opensource.microsoft.com
grpc_bench
opensource.microsoft.com | grpc_bench | |
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13 | 58 | |
742 | 850 | |
1.5% | - | |
7.2 | 8.4 | |
18 days ago | 4 days ago | |
HTML | Dockerfile | |
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.
opensource.microsoft.com
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4 Approved Pull Requests in 1 Week: My Road to Hacktoberfest Success!
If you want to contribute to big projects like Microsoft or Drupal on your portfolio, feel free. However, if you want to increase your chances of getting your contributions reviewed and merged, I highly recommend aiming for smaller projects. Smaller open source projects tend not to get as crowded as others, which means you might get a higher chance of your contribution being reviewed and merged at a quick pace. As a contributor, I wanted to use Hacktoberfest as an opportunity to work with YAML files for open source projects. Luckily for me, I have been talking to Arshad Khan about this on X(Twitter), so I created greetings YAML files for their projects, FarmHub, Curls, and Tindog. It was a bit of a learning curve as the greetings won’t go through, but after reading that permissions: write-all is helpful in making third-party greetings work, I added that to the files, and bam, my PRs got merged! Hold on, before, you rush off to make Pull Requests, there’s just one strategy that I want to share with you.
- I need a self-hosted basic MDM for free, any ideas?
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Microsoft “irreparably damaging” EU’s cloud ecosystem, industry group claims
Jesse what the fuck are you on about? Open source is pretty neat but you know microsoft has a open source page. If you are gonna say but linux blah blah blah microsoft is a platinum linux foundation member
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my buddy’s first time considering upgrading from a macbook. y’all.
M$ also has a page with some of their projects and contributions. https://opensource.microsoft.com/
- [Azure] Company is telling me not to use open-source tools because they are "unreliable"
- Before There Was Effective Altruism, There Was Effective Philanthropy
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Like what the hell
Microsoft has come a really long way in expanding their platform out. They open sourced PowerShell and .NET are actively promoting others ( https://opensource.microsoft.com ) and have full Linux cloud support on Azure.
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Is Linux a secure operating system?
Microsoft themselves is one of the biggest open source contributors in the world. They've moved big projects like PowerShell to be completely open source. They even own GitHub and are one of the top Linux contributors. https://opensource.microsoft.com
- Tell HN: Microsoft forks MIT licensed repo, and changes the copyright to them
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No, Microsoft.
It's ok, the commit is enough
grpc_bench
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Poor gRPC performance on test - help needed
SayHello, GetUser, and Sum differ only by payload size. Sum is the simplest one - (int, int) -> int, GetUser is (long) -> User (medium payload), and SayHello uses exactly the same payload as this test: https://github.com/LesnyRumcajs/grpc_bench/tree/master/dotnet_grpc_bench
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2023-06-25 gRPC benchmark results
This is correct. The problem is not with the benchmark itself but with the implementation. If you look at the result, you can see that even with 6 "allowed" CPUs, the vertx server utilizes less than 100%. Apparently, the current vertx implementation (the one implemented in https://github.com/LesnyRumcajs/grpc_bench/tree/master/java_vertx_grpc_bench) is single-threaded or has some other limitation.
Another iteration of grpc_bench!
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Why does C#/.NET is in demand in Philippines especially in BGC? How about PHP?
Because it's fast and runs on Windows, Linux, and MacOS
- .NET Core performance on Linux
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Another two cents about the current situation with the Scala user base and economics.
In general though, akka/pekko-streams are known to be one of the fastest implementations out there. Their grpc client for example even beats languages like Rust (see https://www.lightbend.com/blog/akka-grpc-update-delivers-1200-percent-performance-improvement and https://github.com/LesnyRumcajs/grpc_bench/wiki/2022-03-15-bench-results).
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What is the current status of Akka in your organisation?
The whole point I was making is at least up until 8 months ago (at best, I can't commend on the stability/maturity/performance of shardcake) Akka was the only mature library/ecosystem solving this problem with also a very strong focus on performance (for example still to this day, akka/pekko-grpc is generally one of the fastest grpc implementations I am aware of, its even beating rust if you have at least 2 cores (see https://github.com/LesnyRumcajs/grpc_bench/wiki/2022-03-15-bench-results)
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QuickBuffers 1.1 released
It would be interesting to create a new java benchmark with your implementation.
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Ask HN: Examples of Top C# Code?
Also worth checking out the gRPC benchmarks: https://github.com/LesnyRumcajs/grpc_bench/discussions/284
dotnet is up there with Rust.
What are some alternatives?
opensource-management-portal - Microsoft's monolithic, opinionated Open Source Management Portal enabling enterprise scale self-service powered by the GitHub API 🏔🧑💻🧰
eCAL - Please visit the new repository: https://github.com/eclipse-ecal/ecal
grpc_bench - Various gRPC benchmarks
FlatBuffers - FlatBuffers: Memory Efficient Serialization Library
cups - OpenPrinting CUPS Sources
gRPC - The C based gRPC (C++, Python, Ruby, Objective-C, PHP, C#)
open-source-practice - Repo for you to raise a Pull Request for practice
gRPC - The Java gRPC implementation. HTTP/2 based RPC
ghcrawler - Crawl GitHub APIs and store the discovered orgs, repos, commits, ...
greeter-bpf - implementing gRPC GreeterServer in eBPF just for fun.
cups - OpenPrinting CUPS Sources
ghz - Simple gRPC benchmarking and load testing tool