fuse | Gitit | |
---|---|---|
2 | 8 | |
493 | 2,129 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 5.8 | |
about 2 years ago | 3 months ago | |
Erlang | Haskell | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
fuse
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When "letting it crash" is not enough
Indeed. I do wish there were a few more "extras" in OTP, because "let it crash" needs some more details in some circumstances.
For instance if you have a system with a user interface and some various components, like say, a database, and the database becomes unavailable, you don't want the entire system to crash. You want it to display an error message to the user and maybe go into some kind of diagnostic mode or other "things are not normal" state.
Something like https://github.com/jlouis/fuse is one approach.
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Elixir for Cynical Curmudgeons
> If you configure it well (the defaults are not always optimal) you can have your invisible mesh of services survive extended outages of the 3rd party APIs it depends on.
This is something that annoyed me a bit with OTP. The basic strategies aren't really enough for that, so you need something like https://github.com/jlouis/fuse
I wrote something like that myself, but it hasn't seen a ton of use: https://github.com/davidw/hardcore
Gitit
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Elixir for Cynical Curmudgeons
You're correct.
It says at the bottom: powered by https://github.com/jgm/gitit
Readme states that: "Gitit is a wiki program written in Haskell. It uses Happstack for the web server and pandoc for markup processing."
- School of Haskell: Basics
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Looking for a simple wiki (web, not desktop) that stores backend as markdown files?
I’ve used the Gitit Wiki. Database is plaintext markdown files under git source control. Renders with pandoc so you get a really good dialect of markdown. The look and feel is a little dated but 8/10 highly recommend.
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Looking for private wiki software on internet
I don't use gitit, but I've had people advocate it to me: https://github.com/jgm/gitit
- Wiki engine using Pandoc and Git
- Is there an open source and deployable collaborative markdown editor with version control (maybe git?)
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Snippet Box - selfhosted and open source code snippet manager with built-in support for Markdown documentation
Instead of SQLite I would prefer if you stored the snippets in a git repo like Gollum or Gitit.
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Archivy - Extensible Self Hosted Knowledge Base - v1 release
I use my own forked version of gitit (dark, full-width theme, with automated toc and some other tweaks) for the last 5 years or so which looks and functions quite similarly. I handled web bookmarking/clipping with xclip (rich text clipboard) + pandoc html-to-markdown.
What are some alternatives?
lz4 - LZ4 bindings for Erlang
Gollum - A simple, Git-powered wiki with a local frontend and support for many kinds of markup and content.
trie - Erlang Trie Implementation
Dokuwiki - The DokuWiki Open Source Wiki Engine
fnv - Pure Elixir implementation of Fowler–Noll–Vo hash functions
ikiwiki
red_black_tree - Red-black tree implementation for Elixir.
ngx-export - A comprehensive web framework aimed at building custom Haskell handlers for the Nginx Web Server
cuckoo - :bird: Cuckoo Filters in Elixir
MoinMoin - MoinMoin Wiki (1.9, also: 1.5a ... 1.8), stable, for production wikis
graphmath - An Elixir library for performing 2D and 3D mathematics.
wol - A program and library to a send WoL Magic Packet, to remotely start a computer.