list-of-tech-migrations
citus
list-of-tech-migrations | citus | |
---|---|---|
14 | 61 | |
498 | 9,860 | |
- | 1.4% | |
7.0 | 9.4 | |
19 days ago | 9 days ago | |
C | ||
- | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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.
list-of-tech-migrations
-
[Blog post] Top 10 Big Companies Using Svelte
too bad not migration https://github.com/kokizzu/list-of-tech-migrations
- List of Tech Migrations
-
Scaling Databases at Activision [pdf]
yup lots of companies do agree https://github.com/kokizzu/list-of-tech-migrations
-
Who is using Go to build web sites and applications?
some of them https://github.com/kokizzu/list-of-tech-migrations other than known one https://github.com/rakyll/gowiki/blob/master/GoUsers.md
- Remix web framework aquired by Shopify
- We at $Famous_company Switched to $Hyped_technology
- Migration Trends
- Public Tech Migrations Since 2005
- Ask HN: What could a modern database do that PostgreSQL and MySQL can't
-
In praise of PostgreSQL
You can see the big companies' choice from here: https://github.com/kokizzu/list-of-tech-migrations
citus
- SPQR 1.3.0: a production-ready system for horizontal scaling of PostgreSQL
- Citus: PostgreSQL extension that transforms Postgres into a distributed database
-
Figma's Databases team lived to tell the scale
I see they don't mention Citus (https://github.com/citusdata/citus), which is already a fairly mature native Postgres extension. From the details given in the article, in sounds like they just reimplemented it.
I wonder if they were unaware of it or disregarded it for a reason —I currently am in a similar situation as the one described in the blog, trying to shard a massive Postgres DB.
-
PostgreSQL Is Enough
It is possible, if you pay for it. You can do Multi-AZ Clustered Instances in RDS, where you get the benefits of Multi-AZ failover with traffic sharing.
If you can run your own infra – at least on an EC2 level – you can do things like Citus [0] for Postgres, which is about as close to "just add database nodes" as you'll get.
[0]: https://www.citusdata.com/
-
Vitess 18
So while searching for something like this for postgres I came across citus. Any one know how that stacks up?
https://github.com/citusdata/citus
- In-Depth Guide: Citus Technical Readme
-
Revolutionizing Database Scaling with CitusDB
References: CitusDB
- Squeeze the hell out of the system you have
- Show HN: Hydra 1.0 – open-source column-oriented Postgres
- Schema-based sharding comes to PostgreSQL with Citus
What are some alternatives?
absurd-sql - sqlite3 in ur indexeddb (hopefully a better backend soon)
Greenplum - Greenplum Database - Massively Parallel PostgreSQL for Analytics. An open-source massively parallel data platform for analytics, machine learning and AI.
lovefield - Lovefield is a relational database for web apps. Written in JavaScript, works cross-browser. Provides SQL-like APIs that are fast, safe, and easy to use.
yugabyte-db - YugabyteDB - the cloud native distributed SQL database for mission-critical applications.
mysql-live-select - NPM Package to provide events on updated MySQL SELECT result sets
vitess - Vitess is a database clustering system for horizontal scaling of MySQL.
meteor-mysql - Reactive MySQL for Meteor
TimescaleDB - An open-source time-series SQL database optimized for fast ingest and complex queries. Packaged as a PostgreSQL extension.
dbt-core - dbt enables data analysts and engineers to transform their data using the same practices that software engineers use to build applications.
remark42 - comment engine
stolon - PostgreSQL cloud native High Availability and more.