craft-jitter
notiflux
craft-jitter | notiflux | |
---|---|---|
1 | 1 | |
8 | 4 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 7.5 | |
7 months ago | 8 days ago | |
PHP | Rust | |
MIT License | - |
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.
craft-jitter
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Ask HN: What was an interesting project you started and finished over a weekend?
I think my favourite weekend project I've built was an image transformer plugin for Craft CMS. The popular (and only) free image plugin had been deprecated and the author was only going to continue supporting their paid version so I hacked together an Imgix-inspired plugin called Jitter[0] over the weekend.
It's not very popular but I like it and use it frequently.
[0]: https://github.com/codewithkyle/craft-jitter
notiflux
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Ask HN: What was an interesting project you started and finished over a weekend?
It was actually couple of weeks ago, but a small project that took mostly just two days to put together and I'm pretty happy with how it turned out.
Notiflux (https://github.com/ikornaselur/notiflux): a small WebSocket broadcast server, the idea being that clients connect with WebSocket (such as a website) and then any source can send a POST request to the API to broadcast messages, allowing for real-time functionality from servers that don't support WebSockets, or you might have multiple sources that each might broadcast messages.
Auth is done by Notiflux having a public key and the sources have the corresponding private key, JWT tokens signed with the private key include topics and scope (subscribe or broadcast to the topics). Clients would auth with an API for example, get a JWT with maybe a 10 second expiry, use it to subscribe to the topics that the API would then broadcast to through Notiflux.
It was an excuse as well to play with WebSocket in Rust and learn a little bit about the Actor Pattern.
If I would continue I'd want to explore how well it scales, how much traffic it could handle and look into horizontal scaling, but I feel like it's complete enough as a toy project.
What are some alternatives?
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CopilotForXcode - The missing GitHub Copilot, Codeium and ChatGPT Xcode Source Editor Extension
Pingu - Pingu - 🐧 A nifty menubar app that... pings
radio_colette - Raspberry Pi Mp3 Player
openwhatsapp - Open SMS to Whatsapp
valoserveri