Broker: session manager + data broker, using mySql databases
`@brokerize/elements` is the official UI library for the brokerize API. Together with `@brokerize/client` it provides drop-in brokerage UI elements for various trading use cases.
A telemetry package for metrics and tracing powered by brokerize
Client for the brokerize.com API
Client for the brokerize.com API
A Rust and CLI client for the Pact Broker. Publish and retrieve pacts and verification results.
A library and command-line to provide indexing and searching functionalities for public BGP data archive files over time.
This provides the REST API for admin operations
Rust's turnkey OAuth 2.0 broker - spin up multi-tenant flows, CAS-smart token stores, and transport-aware observability in one crate built for production.
P2P compute broker with credit-based billing, WAL, and broker mesh support
A Kafka-like message broker in Rust
Command-line interface for CeleRS worker and queue management
RabbitMQ/AMQP broker implementation for CeleRS
AWS SQS broker implementation for CeleRS
RESEARCH — noether-grid broker: pools worker LLM capacity, dispatches jobs
Complete MQTT v5.0 platform with high-performance async client and full-featured broker supporting TCP, TLS, WebSocket, authentication, bridging, and resource monitoring
Rafka - A high-performance distributed message broker written in Rust
Ruby pub-sub on AWS
Brokers requests for alephant components
sms_broker
Broker gem to contact internal services
A gem to test Cloud Foundry service brokers
The z4 wrapper around the paho mqtt client and mosquitto broker.
Ruby gem for Centrifuge real-time messaging broker
Simplified command-line administration for Kafka brokers
Subscribes to a SimplePubsub (SPS) broker
Ruby Implementation of the Interactive Brokers TWS API
Bunnicula is a simple AMQP relay implemented as a ruby daemon (a-la daemon-kit). Similar in intent to shovel, Bunnicula is intended to enable the common messaging scenario where services and applications publish messages to an AMQP broker on the local LAN for speed and reliability which are then subsequently relayed to a remote AMQP instance by a relay process which isn�t so irritable as message producers tend to be when it comes to network speed and reliability. Bunnicula can be configured via configuration file (a Ruby DSL) or, for most common configurations, through command line arguments.