javaslang-circuitbreaker VS J2ObjC

Compare javaslang-circuitbreaker vs J2ObjC and see what are their differences.

javaslang-circuitbreaker

Resilience4j is a fault tolerance library designed for Java8 and functional programming (by resilience4j)

J2ObjC

A Java to iOS Objective-C translation tool and runtime. (by google)
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javaslang-circuitbreaker J2ObjC
11 2
9,358 5,976
1.0% 0.1%
7.3 9.1
15 days ago about 11 hours ago
Java Java
Apache License 2.0 Apache License 2.0
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.

javaslang-circuitbreaker

Posts with mentions or reviews of javaslang-circuitbreaker. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-12-10.
  • Summary of the AWS Service Event in the Northern Virginia (US-East-1) Region
    4 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 10 Dec 2021
    In JVM land resilience4j is the de facto successor of Hystrix:

    https://github.com/resilience4j/resilience4j

  • Roast my github project... please?
    4 projects | /r/java | 14 Sep 2021
    If you still want to keep the retry, have a look at failsafe or resilience4j.
  • What are some open source applications which have a robust external API calls implementations ?
    13 projects | /r/java | 24 Aug 2021
    Hystrix as been deprecated in favour of https://github.com/resilience4j/resilience4j
  • Netflix System Design- Backend Architecture
    2 projects | dev.to | 24 Jun 2021
    Cover Photo by Alexander Shatov on Unsplash Netflix accounts for about 15% of the world's internet bandwidth traffic. Serving over 6 billion hours of content per month, globally, to nearly every country in the world. Building a robust, highly scalable, reliable, and efficient backend system is no small engineering feat but the ambitious team at Netflix has proven that problems exist to be solved. This article provides an analysis of the Netflix system architecture as researched from online sources. Section 1 will provide a simplified overview of the Netflix system. Section 2 is an overview of the backend architecture and section 3 provides a detailed look at the individual system components. 1. Overview Netflix operates in two clouds Amazon Web Services and Open Connect(Netflix content delivery network). The overall Netflix system consists of three main parts. Open Connect Appliances(OCA) - Open Connect is Netflix’s custom global content delivery network(CDN). These OCAs servers are placed inside internet service providers (ISPs) and internet exchange locations (IXPs) networks around the world to deliver Netflix content to users. Client - A client is any device from which you play the video from Netflix. This consists of all the applications that interface with the Netflix servers. Netflix supports a lot of different devices including smart TV, Android, iOS platforms, gaming consoles, etc. All these apps are written using platform-specific code. Netflix web app is written using reactJS which was influenced by several factors some of which include startup speed, runtime performance, and modularity. Backend - This includes databases, servers, logging frameworks, application monitoring, recommendation engine, background services, etc... When the user loads the Netflix app all requests are handled by the backend server in AWS Eg: Login, recommendations, the home page, users history, billing, customer support. Some of these backend services include (AWS EC2 instances, AWS S3, AWS DynamoDB, Cassandra, Hadoop, Kafka, etc). 2. Backend Architecture Netflix is one of the major drivers of microservices architecture. Every component of their system is a collection of loosely coupled services collaborating. The microservice architecture enables the rapid, frequent and reliable delivery of large, complex applications. The figure below is an overview of the backend architecture. Backend Architecture The Client sends a Play request to a Backend running on AWS. Netflix uses Amazon's Elastic Load Balancer (ELB) service to route traffic to its services. AWS ELB will forward that request to the API Gateway Service. Netflix uses Zuul as its API gateway, which is built to allow dynamic routing, traffic monitoring, and security, resilience to failures at the edge of the cloud deployment. Application API component is the core business logic behind Netflix operations. There are several types of API corresponding to different user activities such as Signup API, Discovery/Recommendation API for retrieving video recommendation. In this scenario, the forwarded request from API Gateway Service is handled by Play API. Play API will call a microservice or a sequence of microservices to fulfill the request. Microservices are mostly stateless small programs, there can be thousands of these services communicating with each other. Microservices can save or get data from a data store during this process. Microservices can send events for tracking user activities or other data to the Stream Processing Pipeline for either real-time processing of personalized recommendations or batch processing of business intelligence tasks. The data coming out of the Stream Processing Pipeline can be persistent to other data stores such as AWS S3, Hadoop HDFS, Cassandra, etc. 3. Backend Components Open Connect Everything that happens after you hit play on a video is handled by Open Connect. This system is responsible for streaming video to your device. The following diagram illustrates how the playback process works. Open Connect Design Image OCAs ping AWS instances to report their health, the routes they have learned, and the files they have on them. A user on a client device requests playback of a title (TV show or movie) from the Netflix application in AWS. The Netflix playback service checks for the user's authorization, permission, and licensing, then chooses which files to serve the client taking into account the current network speed and client resolution. The steering service picks the OCA that the files should be served from, generates URLs for these OCAs, and hands it back to the playback service. The playback service hands over the URLs of the OCA to the client, The client requests for the video files from that OCA. Zuul2-API GATEWAY Netflix uses Amazon's Elastic Load Balancer (ELB) service to route traffic to services. ELB’s are set up such that load is balanced across zones first, then instances. Amazon Elastic Load Balancer This load balancer routes request to the API gateway service; Netflix uses Zuul as its API gateway, It