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Starred repositories
Fabric is an open-source framework for augmenting humans using AI. It provides a modular system for solving specific problems using a crowdsourced set of AI prompts that can be used anywhere.
💥 A Lodash-style Go library based on Go 1.18+ Generics (map, filter, contains, find...)
ZincSearch . A lightweight alternative to elasticsearch that requires minimal resources, written in Go.
GoDS (Go Data Structures) - Sets, Lists, Stacks, Maps, Trees, Queues, and much more
An open-source, cross-platform terminal for seamless workflows
Nomad is an easy-to-use, flexible, and performant workload orchestrator that can deploy a mix of microservice, batch, containerized, and non-containerized applications. Nomad is easy to operate and…
🐜🐜🐜 ants is the most powerful and reliable pooling solution for Go.
Instant, easy, and predictable development environments
A distributed transaction framework, supports workflow, saga, tcc, xa, 2-phase message, outbox patterns, supports many languages.
Bare metal to production ready in mins; your own fly server on your VPS.
Kubernetes Virtualization API and runtime in order to define and manage virtual machines.
A Go (Golang) Backend Clean Architecture project with Gin, MongoDB, JWT Authentication Middleware, Test, and Docker.
A solution for implementing efficient and consistent software delivery to Kubernetes facilitating best practices.
An actor-based Framework with network transparency for creating event-driven architecture in Golang. Inspired by Erlang. Zero dependencies.
The production-scale datacenter profiler (C/C++, Go, Rust, Python, Java, NodeJS, .NET, PHP, Ruby, Perl, ...)
Metering and Billing for AI, API and DevOps. Collect and aggregate millions of usage events in real-time and enable usage-based billing.
⚡ boilerplate template manager that generates files or directories from template repositories
100x Efficient Log Management than Splunk 🚀 Reduce your observability cost by 90%
A holistic way of understanding how WebRTC and its protocols run in practice, with code and detailed documentation.
How to structure your Go applications