wick
pushpin
wick | pushpin | |
---|---|---|
4 | 11 | |
462 | 3,581 | |
1.1% | 0.4% | |
9.4 | 9.5 | |
6 months ago | 6 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
wick
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Was Rust Worth It?
> In Wick, we use a script to automatically update inline lint configurations for a few dozen crates.
> https://github.com/candlecorp/wick/blob/28465f8c1492e6588bd2...
Good lord, that is an INCREDIBLE number of lints to disable, and for... what? If you have to disable lints telling you about things like unused/dead code, intentional validation of the language's conventional style, unused/unnecessary allocations, useless/trivial type casts, ... then I really wonder what kind of code is actually being written.
- Wick: Functional, reactive, WebAssembly on both client and server
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Deploying SQLite-Backed REST Application on Candle Cloud (For Free)
Disclaimer: I work at this company
Candle just released the Candle Cloud (https://cloud.candle.dev) with a generous free tier. This allows for anyone who knows basic SQL to create a backend api application and host the application on the Internet. This is made possible by our framework Wick (https://github.com/candlecorp/wick)
If anyone has any questions or wants any help getting your own idea deployed, I will be watching here or you can join our Discord (https://discord.gg/candle) and we can help you there.
I can't wait to see what you can build!
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Building a request enrichment proxy with Wick and Pangea
Hi Everyone
We've been deep-diving into our project, Wick (https://github.com/candlecorp/wick).
The idea? Use Wick to build a low-code request enrichment HTTP proxy, and then harness that same functionality for a CLI app.
For those wary of low-code, we've got you covered. There's a dedicated section showcasing how to employ Rust to craft a WebAssembly component. This ensures you can seamlessly embed any intricate logic into the same workflow.
Keen to hear your thoughts.
pushpin
- Pushpin: Proxy server that pins connections open to build realtime API endpoints
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Building a privacy-friendly, self-hosted application architecture with SvelteKit
For realtime, I used Pushpin with Server Sent Events. (It supports WebSocket as well).
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Ask HN: How do you handle WebSocket connections reconnect problem?
Instead of letting clients directly interface with your services over websockets, consider using Pushpin [1], which allows you to completely isolate realtime communication from your services.
As a bonus, it also provides you the ability to cycle (redeploy/restart) your services without your clients having to reconnect (that's where the name comes from). And as you can imagine - because communication with your services is entirely stateless it scales like crazy.
[1] https://pushpin.org/
- Help !!! websocket and sveltekit
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Ask HN: Hunting for a Framework
Vapor[0] based on Swift. Advantage of this is that you don't have to evaluate multiple frameworks for Swift and suffer paralysis by analysis. All the Swift community is behind one framework.
The next is Actix[1] based on Rust. There are many frameworks in Rust and most of them have not reached 1.0 And which framework will survive becomes a question.
Other not so well-known is Wt[2] based on C++. This actually is created for programmers who are not web developers. The development experience is similar to desktop app development like Qt.
If that is not acceptable then Django[3], based on Python, is the one that will be good for you.
For the front-end I would recommend Flutter[4]. As much as I dislike getting tied to a single company for whom the framework is not their bread-and-butter, I don't see any other viable options to Flutter that will cover all web, mobile and desktop out of the box.
For databases, I would recommend BedrockDB[5], if you are not averse to SQLite. Or FoundationDB[6], if you want NoSQL. But if you are not concerned about horizontal scalability or okay with self-managing database availability, then PostgreSQL[7] is a very good option.
For push notifications, PushPin[8] is a good option.
[0] https://vapor.codes
[1] https://actix.rs
[2] https://webtoolkit.eu
[3] https://www.djangoproject.com
[4] https://flutter.dev
[5] https://bedrockdb.com
[6] https://www.foundationdb.org
[7] https://postgresql.org
[8] https://pushpin.org
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Thoughts on this AWS deployment architecture? (Main web app + lambda microservices)
There is also the option of running a proxy which handles the stateful nature of websockets (i.e. https://pushpin.org/), and then handle the rest in a stateless way with lambdas or similar.
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Ask HN: Is realtime functionality of Firebase and Supabase DBs any useful?
This may not be what you are looking for, but why not use a combination of Postgres listen/notify and PushPin[0] to support push notifications?
[0] https://pushpin.org
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Mark Nottingham: Server-Sent Events, WebSockets, and HTTP
Could use pushpin[1] and have several fallbacks, like SSE -> Websocket -> polling.
[1]https://pushpin.org/
- Show HN: Pushpin – a proxy server for adding push to your API
- Pushpin: Reverse proxy for realtime web services
What are some alternatives?
materialize - The data warehouse for operational workloads.
Mercure - 🪽 An open, easy, fast, reliable and battery-efficient solution for real-time communications
iggy - Iggy is the persistent message streaming platform written in Rust, supporting QUIC, TCP and HTTP transport protocols, capable of processing millions of messages per second.
IP-ESP32-CAM - "IP Camera" based on ESP32-CAM
datafuse - An elastic and reliable Cloud Warehouse, offers Blazing Fast Query and combines Elasticity, Simplicity, Low cost of the Cloud, built to make the Data Cloud easy [Moved to: https://github.com/datafuselabs/databend]
canonic - QML web browser
dozer - Dozer is a real-time data movement tool that leverages CDC from various sources and moves data into various sinks.
rsocket-java - Java implementation of RSocket
lol-html - Low output latency streaming HTML parser/rewriter with CSS selector-based API
eventhub - A high performance pub/sub over WebSocket server written in modern C++.
fluvio - Lean and mean distributed stream processing system written in rust and web assembly.
styx - Simple, high-performance event streaming broker