handles all the requests and performs the dynamic routing of microservice applications. It works as a front door for all the requests. For Example, /api/products is mapped to the product service, and /api/user is mapped to the user service. The Zuul Server dynamically routes the requests to the respective backend applications. Zuul provides a range of different types of filters that allows them to quickly and nimbly apply functionality to the edge service. The Cloud Gateway team at Netflix runs and operates more than 80 clusters of Zuul 2, sending traffic to about 100 (and growing) backend service clusters which amount to more than 1 million requests per second. open-sourcing-zuul-2 Zuul Architecture The Netty handlers on the front and back of the filters are mainly responsible for handling the network protocol, web server, connection management, and proxying work. With those inner workings abstracted away, the filters do all of the heavy liftings. The inbound filters run before proxying the request and can be used for authentication, routing, or decorating the request. The endpoint filters can either be used to return a static response or proxy the request to the backend service. The outbound filters run after a response has been returned and can be used for things like metrics, or adding/removing custom headers. The Zuul 2 Api gateway forwards the request to the appropriate Application API. Application API Currently, the Application APIs are defined under three categories: Signup API -for non-member requests such as sign-up, billing, free trial, etc., Discovery API-for search, recommendation requests, and Play API- for streaming, view licensing requests, etc. When a user clicks signup, for example, Zuul will route the request to the Signup API. If you consider an example of an already subscribed user. Supposing the user clicks on play for the latest episode of peaky blinders, the request will be routed to the playback API. The API in turn calls several microservices under the hood. Some of these calls can be made in parallel because they don’t depend on each other. Others have to be sequenced in a specific order. The API contains all the logic to sequence and parallelize the calls as necessary. The device, in turn, doesn’t need to know anything about the orchestration that goes on under the hood when the customer clicks “play”. Netflix API Architecture Signup requests map to signup backend services, Playback requests, with some exceptions, map only to playback backend services, and similarly discovery APIs map to discovery services. Hystrix- Distributed API Services Management Hystrix Hystrix Architecture In any distributed environment (with a lot of dependencies), inevitably some of the many service dependencies fail. It can be unmanageable to monitor the health and state of all the services as more and more services will be stood up and some services may be taken down or simply break down. Hystrix comes with help by providing a user-friendly dashboard. Hystrix library is used to control the interaction between these distributed services by adding some latency tolerance and fault tolerance logic. Consider this example from Netflix, they have a microservice that provides a tailored list of movies back to the user. If the service fails, they reroute the traffic to circumvent the failure to another vanilla microservice that simply returns the top 10 movies that are family-friendly. So they have this safe failover that they can go to and that is the classic example of first circuit breaking. Note: Netflix Hystrix is no longer in active development and is currently in maintenance mode. Some internal projects are currently being built with resilience4j https://github.com/resilience4j/resilience4j Titus- Container Management Titus Titus is a container management platform that provides scalable and reliable container execution and cloud-native integration with Amazon AWS. Titus Architecture It is a framework on top of Apache Mesos, a cluster management system that brokers available resources across a fleet of machines. Titus is run in production at Netflix, managing thousands of AWS EC2 instances and launching hundreds of thousands of containers daily for both batch and service workloads. Just think of it as the Netflix version of Kubernetes. Titus runs about 3 million containers per week. Datastores EVCache A cache's primary purpose is to increase data retrieval performance by reducing the need to access the underlying slower storage layer. Trading off capacity for speed, a cache typically stores a subset of data transiently. EVCache Two uses cases for caching is to: Provides fast access to frequently stored data. Provides fast access to computed(memoized) data. Netflix's microservices rely on caches for fast, reliable access to multiple types of data like a member’s viewing history, ratings, and personalized recommendations. EVCache Diagram EVCache is a memcached & spymemcached based caching solution that is mainly used for AWS EC2 infrastructure for caching frequently used data. EVCache is an abbreviation for: Ephemeral - The data stored is for a short duration as specified by its TTL (Time To Live). Volatile - The data can disappear any time (Evicted). Cache - An in-memory key-value store. SSDs for Caching Traditionally caching is done on the RAM. Storing large amounts of data on RAM is expensive. Hence Netflix decided to move some caching data to SSD. Modern disk technologies based on SSD are providing fast access to data but at a much lower cost when compared to RAM. The cost to store 1 TB of data on SSD is much lower than storing the same amount using RAM. Evolution of application Data Caching MySQL Netflix uses AWS EC2 instances of MYSQL for its Billing infrastructure. Billing infrastructure is responsible for managing the billing state of Netflix members. This includes keeping track of open/paid billing periods, the amount of credit on the member’s account, managing the payment status of the member, initiating charge requests, and what date the member has paid through. The payment processor needed the ACID capabilities of an RDBMS to process charge transactions. Netflix Datastore Apache Cassandra Cassandra is a free and open-source distributed wide column store NoSQL database designed to handle large amounts of data across many commodity servers, providing high availability with no single point of failure. Netflix uses Cassandra for its scalability, lack of single points of failure, and cross-regional deployments. ” In effect, a