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Rewrite Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to rewrite
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
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gradle-lint-plugin
A pluggable and configurable linter tool for identifying and reporting on patterns of misuse or deprecations in Gradle scripts.
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JavaParser
Java 1-17 Parser and Abstract Syntax Tree for Java with advanced analysis functionalities.
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pfff
Discontinued Tools for code analysis, visualizations, or style-preserving source transformation.
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spring-cloud-dataflow
A microservices-based Streaming and Batch data processing in Cloud Foundry and Kubernetes
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gram_grep
Search text using a grammar, lexer, or straight regex. Chain searches for greater refinement.
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SaaSHub
SaaSHub - Software Alternatives and Reviews. SaaSHub helps you find the best software and product alternatives
rewrite reviews and mentions
- FLaNK Weekly 31 December 2023
- OpenRewrite – Automated mass refactoring of source code
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AST-grep(sg) is a CLI tool for code structural search, lint, and rewriting
If you're into this sort of thing, there's OpenRewrite[1] for the Java ecosystem.
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What's New in Spring Framework 6.1
> Spring has gotten so bloated.
I'd call Spring feature-rich than bloated. You can always shed weight that you don't want to carry.
> Plus there's multiple ways of doing the same thing. e.g. JPA, spring-data.
That's because there are different ways to solve a problem. Someone may want an ORM-based approach to connect to the database; they can choose spring-data-jpa. Someone may want to use JDBC with a light abstraction on top of it; they can choose spring-data-jdbc. It's all about choices and right tradeoffs and Spring offers plenty of them.
> they don't provide easy upgrade paths between majors versions
That's not my experience. I've been happily upgrading 2.x.x versions and plan to upgrade to 3.2.x when it is ready. But depending on the codebase, I admit it can be painful. Projects like OpenRewrite[1] might help here.
> and they stop updating vulnerabilities on older major versions.
This is not news. They want you to pay for extended support if you need it.
> No docs on migration.
They do maintain migration docs on GitHub wiki which are a lot more detailed than their blog posts on migration. Here's the latest one to upgrade from Spring Boot 2 to 3: https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-boot/wiki/Spring-B...
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We already have Spring 2.1.3, Is SpringBoot 3 worth learning.
The issue you may run into when migrating from Spring Boot 2.x to 3.x is the JEE namespace renames. Migrating code from 8 to 17 in my experience hasn't been all that difficult. In most projects, there are no changes to make. However, with the namespace change, you'll probably have to do some planning and testing. If you are migrating a lot of projects, check out Open Rewrite, it may help automate a lot of these upgrades (for both 8 to 17 and Spring Boot versions).
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Why wouldn't somebody change their version?
Couldn't OpenRewrite (https://docs.openrewrite.org) do a big part of this manual work?
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Any ideas on how to automate upgrade of legacy Spring Framework/Spring Boot repositories?
Openrewrite would probably be a big help, see https://docs.openrewrite.org
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what is your favorite programming trick/tool that not many People know about?
In a similar vein there is OpenRewrite which is an open-source project that works in a similar way. It also has a lot of great refactorings already built in, like doing all the grunt work for migrating to JUnit 5, or replacing string concatenation in SLF4J log calls with parameterized formatting.
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Refactoring giant codebase
seems a case for https://docs.openrewrite.org/
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What are your thoughts on Spring in 2023?
https://github.com/openrewrite/rewrite might help
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A note from our sponsor - WorkOS
workos.com | 19 Apr 2024
Stats
openrewrite/rewrite is an open source project licensed under Apache License 2.0 which is an OSI approved license.
The primary programming language of rewrite is Java.