dependency management toolkit that enables project-level library isolation and reproducibility. It tracks package versions in a lockfile and can restore exact library states across machines or over time, making R projects portable and consistent.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 3
    plotly

    plotly

    An interactive graphing library for R

    This part of the book teaches you how to leverage the plotly R package to create a variety of interactive graphics. There are two main ways to creating a plotly object: either by transforming a ggplot2 object (via ggplotly()) into a plotly object or by directly initializing a plotly object with plot_ly()/plot_geo()/plot_mapbox(). Both approaches have somewhat complementary strengths and weaknesses, so it can pay off to learn both approaches. Moreover, both approaches are an implementation of...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 4
    R Packages (r-pkgs)

    R Packages (r-pkgs)

    Building R packages

    rpkgs (in GitHub via hadley/r-pkgs) is the source (text + examples) for the book R Packages by Hadley Wickham and Jenny Bryan. The book teaches how to develop, document, test, and share R packages: the practices, tools, infrastructure, workflows, and best practices around package development in R. The repository contains the code, text, site content for building the book, examples, exercises, etc. It is not a software library to be loaded in R (except perhaps the examples), but a...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • AI-generated apps that pass security review Icon
    AI-generated apps that pass security review

    Stop waiting on engineering. Build production-ready internal tools with AI—on your company data, in your cloud.

    Retool lets you generate dashboards, admin panels, and workflows directly on your data. Type something like “Build me a revenue dashboard on my Stripe data” and get a working app with security, permissions, and compliance built in from day one. Whether on our cloud or self-hosted, create the internal software your team needs without compromising enterprise standards or control.
    Try Retool free
  • 5
    Reproducible-research

    Reproducible-research

    A Reproducible Data Analysis Workflow with R Markdown, Git, Make, etc.

    In this tutorial, we describe a workflow to ensure long-term reproducibility of R-based data analyses. The workflow leverages established tools and practices from software engineering. It combines the benefits of various open-source software tools including R Markdown, Git, Make, and Docker, whose interplay ensures seamless integration of version management, dynamic report generation conforming to various journal styles, and full cross-platform and long-term computational reproducibility. The workflow ensures meeting the primary goals that 1) the reporting of statistical results is consistent with the actual statistical results (dynamic report generation), 2) the analysis exactly reproduces at a later point in time even if the computing platform or software is changed (computational reproducibility), and 3) changes at any time (during development and post-publication) are tracked, tagged, and documented while earlier versions of both data and code remain accessible.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next
MongoDB Logo MongoDB