Top 3 rfc-7049 Open-Source Projects
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cbor
CBOR codec (RFC 8949) with CBOR tags, Go struct tags (toarray, keyasint, omitempty), float64/32/16, big.Int, and fuzz tested billions of execs.
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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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QCBOR
Comprehensive, powerful, commercial-quality CBOR encoder/ decoder that is still suited for small devices.
I have not done a "desktop" program in 25+ years and never using C++ (or C), since then I'm mostly a web developer (PHP,Elixir, JS, Kotlin etc).
I'm currently doing a C++ audio plugin with the Juce framework.
This website has been a good resource, alongside https://www.learncpp.com
But I was actually close to give up before using those two things:
- https://github.com/nlohmann/json : my plugin use a json api backend and the Juce json implementation is atrocious (apparently because of being born in previous c++ version), but this library is GREAT.
- ChatGPT 4. I'm not sure I would have "succeeded" without it, at least not in a reasonable time frame. ChatGPT 3.5 is slow and does not give good results for my use case but 4 is impressive. And I use in a very dumb way, just posing question in the web UI. I probably could have it directly in MSVC?
Also I must say, for all its flaws, I have a renewed appreciation for doing UI on the web ;)
Someone made a benchmark of serialization libraries in go [1], and I was surprised to see gobs is one of the slowest ones, specially for decoding. I suspect part of the reason is that the API doesn't not allow reusing decoders [2]. From my explorations it seems like both JSON [3], message-pack [4] and CBOR [5] are better alternatives.
By the way, in Go there are a like a million JSON encoders because a lot of things in the std library are not really coded for maximum performance but more for easy of usage, it seems. Perhaps this is the right balance for certain things (ex: the http library, see [6]).
There are also a bunch of libraries that allow you to modify a JSON file "in place", without having to fully deserialize into structs (ex: GJSON/SJSON [7] [8]). This sounds very convenient and more efficient that fully de/serializing if we just need to change the data a little.
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1: https://github.com/alecthomas/go_serialization_benchmarks
2: https://github.com/golang/go/issues/29766#issuecomment-45492...
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3: https://github.com/goccy/go-json
4: https://github.com/vmihailenco/msgpack
5: https://github.com/fxamacker/cbor
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6: https://github.com/valyala/fasthttp#faq
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7: https://github.com/tidwall/gjson
8: https://github.com/tidwall/sjson
rfc-7049 related posts
Index
What are some of the best open-source rfc-7049 projects? This list will help you:
Project | Stars | |
---|---|---|
1 | json | 40,239 |
2 | cbor | 659 |
3 | QCBOR | 172 |
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