Databunker
noms
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Databunker | noms | |
---|---|---|
36 | 11 | |
1,208 | 7,502 | |
3.0% | - | |
5.7 | 1.9 | |
1 day ago | over 2 years ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
Databunker
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GDPR compliance for hobby projects
https://databunker.org/ looks really interesting but I haven't found any Django or Python integrations as yet. Any thoughts?
- Practical GDPR Compliance Guide for Startup Founders
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Need your tips on SaaS product launch without a marketing budget
I also have an open-source product in this field: https://databunker.org/
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Need advice on open-source projects with the best documentation
PS. Here is my tool: https://databunker.org/
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Armon Dadgar (HashiCorp CTO) on startup motivation
This morning I was fortunate to listen to a podcast with Armon Dadgar . Armon is a #Hashicorp CTO and co-founder. I found inspiration in his words to what we do Privacybunker.IO. The matter is that we are also an open-source security vendor and we are building a standard tool for every company to store customer records and with the highest level of security and privacy compliance: https://databunker.org/.
So, according to Armon, the motivation for #Hashicorp was the following:
In a Pre #Oracle world, every company was building its own database.
Every company that manages any data had to build their own storage engine, their own query engine, their own everything.
This was a huge tax on the entire industry.
But once you have a set of vendors that provide standard SQL solutions, like Microsoft, Oracle, Sybase, etc... then you can build higher-level applications that consume the database.
For us (#Hashicorp), it felt like, where we are with our tools.
When we started, everyone was building their own platform, everyone was rolling its own approach to automation.
Shouldn't there be a set of vendors who sell that for you and you just operate it rather than building it?
Original podcast: https://lnkd.in/dh4R4xMe
About Databunker
- It took me 1 year to grow to 100 stars on GitHub
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Looking for secure storage for customer data? Look no further!
Hi, I am an open-source developer working on Databunker: https://github.com/securitybunker/databunker.
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Creating CRUD for customer data vs using open-source Databunker tool
More info: https://databunker.org/ https://github.com/securitybunker/databunker
Hi, I am an open-source developer working on Databunker. Today I got a question from one of the guys on a social network.
- Databunker - a secure enclave for customer data
noms
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How Dolt Stores Table Data
This is from 2022. It is based on Noms [1], which is no longer maintained (they forked it).
I think the Noms doc linked from this article [2] is clearer than the article itself. That said I sill cannot turn my head around to grasp how this entire thing work tbh. I hope they wrote a peer reviewed paper to serve the audience better.
[1] https://github.com/attic-labs/
[2] https://github.com/attic-labs/noms/blob/master/doc/intro.md#...
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I was wrong. CRDTs are the future
I am. But i know very little about CRDTs lol, so we'll see how that goes. I'm interested in converting some immutable, local-first data warehouse tooling i enjoy to a CRDT version. Prior it was more.. Git-like. Basically just Git with data structures inspired-massively from Noms[1].
The thing i've found most interesting is it appears[2] that CRDT backends need to expose CRDT flavored types to users. Which is to say how i'm writing this combines the notion of a type, say `[i32]` with how you want the merges to work. CRDT works great but based on my amateur-hour researching on the subject i don't feel you can write a single CRDT merge strategy for a single data type ala `[i32]` and have it be always correct. Applications need to indicate enough context on what makes sense for a given data type.
So yea, i agree with you. I'm interested in making a database-like thing, backed by CRDTs, but i also have seen very few general purpose implementations with CRDTs. It feels like i'm breaking "new ground", while having no idea what i'm doing and having no intention of being an actual researcher here. I'm just making apps i enjoy heh.
[1]: https://github.com/attic-labs/noms
- Building a decentralized database
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Picking low-hanging memory usage bugs of an open source database
Most of the changes are in the noms package which used to live in a separate repo (https://github.com/attic-labs/noms), but Dolt has since adopted them.
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Downsides of Offline First
Not much more to say other than Noms was my favorite project (https://github.com/attic-labs/noms) for a while until acquisition and the engineers are now the ones behind Replicache (https://replicache.dev/).
I think this is going to be the next "Realm" that works everywhere.
- calling Format() on a time struct in a golang program changes the default Location's timezone information in the rest of the program
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Steps to build Database System from sratch?
The storage layer based on Noms: https://github.com/attic-labs/noms
- Noms: The versioned, forkable, syncable database
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Dolt is Git for Data: a SQL database that you can fork, clone, branch, merge
Noms might be what you’re looking for (https://github.com/attic-labs/noms). Dolt is actually a fork of Noms.
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CondensationDB: Build secure and collaborative apps [open-source]
People that are interested in a similar feature set should check out https://github.com/attic-labs/noms and the SQL fork of Noms, https://github.com/dolthub/dolt
What are some alternatives?
Milvus - A cloud-native vector database, storage for next generation AI applications
rqlite - The lightweight, distributed relational database built on SQLite.
migrate - Database migrations. CLI and Golang library.
dat - Go Postgres Data Access Toolkit
goleveldb - LevelDB key/value database in Go.
dolt - Dolt – Git for Data
mssql - Microsoft SQL server adapter for REL written in Golang.
sql-migrate - SQL schema migration tool for Go.
immudb - immudb - immutable database based on zero trust, SQL/Key-Value/Document model, tamperproof, data change history
skeema - Declarative pure-SQL schema management for MySQL and MariaDB
rosedb - Lightweight, fast and reliable key/value storage engine based on Bitcask.
cockroach - CockroachDB - the open source, cloud-native distributed SQL database.