aws-gocljs
starter
Our great sponsors
aws-gocljs | starter | |
---|---|---|
22 | 9 | |
36 | 1,702 | |
- | 1.2% | |
0.0 | 5.8 | |
over 1 year ago | 8 days ago | |
Go | TypeScript | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
aws-gocljs
-
How to build a website without frameworks and tons of libraries
i make two kinds of websites:
- static. markdown rendered to html using github’s api[1].
- dynamic. a go binary and an html file with inlined js zipped together and shipped somewhere[2].
it’s nice to never consider the machinery of either of these anymore. instead i think about building interesting things.
1.
https://github.com/nathants/render
2.
-
Ask HN: How can a BE/infra developer handle the FE side of personal projects?
have you tried cljs and reagent? it’s a different vibe.
my bootstrap: https://github.com/nathants/aws-gocljs
the project: https://reagent-project.github.io/
-
In what modern cloud envs is ClojureScript suitable?
https://gocljs.nathants.com is 300kb gzipped on deploy in a single html file. setup is here: https://github.com/nathants/aws-gocljs.
-
Ask HN: Which stack is as boring (good boring) and cheap in 2023 as PHP?
aws, go, and clojurescript.
go is notoriously boring.
the reagent api for clojurescript hasn’t changed in a decade, though recent things like shadow-cljs do improve qol.
aws releases services with 2 in their name instead of changing existing ones. the old boring service will plod along forever.
aws apigateway v2 is much better, but i have many deployed projects i will never migrate because they are fine on v1.
i do it like this: https://github.com/nathants/aws-gocljs
-
We deploy 5X faster with warm Docker containers
lambdas updatecode api takes less than a second. using container instead of a zip for lambda has advantages, but speed is not one of them.
i auto rebuild my go zip and patch aws on every code change. it’s done before i alt tab and curl.
script: https://github.com/nathants/aws-gocljs/blob/master/bin/dev.s...
-
Ask HN: What is the most barebone back end solution?
lambda + s3. add ec2 spot if you need it.
just make sure you understand how billing works. mostly it’s just egress bandwidth is expensive.
do something like this:
https://github.com/nathants/aws-gocljs
or with less opinions:
https://github.com/nathants/libaws/tree/master/examples/simp...
welcome to cloud, glhf!
-
Devpod: Remote Development at Uber
using remote resources as a part of your local dev flow can be very useful if your local environment is constrained on:
- upload and/or download bandwidth
- cpu/ram/gpu/ssd
this can be as simple as an ephemeral ec2 spot machine that reacts every time files on it’s filesystem change. it then does stuff, like building and shipping.
your local setup then needs to rsync files from local to remote every time you save a file.
i’m on an upload constrained setup right now, and this[1] significantly speeds up my iterations uploading lambda zips.
fancier setups probably are similarly advantageous, but add tradeoffs proportional to their complexity.
1. https://github.com/nathants/aws-gocljs/blob/258ea5bb72d06a50...
-
Ask HN: Solo Dev Stack of 2022?
go, clojurescript, and aws. all three of these have problems, but like linux are the least bad of the available options. from some angles they are even quite good.
- go, a natural fit for backend with types and compilers and speed
- clojurescript (and react via reagent), a natural fit for frontend with dynamism, flexibility, and data centrism
- aws, a natural fit for infra. like linux, literally everyone is using it. if you avoid architect advice and tape over most of the knobs it’s quite good
example:
-
Ask HN: How do you deploy your weekend project in 2022?
on aws as scale to zero services. lambda, dynamo, s3, and ephemeral ec2 spot.
when egress bandwidth is needed i use cloudflare workers + r2 just like i would use s3 presigned urls.
typically i start from a full project template[1][2]. sometimes i start from scratch[3].
1. https://github.com/nathants/aws-gocljs
- Simple website approach and cost
starter
-
Ask HN: Solo Dev Stack of 2022?
I've been enjoying developing on top of PostGraphile. https://www.graphile.org/
Good starter: https://github.com/graphile/starter
I can add a column the the db, and my frontend gets that autimagically (in dev mode, it generates a graphql schema out of the db, and from that it creates composables for my frontend wiht graphql-codegen). On the frontend I use Vue 3, the starter is build with nextjs/react.
-
Show HN: Appwrite – Open-Source and Self Hosted Firebase Alternative
I learned so much about postgresql and RLS from postgraphile starter project: https://github.com/graphile/starter/blob/main/%40app/db/migr...
also the project is worth checking out ;)
- Have my first GraphQL project at work. Any recommended learning resource for production-ready GraphQL APIs?
-
Best resource to learn PL/pgSQL?
I'm a fairly seasoned developer, but I've started contributing to a project (graphile-starter) where the core business logic is defined in PL/pgSQL functions and realized I have a lot to learn.
-
PostgREST v9.0.0
Someone called it: "hasura for adults”
It's highly customisable, works directly with postgresql row levels security and the performance is quite good. It has a custom GraphiQL gui to work on queries/mutations.
To really see how it all works together checkout the starter project: https://github.com/graphile/starter it has migrations, job queue, graphql-codegen etc.
Benjie (https://github.com/benjie) is one of the greatest maintainers I've ever seen!
- Are there any "Opinionated" backend web app frameworks for node?
-
SAME BACKEND FOR WEB APP AND MOBILE APP ?
Here’s a full stack, batteries included example: https://github.com/graphile/starter it doesn’t have mobile app yet but could be added relatively easily.
-
Bedrock - modern full-stack Next.js & GraphQL boilerplate
Postgraphile starter uses most of the same tech and has all the same functionality as far as I can tell, with the additional benefit of Postgraphile generating your GraphQL schema and resolvers instead of worrying them manually.
-
Overwhelmed with auth options, looking for constructive feedback
Check out the Postgraphile Starter and how it handles auth and sessions in a graphql api
What are some alternatives?
org-mode-site-template - A workflow for a complete site using the HTML publish option of Emacs Org-Mode
crystal - 🔮 Graphile's Crystal Monorepo; home to Grafast, PostGraphile, pg-introspection, pg-sql2 and much more!
zola_jamiedumont.com - Zola codebase behind jamiedumont.com
codebase - a software and writing repository
kee-frame-sample - Demo application to show off features of kee-frame
apollo-cache-policies - An extension of the Apollo 3 cache with support for advanced cache policies.
JSONCrush - Compress JSON into URL friendly strings
next-auth - Authentication for the Web.
boardgame.io - State Management and Multiplayer Networking for Turn-Based Games
sandman2 - Automatically generate a RESTful API service for your legacy database. No code required!
lazyweb
tarantool - Get your data in RAM. Get compute close to data. Enjoy the performance.