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

  • The Most Powerful Software Platform for EHSQ and ESG Management Icon
    The Most Powerful Software Platform for EHSQ and ESG Management

    Addresses the needs of small businesses and large global organizations with thousands of users in multiple locations.

    Choose from a complete set of software solutions across EHSQ that address all aspects of top performing Environmental, Health and Safety, and Quality management programs.
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  • Agentic AI SRE built for Engineering and DevOps teams. Icon
    Agentic AI SRE built for Engineering and DevOps teams.

    No More Time Lost to Troubleshooting

    NeuBird AI's agentic AI SRE delivers autonomous incident resolution, helping team cut MTTR up to 90% and reclaim engineering hours lost to troubleshooting.
    Learn More
  • 1
    OliveTin

    OliveTin

    OliveTin gives safe and simple access to predefined shell commands

    Give safe and simple access to predefined shell commands from a web interface. OliveTin just runs shell commands, so theoretically, you could integrate with a bunch of stuff just by using curl, ping, etc. However, writing your own shell scripts is a great way to extend OliveTin. Uses only a few MB of RAM and barely any CPU. Written in Go, with a web interface written as a modern, responsive, single-page app that uses the REST/gRPC API. Helps potential contributors be consistent, and helps with maintainability. Available for quickly testing and getting it up and running, great for the self-hosted community. Passes all the accessibility checks in Firefox, and issues with accessibility are taken seriously.
    Downloads: 6 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    Powerline Go

    Powerline Go

    A beautiful and useful low-latency prompt for your shell

    A Powerline-like prompt for Bash, ZSH, and Fish. All of the version control systems supported by powerline shell give you a quick look into the state of your repo. The current branch is displayed and changes background color when the branch is dirty. When the local branch differs from the remote, the difference in number of commits is shown along with ⇡ or ⇣ indicating whether a git push or pull is pending. powerline-go uses ANSI color codes, these should nowadays work everywhere, but you may have to set your $TERM to xterm-256color for it to work. If you want to use the "patched" mode (which is the default and provides improved UI), you'll need to install a powerline font, either as fallback, or by patching the font you use for your terminal. Alternatively, you can use "compatible" or "flat" mode. There are a few optional arguments that can be seen by running powerline-go -help. These can be used by changing the command you have set in your shell’s init file.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
    Last Update:
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