joist-orm
Apache Pulsar
joist-orm | Apache Pulsar | |
---|---|---|
12 | 30 | |
243 | 13,796 | |
2.6% | 1.0% | |
9.7 | 9.8 | |
about 2 hours ago | about 12 hours ago | |
TypeScript | Java | |
- | 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.
joist-orm
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Which ORM would you pick, Prisma or Typeorm
As few comments have already offered alternatives, so I'll mention Joist.
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Does Typeorm violate the type contract when using relations that aren't explicitly loaded?
I used TypeORM in the past; I had a ton of problems with it. I highly recommend https://joist-orm.io/ instead.
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What is your favorite way to maintain types and schema in a full stack web app, end-to-end?
Codegen our backend models directly from the db (here a strict 1-1 mapping is a feature imo; we use https://github.com/stephenh/joist-ts/), so we get `Green` added to the backend `Color.ts` for free.
- Joist: An idiomatic ORM library for TypeScript
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Complex business logic in Node
If you like Rails/ActiveRecord, Joist is our attempt at a "AR-or-better productivity" ORM for TypeScript.
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Well, shit. Objection.js has been sunset, which ORM/querybuilder did you move to?
Ha, well, as you noted, I'm wary of even bothering to comment :-), but would be great if you checked out Joist: https://joist-orm.io/
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Looking for a type safe ORM/mapper
Checkout https://github.com/stephenh/joist-ts built from the ground up to be typesafe.
- Ask HN: Who is hiring? (November 2021)
- I used Typeorm in one of our projects and I have nothing but regrets
- What do you think about ORMs?
Apache Pulsar
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Choosing Between a Streaming Database and a Stream Processing Framework in Python
Stream-processing platforms such as Apache Kafka, Apache Pulsar, or Redpanda are specifically engineered to foster event-driven communication in a distributed system and they can be a great choice for developing loosely coupled applications. Stream processing platforms analyze data in motion, offering near-zero latency advantages. For example, consider an alert system for monitoring factory equipment. If a machine's temperature exceeds a certain threshold, a streaming platform can instantly trigger an alert and engineers do timely maintenance.
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Apache Pulsar VS quix-streams - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 7 Dec 2023
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Help finding open source Terraform configurations that are not educational projects or developer tools
Edit: Here's a good example of what I'm looking for: https://github.com/apache/pulsar. It is a full application that happens to be deployed (or deployable) with Terraform, and the configuration files are available.
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Kafka Is Dead, Long Live Kafka
I am the founder of RisingWave (http://risingwave.com/), an open-source SQL streaming database. I am happy to see the launch of Warpstream! I just reviewed the project and here's my personal opinion:
* Apache Kafka is undoubtedly the leading product in the streaming platform space. It offers a simple yet effective API that has become the golden standard. All streaming/messaging vendors need to adhere to Kafka protocol.
* The original Kafka only used local storage to store data, which can be extremely expensive if the data volume is large. That's why many people are advocating for the development of Kafka Tiered Storage (KIP-405: https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/KAFKA/KIP-405%3A...). To my best knowledge, there are at least five vendors selling Kafka or Kafka-compatible products with tiered storage support:
-- Confluent, which builds Kora, the 10X Kafka engine: https://www.confluent.io/10x-apache-kafka/;
-- Aiven, the open-source tiered storage Kafka (source code: https://github.com/Aiven-Open/tiered-storage-for-apache-kafk...
-- Redpanda Data, which cuts your TCO by 6X (https://redpanda.com/platform-tco);
-- DataStax, which commercializes Apache Pulsar (https://pulsar.apache.org/);
-- StreamNative, which commercializes Apache Pulsar (https://pulsar.apache.org/).
* WarpStream claims to be "built directly on top of S3," which I believe is a very aggressive approach that has the potential to drastically reduce costs, even compared to tiered storage. The potential tradeoff is system performance, especially in terms of latency. As new technology, WarpStream brings novelty, and definitely it also needs to convince users that the service is robust and reliable.
* BYOC (Bring Your Own Cloud) is becoming the default option. Most of the vendors listed above offer BYOC, where data is stored in customers' cloud accounts, addressing concerns about data privacy and security.
I believe WarpStream is new technology to this market, and and would encourage the team to publish some detailed numbers to confirm its performance and efficiency!
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Analyzing Real-Time Movie Reviews With Redpanda and Memgraph
In recent years, it has become apparent that almost no production system is complete without real-time data. This can also be observed through the rise of streaming platforms such as Apache Kafka, Apache Pulsar, Redpanda, and RabbitMQ.
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There are about Pulsar 10k users in Slack, but about 70 in this subreddit.
It's colored black on the refreshed Apache Pulsar site. https://pulsar.apache.org/
- Is anyone frustrated with anything about Prometheus?
- Kafka alternatives
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Is Redpanda going to replace Apache Kafka?
So many tools out there, its just which one do you like, I guess. I like Kafka. Works for our environment and we have a few clusters. People have brought up Cribl to replace our kafka (havent really looked into Cribl and we also run NiFi). I have even heard https://pulsar.apache.org/ , which seems to be almost another flavor of Kafka.
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Querying microservices in real-time with materialized views
RisingWave is an open-source streaming database that has built-in fully-managed CDC source connectors for various databases, also it can collect data from other sources such Kafka, Pulsar, Kinesis, or Redpanda and it allows you to query real-time streams using SQL. You can get a materialized view that is always up-to-date.
What are some alternatives?
pg-mem - An in memory postgres DB instance for your unit tests
redpanda - Redpanda is a streaming data platform for developers. Kafka API compatible. 10x faster. No ZooKeeper. No JVM!
beam - 🪵 Beam Design System
Apache ActiveMQ - Mirror of Apache ActiveMQ
graphql-typescript-factories - TypeScript test builders/factories for GraphQL schemas
Apache ActiveMQ Artemis - Mirror of Apache ActiveMQ Artemis
studio - 🎙️ The easiest way to explore and manipulate your data in all of your Prisma projects.
Apache Camel - Apache Camel is an open source integration framework that empowers you to quickly and easily integrate various systems consuming or producing data.
kysely - A type-safe typescript SQL query builder
Apache RocketMQ - Apache RocketMQ is a cloud native messaging and streaming platform, making it simple to build event-driven applications.
slonik - A Node.js PostgreSQL client with runtime and build time type safety, and composable SQL.
RocketMQ