CoreWCF
dapr
Our great sponsors
CoreWCF | dapr | |
---|---|---|
24 | 78 | |
1,596 | 23,255 | |
1.1% | 1.1% | |
7.8 | 9.7 | |
6 days ago | 6 days ago | |
C# | Go | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
CoreWCF
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How do I approach migrating from .net framework WCF to .net core web api
CoreWCF might be of some use.
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Having a heck of a time getting WCF web.config working correctly.
You can open a discussion in the CoreWCF repo:
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Why WCF? Am I wrong for hating it so much?
In the later versions you could avoid almost all the XML mess by configuring all of the settings in code. The experience is pretty close to gRPC imo, one plus point is you don't need to learn how to write proto classes. Though you could use protobuf-net for a similar experience. I'm kinda hopeful with CoreWCF, they aim to support more transports (including event gRPC) in the future along with queues other than MSMQ and slowly evolve from being too SOAP specific. There's a lot of potential still for WCF to be a transport agnostic framework that ecompass a lot of transports.
- OpenAPI vs SOAP and WSDL
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.NET 7 is Available Today
On our end, it's WCF for some servers that haven't been upgraded over. Though it seems we have a path forward for that now with CoreWCF that we're working towards.
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Bring WCF apps to the latest .NET with CoreWCF and Upgrade Assistant
There's ongoing work on adding generic queue support. The first two concrete implementations should be MSMQ and RabbitMq from what I recall, though MSMQ will be windows only. But the nice thing about the work is it also opens up other types of message queues for WCF (e.g. Azure Service Bus, RabbitMq, Amazon SQS etc...).
- .NET 6 is now in Ubuntu 22.04
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CoreWCF 1.1.0 release and project templates
It's seems there's already design work started for a generic queue concept here. I'm pretty interested to see how it goes as well as that'll be a big part for CoreWcf to move forward as a viable choice for greenfield projects and not just a way to migrate existing Wcf projects to Core.
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Questions about OWIN and WCF from a high level.
The ongoing .net core port called CoreWcf plans to realize that goal as a future feature on it's roadmap. Where there's plans on adding new transports that didn't exist on .net framework wcf like Grpc, Azure Service bus, Amazon SQS, rabbitmq etc...
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CoreWCF v1.0.0 released and comes with official support from Microsoft
If you hit any difficulties or have any problems, feel free to jump on the gitter channel. Details for that are in the repo contributing guide.
dapr
- Dapr: Microservices API
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Interesting projects using WebAssembly
The following two examples are open-source projects maintained by Fermyon with contributions from companies like Microsoft and SUSE. The first is Spin, which allows us to use WebAssembly to create Serverless applications. The second, SpinKube, combines some of the topics I'm most excited about these days: WebAssembly and Kubernetes Operators :) The official website says, "By running applications in the Wasm abstraction layer, SpinKube offers developers a more powerful, efficient, and scalable way to optimize application delivery on Kubernetes." By the way, this post shows how to integrate SpinKube with Dapr, another technology I'm very interested in, and I should write some posts soon.
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The Ambassador Pattern
Speaking of this has anyone had much experience with Dapr (https://dapr.io/) before?
I always thought this was a particularly interesting approach from Microsoft where they use this pattern to essentially take the complexity of micro services and instead try and keep it as simple as a normal .NET application but (and I think this is the clever part) in both a vendor and language neutral way.
But all of a sudden it means you can start removing all kinds of cruft and random SDKs from your codebase and push almost all of your interactions with the outside world into something like this .
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Comparing Azure Functions vs Dapr on Azure Container Apps
Azure Container Apps hosting of Azure Functions is a way to host Azure Functions directly in Container Apps - additionally to App Service with and without containers. This offering also adds some Container Apps built-in capabilities like the Dapr microservices framework which would allow for mixing microservices workloads on the same environment with Functions.
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Episode 150: myNewsWrap – SAP and Microsoft
Having containers is nice but everything (well ... nearly everything 😉) gets better with Dapr as an outstanding tool for app development in the container-based area. Here we go what might be worth a look:
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Using DARP in production?
Anyone using or planing to use darp Distributed application platform runtime as a microservices platform? https://dapr.io/
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Ensuring Seamless Operations: Troubleshooting and Resolving Dapr Certificate Expiry
A CNCF project, the Distributed Application Runtime (Dapr) provides APIs that simplify microservice connectivity. Whether your communication pattern is service to service invocation or pub/sub messaging, Dapr helps you write resilient and secured microservices. Essentially, it provides a new way to build microservices by using the reusable blocks implemented as sidecars.
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Understanding the Dapr workflow engine and workflow patterns in .NET (1hr webinar)
Dapr is a runtime that implements common patterns such as pub/sub, state storage, etc. It runs as a sidecar to your app. Your app then interfaces with it using an sdk or http calls to use said patterns instead of implementing those patterns directly yourself. Seems pretty cool to me, but you can find out more at https://dapr.io/.
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Is Dapr actually used by anyone?
- Over 21k stars on GitHub, see the core repo and devstats.
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Modular Architecture Design question | Re-using modules in multiple applications
I would like to build modules, either in a modular monolith style, or in a microservice style using DAPR and/or Tye.
What are some alternatives?
SoapCore - SOAP extension for ASP.NET Core
MassTransit - Distributed Application Framework for .NET
Introducing .NET Multi-platform App UI (MAUI) - .NET MAUI is the .NET Multi-platform App UI, a framework for building native device applications spanning mobile, tablet, and desktop.
camel-k - Apache Camel K is a lightweight integration platform, born on Kubernetes, with serverless superpowers
FrameworkBenchmarks - Source for the TechEmpower Framework Benchmarks project
tye - Tye is a tool that makes developing, testing, and deploying microservices and distributed applications easier. Project Tye includes a local orchestrator to make developing microservices easier and the ability to deploy microservices to Kubernetes with minimal configuration.
wcf - This repo contains the client-oriented WCF libraries that enable applications built on .NET Core to communicate with WCF services.
OpenFaaS - OpenFaaS - Serverless Functions Made Simple
zeebe-dapr-example - An example that allows to orchestrate Dapr microservices with the Zeebe process engine.
Nomad - Nomad is an easy-to-use, flexible, and performant workload orchestrator that can deploy a mix of microservice, batch, containerized, and non-containerized applications. Nomad is easy to operate and scale and has native Consul and Vault integrations.
.NET Runtime - .NET is a cross-platform runtime for cloud, mobile, desktop, and IoT apps.
NServiceBus - Build, version, and monitor better microservices with the most powerful service platform for .NET