haproxy
Hystrix
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haproxy | Hystrix | |
---|---|---|
16 | 19 | |
4,445 | 23,877 | |
2.7% | 0.3% | |
9.9 | 2.7 | |
6 days ago | 6 months ago | |
C | Java | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
haproxy
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HAProxy is not affected by the HTTP/2 Rapid Reset Attack (CVE-2023-44487)
I wanted to try it out just now but hit a roadblock immediately - it cannot automatically obtain and maintain TLS certificates. You have to use an external client (e.g. acme.sh), set up a cron to check/renew them, and poke HAProxy to reload them if necessary. I'm way past doing this in 2023.
https://www.haproxy.com/blog/haproxy-and-let-s-encrypt
https://github.com/haproxy/haproxy/issues/1864
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Why Haproxy is not build with PROMEX by default (Linux / BSD)
For context I think this might be useful: https://github.com/haproxy/haproxy/blob/master/addons/promex/README
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minexmr2.com updated to p2pool v3.1, monerod v0.18.2.0, and ready for Mar 18 p2pool (not monero) hardfork
I turn on 1 relatively cheap cloud server to process DNS, https and stratum connections and route them via haproxy to one of N miner servers described above.
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HAProxy Security Update (CVE-2023-25725) - HTTP content smuggling attack
Full technical writeup here: https://github.com/haproxy/haproxy/commit/a8598a2eb11b6c989e81f0dbf10be361782e8d32
- Request smuggling in HAProxy via empty header name
- Enormous session rate
- Update to haproxy 2.4.18 breaks WebDAV
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HAProxy 2.7
With the recent discussions about memory safe languages, HAProxy is still surprisingly written in C [0].
[0]: https://github.com/haproxy/haproxy
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35M Hot Dogs: Benchmarking Caddy vs. Nginx
It does not, because HAProxy does not perform any disk access at runtime and thus would be unable to persist the certificates anywhere. Disks accesses can be unpredictably slow and would block the entire thread which is not something you want when handling hundreds of thousands of requests per second.
See this issue and especially the comment from Lukas Tribus: https://github.com/haproxy/haproxy/issues/1864
Disclosure: Community contributor to HAProxy, I help maintain HAProxy's issue tracker.
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Guide to Adapting HAProxy to openGauss
Code link: https://github.com/haproxy/haproxy
Hystrix
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Ask HN: Modern Node.js Request Fault Tolerance Library?
Oops, forgot to include the Hystrix link, https://github.com/Netflix/Hystrix
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[OC] Gender diversity in Tech companies
They had to figure out video compression that worked at the volume that they wanted to deliver. They had to build and maintain their own CDN to be able to have a always available and consistent viewing experience. Don’t even get me started on the resiliency tools like hystrix that they were kind enough to open source. I mean, they have their own fucking data science framework and they’re looking into using neural networks to downscale video.. Sound familiar? That’s cause that’s practically the same thing as Nvidia’s DLSS (which upscales instead of downscales).
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What is a service mesh?
When breaking up a monolithic app into microservices, the communication between these services becomes vital to the health and performance of the application. Technically, you could incorporate the features to manage this traffic directly into your application. This is what Twitter, Google, and Netflix did with massive internal libraries like Finagle, Stubby, and Hysterix.
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Timestone: Netflix’s High-Throughput, Low-Latency Priority Queueing System
Hystrix: https://github.com/Netflix/Hystrix Hollow: https://hollow.how/
- Circuit Breaker Explained
- Hystrix
- I love this and wanna build something similar, I know close to zero programming though (thinking about starting)
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A tentative comparison of fault tolerance libraries on the JVM
Have you actually read the article and maybe also https://github.com/Netflix/Hystrix status section??!
I came upon Resilience4J when I was running my talk on the Circuit Breaker pattern. The talk included a demo, and it relied on Hystrix. One day, I wanted to update the demo to the latest Hystrix version and noticed that maintainers had deprecated it in favor of Resilience4J.
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Summary of the AWS Service Event in the Northern Virginia (US-East-1) Region
Netflix was talking alot about circuit breaks a few years ago, and had the Hystrix project. Looks like Hystrix is discontinued, so I'm not sure if there are good library solutions that are easy to adopt. Overall I don't see it getting talked about that frequently... beyond just exponential backoff inside a retry loop.
- https://github.com/Netflix/Hystrix
What are some alternatives?
zstd - Zstandard - Fast real-time compression algorithm
Akka - Build highly concurrent, distributed, and resilient message-driven applications on the JVM
ClickHouse - ClickHouse® is a free analytics DBMS for big data
Apache ZooKeeper - Apache ZooKeeper
3proxy - 3proxy - tiny free proxy server
Zuul - Zuul is a gateway service that provides dynamic routing, monitoring, resiliency, security, and more.
Caddy - Fast and extensible multi-platform HTTP/1-2-3 web server with automatic HTTPS
Ribbon - Ribbon is a Inter Process Communication (remote procedure calls) library with built in software load balancers. The primary usage model involves REST calls with various serialization scheme support.
Jool - SIIT and NAT64 for Linux
Hazelcast - Hazelcast is a unified real-time data platform combining stream processing with a fast data store, allowing customers to act instantly on data-in-motion for real-time insights.
brotli - Brotli compression format
JGroups - The JGroups project