Minimal FIFO queue implementation to be used for simple concurrency limiting scenarios.
Minimal queue implementation
Tiny queue data structure
fast, tiny `queueMicrotask` shim for modern engines
A shim for the setImmediate efficient script yielding API
Promise queue with concurrency control
A simple tool to keep requests to be executed in order.
The smallest and simplest JavaScript priority queue
queue-lit is a tiny queue data structure in case you `Array#push()` or `Array#shift()` on large arrays very often
Next tick shim that prefers process.nextTick over queueMicrotask for compat
Promise-based queue
LRU Queue
Simple JS queue with auto run for node and browsers
A simple, fast, robust job/task queue, backed by Redis.
In memory queue system prioritizing tasks
The fastest javascript implementation of a double-ended queue. Used by the official Redis, MongoDB, MariaDB & MySQL libraries for Node.js and many other libraries. Maintains compatability with deque.
Simple JS queue with auto run for node and browsers
Sequential asynchronous lock-based queue for promises
Fast, in memory work queue
asynchronous function queue with adjustable concurrency
A promise based, dynamic priority queue runner, with concurrency limiting.
Microsoft Azure Storage SDK for JavaScript - Queue
Extremely fast double-ended queue implementation
Compatible version of p-queue
Schdlr is a small library that let you store jobs for later exceution.
Marj (Minimal ActiveRecord Jobs) is a minimal database-backed ActiveJob queueing backend.
A Resque plugin which allows you to create dedicated queues for jobs that use rate limited apis. These queues will pause when one of the jobs hits a rate limit, and unpause after a suitable time period. The rate_limited_queue can be used directly, and just requires catching the rate limit exception and pausing the queue. There are also additional queues provided that already include the pause/rety logic for twitter, angelist and evernote; these allow you to support rate limited apis with minimal changes.
A Resque plugin which allows you to create dedicated queues for jobs that use rate-limited APIs. These queues will pause when one of the jobs hits a rate limit, and unpause after a suitable time period. The rate-limited queue can be used directly, and just requires catching the rate limit exception and pausing the queue. There are also additional queues provided that already include the pause/retry logic for Twitter, AngelList and Evernote; these allow you to support rate-limited APIs with minimal changes.
Proper related posts plugin for Jekyll - uses document correlation matrix on TF-IDF (optionally with Latent Semantic Indexing). Each document is tokenized and stemmed, every word found is treated as keyword for analysis (except for some stop words). TF-IDF matrix for the whole site is calculated (including extra provided weights), then if given accuraccy is lower than 1.0, LSI algorithm is used to compute new simplified vector space. Document correlation matrix is created using dot product of the matrix and its transpose. For each of the post' related documents are inserted into priority queue (sorted by score from document correlation matrix), assuming the score is greater than minimal required score. Selected few bests related posts are retrieven from the queue. Liquid template for each post is rendered and <related-posts /> is replaced with the outcomes of algorithm.
Cosell is a minimal implementation of the 'Announcements' observer framework, originally introduced in VisualWorks Smalltalk as a replacement for 'triggerEvent' style of event notification. Instead of triggering events identified by symbols, the events are first class objects. For rationale, please see the original blog posting by Vassili Bykov (refs below). *Lineage* This implementation is loosely based on Lukas Renggli's tweak of Colin Putney's Squeak implementation of Vassili Bykov's Announcements framework for VisualWorks Smalltalk. (Specifically Announcements-lr.13.mcz was used as a reference.) Liberties where taken during the port. In particular, the Announcer class in the Smalltalk version is implemented here as a ruby module which can be mixed into any object. Also, in this implementation any object (or class) can serve as an announcement, so no Announcement class is implemented. The ability to queue announcements in the background is built into cosell. <b>The Name 'Cosell'</b> I chose the name 'Cosell' because a. Howard Cosell is an iconic event announcer b. Googling for 'Ruby Announcements', 'Ruby Event Announcements', etc., produced scads of results about ruby meetups, conferences, and the like. So I went with something a bit cryptic but hopefully a little more searchable. *See* * {Original blog posting describing Announcments by Vassili Bykov}[http://www.cincomsmalltalk.com/userblogs/vbykov/blogView?entry=3310034894] * {More info on the Announcements Framework}[http://wiki.squeak.org/squeak/5734]
Cosell is a minimal implementation of the 'Announcements' observer framework, originally introduced in VisualWorks Smalltalk as a replacement for 'triggerEvent' style of event notification. Instead of triggering events identified by symbols, the events are first class objects. For rationale, please see the original blog posting by Vassili Bykov (refs below). *Lineage* This implementation is loosely based on Lukas Renggli's tweak of Colin Putney's Squeak implementation of Vassili Bykov's Announcements framework for VisualWorks Smalltalk. (Specifically Announcements-lr.13.mcz was used as a reference.) Liberties where taken during the port. In particular, the Announcer class in the Smalltalk version is implemented here as a ruby module which can be mixed into any object. Also, in this implementation any object (or class) can serve as an announcement, so no Announcement class is implemented. The ability to queue announcements in the background is built into cosell. <b>The Name 'Cosell'</b> I chose the name 'Cosell' because a. Howard Cosell is an iconic event announcer b. Googling for 'Ruby Announcements', 'Ruby Event Announcements', etc., produced scads of results about ruby meetups, conferences, and the like. So I went with something a bit cryptic but hopefully a little more searchable. *See* * {Original blog posting describing Announcments by Vassili Bykov}[http://www.cincomsmalltalk.com/userblogs/vbykov/blogView?entry=3310034894] * {More info on the Announcements Framework}[http://wiki.squeak.org/squeak/5734]
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