single global Cassandra cluster can simultaneously service applications and asynchronously replicate data across multiple geographic locations. Netflix stores all kinds of data across their Cassandra DB instances. All user collected event metrics are stored on Cassandra. As user data began to increase there needed to be a more efficient way to manage data storage. Netflix Redesigned data storage architecture with two main goals in mind: Smaller Storage Footprint. Consistent Read/Write Performance as viewing per member grows. The solution to the large data problem was to compress the old rows. Data were divided into two types: Live Viewing History (LiveVH): Small number of recent viewing records with frequent updates. The data is stored in uncompressed form. Compressed Viewing History (CompressedVH): A large number of older viewing records with rare updates. The data is compressed to reduce the storage footprint. Compressed viewing history is stored in a single column per row key. Compressed Viewing History Stream Processing Pipeline Did you know that Netflix personalizes movie artwork just for you?. You might be surprised to learn the image shown for each video is selected specifically for you. Not everyone sees the same image. Netflix tries to select the artwork highlighting the most relevant aspect of a video to you based on the data they have learned about you on your viewing history and interests. Stream Processing Data Pipeline has become Netflix’s data backbone of business analytics and personalized recommendation tasks. It is responsible for producing, collecting, processing, aggregating, and moving all microservice events to other data processors in near real-time. Streaming data is data that is generated continuously by thousands of data sources, which typically send in the data records simultaneously, and in small sizes (order of Kilobytes). Streaming data includes a wide variety of data such as log files generated by customers using your mobile or web applications, e-commerce purchases, in-game player activity, information from social networks, financial trading floors, or geospatial services, and telemetry from connected devices or instrumentation in data centers. AWS- What is streaming Data? This data needs to be processed sequentially and incrementally on a record-by-record basis or over sliding time windows and used for a wide variety of analytics including correlations, aggregations, filtering, and sampling. Information derived from such analysis gives companies visibility into many aspects of their business and customer activity such as –service usage (for metering/billing), server activity, website clicks, and geo-location of devices, people, and physical goods –and enables them to respond promptly to emerging situations. For example, businesses can track changes in public sentiment on their brands and products by continuously analyzing social media streams, and respond in a timely fashion as the necessity arises. The stream processing platform processes trillions of events and petabytes of data per day. Viewing History Service captures all the videos that are played by members. Beacon is another service that captures all impression events and user activities within Netflix, All the data collected by the Viewing History and Beacon services are sent to Kafka. Apache Kafka- Analyzing Streaming Data Kafka is open-source software that provides a framework for storing, reading, and analyzing streaming data. Netflix embraces Apache Kafka® as the de-facto standard for its eventing, messaging, and stream processing needs. Kafka acts as a bridge for all point-to-point and Netflix Studio wide communications. How Kafka is used by Netflix Apache Chukwe- Analyzing Streaming Data Apache Chukwe is an open-source data collection system for collecting logs or events from a distributed system. It is built on top of HDFS and Map-reduce framework. It comes with Hadoop’s scalability and robustness features. It includes a lot of powerful and flexible toolkits to display, monitor, and analyze data. Chukwe collects the events from different parts of the system; From Chukwe you can do monitoring, analysis or you can use the dashboard to view the events. Chukwe writes the event in the Hadoop file sequence format (S3). Apache Spark - Analyzing Streaming Data Netflix uses Apache Spark and Machine learning for Movie recommendation. Apache Spark is an open-source unified analytics engine for large-scale data processing. On a live user request, the aggregated play popularity(How many times is a video played) and take rate(Fraction of play events over impression events for a given video) data along with other explicit signals such as members’ viewing history and past ratings are used to compute a personalized content for the user. The following figure shows the end-to-end infrastructure for building user movie recommendations. Data Processing Engine Elastic Search - Error Logging and Monitoring Netflix uses elastic search for data visualization, customer support, and for error detection in the system. Elasticsearch is a search engine based on the Lucene library. It provides a distributed, multitenant-capable full-text search engine with an HTTP web interface and schema-free JSON documents. With elastic search, they can easily monitor the state of the system and troubleshoot error logs and failures. Conclusion This article has provided a detailed analysis of the Netflix Backend architecture. You can refer to these references for more information. Follow me here and across my social media for more content like this Linkedin. Twitter REFERENCES Titus Open Sourcing Zuul Open Connect How Netflix Backend Operates A Design Analysis Of Cloud-Based Microservices Architecture At Netflix Netflix System Design Hystrix What is it and Why is it Used Engineering Tradeoffs and the Netflix API Re-architecture Application Data Caching Using ssds Evolution Of Application Data Caching From Ram To ssd Netflix Billing Migration To Aws Optimizing The Netflix Api What's Trending On Netflix Evolution Of The Netflix Data Pipeline Zuul API Gateway CAP_theorem What Happens When You Press Play Scaling Time Series Data Storage Part1 Netflix-High-Level-System-Architecture How-Kafka-is-used-by-Netflix
  • Microsserviços com Spring Cloud: Introdução
    2 projects | dev.to | 10 Apr 2021
    Resilience4J
  • Surprisingly Slow
    8 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 7 Apr 2021
    This is a solved problem tho, timeout / retry / circuit breakers / fallback etc.

