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Asami Alternatives
Similar projects and alternatives to asami
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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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pyroscope
Discontinued Continuous Profiling Platform. Debug performance issues down to a single line of code [Moved to: https://github.com/grafana/pyroscope] (by pyroscope-io)
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AspNetCoreDiagnosticScenarios
This repository has examples of broken patterns in ASP.NET Core applications
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SaaSHub
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Apache AGE
Discontinued Graph database optimized for fast analysis and real-time data processing. It is provided as an extension to PostgreSQL. [Moved to: https://github.com/apache/age]
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crux
Discontinued General purpose bitemporal database for SQL, Datalog & graph queries. Backed by @juxt [Moved to: https://github.com/xtdb/xtdb]
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RoaringBitmap
A better compressed bitset in Java: used by Apache Spark, Netflix Atlas, Apache Pinot, Tablesaw, and many others
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t-digest
A new data structure for accurate on-line accumulation of rank-based statistics such as quantiles and trimmed means
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FusionCache
FusionCache is an easy to use, fast and robust cache with advanced resiliency features and an optional distributed 2nd level.
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SaaSHub
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asami reviews and mentions
- Ask HN: What are some 'cool' but obscure data structures you know about?
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Ask HN: Why are relational DBs are the standard instead of graph-based DBs?
Unlike some other commenters, I agree that graph models are usually a better fit for most data than relational models. There's been some interesting work in recent years developing this idea: in the Clojure world there's Datomic, XTDB, and a host of competitors, all of which build on work from Semantic Web/SPARQL/triplestores and logic programming. Some are even intended to be used as primary datastores: they support some amount of schema and constraints, have well-defined consistency and ACID guarantees, etc. This makes them unlike graph databases like Neo4J and others, which fill an architectural role more like Elasticsearch as a read-optimization tool. Here's an interesting talk making a case for triple-based databases.
- Introduction to the Asami Graph Database
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How to query Datomic, Datascript, Asami, or other graph databases
Despite the documentation that exists, I've heard many people who have been confused about how to query Datomic, Datascript, Asami, or other graph databases. So I've made an attempt at explaining it https://github.com/threatgrid/asami/wiki/Introduction
- Introduction (To Graph Databases)
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Asami
The first Graph implementation for Asami was a simple in-memory data structure, described in my ClojureD talk. The code for this appears in asami.index. This file started much smaller (as referenced above), but has since expanded with the needs extended functionality, such as transactions, and transitive closure operations.
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Stats
threatgrid/asami is an open source project licensed under Eclipse Public License 1.0 which is an OSI approved license.
The primary programming language of asami is Clojure.
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