faenz
Bedrock
faenz | Bedrock | |
---|---|---|
5 | 23 | |
15 | 1,050 | |
- | 1.4% | |
7.6 | 9.4 | |
12 days ago | 2 days ago | |
Ruby | C | |
- | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
faenz
-
Running a funny experiment with my free web-analytics
Two years back, I created a little web analytics tool for my side projects and I called Faenz. It's open source and self-hostable, available on GitHub at https://github.com/a-chris/faenz.
I've recently given it an update and came up with the idea of creating a demo version that's accessible to everyone.
How does it work?
You can add your own website, blog or e-commerce site and keep track of the visits it receives. Your website stats will be visible to others, and you'll get to check out everyone else's stats too. You won't be allowed to edit/delete a website, you should reach out to me for that.
I find it to be a fun experiment to see how people handle SEO or just to discover some cool new websites :)
The demo is available here https://faenz.acmecorp.dev/
- Il Garante della privacy Italiana dichiara lo stop all’uso di Google Analytics per il trasferimento dei dato negli USA senza garanzie adeguate
-
Small tip to shrink your Docker images size
Here is the project I'm working on: Faenz Analytics
- Ask HN: Have you used SQLite as a primary database?
-
Ask HN: Have you created programs for only your personal use?
I've built several personal projects to be honest; background jobs, tasks automation, telegram bots to find a house to rent or buy, most of them are kept provate.
The two I'm most proud of are a web analytics that, coincidentally, I've made public today after a few weeks of work:
https://github.com/a-chris/faenz
I developed it for collect data for my personal website and it is working well so far, really happy of it.
The other one is a Google Chrome extension to manage bookmark because I think the default one is a mess and very unpratical to use. I haven't worked on it for a while:
https://github.com/a-chris/peffect-bookmarks-manager
Bedrock
-
Marmot: Multi-writer distributed SQLite based on NATS
Also Expensify's Bedrock, which powers their famous "Scaling SQLite to 4M QPS" article:
https://bedrockdb.com/
https://use.expensify.com/blog/scaling-sqlite-to-4m-qps-on-a...
- I'm All-In on Server-Side SQLite
-
SQLite is not a toy database
Lots of things don't need failover, but if you do, you can use Bedrock, which is built on sqlite.
-
Amazon announces 'Bedrock,' its ChatGPT and DALL-E rival
At first, I thought Amazon was launching their own SQLite hosted database.
BedrockDB is a SQLite based database with MySQL compatible drivers.
https://bedrockdb.com
-
Ask HN: Hunting for a Framework
Vapor[0] based on Swift. Advantage of this is that you don't have to evaluate multiple frameworks for Swift and suffer paralysis by analysis. All the Swift community is behind one framework.
The next is Actix[1] based on Rust. There are many frameworks in Rust and most of them have not reached 1.0 And which framework will survive becomes a question.
Other not so well-known is Wt[2] based on C++. This actually is created for programmers who are not web developers. The development experience is similar to desktop app development like Qt.
If that is not acceptable then Django[3], based on Python, is the one that will be good for you.
For the front-end I would recommend Flutter[4]. As much as I dislike getting tied to a single company for whom the framework is not their bread-and-butter, I don't see any other viable options to Flutter that will cover all web, mobile and desktop out of the box.
For databases, I would recommend BedrockDB[5], if you are not averse to SQLite. Or FoundationDB[6], if you want NoSQL. But if you are not concerned about horizontal scalability or okay with self-managing database availability, then PostgreSQL[7] is a very good option.
For push notifications, PushPin[8] is a good option.
[0] https://vapor.codes
[1] https://actix.rs
[2] https://webtoolkit.eu
[3] https://www.djangoproject.com
[4] https://flutter.dev
[5] https://bedrockdb.com
[6] https://www.foundationdb.org
[7] https://postgresql.org
[8] https://pushpin.org
-
Databases: 2021 in Review and Predictions for 2022
Recently I stumbled upon BedrockDB[0] from Expensify. It is based on SQLite and has very interesting idea on HA and distributed DB.
[0] https://bedrockdb.com
-
One million queries per second with MySQL
This is not SQLite though, also the test is trivial compared to TPC: https://github.com/Expensify/Bedrock/blob/dbarrett_perftest/...
-
Turning SQLite into a Distributed Database
Don’t forget BedrockDB (built on SQLite) that’s used in production at Expensify.
How it scales as well.
https://bedrockdb.com/
https://blog.expensify.com/2018/01/08/scaling-sqlite-to-4m-q...
- Fly.io Buys Litestream
- Ask HN: Have you used SQLite as a primary database?
What are some alternatives?
termdbms - A TUI for viewing and editing database files.
SQLite - Unofficial git mirror of SQLite sources (see link for build instructions)
dqlite - Embeddable, replicated and fault-tolerant SQL engine.
MySQL - MySQL Server, the world's most popular open source database, and MySQL Cluster, a real-time, open source transactional database.
ws4sqlite - Query sqlite via json+http
rqlite - The lightweight, distributed relational database built on SQLite.
ClickHouse - ClickHouse® is a free analytics DBMS for big data
LevelDB - LevelDB is a fast key-value storage library written at Google that provides an ordered mapping from string keys to string values.
Adminer - Database management in a single PHP file
MongoDB C++ Driver - C++ Driver for MongoDB
litestream - Streaming replication for SQLite.
phpMyAdmin - A web interface for MySQL and MariaDB