rafiki VS python-architecture-linter-demo

Compare rafiki vs python-architecture-linter-demo and see what are their differences.

rafiki

An open-source, comprehensive Interledger service for wallet providers, enabling them to provide Interledger functionality to their users. (by interledger)

python-architecture-linter-demo

Demo of python-architecture-linter using a definition and CLI (by Incognito)
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rafiki python-architecture-linter-demo
4 1
222 1
1.8% -
9.8 0.0
6 days ago about 1 year ago
TypeScript Python
Apache License 2.0 MIT License
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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rafiki

Posts with mentions or reviews of rafiki. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-10-15.
  • How boring should your team be
    11 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 15 Oct 2022
    Joran from TigerBeetle here.

    On the contrary, Coil's Interledger [1] project is designing for TigerBeetle, and TigerBeetle will be the core ledger database for Rafiki [2], the open implementation of Interledger.

    [1] https://interledger.org

    [2] https://github.com/interledger/rafiki

  • Interledger 2022 - The Year of Rafiki
    3 projects | dev.to | 26 Jan 2022
    Thus far, most of these functionalities only existed on paper. Rafiki will be the reference implementation, bundling all of them and hence allowing not just digital wallets but any payment provider to easily enable Interledger functionalities on their accounts. And it is fully open source!
  • How Coil supports the open-source projects we use
    2 projects | dev.to | 1 Sep 2021
    For the past three months at Coil, we have started to develop Rafiki, an open-source All-In-One Solution for Interledger Wallets. Throughout the process, we have continued to think more deeply about how we support the open-source community and the packages that we use in Rafiki and at Coil. In this blog post, we are sharing some discoveries and decisions about what we want sustaining open-source to look like at Coil.
  • Introducing Rafiki – An All-In-One Solution for Interledger Wallets
    1 project | dev.to | 26 May 2021
    Learn more about Rafiki and contribute to the official Rafiki source code repository.

python-architecture-linter-demo

Posts with mentions or reviews of python-architecture-linter-demo. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-10-15.
  • How boring should your team be
    11 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 15 Oct 2022
    I think I grossly oversold this thing because there's a lot of comments here asking for something.

    I don't really have this concept written down anywhere like a number of other ideas I have. But, I guess the short version is, if I had to make an elevator pitch or something: No framework is a configuration (maybe "distro" in the linux sense) of concepts (maybe "packages" in the software sense). A concept is either something you might use a framework or library for (and usually it exists somewhere), or it is something you would want a linter to find, and it might even be something that you want to ensure was done correctly at code review. I think this last one is the most accurate idea of what a "concept" is.

    Over time I have accumulated a small informal set of "packages" that can be implemented without a helper library in nearly the same amount of code as if you were to use that library anyway. The important part is that the running software doesn't depend on the third party code, but actually the developers depend on a rule book and anything that violates the rules should be treated the same as calling an third party package's API method that doesn't exist. In other words: the dependency remains entirely in concept-space, not disk space.

    This link below is not "no framework" but it is something I wrote where you can see the result of "no framework thinking". The concepts are stole from people who are probably smarter than me, have decades of experience and written books on these topics. The only difference is instead of turning it into a library to depend on, it's turned into rules for humans (which I guess is also what the book authors originally did anyway). I combined them and made them into a "distro" and I called it "modular provider architecture" (not very engaging or entertaining, but it does what's on the label).

    https://github.com/Incognito/python-architecture-linter/tree...

    That text document is meant to be an example of how developers should write an application. By the way, it has a demo application here which does basically nothing:

    https://github.com/Incognito/python-architecture-linter-demo...

    It might be hard to see here because it's pretty silly example, but I managed a small/growing team of 3-5 developers who create over 15 different services following this pattern. They did end up using libraries to do things like send data to/from Kafka or a DB, but the Modular Provider Architecture's rules were always there.

    Oh, by the way, that repo I linked to, https://github.com/Incognito/python-architecture-linter/ ... this is a proof of concept for a linter that could implement the "no framework" concept. It is a dev dependency of your project, meaning you have no production framework as a dependency. It is a tool that lets you configure "rules" for your project in the style of any linter you already know of. It's like a linter from hyperspace, you can "lint" rules like.... if a file is 3 levels deep, and depended on by methods anywhere in the project with the word "bob" in the method name name, but those methods don't have if-statements, and also the Afferent coupling of the module itself is less than 0.5 .... fail CI with an explanation why. It also has a feature for you to commit an exemption list.

    I used this in my teams once I started managing multiple large teams, and I could do things like generate entire reports across all projects of these really complex metrics that most linters and tools aren't really set up for.

    That code is in these files, sorry for the total mess, I was just hacking around and didn't really think of a nice way to structure the definition "API. My main goal was proving the concept.

What are some alternatives?

When comparing rafiki and python-architecture-linter-demo you can also consider the following projects:

tigerbeetle - The distributed financial transactions database designed for mission critical safety and performance.

architecture-decision

tigerbeetle - A distributed financial accounting database designed for mission critical safety and performance. [Moved to: https://github.com/tigerbeetledb/tigerbeetle]

architecture_decision_record - Architecture decision record (ADR) examples for software planning, IT leadership, and template documentation

akita - 🚀 State Management Tailored-Made for JS Applications

awesome-web-monetization - 🕶️ Stuffs about Web Monetization. Packages, articles, documentation links and others tools.

switch - Swap BTC, ETH, DAI & XRP in seconds. Keep your private keys private.

webmonetization - Proposed Web Monetization standard

akita - A browser extension that gives you insight into your engagement with Web Monetization.