inet256
Apache Thrift
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inet256 | Apache Thrift | |
---|---|---|
14 | 10 | |
133 | 10,143 | |
0.0% | 0.6% | |
4.6 | 9.0 | |
10 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Go | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
inet256
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Show HN: A version control system based on rsync
My approach to hosting with Got has been to make it easy and secure for users to host from any machine.
INET256 solves that problem nicely. If you have access to an INET256 network, then all you have to do is swap addresses and two Got instances can communicate.
https://github.com/inet256/inet256
Also, end-to-end encryption is table stakes. Any data that leaves the user needs to be encrypted in transit, and if it hangs around away from the user, at rest.
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Ask HN: What Are You Working on This Year?
I'm working on INET256, an API for secure identity based networking. The reference implementation, mesh256 is a mesh network using a distributed routing algorithm. There is also diet256, which is a centrally coordinated network with direct connections using QUIC over The Internet.
https://github.com/inet256/inet256
https://github.com/inet256/diet256
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SourceHut terms of service updates, cryptocurrency projects to be removed
Thanks for sharing RocketGit. This is the first time I've heard of it, and yes, it does look like a cool copyleft solution to self-hosted Git.
Another interesting option is Brendan Caroll's got[0], which allows sharing of repositories over INET256[1]. I'm sure there are other P2P approaches to Git, but this one just piqued my interest. Unfortunately it has a naming conflict with OpenBSD's Game of Trees[2].
[0] https://github.com/gotvc/got
[1] https://github.com/inet256/inet256
[2] https://gameoftrees.org/
- INET256 is a 256 bit network address space for p2p applications
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Ask HN: Who Wants to Collaborate?
I'm working on INET256, a 256 bit network address space for easily and securely connecting applications.
https://github.com/inet256/inet256
- The API is focused around sending and receiving messages to addresses derived from public keys.
- Each application can have its own stable address.
- Runs as a daemon process which is configured with peering information. Additional network nodes can be spawned through the API.
- Can easily support arbitrary routing algorithms through a well defined interface.
- A TUN device (similar to CJDNS or Yggdrasil) is included as a separate application. (The IP6 Portal)
https://github.com/inet256/inet256
Developers, applications, and end-users are under-served by the network layer. INET256 provides necessary features (stable addresses, encryption) to client applications, which usually have to reimplement those features themselves.
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Show HN: Got is like Git, but with an 'o'
There is an interface for address discovery [1] (finding transport addresses for peers you know about) and autopeering [2] (peering with peers you didn't know about beforehand). There is an unfinished branch for LAN broadcast discovery/autopeering. Contributions are definitely welcome here.
I had played around with a STUN transport, but the easiest way to connect has been to stand up a cloud VM with a static IP.
INET256 addresses use the same public key serialization as TLS, but they intentionally avoid the rest of the certificate infrastructure complexity. They make great leaves in a web of trust. You can sign them, or stick them in DNS records. And if you don't want to deal with any of that, fine, just swap addresses and you can communicate securely.
[1] https://github.com/inet256/inet256/blob/master/pkg/discovery...
- INET256: A 256 bit address space for peer-to-peer applications
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Spork: Peer-to-peer socket magic in the air
> To me, this is the future. I wish we had a set of APIs to allow connecting to a public key instead of an IP address
INET256 is working on exactly that. It's a set of APIs for connecting to addresses derived from public keys.
https://github.com/inet256/inet256
- INET256: A 256 bit address space for peer-to-peer hosts/applications
Apache Thrift
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Symfony in microservice architecture - Episode I : Symfony and Golang communication through gRPC
There are various notable implementations of RPC like Apache Thrift and gRPC.
- What is gRPC popularity? I believe not very popular. And subreddit is small. Why is that?
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Fresh – The next-gen web framework
> That's just your choice of how to build your app, right? You could've avoided this by rendering templates on the server and sending static HTML to the client, keeping the business logic on the server.
No, that's a requirement on most business cases, my comment stated 'complex and dynamic web apps'. Re-rendering the whole page everytime the user checks a box or clicks a button is (a) terrible UX, (b) hard to track the state between page refresh, (c) wrong practice and (d) bad performance.
> Here's just one of ten-thousand other battle-tested options you can use: https://github.com/apache/thrift/
Sure, I should setup a complex and huge dependency for just one of the many problems I highlighted. What a great idea
- Ask HN: Who Wants to Collaborate?
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Deadline Budget Propagation for Baseplate.py
Thus, we released Baseplate.py v2.1 with deadline propagation. Each request between Baseplate services has an associated THeader, which includes relevant information for Baseplate to fulfill its functionality, such as tracing request timings. We added a “Deadline-Budget” field to this header that propagates the remaining timeout so that information is available to the following request, and this timeout continues to get updated with every new request made. With this update, we save production costs by allowing resources to work on requests awaiting a response, and gain overall improved latency.
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If someone ever asks you why you use Apollo, show them this screenshot.
Here’s an example of the Thrift changelog. Knock yourself out. Or you can get your sense of productivity by actually doing something of value.
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parquet2 0.3.0, with native support to read async
The biggest addition is native async reading via futures::AsyncRead and futures::AsyncSeek, which required a lot of (to be merged) changes upstream (changes to thrift rust compiler and parquet-format-rs). I placed those changes on a temporary crate until things are released there.
- proposal: expression to create pointer to simple types #45624
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Can you share your experience with race conditions in production?
We were sharing instances of a Thrift TDeserializer across threads. We knew TProtocol was not thread-safe, but the TDeserializer constructor accepts a TProtocolFactory, so we naively assumed the deserialize method would use that to create a new instance of TProtocol for each invocation, but unfortunately, the TDeserializer constructor immediately creates TProtocol and stores it in a member variable, so TDeserializer is not actually thread-safe.
What are some alternatives?
platelet - Dispatch system for emergency volunteer couriers.
gRPC - The C based gRPC (C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, C#)
adama-lang - A headless spreadsheet document container service.
ZeroMQ - ZeroMQ core engine in C++, implements ZMTP/3.1
ipdr - 🐋 IPFS-backed Docker Registry
Cap'n Proto - Cap'n Proto serialization/RPC system - core tools and C++ library
OpenBazaar - OpenBazaar 2.0 Server Daemon in Go
Protobuf - Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format
roqr - QR codes that will rock your world
Apache Avro - Apache Avro is a data serialization system.
Phaser - Phaser is a fun, free and fast 2D game framework for making HTML5 games for desktop and mobile web browsers, supporting Canvas and WebGL rendering. [Moved to: https://github.com/phaserjs/phaser]
Apache Parquet - Apache Parquet