rqlite
WSL
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rqlite | WSL | |
---|---|---|
112 | 406 | |
14,862 | 16,635 | |
1.3% | 1.4% | |
9.9 | 8.3 | |
2 days ago | 7 days ago | |
Go | PowerShell | |
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.
rqlite
- The lightweight, easy-to-use, distributed relational database built on SQLite
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CursusDB – A new scalable distributed document oriented database
Seems like you could do the same with rqlite [1], since SQLite supports JSON.
[1]: https://rqlite.io
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Rqlite 8.0
rqlite[1] creator here, happy to answer any questions about rqlite, this latest release, and how it works.
[1] https://rqlite.io
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Adding new database engine support
I found simple distributed RQlite https://github.com/rqlite/rqlite based on raft and sqlite. How hard is to add it?
- I'm All-In on Server-Side SQLite
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So, you want to deploy on the edge?
rqlite[1] creator here, happy to answer any questions. rqlite also supports read-only nodes, which can also help with reads at the "edge". It probably wouldn't scale to 100s of nodes, it is an option.
"rqlite supports adding read-only nodes. You can use this feature to add read scalability to the cluster if you need a high volume of reads, or want to distribute copies of the data nearer to clients – but don’t want those nodes counted towards the quorum. These types of nodes are also known as non-voting nodes."
[1] https://rqlite.io/
[2] https://rqlite.io/docs/clustering/read-only-nodes/
- LiteFS Cloud: Distributed SQLite with Managed Backups
- Show HN: Rqlite, distributed DB built on SQLite, now runs on MIPS, RISC, PowerPC
- rqlite v7.19.0: the lightweight distributed relational database built on Go, Raft, and SQLite -- now runs on MIPS, PowerPC, and RISC
- rqlite v7.18: the lightweight distributed database built on Go, Raft, and SQLite -- now with new Unified HTTP endpoint for easy reads and writes
WSL
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GoboLinux
It absolutely 100% can be true.
As an example: Windows Services for Linux 2 used a special init daemon to interact with the host OS.
That meant no systemd. That meant that the `systemctl` program wasn't there.
This baffled legions, armies, of wannabe sysadmins.
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/55579342/why-systemd-is-...
https://superuser.com/questions/1785697/systemd-in-wsl-on-wi...
https://github.com/microsoft/WSL/issues/9477
https://askubuntu.com/questions/1132230/unable-to-run-any-sy...
People on the whole have no idea how this stuff works, and they just copy magic incantations from StackOverflow to get stuff to happen. If that doesn't work, then this OS is broken. The end.
For these guys, WSL was broken.
Result:
MS hired Lennart Poettering.
https://www.theregister.com/2022/07/07/lennart_poettering_re...
He "fixed" it. Systemd now works in WSL2. All those guides for noobs now work. Everyone is happy.
In a world where tools like Flatpak and Snap are proliferating and it's driving deep divisions between Linux distros, if you think the average person struggling with Linux is going to use `ldd` to work out where the dependencies for something live, I'm afraid you are a deep guru who lives on a different plane of existence.
We now have widely-used packaging systems which simply embed an apps entire dependency tree into a package to avoid people having to work out the difference between `apt` and `rpm`. Thousands of terabytes of disk are being burned to make this stuff go away.
Yes, this is too hard. Way too hard.
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Why Linux utilities tend to run poorly on Windows
Better source: https://github.com/Microsoft/WSL/issues/873#issuecomment-425...
- Weird graphical glitch/problem in Ubuntu WSLg (OpenGL)
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RamRamRamEveryoneSleepingOnDocker
One of the bugs where on the Docker side. As I have said, there have been several since release with a lot of impact period overlap. The latest and greatest is not resolved.
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Laravel dev in Windows - Laragon vs Docker?
It's the issue of abysmal I/O performance in communication between the mounted WSL2 virtual hard disk and Windows mounts inside the WSL2 distro.
- WSL freeze seems fixed in 2.0.12
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What's the right way to open files in the system's default program from Ubuntu 22.04 in WSL 2 please?
I found this github page and I was able to reproduce this from the answer
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Ask HN: Best Docker open source alternative?
* Docker engine and not Docker Desktop in a VM. WSL2 works well after some configuration: https://github.com/microsoft/WSL/issues/6655#issuecomment-11...
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Broadcom to Cut Almost 1,300 VMware Jobs in California After Takeover
Seems to more of a Defender issue than a WSL one, see https://github.com/microsoft/WSL/issues/8995
After adding exclusions for the fsnotifier-wsl process and and both variants of the WSL distro path my disk performance was improved.
Adding the idea64.exe process also helped since I was trying to run IntelliJ against projects inside WSL.
- Bricked WSL 2 after 2.0.9 / Windows 10
What are some alternatives?
dqlite - Embeddable, replicated and fault-tolerant SQL engine.
wslg - Enabling the Windows Subsystem for Linux to include support for Wayland and X server related scenarios
litestream - Streaming replication for SQLite.
genie - A quick way into a systemd "bottle" for WSL
cockroach - CockroachDB - the open source, cloud-native distributed SQL database.
Scoop - A command-line installer for Windows.
bolt
Single-GPU-Passthrough
etcd - Distributed reliable key-value store for the most critical data of a distributed system [Moved to: https://github.com/etcd-io/etcd]
setup-msys2 - GitHub Action to setup MSYS2
TinyGo - Go compiler for small places. Microcontrollers, WebAssembly (WASM/WASI), and command-line tools. Based on LLVM.
mkcert - A simple zero-config tool to make locally trusted development certificates with any names you'd like.