bull
Yup
bull | Yup | |
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50 | 113 | |
15,062 | 22,266 | |
0.6% | - | |
6.8 | 6.8 | |
6 days ago | 3 days ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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bull
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Prioritizing Concurrent Requests: Queuing system to handle distributed processes and messages with NodeJS and Bull
To implement the solution with a queue, I used a package called 'Bull' (https://github.com/OptimalBits/bull). It's a library that helps with distributed job control, providing some very useful solutions for this type of work, such as background job processing, queues with priorities (FIFO, LIFO, and others), among other features. 'Bull' uses Redis for queue storage, so if your application crashes for any reason, once it's back online, it will continue executing the processes that are in the queue. In our case, we'll use the FIFO (First in, first out) queue solution, meaning priority based on arrival order.
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Instrumentation for Event Driven
We use bull-js for our distributed queue and event-driven library.
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Redis master/slave setup on Kubernetes throwing error: BRPOPLPUSH { ReplyError: MOVED 2651
I'm using the excellent Redis based Bull.js as a job queue on Kubernetes.
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How to use Job Queue to handle email sending in your Nestjs server
For Job Queue, NestJs provides a package named @nestjs/bull as an abstraction/wrapper on top of Bull, a popular, well-supported, high-performance Node. js-based Queue system implementation.
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How do you handle queues in Node.js? Have you ever tried using pgboss?
I'm working on a large ETL project that involves handling queues for file integration. Currently, we are using Redis with Bull (https://www.npmjs.com/package/bull) for this purpose. However, to streamline our architecture and address security concerns, we are considering migrating the queue to PostgreSQL.
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What is a good background scheduler?
BullMQ is a pretty solid choice: https://github.com/taskforcesh/bullmq It's the successor of Bull: https://github.com/OptimalBits/bull
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Learning Guidance
For Node specifically, things like Streams, understanding the asynchronous model completely, and the event loop. Also, queues tend to get used a lot in Node, so understanding the basic concepts behind that and how to use something like bull would be useful.
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image processing in express application, should it be done in a separate thread?
To do this properly, you need to put the task into queue, so if there are 1000 simultaneous uploads it won't kill your server but will be processed one by one. For the queue, see bull. Image hostings like AWS have some functionality for processing on their side, as an option.
- Best development practice for setting up a cron job for each user?
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How do I implement Heroku background processes?
This is a memory intensive process though and Heroku is OOM'ing with R14 errors. For this they recommend migrating intensive work like this to a Background Job via Redis, implemented in Bull and Throng
Yup
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Converting React Forms to Formik and Yup
Formik and Yup empower you to build robust and user-friendly forms in React. By leveraging their capabilities, you can streamline form management, reduce boilerplate code, and ensure a smooth user experience with clear and effective validation. Refer to the official documentation of Formik https://formik.org/ and Yup https://github.com/jquense/yup for in-depth exploration and advanced use cases.
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Crafting Forms in React: Vanilla vs. React Hook Form vs. Formik
On the other hand, Formik gives you components that you can mix and match to have fully working forms. Formik has builtin support for Yup for data validation.
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Using React Select with Formik
I was recently building an application that, among other features, allows a user to submit chess players and chess games to a database. I was utilizing Yup for form schema and Formik for error handling, validation, and form submission.
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A simple Vue form validation composable with Zod
Sometimes our use case might not require a full-blown form validation library though and we might already have a schema validation library installed in our project such as Zod or Yup. In that case, a simple Vue composable is all that is needed to provide a great form validation UX.
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validation ???
As for validation libraries, I would recommend Yup. With it you define your validation rules in a schema object which can be used where ever you need to do validation. It also integrates very nicely with react-hook-form which is what I’ve moved to using for any nontrivial forms.
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Top 5 form validation libraries in React JS and Next JS
GitHub Repository:
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Enhancing Redwood: A Guide to Implementing Zod for Data Validation and Schema Sharing Between the API and Web Layers
I'm currently experimenting with the fantastic Redwood framework. However, while going through the excellent tutorial, I didn't find any guidance on using data validation libraries like Yup, Zod, Vest, etc. So, I had to do some investigation and came up with a solution. This article describes the implementation of validation with Zod in a fresh Redwood app. You can find the sources at this github repository.
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Creating a form In React Native With Formik
Do you want to create a form in your React Native app but don't know how? Then this post is for you! In this post I will teach you how to create forms using a library called Formik , as well as how to integrate non-native form components with Formik. Additionally you will learn how to validate forms using Yup (which Formik supports out of the box)
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Authentication in Next.js with Supabase Auth and PKCE
The project has two authenticated pages - Home and Profile. Unauthenticated users can Sign In, Sign Up, Reset Password and Update Password. All of this is powered by Next.js app router, with usage of both Client and Server Components, and Supabase handling all of the authentication related functionality. Forms are built using Formik and Yup for field validation.
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The DynamoDB-Toolbox v1 beta is here 🙌 All you need to know!
Similarly to zod or yup, attributes are now defined through function builders. For TS users, this removes the need for the as const statement previously needed for type inference (so don't forget to remove it when you migrate 🙈).
What are some alternatives?
Bee-Queue - A simple, fast, robust job/task queue for Node.js, backed by Redis.
joi - The most powerful data validation library for JS [Moved to: https://github.com/hapijs/joi]
kue - Kue is a priority job queue backed by redis, built for node.js.
joi - The most powerful data validation library for JS [Moved to: https://github.com/sideway/joi]
node-resque - Node.js Background jobs backed by redis.
zod - TypeScript-first schema validation with static type inference
agenda - Lightweight job scheduling for Node.js
ajv - The fastest JSON schema Validator. Supports JSON Schema draft-04/06/07/2019-09/2020-12 and JSON Type Definition (RFC8927)
bottleneck - Job scheduler and rate limiter, supports Clustering
Superstruct - A simple and composable way to validate data in JavaScript (and TypeScript).
better-queue - Better Queue for NodeJS
jest - Delightful JavaScript Testing.