Rails Event Store
Sidekiq
Rails Event Store | Sidekiq | |
---|---|---|
6 | 92 | |
1,380 | 12,990 | |
0.9% | 0.6% | |
9.7 | 9.0 | |
9 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
Rails Event Store
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Organize Business Logic in Your Ruby on Rails Application
That's not to say it's not an interesting pattern. You should use it if you have advanced reporting requirements, for example. If you want to learn more about it, look at Rails Event Store.
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How would you build an audit log in Rails for a high-throughput API?
If you need something actually structured, you could use an Event Store
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OOP vs. services for organizing business logic: is there a third way?
Rails Event Store – for an event-driven architecture
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Event Store with Rails
Does anyone implemented or used a gem such as https://railseventstore.org to support Event Store in their Rails app?
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What would you like to see in a Ruby web framework?
Events and CQRS are what rails event store deals with. I don't have any experience with it, though. It seems that they also support ROM and Sequel outside of Rails.
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Yard Sale - event-driven e-commerce
This is a test project for Mongo Atlas hackathon. It uses RailsEventStore with PostgreSQL as an event store and MongoDB on Atlas for read models.
Sidekiq
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Hanami and HTMX - progress bar
Hi there! I want to show off a little feature I made using hanami, htmx and a little bit of redis + sidekiq.
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solid_queue alternatives - Sidekiq and good_job
3 projects | 21 Apr 2024
I'd say Sidekiq is the top competitor here.
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Valkey Is Rapidly Overtaking Redis
There's something wrong at Redislabs, it took them over a year to get RESP3 rolled out into their hosted service, you'd expect a rollout of that to be a bit quicker when they're the owner of Redis.
It affected us when upgrading Sidekiq to version 7, which dropped support for older Redis, and their Envoy proxy setup didn't support HELLO and RESP3: https://github.com/sidekiq/sidekiq/issues/5594
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Redis Re-Implemented with SQLite
That depends on how the `maxmemory-policy` is configured, and queue systems based on Redis will tell you not to allow eviction. https://github.com/sidekiq/sidekiq/wiki/Using-Redis#memory (it even logs a warnings if it detects your Redis is misconfigured IIRC).
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3 one-person million dollar online businesses
Sidekiq https://sidekiq.org/: This one started as an open source project, once it got enough traction, the developer made a premium version of it, and makes money by selling licenses to businesses.
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Choose Postgres Queue Technology
Sidekiq will drop in-progress jobs when a worker crashes. Sidekiq Pro can recover those jobs but with a large delay. Sidekiq is excellent overall but it’s not suitable for processing critical jobs with a low latency guarantee.
https://github.com/sidekiq/sidekiq/wiki/Reliability
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We built the fastest CI in the world. It failed
> I'm not sure feature withholding has traditionally worked out well in the developer space.
I think it's worked out well for Sidekiq (https://sidekiq.org). I really like their model of layering valuable features between the OSS / Pro / Enterprise licenses.
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Exploring concurrent rate limiters, mutexes, semaphores
I was studying Sidekiq's page on rate limiters. The first type of rate limiting mentioned is the concurrent limiter: only n tasks are allowed to run at any point in time. Note that this is independent of time units (e.g. per second), or how long they take to run. The only limitation is the number of concurrent tasks/requests.
- Ask HN: What are some of the most elegant codebases in your favorite language?
- Sidekiq and managing resumable jobs?
What are some alternatives?
wisper - A micro library providing Ruby objects with Publish-Subscribe capabilities
Resque - Resque is a Redis-backed Ruby library for creating background jobs, placing them on multiple queues, and processing them later.
Sequent - CQRS & event sourcing framework for Ruby
Sneakers - A fast background processing framework for Ruby and RabbitMQ
Trailblazer - The advanced business logic framework for Ruby.
Shoryuken - A super efficient Amazon SQS thread based message processor for Ruby
Rectify - Build maintainable Rails apps
Sucker Punch - Sucker Punch is a Ruby asynchronous processing library using concurrent-ruby, heavily influenced by Sidekiq and girl_friday.
ActiveInteraction - :briefcase: Manage application specific business logic.
Apache Kafka - Mirror of Apache Kafka
u-service - Represent use cases in a simple and powerful way while writing modular, expressive and sequentially logical code.
celery - Distributed Task Queue (development branch)