add sponsors to readme

pull/342/head
Jesse Duffield 2 years ago
parent da650f4384
commit 5112ac775d

@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
# see https://github.com/JamesIves/github-sponsors-readme-action
name: Generate Sponsors README
on:
push:
branches:
- master
jobs:
deploy:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout 🛎️
uses: actions/checkout@v2
- name: Generate Sponsors 💖
uses: JamesIves/github-sponsors-readme-action@v1.0.8
with:
token: ${{ secrets.SPONSORS_TOKEN }}
file: 'README.md'

@ -15,10 +15,16 @@ A simple terminal UI for both docker and docker-compose, written in Go with the
![Gif](/docs/resources/demo3.gif)
This Just In: Github Sponsors is matching every donation dollar-for-dollar for the next twelve months so if you're feeling generous consider [sponsoring me](https://github.com/sponsors/jesseduffield)
[Demo](https://youtu.be/NICqQPxwJWw)
## Sponsors
This project would not be possible without the help of its very generous sponsors! If you want to support Lazydocker's development, please consider [sponsoring me](https://github.com/sponsors/jesseduffield)
<!-- sponsors --><!-- sponsors -->
## Elevator Pitch
Minor rant incoming: Something's not working? Maybe a service is down. `docker-compose ps`. Yep, it's that microservice that's still buggy. No issue, I'll just restart it: `docker-compose restart`. Okay now let's try again. Oh wait the issue is still there. Hmm. `docker-compose ps`. Right so the service must have just stopped immediately after starting. I probably would have known that if I was reading the log stream, but there is a lot of clutter in there from other services. I could get the logs for just that one service with `docker compose logs --follow myservice` but that dies everytime the service dies so I'd need to run that command every time I restart the service. I could alternatively run `docker-compose up myservice` and in that terminal window if the service is down I could just `up` it again, but now I've got one service hogging a terminal window even after I no longer care about its logs. I guess when I want to reclaim the terminal realestate I can do `ctrl+P,Q`, but... wait, that's not working for some reason. Should I use ctrl+C instead? I can't remember if that closes the foreground process or kills the actual service.
What a headache!

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