docs.anycable.io
AnyCable
docs.anycable.io | AnyCable | |
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1 | 13 | |
9 | 1,896 | |
- | 0.9% | |
7.6 | 7.0 | |
about 2 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
- | 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.
docs.anycable.io
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Container with anycable-go can not reach Internal Address from Web Service on Render.com
We don't have any Render specific docs yet; it would be great if you share some information either via issue or PR: https://github.com/anycable/docs.anycable.io
AnyCable
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AnyCable for Ruby on Rails: How Does it Improve over Action Cable?
The AnyCable WebSocket Server was created to combine the beauty of Action Cable with the performance benefits gained from Golang. AnyCable handles WebSockets on a different server called AnyCable-Go, effectively reducing the burden on your primary web application.
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Stream Updates to Your Users with LiteCable for Ruby on Rails
LiteCable is tailored for vertical scaling by a tight integration of components. If you extract maximum performance from the SQLite engine, the limits of this approach are pushed a lot further. Once you observe that your latencies start to explode, though, I would suggest researching options like AnyCable, which inherently provide better strategies for horizontal scaling.
- Show HN: AnyCable – real-time for Next.js, open source alternative to PaaS
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Deploy Anycable with MRSK
Here we'll deploy Anycable wih MRSK.
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Using Tailscale on Lambda for a Live Development Proxy
So far, everything is working great with our new LambdaCable gem. Eventually it will be a drop-in adapter for ActionCable and join the ranks of other popular alternatives like AnyCable. To bring the project to completion faster, I needed feedback loops that were much faster than deploying code to the cloud. I needed a development proxy! One where my Rails application would receive events from both Lambda's Function URLs and the WebSocket events from API Gateway. Illustrated below with a demo video.
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AnyCable v1.3: embedded NATS, StatsD, and more
AnyCable v1.3 has been just released. The major highlights are:
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Faster RuboCop runs for Rails apps
I've been using this technique for a long time for gems development—to speed up CI RuboCop runs (by installing only the linter dependencies). Here is my typical rubocop.gemfile:
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Any performance/memory issue with Ruby 3.x compared to 2.7?
It does, but the precompiled binaries are only for < 3.1: https://rubygems.org/gems/grpc/versions/1.43.1-x86-linux
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Action cable or AJAX? Performance and solution - what to choose?
Action cable is probably what you're looking for. If you start having performance issues, AnyCable is a more performatic option that requires almost no changes in your ruby code.
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Kubing Rails: stressless Kubernetes deployments with Kuby
I decided to give it a try for the AnyCable demo application, which requires deploying not only a Rails app, but also additional services for AnyCable.
What are some alternatives?
devdocs - API Documentation Browser
Action Cable Client - A ruby client for interacting with Rails' ActionCable. -- Maintainers Wanted.
Faye - Simple pub/sub messaging for the web
Websocket-Rails - Plug and play websocket support for ruby on rails.
Rails Realtime - Adding Real-Time To Your RESTful Rails App
anycable-go - AnyCable real-time server
falcon - A high-performance web server for Ruby, supporting HTTP/1, HTTP/2 and TLS.
WebPush - webpush, Encryption Utilities for Web Push protocol
Lite Cable - Lightweight Action Cable implementation (Rails-free)
Slanger - Open Pusher implementation compatible with Pusher libraries
Sync - Real-time Rails Partials
Firehose - Build realtime Ruby web applications. Created by the fine folks at Poll Everywhere.