elasticsearch-py
orama
Our great sponsors
elasticsearch-py | orama | |
---|---|---|
21 | 11 | |
4,136 | 8,018 | |
0.8% | 9.3% | |
8.7 | 9.4 | |
8 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Python | TypeScript | |
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.
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
orama
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Sky's the Limit! Supercharging Your Astro Blog with Orama, the Ultimate Stargazing Search Engine!
Let's break into the steps to utilize Orama and analyze how it works. I won't dig into the technical stuff because, hey, it's an open-source project, which means you can easily peek at the source code, no problemo!
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OramaSearch, a full-text search in your React application
If you are interested in it, you can learn more about it in the official documentation. And don't forget to follow Orama on Twitter and Michere Riva its CTO.
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Why I love GitLens in my VsCode - Part 1
I'll use the Lyra repository for this article, so thanks to the Lyra contributors if this article has a great git history and awesome code.
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What is your go to client-side fuzzy searching library?
You can checkout lyra, its in-memory full text search engine for javascript
- An alternative to Elasticsearch that runs on a few MBs of RAM
- Lyra
- Lyra: Fast, in-memory, typo-tolerant, full-text search engine in TypeScript
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.
flexsearch - Next-Generation full text search library for Browser and Node.js
quickwit - Cloud-native search engine for observability. An open-source alternative to Datadog, Elasticsearch, Loki, and Tempo.
Lyra - A simple to use, composable, command line parser for C++ 11 and beyond
helm-charts
minisearch - Tiny and powerful JavaScript full-text search engine for browser and Node
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.
regex-benchmark - It's just a simple regex benchmark of different programming languages.
evtx2es - A library for fast parse & import of Windows Eventlogs into Elasticsearch.
re.places - An in-cache, searchable database of 41,000 global cities. It’s designed as a light-weight polyfill for ‘cities’ in Algolia's places API, for when it sunsets in May 2022
zeek-clickhouse
lunr.js - A bit like Solr, but much smaller and not as bright