connect-go
fastify
connect-go | fastify | |
---|---|---|
26 | 124 | |
3 | 30,705 | |
- | 1.2% | |
0.0 | 9.4 | |
9 months ago | 1 day ago | |
Go | JavaScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
connect-go
- Code generation for REST inter service communication?
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Flutter + gRPC for Desktop and Mobile App Development - Good choice?
In my opinion it's a good idea, it's the architecture we use at work, and it works well for us. The main limitation to be aware of is that many PaaS don't support gRPC traffic (because of the proxies used). For example, DigitalOcean App Platform or Heroku if I remember correctly. If the way you want to host your backend is OK with HTTP/2 and gRPC traffic, then it's not a limitation. One way around this limitation is to use the gRPC-Web protocol, or the Connect protocol (https://connect.build/). Unfortunately, Dart's gRPC client does not support the gRPC-Web protocol outside the web platform. So for a mobile application, it's not usable at the moment. (If this PR were accepted, it would solve the issue: https://github.com/grpc/grpc-dart/pull/557.) As for Connect, no client is currently offered by Buf for Dart. Don't hesitate if you want to know more. That said, I'd advise you to use the Connect implementation for Go to implement your backend. Connect will enable your server to speak all three protocols (gRPC, gRPC-Web and Connect), which is very useful in the long term. What's more, the code is cleaner, and you benefit from official support for observability with OpenTelemetry. If you don't know Buf (the creators of Connect),I suggest you visit their website: https://buf.build/. :-) Good luck!
- How do I provide bot RPC and REST endpoints?
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Building a modern gRPC-powered microservice using Node.js, Typescript, and Connect
As mentioned in the intro, we are going to use Buf and Connect as our tools. We’ll start by installing the dependencies.
- Ask HN: Is it possible to compile TypeScript to Golang?
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gRPC + Envoy + grpc-web = scalable multiplexed streaming?
Its annoying, because the rest of Connect (https://connect.build/) looks really really cool. But its no good for me in a complex app if I can't have multiple streams from the server :/
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Issues with proxying gRPC services to web, and a potential prototype
Consider checking out https://connect.build from https://buf.build. Supports a simpler protocol than grpc-web. Includes a js/ts client for frontend. Then you don’t necessarily need a rest layer, but could leverage the proxy your building.
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Best Web Sever Framework?
Twirp (though I'd move to https://connect.build for my next project) to do JSON based RPC using protobufs.
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GRPC Gateway API Client?
my backend is go via https://github.com/bufbuild/connect-go , it's stable and all open source. just try and test it for your purpose. my project run all in 300 server more....
- Connect – A Better gRPC
fastify
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Should you use jest as a testing library?
For example, Fastify removed the instanceof operatorfrom its codebase because it was causing problems for those developers that rely on jest as a testing framework.
- Is this a valid reason to give up node?
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Next JS vs Nest JS
Both are frameworks but NextJs is for Forntend (web app in browser that use ReactJs under the hood) and NestJs is for Backend (server app running on a server witch use Express or Fastify). The only thing similar between them is the typed language in which they were written.
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Stop using express.js
Restify & Fastify Hapi
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The fundamentals of building a Docker image
Let's create a sample Node API project we can work with throughout to build a new docker image. We will leverage Fastify to create an API that we configure via the fastify-cli.
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Aplicação de Referência Empresarial em JavaScript - Contoso Real Estate
Fastify
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Building a modern gRPC-powered microservice using Node.js, Typescript, and Connect
In setting out to build this service, we wanted to use gRPC for its APIs. We’ve been reaching for REST when building APIs so far, primarily out of necessity, i.e., our public APIs needed auto-generated client SDKs and docs for developers working with them. We built those APIs with Fastify and Typebox but felt burned by a code-first approach to generating an OpenAPI spec. I’ll spare you the details and save that experience/learning for another article. Suffice it to say we love gRPC’s schema-first approach. This blog post summarizes our feelings well
- Node.js 20 is now available
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Node JS Microservice Frameworks for Developing Scalable Web Apps.
Fastify – Fast and Low overhead web framework
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How to Speed Up your Applications by Caching at the Edge with HarperDB
Custom Functions are powered by Fastify (a light-weight Node.js framework that claims to be faster than Express.js), so they’re extremely flexible.
What are some alternatives?
grpc-go - The Go language implementation of gRPC. HTTP/2 based RPC
Next.js - The React Framework
grpc-gateway - gRPC to JSON proxy generator following the gRPC HTTP spec
Express - Fast, unopinionated, minimalist web framework for node.
protobuf-es - Protocol Buffers for ECMAScript. The only JavaScript Protobuf library that is fully-compliant with Protobuf conformance tests.
Koa - Expressive middleware for node.js using ES2017 async functions
twirp - A simple RPC framework with protobuf service definitions
Nest - A progressive Node.js framework for building efficient, scalable, and enterprise-grade server-side applications with TypeScript/JavaScript 🚀
examples-go - An example Go server built with Connect.
Hapi - The Simple, Secure Framework Developers Trust
drpc - drpc is a lightweight, drop-in replacement for gRPC
AdonisJs Framework - AdonisJS is a TypeScript-first web framework for building web apps and API servers. It comes with support for testing, modern tooling, an ecosystem of official packages, and more.