haproxy
brotli
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haproxy | brotli | |
---|---|---|
16 | 25 | |
4,431 | 13,111 | |
2.4% | 1.2% | |
9.9 | 8.3 | |
6 days ago | 1 day ago | |
C | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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.
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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].
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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
brotli
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Jpegli: A New JPEG Coding Library
JPEGLI = A small JPEG
The suffix -li is used in Swiss German dialects. It forms a diminutive of the root word, by adding -li to the end of the root word to convey the smallness of the object and to convey a sense of intimacy or endearment.
This obviously comes out of Google Zürich.
Other notable Google projects using Swiss German:
https://github.com/google/gipfeli high-speed compression
Gipfeli = Croissant
https://github.com/google/guetzli perceptual JPEG encoder
Guetzli = Cookie
https://github.com/weggli-rs/weggli semantic search tool
Weggli = Bread roll
https://github.com/google/brotli lossless compression
Brötli = Small bread
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Compression efficiency with shared dictionaries in Chrome
The brotli repo on github has a dictionary generator: https://github.com/google/brotli/blob/master/research/dictio...
I have a hosted version of it on https://use-as-dictionary.com/ to make it easier to experiment with.
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The Full-Stack development experience
An additional element that we can finally remove from our stack is the minification of JavaScript and CSS files. Thanks to algorithms like brotli (with a very Swiss flavour) we no longer need to minify and compress our files before distributing them. Cloudflare, Nginx, or Apache will take care of everything for us.
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Brotli vs. GZIP vs. Zopfli: Comparing JavaScript Compression Techniques.
As you navigate the intricate world of JavaScript compression and web development, having a trusted partner by your side can make all the difference. That's where Coding Crafts comes in. At Coding Crafts, we take pride in being a top-tier software development company in USA. Our team of experts specializes in web development, optimization, and everything in between. As the best IT company in USA, we are dedicated to delivering cutting-edge solutions that drive performance and efficiency. Our expertise extends to choosing the right compression technique for your web application, ensuring that your website performs optimally. In conclusion, the choice of JavaScript compression technique depends on various factors, including your specific goals, browser and server support, and performance requirements. Whether you opt for Brotli, GZIP, or Zopfli, Coding Crafts is here to provide the guidance and expertise you need to enhance your web application's performance and user experience. For more information on how Coding Crafts can assist you with your web development and optimization needs, contact us today. Resources "Brotli - GitHub Repository": https://github.com/google/brotli "Zopfli - Google Developers": https://developers.google.com/speed/articles/zopfli "Introduction to GZIP Compression - MDN Web Docs": https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Overview#gzip_compression "Brotli vs. GZIP vs. Zopfli: Which Compression Method is Best?" - KeyCDN Blog: https://www.keycdn.com/blog/brotli-vs-gzip-vs-zopfli
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Framer Update: 2x Faster Sites
We serve your site from a global cache location close to your visitors to make sure your site loads fast. In addition, we use an advanced HTML and text compression algorithm called Brotli. Compressed content is now cached, so we can send it directly to your visitors instead of compressing each request individually. In our tests this often improves loading speed by up to 2x, which will have a very positive impact on your Lighthouse scores like LCP. This will be especially noticeable on larger sites, so you can scale your site without worry.
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How Much Faster Is Making a Tar Archive Without Gzip?
For anyone who wants to try this, zstd -T0 uses all your threads to compress, and https://github.com/facebook/zstd has a lot more description. Brotli, https://github.com/google/brotli, is another modern format with some good features for high compression levels and Content-Encoding support in web browsers. You might also want to play with the compression level (-1 to -11 or more, zstd's --fast=n).
One reason these modern compressors do better is not any particular mistake made defining DEFLATE in the 90s, but that new algos use a few MB of recently seen data as context instead of 32KB, and do other things impractical in the 90s but reasonable on modern hardware. The new algorithms also contain logs of smart ideas and have fine-tuned implementations, but that core difference seems important to note.
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Troubling Launching Duckstation
It seems to be using a lib called brotli - https://github.com/google/brotli. Can you compile from source?
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2000’s Winamp/WMP-ish skins?
(++) Play Youtube videos and playlistsRelease date: Feb 3 20223dyd, [email protected] libraries: brotli https://github.com/google/brotli (1.0.7)
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Stop delaying. Share knowledge on a blog built with Eleventy.
Alright, the minifying is done. What else? Did you know you can serve HTML, CSS and JS compressed? A lot of websites still use gzip, but there’s also Brotli. Brotli is specifically made for the web and compresses a lot better than gzip in most cases.
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Configuring CloudFront to compress objects in AWS CDK
You can use CloudFront to automatically compress certain types of objects (files) and serve the compressed objects when viewers (web browsers or other clients) support them. Viewers indicate their support for compressed objects with the Accept-Encoding HTTP header. CloudFront can compress objects using the Gzip and Brotli compression formats. When the viewer supports both formats, CloudFront prefers Brotli.
What are some alternatives?
zstd - Zstandard - Fast real-time compression algorithm
Snappy - A fast compressor/decompressor
ClickHouse - ClickHouse® is a free analytics DBMS for big data
LZ4 - Extremely Fast Compression algorithm
3proxy - 3proxy - tiny free proxy server
Caddy - Fast and extensible multi-platform HTTP/1-2-3 web server with automatic HTTPS
LZMA - (Unofficial) Git mirror of LZMA SDK releases
Jool - SIIT and NAT64 for Linux
ZLib - A massively spiffy yet delicately unobtrusive compression library.
traefik - The Cloud Native Application Proxy
zlib-ng - zlib replacement with optimizations for "next generation" systems.