Redis
Ruby on Rails
Our great sponsors
Redis | Ruby on Rails | |
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311 | 465 | |
64,235 | 54,776 | |
1.0% | 0.8% | |
9.7 | 10.0 | |
2 days ago | about 4 hours ago | |
C | Ruby | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
Redis
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Containerize your multi-services app with docker compose
Cache: a Redis cache
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Redis License Changed
I'm curious about something: I suppose Salvatore still owns the copyright for most of the code? The old license does include his copyright, up to 2020: https://github.com/redis/redis/blob/7.2/COPYING So I think this change couldn't have been done without his explicit consent? Or did he transferred his rights to RedisLabs or a foundation?
Redis.io no longer mentions open source.
They have still not changed meta description on their page. It still says it is open source ^^
view-source:https://redis.io/
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Redis Adopts Dual Source-Available Licensing
First they break lolwut (https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/12074) and now this.
Redis Inc. is moving the https://github.com/redis/redis/ project away from the three part BSD license to a dual license using two non-OSI approved license. This comes after previous comment from them saying that "... the Redis core license, which is and will always be licensed under the 3-Clause- BSD".
> They get paid for it. Don't try to spin this as if it's someone people working on it in their spare time out of the goodness of their heart. It's just their job.
No, you can't have this both ways. I'm the main contributor from AWS, and I've worked many times on weekends because I care about open source. I like helping people, I don't need to be paid to do it. Many of the AWS folks that made changes were normal engineers that were excited to be part of Redis. https://github.com/redis/redis/pull/10419 and https://github.com/redis/redis/pull/8621 are both examples of features someone from AWS built in their free time. We're all upset about this. Not because Redis deserves to get paid, it's that they acted like they were being good stewards of the open-source community and then they changed their mind.
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How to choose the right type of database
Redis: An open-source, in-memory data structure store supporting various data types. It offers persistence, replication, and clustering, making it ideal for more complex caching requirements and session storage.
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Delving Deeper: Enriching Microservices with Golang with CloudWeGo
In the bustling e-commerce landscape, Book Shop stands as a testament to CloudWeGo's capacity for seamless integration. Integrating middleware like Elasticsearch and Redis into a Kitex project to build a solid e-commerce system that rivals more complex platforms.
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Cryptoflow: Building a secure and scalable system with Axum and SvelteKit - Part 0
Redis - A storage to store tokens, and sessions etc.
Ruby on Rails
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16 Best Ruby Frameworks For Web Development [2024]
Ruby on Rails is regarded as one of the best ruby frameworks. It was the primary language in developing big projects such as Twitter and helped the language boost the community. Often referred to as “Rails,” Ruby on Rails is a web development framework with an MVC control structure and currently running its 6.1 version. The 16-year-old language has dramatically influenced the web development structures and managing databases, web pages, and other components on a web application.
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Ruby on Rails load testing habits
Rails isn't super opinionated about database writes, its mostly left up to developers to discover that for relational DBs you do not want to be doing a bunch of small writes all at once.
That said it specifically has tools to address this that started appearing a few years ago https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/35077
The way my team handles it is to stick Kafka in between whats generating the records (for us, a bunch of web scraping workers) and and a consumer that pulls off the Kafka queue and runs an insert when its internal buffer reaches around 50k rows.
Rails is also looking to add some more direct background type work with https://github.com/basecamp/solid_queue but this is still very new - most larger Rails shops are going to be running a second system and a gem called Sidekiq that pulls jobs out of Redis.
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First commits in a Ruby on Rails app
Here is what strict_loading does (source):
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Continuous Deployment with GitHub Actions and Kamal
Kamal is a wonderfully simple way to deploy your applications anywhere. It will also be included by default in Rails 8. Kamal is trivial, but I don’t recommend using it on your development machine.
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Jets: The Ruby Serverless Framework
I think that you're conflating correlation with causation. I think it's more plausible to assume it was the early numbers that are skewed and non-representative.
The fact that GitHub itself was is a killer app of the Ruby on Rails, and that the Rails project itself changed to being hosted on GitHub somewhat very early on it's history [1] had a disproportionate effect on the early community that gathered there.
Now GitHub attracts a much more diverse portfolio of projects, so the numbers you see there are less statistically biased towards early Ruby on Rails adopters.
[1] Commit history on the main branch of rails/rails via github goes as far as Apr 10, 2008 https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/c67e985994362290308073...
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understanding Rails version maintenance policy?
Done! https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/50295
releaseCycle: "6.1" releaseDate: 2020-12-09 eol: 2024-06-01 # https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/46895#issuecomment-1673353127 latest: "6.1.7.6" latestReleaseDate: 2023-08-22
You might have luck. It does look like docs changes are being accepted into 7.1-stable branch: https://github.com/rails/rails/commits/7-1-stable/
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Rage: Fast web framework compatible with Rails
Also this doesn't show how database access is handled which is the hard part. If you are not touching the database, you can run Rails on falcon and get fiber based concurrency.
If you run falcon on rails and access database, then you have to explicitly checkin/checkout a connection to be safe. Details here - https://github.com/rails/rails/issues/42271.
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HTML Data Attributes: One of the Original State Management Libraries
DEV is a Rails monolith, which uses Preact in the front-end using islands architecture. The reason why I mention all this is that it's not a full-stack JavaScript application, and there is no state management library like Redux or Zustand in use. The data store, for the most part on the front end, is all data attributes.
What are some alternatives?
Roda - Routing Tree Web Toolkit
Hanami - The web, with simplicity.
Redis - 🚀 A robust, performance-focused, and full-featured Redis client for Node.js.
LevelDB - LevelDB is a fast key-value storage library written at Google that provides an ordered mapping from string keys to string values.
RabbitMQ - Open source RabbitMQ: core server and tier 1 (built-in) plugins
Polly - Polly is a .NET resilience and transient-fault-handling library that allows developers to express policies such as Retry, Circuit Breaker, Timeout, Bulkhead Isolation, and Fallback in a fluent and thread-safe manner. From version 6.0.1, Polly targets .NET Standard 1.1 and 2.0+.
Sinatra - Classy web-development dressed in a DSL (official / canonical repo)
celery - Distributed Task Queue (development branch)
Riak - Riak is a decentralized datastore from Basho Technologies.
Cuba - Rum based microframework for web development.
CodeBehind Framework - CodeBehind library is a modern backend framework. This library is a programming model based on the MVC structure, which provides the possibility of creating dynamic aspx files in .NET Core and has high serverside independence.
Padrino - Padrino is a full-stack ruby framework built upon Sinatra.