Bun

Bun is a lot of things. It's a bundler, a package manager, a test runner, a runtime, and much more. It's my beloved swiss-army knife of JavaScript toolkits, and (unsurprisingly) I'm quite a fan of it.

Source: Artem Horovenko (via Unsplash). On the left side of the image, there are two adjacent pairs of large blue tubes, aligned vertically, and running from the left to the center of the image, featuring a convex-fairing, and a grate over their respective openings. In the background we can see more large blue tubes, curving left and right, with steel cages and catwalks adjacent to them. On the right side of the image, there are six large green tubes, placed vertically, and spaced tightly together, running from top to bottom of the image.

How I Broke (my own) Production & How I Fixed it 4 Hours Later

An Adventure in Deploying Next.js Apps with Bun, Turborepo, and SST from a CI

Since I finally managed to break the CI/CD pipeline for this site, I've been thinking a lot about that infamous quote from the Senator for Alaska. Not for its accuracy (or lack thereof), but because in this one instance, I did, in fact, break (or jam) a critical tube that gets this site out to the internet. Though, I should admit that's not what took this site offline for 4 hours (we'll get to that part soon)... READ_MORE =>