    See - https://github.com/resilience4j/resilience4j

  • Resilience4j, the path beyond Hystrix
    2 projects | dev.to | 9 Mar 2021
    Many APIs deploys rate-limiting capabilities so that it does not become overwhelmed and in general it answers with a 429 TooManyRequests status code. When I first read about Ratelimiter I was a bit confused because most of the patterns above deploy on the caller side and protects it from calling service and get stuck, however when we are talking about Ratelimiter how can a caller decide how many requests is too much? Should not it the service being called is the one who decides how many call it can receive? While I search for an answer I found a GitHub discussion and the comment here https://github.com/resilience4j/resilience4j/issues/350#issuecomment-475868062 which suggests using resilience4j as a client-side rate limiter. In case one needs to implement a server-side rate limiter an API Gateway is a better alternative. I still have my doubts about how much a client-side rate limiter worth and who should dictate how much request is too much let's see how it works. Just like all the above pattern here too I create an endpoint, and I decorate the method as below -
  • Fantastic Microservice and the Sorcerer's Circuit Breaker
    2 projects | dev.to | 13 Jan 2021
    An alternate of Hystrix is resilience4j. This is another fantastic library. The description says,

J2ObjC

Posts with mentions or reviews of J2ObjC. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2022-07-09.
  • Microsoft begins “Extinguish” phase of dealing with Open Source
    3 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 9 Jul 2022
    >> What is Java's equivalent of Xamarin or Avalonia?

    Xamarin - RoboVM was a Java-based competitor to Xamarin which Xamarin acquired in 2015, but it was shutdown in 2017 after Microsoft acquired Xamarin. There are some Java-based toolkits such as https://www.codenameone.com/ that target mobile, but they are probably not as well funded as Xamarin has been under Microsoft. From what I hear Xamarin will be deprecated and replaced by MAUI.

    Avalonia - Java has had multiplatform windowing for much longer than C# has. The Java Swing toolkit has been part of Java for more than a decade and is still supported in OpenJDK. JavaFX (https://openjfx.io/) is a newer toolkit that was originally part of Java and was later spun out into its own project.

    How well are Xamarin and Avalonia supported if you are doing C# development on Mac or Linux?

    >> How do I run Java on iOS?

    As stated above, some tools such as https://www.codenameone.com/ and https://github.com/google/j2objc that convert Java code to target iOS.

    I have never tried using those tools so I am not sure how good they are.

What are some alternatives?

When comparing javaslang-circuitbreaker and J2ObjC you can also consider the following projects:

failsafe - Fault tolerance and resilience patterns for the JVM

FF4J - Feature Flags for Java made easy

Codename One - Cross-platform framework for building truly native mobile apps with Java or Kotlin. Write Once Run Anywhere support for iOS, Android, Desktop & Web.

LightAdmin - [PoC] Pluggable CRUD UI library for Java web applications

Multi-OS Engine - Multi-OS Engine: Create iOS Apps in Java (or Kotlin ... etc.)

Modern Java - A Guide to Java 8 - Modern Java - A Guide to Java 8

Maven Wrapper - The easiest way to integrate Maven into your project!

Design Patterns - Design patterns implemented in Java

Smooks - Extensible data integration Java framework for building XML and non-XML fragment-based applications

CQEngine - Ultra-fast SQL-like queries on Java collections