horde
Phoenix
horde | Phoenix | |
---|---|---|
6 | 120 | |
1,321 | 21,467 | |
- | 0.5% | |
6.2 | 9.2 | |
about 2 months ago | 8 days ago | |
Elixir | Elixir | |
MIT License | 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.
horde
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Managing Distributed State with GenServers in Phoenix and Elixir
Note: In addition to DeltaCrdt, other libraries like Horde and Swarm can help you to coordinate processes and state across several nodes in the cluster.
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Elixir for Ruby developers: the three most important differences
[^3]: https://github.com/derekkraan/horde
- People (even open source maintainers) have lives and jobs and other interests
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Question about a Decentralized Timeline
CRDTs are one solution to “eventual consistency”. Horde is one option: https://github.com/derekkraan/horde
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Building a Distributed Turn-Based Game System in Elixir
Horde – Elixir library that provides a distributed and supervised process registry.
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Write libraries instead of services, where possible
No, typically you register a node and instruct it on what processes to run. But there are libraries to help instrument this kind of behavior.
For elixir:
- https://github.com/derekkraan/horde
- https://github.com/bitwalker/swarm
Phoenix
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Top FP technologies
Stars: 21k One of the most if not the most popular FP frameworks that has won "the most admired web framework" at stackoverflow research for several years in a row. Stack Overflow Developer Survey 2023 Fullstack, Ruby inspired. Connects high load with easy of use. There are big companies using this framework check related block at Phoenix Framework
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Running Elixir Phoenix on Windows
You've miraculously managed to install elixir, erlang, and friends on your Windows machine and you're ready to try out Phoenix. At some point in your tutorial you will be asked to run this command:
- Realtime PostgreSQL - Escutando o seu banco de dados com Supabase
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Why we chose Elixir
After some time debating which technologies we should use, we decided to go with Elixir and Phoenix. In short, these tools gave us the productivity, stability, safety, and scalability (the company was planning on opening up the application to the public, with a new API added to the mix, so future performance was a bit of a concern) that seemed appropriate for the company's plans.
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A RAG for Elixir
For testing purposes we will use our RAG system on a popular open source Elixir package, the Phoenix Framework.
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(Unofficial) Getting Started with Elixir Phoenix Guide
Hey, this guide is meant to be a recreation of the Getting Started with Rails Guide, but for Elixir Phoenix. I very intentionally poach their words for sections when applicable. All true credit goes to the writer of that Rails guide. Thank you for creating such an awesome guide.
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Why, after 6 years, I'm over GraphQL
> I seem to recall Meta/Facebook engineers on HN having said they have a tool that allows engineers to author SQL or ORM-like queries on the frontend and close to where the data is used, but a compiler or post-processor turns that into an endpoint.
I don't know about on-HackerNews but there's a discussion about their "all of Facebook optimizing compiler" infrastructure from when they did the site redesign in 2020: https://engineering.fb.com/2020/05/08/web/facebook-redesign/...
> perhaps not coincidentally, React introduced "server actions" as a mechanism that is very similar to [the above]
Yep - there's also the Scala framework LiftWeb (https://www.liftweb.net/), the Elixir framework Phoenix (https://www.phoenixframework.org/) and of course the system we're using right now (Arc) that do similar things. Scaling these kinds of UUID-addressed-closures is harder (because the client sessions have to be sticky unless you can serialize closures and send them across the network between servers).
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Show HN: Wikipedia Golf – find the fewest clicks between two random wiki article
- The game uses iframe and fetches the pages from Wikipedia API. I think the usage of iframe may have a huge impact on performance.
[1]: https://www.phoenixframework.org/
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Idempotent seeds in Elixir
A standard Phoenix app contains a priv/repo/seeds.exs script file, which populates a database when it is run, so that developers can work with a conveniently prepared environment.
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Ask HN: Did you encounter any Leap Year bugs today? How bad was it?
There was one in the Phoenix Framework (Elixir) about issuing certificates with an invalid end date: https://github.com/phoenixframework/phoenix/issues/5737
Interestingly, Azure had this bug some years ago too leading to an outage. https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/blog/summary-of-windows-az...
What are some alternatives?
libcluster - Automatic cluster formation/healing for Elixir applications
Django - The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.
libgit2 - A cross-platform, linkable library implementation of Git that you can use in your application.
sugar - Modular web framework for Elixir
Elixir - Elixir is a dynamic, functional language for building scalable and maintainable applications
hotwire-rails - Use Hotwire in your Ruby on Rails app
tictac - Demonstration of building a clustered, distributed, multi-player, turn-based game server written in Elixir.
kitto - Kitto is a framework for interactive dashboards written in Elixir
pygooglenews - If Google News had a Python library
trot - An Elixir web micro-framework.
citus - Distributed PostgreSQL as an extension
RIG - Create low-latency, interactive user experiences for stateless microservices.