dbeaver
boringproxy
dbeaver | boringproxy | |
---|---|---|
28 | 10 | |
38,034 | 1,146 | |
1.7% | 3.1% | |
9.9 | 0.0 | |
4 days ago | 14 days ago | |
Java | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
dbeaver
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Volatile, DCL, and synchronization pitfalls in Java
Not so long ago, as part of my work routine related to checking open-source projects using PVS-Studio, I checked the newly released 24th version of the well-known DBeaver project. I was pleasantly surprised by the quality of its code — the fact that developers use static analysis tools doesn't go to waste. However, I kept digging and found some suspicious code fragments that caught my eye. They were so conspicuous that I've decided to dedicate an article to each of them. So, welcome to the first part of the series.
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DBeaver – open-source Database client
Yes but not in the community version:
https://github.com/dbeaver/dbeaver/wiki/Schema-compare
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👻Top 8 Free, Open Source SQL Clients🔥
DBeaver is a veteran SQL client. In addition to basic visualization and management capabilities, it has a SQL editor, data and schema migration capabilities, monitor database connections, and more. It supports a full range of databases (both SQL and NoSQL). DBeaver is also hooked up with GPT-3, which converts your natural language to SQL.
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Does the world need a new SQL editor?
If you want to do something meaningful, here's the DBeaver GitHub repo https://github.com/dbeaver/dbeaver. Go contribute a ChatGPT plugin & update the UI to look nicer.
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SQLite is not a toy database
dbeaver is an excellent option as well, plus it supports basically every kind of SQL database in existence.
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The Firefox snap: Updates and Upgrades
Curiously enough, just yesterday a snap broke on me. People on the github thread said reverting snap didn't work either - I'm not sure whether they simply couldn't revert, or they reverted and still had issues, as I just saw this and slapped on the flatpak instead of messing with my snap. I'm also not sure whether the snap revert didn't work because of something the dbeaver team screwed up there as well, however I'll make sure to avoid automatic/unattended updates in the future. I'm running Arch on my personal machine anyway, so it's not like I mind running updates regularly, but I'd rather do it at my own discretion.
- opensource sqlyog alternatives that beautify sql code
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Issue with copying and pasting from certain sources
Please create a ticket and describe your issue here: https://github.com/dbeaver/dbeaver/issues/new/choose
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DBeaver controls compared to Microsoft SQL
I did find https://github.com/dbeaver/dbeaver/issues/6064 marked as closed, perhaps that will help?
- BigQuery Table with JSON Error "The specified column type is currently unsupported by the driver for column JSON."
boringproxy
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List of ngrok/Cloudflare Tunnel alternatives and other tunneling software and services. Focus on self-hosting.
boringproxy - Designed to be very easy to use. No config files. Clients can be remote-controlled through a simple WebUI and/or REST API on the server.
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Ask HN: Remote access to self hosted (back end) software
A couple of years ago I've read about this concept (already forgot the name) of using self hosted data storage with cloud applications. Basically, you as a user own your data and only permit the cloud hosted web application to access it - not own it and manage in your place.
I was thinking of a similar concept, but in the context of mobile applications. The mobile application itself would be accessible via Google Play Store/App Store, but the backend part would be self hosted and upon opening the application you would have to specify how to access backend.
My question is how would I access the backend if it was hosted on let's say rpi running in the living room? It's not a problem as long as I'm within the home network, but I want seemless network transition without losing access when entering/leaving the house. I was told https://www.cloudflare.com/en-gb/products/zero-trust/access/ could be used for this, but to me it sounds a bit of an overkill to use it for an application which would never be used by more than a single digit amount of users. This looks more suitable: https://github.com/boringproxy/boringproxy
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Replacing cloudflare with a VPS - My journey
Finally, someone in the above project's Matrix room directed me towards boringproxy - https://github.com/boringproxy/boringproxy. This was the perfect solution. No lengthy config files, easy to use and automate. Setup took about an hour and now everything is back up and running. The only issue I've currently not been able to solve is one where the container seems to use a websocket, which keeps getting timed out (will investigate this further tomorrow).
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zrok: open-source peer-to-peer sharing (alternative to ngrok)
boringproxy (GitHub) is my go-to for this sort of thing. Thanks for the announcement, I'll have to do a head-to-head and see how they stack up!
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What's the best way to host Jellyfin to be accessed outside of my home network?
boringproxy
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Consider SQLite
Am I the only one who thinks SQLite is still too complicated for many programs? Maybe it's just the particular type of software I normally work on, which tends towards small, self-hosted networking services[0] that would often have a single user, or maybe federated with <100 users. These programs need a small amount of state for things like tokens, users accounts, and maybe a bit of domain-specific things. This can all live in memory, but needs to be persisted to disk on writes. I've reached for SQLite several times, and always come back to just keeping a struct of hashmaps[1] in memory and dumping JSON to disk. It's worked great for my needs.
Now obviously if I wanted to scale up, at some point you would have too many users to fit in memory. But do programs at that scale actually need to exist? Why can't everyone be on a federated server with state that fits in memory/JSON? I guess that's more of a philosophical question about big tech. But I think it's interesting that most of our tech stack choices are driven by projects designed to work at a scale most of us will never need, and maybe nobody needs.
[0]: https://boringproxy.io/
[1]: https://github.com/boringproxy/boringproxy/blob/master/datab...
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Architecture issue with running a docker project - have a crack at this
This is the commit that seems to have broken the docker image.
- Problems with port forwarding
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How does pricing work for making and maintaining a website?
I use https://github.com/boringproxy/boringproxy
What are some alternatives?
dbgate - Database manager for MySQL, PostgreSQL, SQL Server, MongoDB, SQLite and others. Runs under Windows, Linux, Mac or as web application
Gravitational Teleport - The easiest, and most secure way to access and protect all of your infrastructure.
LINQ to DB - Linq to database provider.
dqlite - Embeddable, replicated and fault-tolerant SQL engine.
liquibase - Main Liquibase Source
Lunar - Intelligent adaptive brightness for your external monitors
ngrok - Expose your localhost to the web. Node wrapper for ngrok.
LevelDB - LevelDB is a fast key-value storage library written at Google that provides an ordered mapping from string keys to string values.
yjs - Shared data types for building collaborative software
mondrian - Mondrian is an Online Analytical Processing (OLAP) server that enables business users to analyze large quantities of data in real-time.
selfhosted-gateway - Self-hosted Docker native tunneling to localhost. Expose local docker containers to the public Internet via a simple docker compose interface.