Akka.net
Ninja
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Akka.net | Ninja | |
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20 | 2 | |
4,612 | 1,913 | |
0.8% | 0.2% | |
9.3 | 5.9 | |
6 days ago | 5 months ago | |
C# | Java | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
Akka.net
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What is the fastest producer consumer model in C#
akka.net actors. Actors all the way! https://getakka.net
- .NET - iskustva s akka.net?
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MassTransit with MSMQ vs RabbitMQ
If it's the former you may want to take a look at something like the actor model akka.net with persistent actors (https://getakka.net/articles/persistence/architecture.html). No need of an external message broker or mass transit (which is a wrapper over different message brokers). You could use sqllite for persisting the actors state to recover in case of a restart.
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For .NET 6+, is there value in using NHibernate with Sprint.net or should I stick with EF Core and the usual supporting libraries?
Spring and Hibernate are the goto libraries in Java land and I suspect that's the primary motivation for your colleague's recommendations. It's quite easy to bulldoze someone less experienced with your ideas so be careful of that. I'd avoid both. They aren't bad libraries at all but they have a 'legacy' feel and it will make your application less future proof. Would a distributed system be viable? If so then I'd recommend Akka, there'a .NET port of it that's well supported and maintained.
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Learning resource for seniors
Is akka a good alternative?
- Carl Hewitt has died [pdf]
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Using functional extensions in production C# code?
However, I've found that sometimes, they are a little -too- functional. I'm a bit more preferential to Akka.Net's implementation of Option and Try, if only because they have good 'escape hatches' where you interrogate them in a more procedural manner.
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Microsoft RulesEngine. Feedback from those that have used it in enterprise environments
This project is also what ultimately led to the creation of Akka.NET - I wrote an overview on how our application was built here: https://aaronstannard.com/markedup-akkadotnet/
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Questions about network programming with C#
You may also want to take a look at queues (e.g. RabbitMQ) or even something like Akka.NET or Microsoft Orleans.
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What does the .NET ecosystem offer in terms of distributed data processing frameworks?
From the title I immediately thought AKKA.NET or Orleans
Ninja
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On the Future of Akka and Lightbend
It’s a shame that the Play framework is being abandoned. v1 had a lot of great ideas, but v2 kind of jumped off the cliff into Scala lala-land, where it got lost in the weeds. It never really recovered.
If you’re looking for a straightforward Java framework similar to Play v1 check out Ninja:
https://www.ninjaframework.org/
For me at least, it hits a sweet spot of enabling fast productive development and maintainable code.
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best light framework or library for developing API without the magic (Spring)
take a look at https://www.ninjaframework.org/
What are some alternatives?
protoactor-dotnet - Proto Actor - Ultra fast distributed actors for Go, C# and Java/Kotlin
Spring Boot - Spring Boot
Orleankka - Functional API for Microsoft Orleans http://orleanscontrib.github.io/Orleankka
Spring - Spring Framework
Orleans - Cloud Native application framework for .NET
Vaadin - Vaadin 6, 7, 8 is a Java framework for modern Java web applications.
.NET port of LMAX Disruptor - Port of LMAX Disruptor to .NET
Grails - The Grails Web Application Framework
.NEXT Raft
Jooby - The modular web framework for Java and Kotlin
MBrace - MBrace Core Libraries & Runtime Foundations
ZK - ZK is a highly productive Java framework for building amazing enterprise web and mobile applications