graphql-go-tools
wundergraph
graphql-go-tools | wundergraph | |
---|---|---|
27 | 108 | |
638 | 2,162 | |
2.0% | 0.3% | |
9.6 | 9.3 | |
5 days ago | about 21 hours ago | |
Go | TypeScript | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
graphql-go-tools
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Scaling GraphQL Subscriptions in Go with Epoll and Event Driven Architecture
If you're interested in the full implementation of the resolver, you can find it on GitHub.
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Optimizing Go string operations with practical examples
https://github.com/wundergraph/graphql-go-tools/blob/dcd50bd...
Each iteration of this benchmark measures the aggregate performance of
- 1x ParseObject
- 3x AppendObject
- 3x MergeNodesWithPath
- 1x PrintNode
- 1x bytes.Equal comparison of two byte slices
The benchmark isn't actually benchmarking MergeNodesWithPath, it's benchmarking a much larger composite operation, which includes (multiple) calls to MergeNodesWithPath but also all of the above listed calls as well. If you want to measure MergeNodesWithPath, you would need to have each iteration of the loop do a single MergeNodesWithPath call, on the same JSON method receiver, and with the same input parameters.
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Introducing astjson: Transform and Merge JSON Objects with Unmatched Speed in Go
You can check out the full code including tests and benchmarks on GitHub. It's part of graphql-go-tools, the GraphQL Router / API Gateway framework we've been working on for the last couple of years. It's the "Engine" that powers the Cosmo Router.
- GraphQL Router / API Gateway Framework Written in Golang
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Building a high performance JSON parser
I've taken a very similar approach and built a GraphQL tokenizer and parser (amongst many other things) that's also zero memory allocations and quite fast. In case you'd like to check out the code: https://github.com/wundergraph/graphql-go-tools
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A Blazingly Fast Open-Source Federation V1/V2 Gateway
The Cosmo Router is powered by graphql-go-tools, a highly mature and optimized GraphQL engine (MIT License) that is the fastest and most reliable implementation for Federation V1. The Cosmo Router builds on it with its own optimizations.
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Cosmo Router: High Performance Federation v1 & v2 Router / Gateway
Cosmo Router is built on top of graphql-go-tools, a high performance GraphQL engine written in Go.
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WunderGraph Cosmo: a open source alternative to Apollo Federation, GraphOS, Studio, etc...
For more than five years, we've been involved in the GraphQL ecosystem, building tools and services around GraphQL, like [graphql-go-tools (https://github.com/wundergraph/graphql-go-tools), a library to build GraphQL Gateways in Go.
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Introducing Open Federation - a MIT-Licensed specification to build federated GraphQL APIs
I've been working on this library for more than 5 years now and it has been a great success. Almost 3 years ago, I started adding support for Apollo Federation to graphql-go-tools. As excited as I was about the idea of Federation, the community was not ready for it yet. I've added support for Subscriptions years ago, but demand for it was very low, so my focus shifted to solving other problems.
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I want to contribute to open-source software written in Go
Check us out: https://github.com/wundergraph/graphql-go-tools
wundergraph
- The Open-Source GraphQL Federation Solution
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GraphQL and the Beads on a String
I never really got graphql until I stumbled upon Wundergraph. (https://github.com/wundergraph/wundergraph). I have no affiliation with them except that I have been building an app with it. I'm honestly puzzled how it's not more popular. Maybe people are solving these problems in other ways? But I tried out a bunch of stuff: Vapor, Supabase, Hasura, etc. None of it simplifies building complex systems the way WG does.
I think their takes on graphql make sense: https://wundergraph.com/blog/graphql_is_not_meant_to_be_expo...
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GraphQL Federation Field-level Metrics 101
To demonstrate field usage metrics in Federation, Iβll be using WunderGraph Cosmo β a fully open source, fully self-hostable platform for Federation V1/V2 that is a drop in replacement for Apollo GraphOS.
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You do need a technical co-founder
The inverse is also true. As a technical founder, and maybe even an introvert like me, you should definitely look for a non-technical co-founder who can help you with networking, etc... I found my dream co-founder through YC Co-founder match and what can I say, it's going great. We're focusing on enterprise GraphQL/API solutions (https://wundergraph.com) and I benefit from the networking and communication abilities of Stefan, while I answer all technical questions. Tldr, I highly recommend to team up with people who complement your skills.
- The Open-Source Enterprise GraphQL Federation Solution
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The Road to GraphQL At Enterprise Scale
GraphQL Gateway is primarily responsible for serving GraphQL queries to consumers. It takes a query from a client, breaks it into smaller sub-queries, and executes that plan by proxying calls to the appropriate downstream subgraphs. When we started our journey, there was only Apollo Federation in the arena, and we used it. Still, now you can look at other options (e.g. Mercurius, Conductor, Hot Chocolate, Wundergraph, Hasura Remote Schemas), compare benchmarks and decide what's important and preferable for your needs. The Gateway provides a unified API for consumers while giving backend engineers flexibility and service isolation.
- Show HN: Graphweaver β Instant GraphQL API on Postgres, MySQL, SQLite and More
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tRPC β Move Fast and Break Nothing. End-to-end typesafe APIs made easy
I'm a big fan of tRPC. It's amazing how it pushed TypeScript only stacks to the limit in terms of DX. Additionally, it made the GraphQL community aware of the limitations and tradeoffs of the Query language. At the same time, I think tRPC went through a really fast hype cycle and it doesn't look like we're seeing a massive move away from REST and GraphQL to RPC. That said, we see a lot of interest in RPC these days as we've adopted some ideas from tRPC and the old NextJS. In our BFF framework (https://wundergraph.com/) we've combined file based routing with RPC. In addition to tRPC, we're automatically generating a JSON Schema for each operation and an OpenAPI spec for the whole set of operations. People quite like this approach because you can easily share a set of RPC endpoints as an OpenAPI spec or postman collection. In addition, there are no discussions around HTTP verbs and such, there's only really queries, mutations and subscriptions. I'm curious what other people's experiences are with GraphQL, REST and RPC style APIs? What are you using these days and how many people/teams are involved/using your apis?
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Preventing prompt injections with Honeypot functions
You can check out the source code on GitHub and leave a star if you like it. Follow me on Twitter, or join the discussion on our Discord server.
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Beyond Functions: Seamlessly build AI enhanced APIs with OpenAI
If you like the work we're doing and want to support us, give us a star on GitHub.
What are some alternatives?
bramble - A federated GraphQL API gateway
Hasura - Blazing fast, instant realtime GraphQL APIs on your DB with fine grained access control, also trigger webhooks on database events.
schema-stitching-handbook - Guided examples exploring GraphQL Tools v6+ Schema Stitching
electric - Local-first sync layer for web and mobile apps. Build reactive, realtime, local-first apps directly on Postgres.
gateway - A federated api gateway for graphql services. https://gateway.nautilus.dev/
Strapi - π Strapi is the leading open-source headless CMS. Itβs 100% JavaScript/TypeScript, fully customizable and developer-first.
gqlparser - A port of the parser from graphql-js into golang
Multicorn - Data Access Library
participle - A parser library for Go
chatgpt-raycast - ChatGPT raycast extension
graphjin - GraphJin - Build NodeJS / GO APIs in 5 minutes not weeks
tailcall - A high-performance GraphQL Platform