aiosql
EteSync Server
aiosql | EteSync Server | |
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10 | 84 | |
1,245 | 1,452 | |
- | 0.5% | |
8.7 | 4.8 | |
about 2 months ago | 7 months ago | |
Python | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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aiosql
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Don't use your ORM entities for everything – embrace the SQL
> resort to raw SQL
I'm the opposite, I would rather write SQL than "resorting to" ORM queries, which is why my favourite libraries are aiosql[1] in Python, Hugsql[2] in Clojure and similar: write the queries as SQL in .sql files, which then get exposed as functions to your code.
[1] https://nackjicholson.github.io/aiosql/
[2] https://www.hugsql.org/
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Project template without ORM
I prefer to use aiosql https://nackjicholson.github.io/aiosql/ to organize my SQL and have it in a SQL folder. It looks like this where colons specify variables:
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If you could choose any Python web framework to build APIs for a startup, which one would you choose and why?
I tend to do a lot of data-heavy projects, so I tend to eschew ORM-style code and use a project called aiosql to bind raw SQL to python methods, and offload as much expensive computation to the DB as possible. If I'm prototyping an endpoint (e.g. calculating percentiles for some midsized time-series data), and just need a non-performant working placeholder, it's extremely easy to dump a SQL table to pandas and yeet something together in a few lines - then smoothly replace it with a more performant SQL query down the road. Highly contextual move, but I find it to be an awesome balancing point between flexibility, scalability, performance, productivity, etc.
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Which not so well known Python packages do you like to use on a regular basis and why?
As one of the rare Python developers who actually like SQL, my favourite database library is aiosql
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Database as Code. Not only migrations
Only slightly off-topic, poking around in there led me to aiosql, which takes an idea I'd had and jumps forward a good long way. :-)
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The Data-Oriented Design Process for Game Development
I've been doing something in this vein for a big personal project, using this python library: https://nackjicholson.github.io/aiosql/.
In short, I'm using a run of the mill stack (Caddy/Gunicorn/Flask/Postgres) - but with the twist that all my core logic is defined in plaintext SQL files, which get bound into namespaced Python methods by aiosql. Routing, error handling, templating, etc. are all done in Python - but all data manipulation and processing are outsourced to the DB level. All database object definitions are laid out in a massive, idempotent "init_db" method that gets called at launch, so I can essentially point the app at a fresh instance of Postgres and rebuild from scratch. The design is primarily driven by my personal distaste for ORMs, but I've found it extremely beneficial in terms of rigid typing, integrity checks, and performance.
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Is it bad practice for my flask API to run raw SQL queries against my DB to get/post data?
Definitely check out https://nackjicholson.github.io/aiosql/ if you want to stick with SQL
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Django 4.0 release candidate 1 released
I took that approach on my latest Flask project and it’s gone quite swimmingly. The problem I ran into was that a lot of the ecosystem, and therefore documentation, blog posts, helper libraries, etc., are all written under the assumption that you’re using an ORM. It took a while to figure out how to work around that, but once I did, I was home clear.
I also used a helper library to automatically map namespaced .sql files onto python functions with various return types, which made the development process way more elegant: https://nackjicholson.github.io/aiosql/. Absolute game changer if you plan to go this route - can’t recommend it highly enough.
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FastAPI framework, high perf, easy to learn, fast to code, ready for production
I've been using FastAPI for some time, and now I'm using it as a full web framework (not just for REST APIs). I like writing SQL without ORMs, so the combination of aiosql[0] + FastAPI + Jinja2 works great. Add HTMX[1] and even interactive websites become easy.
That's in fact the stack I am using to build https://drwn.io/ and I couldn't enjoy it more.
Thanks Sebastián for creating it!
[0] https://github.com/nackjicholson/aiosql
EteSync Server
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Show HN: ElectricSQL, Postgres to SQLite active-active sync for local-first apps
Are you / have you considered leveraging postgres' row level security for this (row filtering)? Feels like a natural fit for ensuring the right subset of data gets to the right users https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/ddl-rowsecurity.html
E2E encryption would also be nice to have, it could be worth having a look at https://www.etesync.com/ for inspiration
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Any alternative to Google contact?
A few days ago I saw some guys in this community saying that they uses https://www.etesync.com/ in order to sync contacts between Proton + Thunderbird (Desktop) + Mobile. I haven't used it yet, but I saved the link.
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The Privacy, Security, & OSINT Show: 303-iOS Privacy & Security
https://inteltechniques.com/book7a.html Benefits of iOS Risks of iOS Privacy & Security Considerations Settings Remove unused stock apps App Store login vs iCloud login App funding DNS: https://nextdns.io/ Calendars & Contacts: https://www.etesync.com/ Password Manager: https://strongboxsafe.com/ VoIP App: https://acrobits.net/ VoIP Service: https://voip.ms/en/invite/Mzc2NjM3 Data Service: https://refer.telnyx.com/refer/zrfmo Custom App Settings Shortcuts for Home Screen Next Week
- The Privacy, Security, & OSINT Show: 301-Self-Hosted 3: Calendars, Contacts, & Notes
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⟳ 1 apps added, 30 updated at f-droid.org
EteSync - Secure Data Sync (version 2.4.0): Secure, private and end-to-end encrypted calendar, contacts and tasks sync
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Khalel org-back-to-heading: Directory / write-protected
The programs will allow me to sync both my Google and my Etesyc Contacts and Calendars. Etesync also needs Etesync-Dav installed on the desktop but that is well explained on Github.
- Am I overthinking to-do lists?
- Tell HN: Telegram sole reason why I still have my contacts since 10 years
- What's an open source solution to have a synced calendar in phone and computer that doesn't require self hosting?
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Encrypted caldav/carddav solution
There is https://www.etesync.com
What are some alternatives?
databases - Async database support for Python. 🗄
Nextcloud - ☁️ Nextcloud server, a safe home for all your data
full-stack-fastapi-template - Full stack, modern web application template. Using FastAPI, React, SQLModel, PostgreSQL, Docker, GitHub Actions, automatic HTTPS and more.
selfhosted-apps-docker - Guide by Example
django-async-orm - Bringing Async Capabilities to django ORM
DecSync CC - Android app to sync contacts, calendars and tasks without a server using DecSync
fastapi-crudrouter - A dynamic FastAPI router that automatically creates CRUD routes for your models
org-caldav - Caldav sync for Emacs orgmode
Pebble - Java Template Engine
baikal-docker - Provides a ready-to-go Baikal server, incl. docker-compose.yml & Systemd service file
mangum - AWS Lambda support for ASGI applications
Baïkal - Baïkal is a Calendar+Contacts server