Browse free open source Go Build Tools for Windows and projects below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source Go Build Tools for Windows by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

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  • 1
    deej

    deej

    Set app volumes with real sliders! Arduino project to build hardware

    deej is an open-source hardware volume mixer for Windows and Linux PCs. It lets you use real-life sliders (like a DJ!) to seamlessly control the volumes of different apps (such as your music player, the game you're playing and your voice chat session) without having to stop what you're doing. Control your microphone's input level. Lightweight desktop client, consuming around 10MB of memory. Runs from your system tray. Helpful notifications to let you know if something isn't working. The sliders are connected to 5 (or as many as you like) analog pins on an Arduino Nano/Uno board. They're powered from the board's 5V output (see schematic). The board connects via a USB cable to the PC. The code running on the Arduino board is a C program constantly writing current slider values over its serial interface. The PC runs a lightweight Go client in the background. This client reads the serial stream and adjusts app volumes according to the given configuration file.
    Downloads: 11 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 2
    Concourse

    Concourse

    Concourse is a container-based continuous thing-doer written in Go

    Built on the simple mechanics of resources, tasks, and jobs, Concourse presents a general approach to automation that makes it great for CI/CD. Concourse is designed to be expressive, versatile, and safe, remaining intuitive as the complexity of your project grows. A Concourse pipeline is like a distributed, continuous Makefile. Each job has a build plan declaring the job's input resources and what to run with them when they change. Your pipeline is then visualized in the web UI, taking only one click to get from a failed job to seeing why it failed. The visualization provides a "gut check" feedback loop: if it looks wrong, it probably is wrong. Jobs can depend on other jobs by configuring passed constraints. The resulting chain of jobs and resources is a dependency graph that continuously pushes your project forward, from source code to production.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 3
    Origin

    Origin

    Community Distribution of Kubernetes

    Origin, also known as OKD is the community distribution of Kubernetes that has been optimized for continuous application development and multi-tenant deployment. It adds developer and operations-centred tools to Kubernetes to speed up application development and simplify deployment, scaling, as well as long-term lifecycle maintenance. It also makes it easier to launch Kubernetes on any cloud or bare metal and run and update clusters, while providing all the necessary tools for creating successful containerized applications.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 4
    Comcast

    Comcast

    Simulating bad network connections so you can build better systems

    Testing distributed systems under hard failures like network partitions and instance termination is critical, but it's also important we test them under less catastrophic conditions because this is what they most often experience. Comcast is a tool designed to simulate common network problems like latency, bandwidth restrictions, and dropped/reordered/corrupted packets. It works by wrapping up some system tools in a portable(ish) way. On BSD-derived systems such as OSX, we use tools like ipfw and pfctl to inject failure. On Linux, we use iptables and tc. Comcast is merely a thin wrapper around these controls. Windows support may be possible with wipfw or even the native network stack, but this has not yet been implemented in Comcast and may be at a later date. On Linux, Comcast supports several options: device, latency, target/default bandwidth, packet loss, protocol, and port number.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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