tembo
rq
tembo | rq | |
---|---|---|
4 | 27 | |
668 | 9,540 | |
19.8% | 1.0% | |
9.8 | 8.6 | |
1 day ago | 12 days ago | |
Rust | Python | |
PostgreSQL License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
tembo
-
Tembo Operator: a Rust-Based Kubernetes Operator for Postgres
Stacks[1] are basically recipes for deploying Postgres for specific use cases. This includes extensions, Postgres configs and application deployments (example: PostgREST)
For examples, you can look at https://github.com/tembo-io/tembo/tree/main/tembo-operator/s...
[1] Blog about Stacks: https://tembo.io/blog/tembo-stacks-intro/
- Show HN: One Postgres message queue to rule them all
-
SQL Maxis: Why We Ditched RabbitMQ and Replaced It with a Postgres Queue
Perhaps you mean https://github.com/CoreDB-io/coredb/tree/main/extensions/pgm...
Your link results in a 404.
rq
-
Redis Re-Implemented with SQLite
That's pretty cool. Reckon it would work with existing code that calls Redis over the wire for RQ?
https://python-rq.org
-
The Many Problems with Celery
https://github.com/rq/rq is to the rescue.
-
Keep the Monolith, but Split the Workloads
We use RQ[0], it has Redis as a dependency. It’s pretty straightforward and we’re very happy with it. If you are using Django you may want to look at Django RQ[1] as well. RQ has built in scheduling capabilities these days, but historically it did not so we used (and still use) RQ Scheduler[2] which I think still has some advantages over the built in stuff.
[0] https://python-rq.org/
-
SQL Maxis: Why We Ditched RabbitMQ and Replaced It with a Postgres Queue
Also had a similar experience using RabbitMQ with Django+Celery. Extremely complicated and workers/queues would just stop for no reason.
Moved to Python-RQ [1] + Redis and been rock solid for years now.
[1] https://python-rq.org/
- Ask HN: Redis Queue Hacks and Questions
- What libraries do you use the most alongside django?
-
Recommendations other than celery to send an API processing in background, which would only take 5 mins to process and API usage would be once a month or so.
Yep, rq is simple and good: https://python-rq.org/ It also has a Django wrapper: https://github.com/rq/django-rq
-
GPU instance crashes when two python processes use the same pt file
We have a GPU (G5) instance that uses Python RQ (https://python-rq.org/).
- Dynamically update periodic tasks in Celery and Django
- Celery + RabbitMQ alternatives
What are some alternatives?
neoq - Queue-agnostic background job library for Go, with a pleasant API and powerful features.
celery - Distributed Task Queue (development branch)
good_job - Multithreaded, Postgres-based, Active Job backend for Ruby on Rails.
huey - a little task queue for python
starqueue
RabbitMQ - Open source RabbitMQ: core server and tier 1 (built-in) plugins
tqs - Tiny Queue Service (Server)
mrq - Mr. Queue - A distributed worker task queue in Python using Redis & gevent
pgtt - PostgreSQL extension to create, manage and use Oracle-style Global Temporary Tables and the others RDBMS
procrastinate - PostgreSQL-based Task Queue for Python
Suwayomi-Server - A rewrite of Tachiyomi for the Desktop
Apache Kafka - Mirror of Apache Kafka