Ebean ORM | ksuid | |
---|---|---|
7 | 38 | |
1,429 | 4,682 | |
0.0% | 0.8% | |
9.5 | 3.1 | |
15 days ago | 7 months ago | |
Java | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
Ebean ORM
- loom and database drivers
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How do you guys go about the persistence layer?
You can have a look at https://ebean.io/ ... better control over the generated SQL, multiple levels of abstraction, can generate DB migrations and run the DB migrations, transparent encryption support, SQL 2011 history support, test against docker containers.
- O que estou fazendo?? Um projetinho de estudo.
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What do you whish for Spring 6?
There is https://ebean.io/ and looks like it a community driven alternative to jOOQ.
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Do you use code generators in your IDEs or some external ones? If so, which ones?
Ebean ORM https://ebean.io/ was built to somewhat rival JPA (and JDBI) Btw: you can use java 16 records with ebean as DTOs, EmbeddedId and also as read only entity beans (and JPA implementations could similarly do so).
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20 years of Hibernate
Ebean is pretty good: https://ebean.io
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Stop Using JPA/Hibernate
I wouldn't call it micro, but https://ebean.io/ is pretty nice.
ksuid
- What happens after 100 years?
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Zero Downtime Postgres Upgrades
OP here - we avoid sequences in all but one part of our application due to a dependency. We use [KSUIDs][1] and UUID v4 in various places. This one "gotcha" applies to any sequence, so it's worth calling out as general advice when running a migration like this.
[1]: https://segment.com/blog/a-brief-history-of-the-uuid/
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Bye Sequence, Hello UUIDv7
UUID v4 isn't large enough to prevent collisions, that is why segment.io created https://github.com/segmentio/ksuid which is 160bit vs the 128bit of a UUIDv4.
- You Don't Need UUID
- A Brief History of the UUID
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Type-safe, K-sortable, globally unique identifier inspired by Stripe IDs
Assuming you don't need to use UUIDv7 (or any UUID's) then https://github.com/segmentio/ksuid provides a much bigger keyspace. You could just append a string prefix if you wanted to namespace, but the chance of collisions of a KSUID is many times smaller than a UUID of any version.
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Unexpected downsides of UUID keys in PostgreSQL
KSUID's are have temporal-lexicographical order plus 128 bits of entropy, which is more than UUIDv4.
https://github.com/segmentio/ksuid
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UUIDs are so much better than autoincrementing ids and it's not even close
That's why you use ksuid (https://segment.com/blog/a-brief-history-of-the-uuid/) or, if you're willing to go with a draft spec you could go with the new UUID formats https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-uuidrev-rfc4122bi...
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What Happened to UUIDv2?
Interesting in more history of UUIDs? Twilio Segment's blog has an amazing history lesson about how they came to be.
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Which UUID package do you use? and why?
I use the ksuid from segment. https://github.com/segmentio/ksuid
What are some alternatives?
Hibernate - Hibernate's core Object/Relational Mapping functionality
ulid - Universally Unique Lexicographically Sortable Identifier (ULID) in Python 3
MyBatis - MyBatis SQL mapper framework for Java
pg-ulid - ULID Functions for PostgreSQL
Spring Data JPA - Simplifies the development of creating a JPA-based data access layer.
nanoid - A tiny (124 bytes), secure, URL-friendly, unique string ID generator for JavaScript
Ktorm - A lightweight ORM framework for Kotlin with strong-typed SQL DSL and sequence APIs.
ulid-mssql - Implementation of ULID generator For Microsoft SQL Server
OrmLite - Core ORMLite functionality that provides a lite Java ORM in conjunction with ormlite-jdbc or ormlite-android
python-ksuid - A pure-Python KSUID implementation
Exposed - Kotlin SQL Framework
uuid7 - UUID version 7, which are time-sortable (following the Peabody RFC4122 draft)