dapr
monkey
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dapr | monkey | |
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77 | 14 | |
23,255 | 2,370 | |
1.1% | - | |
9.7 | 0.0 | |
4 days ago | almost 4 years ago | |
Go | Go | |
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.
dapr
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Interesting projects using WebAssembly
The following two examples are open-source projects maintained by Fermyon with contributions from companies like Microsoft and SUSE. The first is Spin, which allows us to use WebAssembly to create Serverless applications. The second, SpinKube, combines some of the topics I'm most excited about these days: WebAssembly and Kubernetes Operators :) The official website says, "By running applications in the Wasm abstraction layer, SpinKube offers developers a more powerful, efficient, and scalable way to optimize application delivery on Kubernetes." By the way, this post shows how to integrate SpinKube with Dapr, another technology I'm very interested in, and I should write some posts soon.
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The Ambassador Pattern
Speaking of this has anyone had much experience with Dapr (https://dapr.io/) before?
I always thought this was a particularly interesting approach from Microsoft where they use this pattern to essentially take the complexity of micro services and instead try and keep it as simple as a normal .NET application but (and I think this is the clever part) in both a vendor and language neutral way.
But all of a sudden it means you can start removing all kinds of cruft and random SDKs from your codebase and push almost all of your interactions with the outside world into something like this .
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Comparing Azure Functions vs Dapr on Azure Container Apps
Azure Container Apps hosting of Azure Functions is a way to host Azure Functions directly in Container Apps - additionally to App Service with and without containers. This offering also adds some Container Apps built-in capabilities like the Dapr microservices framework which would allow for mixing microservices workloads on the same environment with Functions.
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Episode 150: myNewsWrap – SAP and Microsoft
Having containers is nice but everything (well ... nearly everything 😉) gets better with Dapr as an outstanding tool for app development in the container-based area. Here we go what might be worth a look:
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Using DARP in production?
Anyone using or planing to use darp Distributed application platform runtime as a microservices platform? https://dapr.io/
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Ensuring Seamless Operations: Troubleshooting and Resolving Dapr Certificate Expiry
A CNCF project, the Distributed Application Runtime (Dapr) provides APIs that simplify microservice connectivity. Whether your communication pattern is service to service invocation or pub/sub messaging, Dapr helps you write resilient and secured microservices. Essentially, it provides a new way to build microservices by using the reusable blocks implemented as sidecars.
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Understanding the Dapr workflow engine and workflow patterns in .NET (1hr webinar)
Dapr is a runtime that implements common patterns such as pub/sub, state storage, etc. It runs as a sidecar to your app. Your app then interfaces with it using an sdk or http calls to use said patterns instead of implementing those patterns directly yourself. Seems pretty cool to me, but you can find out more at https://dapr.io/.
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Is Dapr actually used by anyone?
- Over 21k stars on GitHub, see the core repo and devstats.
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Modular Architecture Design question | Re-using modules in multiple applications
I would like to build modules, either in a modular monolith style, or in a microservice style using DAPR and/or Tye.
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Ask HN: Modern Node.js Request Fault Tolerance Library?
Just heard about Dapr last week. Might be more than what you are asking, though but it’s probably worth a look.
https://dapr.io/
monkey
- Many reasons to always read the LICENSE
- GitHub is the trap that Microsoft if using to secretly and illegally read your code with total disrespect to its license, in order to train its AI to write better code and, eventually, make you redundant. Change my mind
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looking for resources for learning unit testing in go?
Code that's hard to test is just bad code. And unlike most dynamic languages you can't just override some internals in Go (though there are some arcane hacks you can pull of but only at full moon https://github.com/bouk/monkey).
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Library for monkey-patching functions
This person did not read the license of the original library https://github.com/bouk/monkey/blob/master/LICENSE.md
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Alternative for Monkey patching
I am a new gopher. I was looking into the Monkey Patching module and it is archived now. I was wondering if there is an alternative for that.
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Why go plugin addresses do not load with go binary
Here is an example of this in Go - but as he says, don't actually do this. https://github.com/bouk/monkey
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is there an easy (python like way) to do mocks?
I discovered this lib a few days ago. https://github.com/bouk/monkey it allows you to monkey patch entire functions, replacing them by whatever you want. Perfect for mocking. It's simple to use. The program is hard patching the code using assembly to replace the function address at runtime. You should not use this lib out of your tests since it's absolutely not safe. It's only compatible with linux and windows. But it works great!
- Oops!
- Monkey Patching in Go (2015)
- I do not give anyone permissions to use this tool for any purpose. Don’t use it. I’m not interested in changing this license. Please don’t ask.
What are some alternatives?
MassTransit - Distributed Application Framework for .NET
gomock - GoMock is a mocking framework for the Go programming language.
camel-k - Apache Camel K is a lightweight integration platform, born on Kubernetes, with serverless superpowers
Mmock - Mmock is an HTTP mocking application for testing and fast prototyping
tye - Tye is a tool that makes developing, testing, and deploying microservices and distributed applications easier. Project Tye includes a local orchestrator to make developing microservices easier and the ability to deploy microservices to Kubernetes with minimal configuration.
rust-by-example - Learn Rust with examples (Live code editor included)
OpenFaaS - OpenFaaS - Serverless Functions Made Simple
go-txdb - Immutable transaction isolated sql driver for golang
Nomad - Nomad is an easy-to-use, flexible, and performant workload orchestrator that can deploy a mix of microservice, batch, containerized, and non-containerized applications. Nomad is easy to operate and scale and has native Consul and Vault integrations.
timex - A test-friendly replacement for golang's time package [managed by soy-programador]
NServiceBus - Build, version, and monitor better microservices with the most powerful service platform for .NET
gock - HTTP traffic mocking and testing made easy in Go ༼ʘ̚ل͜ʘ̚༽