faenz
dqlite
faenz | dqlite | |
---|---|---|
5 | 33 | |
15 | 3,717 | |
- | 0.9% | |
7.6 | 9.5 | |
12 days ago | 2 days ago | |
Ruby | C | |
- | 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.
faenz
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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
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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?
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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
dqlite
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Marmot: Multi-writer distributed SQLite based on NATS
If you're interested in this, here are some related projects that all take slightly different approaches:
- LiteSync directly competes with Marmot and supports DDL sync, but is closed source commercial (similar to SQLite EE): https://litesync.io
- dqlite is Canonical's distributed SQLite that depends on c-raft and kernel-level async I/O: https://dqlite.io
- cr-sqlite is a Rust-based loadable extension that adds CRDT changeset generation and reconciliation to SQLite: https://github.com/vlcn-io/cr-sqlite
Slightly related but not really (no multi writer, no C-level SQLite API or other restrictions):
- comdb2 (Bloombergs multi-homed RDMS using SQLite as the frontend)
- rqlite: RDMS with HTTP API and SQLite as the storage engine, used for replication and strong consistency (does not scale writes)
- litestream/LiteFS: disaster recovery replication
- liteserver: active read-only replication (predecessor of LiteSync)
- I'm All-In on Server-Side SQLite
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SQLite performance tuning: concurrent reads, multiple GBs and 100k SELECTs/s
I'd be curious for a similar tuning with Dqlite: https://github.com/canonical/dqlite
- Strong Consistency with Raft and SQLite
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9 years of open-source database development: reviewing the designs
Anyone knows how the DB this is about, https://rqlite.io/, compares with https://dqlite.io/ by Canonical (both seem to be distributed versions of sqlite)?
- SQLite the only database you will ever need in most cases
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Transcending Posix: The End of an Era?
For folks' context, the new tool that's being discussed in the thread mentioned by the parent here is litefs [0], as well as which you can also look at rqlite [1] and dqlite [2], which all provide different trade-offs (e.g. rqlite is 'more strongly consistent' than litefs).
[0]: https://github.com/superfly/litefs
[1]: https://github.com/rqlite/rqlite
[2]: https://github.com/canonical/dqlite
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SQLite is not a toy database
I presume you're familiar with https://github.com/canonical/dqlite (made by my employer) and https://github.com/rqlite/rqlite (unrelated)? How will mvsqlite compare to those?
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GitDB, a distributed embeddable database on top of Git
Check out dqlite, it's sqlite but with a raft consensus to distribute changes through a log: https://dqlite.io/ You can link it in as a library too, it sounds like exactly what you want.
- Ask HN: Free and open source distributed database written in C++ or C
What are some alternatives?
termdbms - A TUI for viewing and editing database files.
rqlite - The lightweight, distributed relational database built on SQLite.
ws4sqlite - Query sqlite via json+http
kine - Run Kubernetes on MySQL, Postgres, sqlite, dqlite, not etcd.
better-sqlite3 - The fastest and simplest library for SQLite3 in Node.js.
litestream - Streaming replication for SQLite.
boringproxy - Simple tunneling reverse proxy with a fast web UI and auto HTTPS. Designed for self-hosters.
Bedrock - Rock solid distributed database specializing in active/active automatic failover and WAN replication
litefs - FUSE-based file system for replicating SQLite databases across a cluster of machines
SQLite - Official Git mirror of the SQLite source tree
mvsqlite - Distributed, MVCC SQLite that runs on FoundationDB.
edge-sql - Cloudflare Workers providing a SQL API