elasticsearch-py
bayard
elasticsearch-py | bayard | |
---|---|---|
21 | 4 | |
4,147 | 1,839 | |
0.5% | 0.0% | |
8.9 | 0.0 | |
3 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
Python | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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elasticsearch-py
- Verify Connection to Elasticsearch (2021)
- An alternative to Elasticsearch that runs on a few MBs of RAM
- Help With Psort.py -> ELK
- Elastic Open Sources Their Endpoint Security Protection YARA Ruleset
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OpenSearch – open-source search and analytics based on Apache 2.0 Elasticsearch
FD: I have a friend who works at Elastic, though he doesn't really colour my opinions of things.
> Firstly, dick moves like this: https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch-py/pull/1623
I understand that this is unpopular, but you can make a very strong argument that it's to prevent weird errors in the future. I'm also guilty of littering my code with Asserts to ensure the universe is working fine.
The alternative is to allow it to work and then you end up with weird issues like when you connect mysql client to mariadb server (and vice-versa): https://stackoverflow.com/questions/50169576/mysql-8-0-11-er...
> Secondly, I don't buy the argument from Elastic any more. Yes, the ethical thing to do when you're making money from someone's work is at least contribute back. At the same time though, they're making money from packaging it up and selling it _as a service_. That "as a service" part is where they're making the bucks.
That's just an opinion, yes they have a service, and yes it competes with Amazon. Is it cool for Amazon to take a body of work and sell it without supporting it? Are amazon actually supporting it? Is it the same as Elastic using Lucene? (not really because Elastic submits a the majority of fixes to Lucene, but, you get it).
it's kinda gray, I'm sure Amazon thinks they're the good guy, but it's hard for me to look at Elastic as the bad guy in all this.
- Struggling reading code with type hints
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I Don't Think Elasticsearch Is a Good Logging System
Oh man, https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch-py/issues/1734 is a disappointing read. I know ES wants to save their business, but alienating users isn't exactly the path to success.
- Elasticsearch adding code to reject connections to OpenSearch clusters or to clusters running open source distributions of ES7
- Official Elasticsearch Python library no longer works with open-source forks
bayard
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An alternative to Elasticsearch that runs on a few MBs of RAM
Somewhat related, this guy: https://github.com/mosuka/ seems to be very passionate about search service.
He built two distributed search services:
- https://github.com/mosuka/phalanx, written in Go.
- https://github.com/mosuka/bayard, written in Rust.
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Postgres Full Text Search vs. the Rest
I wish we had an extension like ZomboDB but using a lighter search engine like https://github.com/quickwit-oss/quickwit, https://github.com/toshi-search/Toshi and https://github.com/mosuka/bayard
Here I'm listing engines based on https://github.com/quickwit-oss/tantivy - tantivy is comparable to Lucene in its scope - but I'm sure there are other engines that could tackle ElasticSearch.
Another thing that could happen is maybe directly embed tantivy in Postgres using an extension, perhaps this could be an option too.
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Meilisearch, the Rust search engine, just raised $5M
So there's more than one? The one I knew was https://github.com/quickwit-oss/tantivy and https://github.com/quickwit-oss/quickwit on top of it (there's a couple of other search engines built on top of tantivy, like https://github.com/bayard-search/bayard)
What are some alternatives?
searxng - SearXNG is a free internet metasearch engine which aggregates results from various search services and databases. Users are neither tracked nor profiled.
quickwit - Cloud-native search engine for observability. An open-source alternative to Datadog, Elasticsearch, Loki, and Tempo.
tantivy - Tantivy is a full-text search engine library inspired by Apache Lucene and written in Rust
helm-charts
sonic - 🦔 Fast, lightweight & schema-less search backend. An alternative to Elasticsearch that runs on a few MBs of RAM.
orama - 🌌 Fast, dependency-free, full-text and vector search engine with typo tolerance, filters, facets, stemming, and more. Works with any JavaScript runtime, browser, server, service!
zincsearch - ZincSearch . A lightweight alternative to elasticsearch that requires minimal resources, written in Go.
qryn - qryn is a polyglot, high-performance observability framework for ClickHouse. Ingest, store and analyze logs, metrics and telemetry traces from any agent supporting Loki, Prometheus, OTLP, Tempo, Elastic, InfluxDB and many more formats and query transparently using Grafana or any other compatible client.
quickwit - Quickwit is a fast and cost-efficient distributed search engine for large-scale, immutable data. [Moved to: https://github.com/quickwit-oss/quickwit]
evtx2es - A library for fast parse & import of Windows Eventlogs into Elasticsearch.
lyra - 🌌 Fast, in-memory, typo-tolerant, full-text search engine written in TypeScript. [Moved to: https://github.com/LyraSearch/lyra]