hyper-express
web-frameworks
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hyper-express | web-frameworks | |
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38 | 26 | |
1,431 | 6,897 | |
- | 0.5% | |
8.8 | 9.8 | |
17 days ago | 6 days ago | |
JavaScript | PHP | |
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.
hyper-express
- HyperExpress: High Performance Node.js Webserver
- HyperExpress – High-perf HTTP/ws server (~20x Express.js)
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I have done a full benchmark of a POST REST API on my computer: Node.js vs Fastify vs Express.js vs Deno vs Bun vs GO. Node.js is used WITH and WITHOUT clustering on 6-core I7 processor
Hey, I believe uWebsockets.js does support clustering. I'm the author of https://github.com/kartikk221/hyper-express which is written on top of uWebsockets.js and is pretty much the fastest webserver in Node land with an Express-like API and all of the common features such as middlewares, Router, async/sync, Websockets, Server Sent Events, File Uploading in a single package that is about same size as Express. The only catch is that you lose about 14% performance from the uWebsockets.js peak because of all the features but this is being improved and a well worth trade off for the familiar developer experience with still almost 2.5x performance of Fastify and other similar frameworks.
- HyperExpress – High Performance Node.js Webserver
- HyperExpress – Simple, performant HTTP/WebSocket server using uWebSockets.js
- Simple, Performant HTTP and WebSocket Server Using Uwebsockets.js
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MRSK: Deploy Web Apps Anywhere
Yeah I’m personally of the opinion that the performance loss for regular web services is worth it 99% of the time. RAM is cheap, human time is not.
That said I definitely believe your characterization of resource hunger between nginx and traefik.
You are the second person to mention using websockets for requests in as many days… How do you deal with scale out? Sticky cookie routing seems like almost a requirement if you don’t want to deploy a redis-alike.
Also just out of curiosity, do you use hyper-express[0]?
[0]: https://github.com/kartikk221/hyper-express
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What are some good projects for learning about buffers, event emitters, and streams in NodeJS?
Building your own webserver on top of a lower level networking library in Node.js can be a good way to learn all 3 of those things. I have built a webserver called HyperExpress which is essentially a layer on top of a low level C++ websever called uWebsockets and I had to utilize and progress my knowledge in buffers, emitters and streams to achieve the same API as Express.js and make it usable for Node.js applications: https://github.com/kartikk221/hyper-express Feel free to dig around in the code and make any PRs for improvements!
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What are the performance overheads of V8 Engine
You can check out source code here if you’d like to do more digging https://github.com/kartikk221/hyper-express
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Need help in understanding why we need classes in JS(node specifically).
Are classes absolutely needed in JS? No, not really. Are classes really nice and significantly improve the readability/flow of your code in some cases? Sure, an example could be a webserver I wrote: https://github.com/kartikk221/hyper-express
web-frameworks
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[Web Frameworks Benchmark] How is the FOMO framework handling 45k+ requests more than Swoole the framework it depends on?
Notably it seems that Fomo is using the raw Swoole Server (https://github.com/fomo-framework/framework/blob/a52b75abbd06c0aa6cb1ec47c4011557bc347532/src/Servers/Http.php#L21) rather than the HTTP-specific server wrapper which is what is used in the Swoole benchmark: https://github.com/the-benchmarker/web-frameworks/blob/master/php/swoole/start.php
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Understanding web stack performance
As an Experienced Developer (TM), I'd like to authoritatively know whether a given tech stack is "slow" or "fast", measured in requests per seconds. I'd like to find a way to correctly and objectively measure performance, but most performance suites measure a small thing in isolation. For example, The Benchmarker measures the performance of HTTP APIs, but the requests are super simple (GET request that gets a value, POST request that doesn't do anything but return a value, empty GET).
- Go with Chi has more ram consumption and less req/s than Koa or Fastify
- tools to stress test your website
- Which is the fastest web framework?
- Slower than Go, Java and JS?
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The NanoMux HTTP router benchmark results
Hi friends. I've opened pull requests for the-benchmarker/web-frameworks and Go HTTP Router Benchmark. Hopefully, they will be merged soon. Here are the benchmark results that I got on my laptop from Julien Schmidt's Go HTTP Router Benchmark. For comparison, I also added Chi, GorillaMux, and HttpRouter.
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Django Ninja - Help debugging/understanding Internals
The benchmark code: https://github.com/the-benchmarker/web-frameworks
- Passenger 介紹
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Nim Version 1.6 Released
And the httpbeast code is here: https://github.com/the-benchmarker/web-frameworks/tree/maste...
What are some alternatives?
nanoexpress - Professional backend framework for Node.js
FrameworkBenchmarks - Source for the TechEmpower Framework Benchmarks project
iron-session - 🛠 Secure, stateless, and cookie-based session library for JavaScript
wrk - Modern HTTP benchmarking tool
Socket.io - Realtime application framework (Node.JS server)
graphql-benchmarks - GraphQL benchmarks using the-benchmarker framework.
bun - Bun JS app doing basically nothing
PHP-CRUD-API - Single file PHP script that adds a REST API to a SQL database
Express - Fast, unopinionated, minimalist web framework for node.
Fusio - Open source API management platform
µWebSockets - Simple, secure & standards compliant web server for the most demanding of applications
ray - Debug with Ray to fix problems faster