grpc-dotnet
jvm-serializers
grpc-dotnet | jvm-serializers | |
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4 | 7 | |
4,035 | 3,275 | |
0.8% | - | |
8.4 | 4.4 | |
13 days ago | 7 months ago | |
C# | Java | |
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.
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grpc-dotnet
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Fury: 170x faster than JDK, fast serialization powered by JIT and Zero-copy
Given it's a binary serialization framework, it should not be too difficult, because the domain is well-explored and numerous libraries exist in C# which address same goals that Fury does.
More popular/newer examples are https://github.com/Cysharp/MemoryPack (which is similar to Fury with its own spec, C#-code first schema), https://github.com/MessagePack-CSharp/MessagePack-CSharp or even gRPC / Protobuf tooling https://github.com/grpc/grpc-dotnet
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Unity alternatives for an online mobile card game?
And I used Unity because I wanted a tool/engine that I can use to build the game for multiple platforms at once, however, after a while I realized that the game is really simple and I'm not utilizing Unity. Actually, it was quite the opposite, the performance of the game (when it comes to simple animations like drag and drop) was not that good, the size was large, and some tools like gRPC-net are not maintained anymore for Unity.
- How to validate incoming gRPC requests?
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Needing help: How are front-end folks setting up build processes with .NET?
You can refer to this grpc spa example. It also demonstrates how to use grpc instead of restful API to communicate with dotnet backends.
jvm-serializers
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Fury: 170x faster than JDK, fast serialization powered by JIT and Zero-copy
Compared with protobuf, fury is 3.2x faster. When comparing with avro, fury is 5.3x faster. Compared with flatbuffers, fury is 4.8x faster. See https://github.com/eishay/jvm-serializers/wiki for detailed benchmark data
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The state of Java Object Serialization libraries in Q2 2023
First, there's benchmarks here if you haven't seen it: jvm-serializers. Not terribly scientific, but it's something. To make any decision, you really need to benchmark your own object graph and it's important to configure the serializer for your particular usage. Still, it is sort of useful for comparing frameworks. It would be interesting to see how Loial performs there. Ping me if you add it.
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Up to 100x Faster FastAPI with simdjson and io_uring on Linux 5.19+
It depends. Some binary encodings such as flatbuffer are actually slower than some JSON libraries. There's a wide range of performance even in the JSON libraries themselves. Generally the faster JSON libraries are the ones that work on a predefined schema and so are able to generate code specifically for that JSON.
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Go standard library: structured, leveled logging
> I'm surprised this is up for debate.
I looked into logging in protobuf when I was seeing if there was a better binary encoding for ring-buffer logging, along the same lines as nanolog:
https://tersesystems.com/blog/2020/11/26/queryable-logging-w...
What I found was that it's typically not the binary encoding vs string encoding that makes a difference. The biggest factors are "is there a predefined schema", "is there a precompiler that will generate code for this schema", and "what is the complexity of the output format". With that in mind, if you are dealing with chaotic semi-structured data, JSON is pretty good, and actually faster than some binary encodings:
https://github.com/eishay/jvm-serializers/wiki/Newer-Results...
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Scala 3.0 serialization
You could use any of the JVM serialisers which should still work.
What are some alternatives?
grpcurl - Like cURL, but for gRPC: Command-line tool for interacting with gRPC servers
fury-benchmarks - Serialization Benchmarks for fury with other libraries
grpcui - An interactive web UI for gRPC, along the lines of postman
Apache Avro - Apache Avro is a data serialization system.
bloomrpc - Former GUI client for gRPC services. No longer maintained.
zio-json - Fast, secure JSON library with tight ZIO integration.
opentelemetry-specificatio
vite - Next generation frontend tooling. It's fast!
janino - Janino is a super-small, super-fast Java™ compiler.
incubator-fury - A blazingly fast multi-language serialization framework powered by JIT and zero-copy.
honeycomb-opentelemetry-go - Honeycomb's OpenTelemetry Go SDK distribution