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erq - Lightweight message queues in erlang. Introduction/Background ======================= erq is an attempt to clone Kestrel in Erlang. Kestrel is a lightweight message queue written in Scala by Robey Pointer at twitter. It is a clone of starling which was written in Ruby by Blaine Cooke at twitter previously. One nifty feature of Starling (and therefore Kestrel (and therefore erq)) is that it shares an interface with memcache, so that any platform that has a memcache client (i.e. most) automatically have a client for accessing any of these platforms. You can find kestrel here: http://github.com/robey/kestrel/tree/master And starling here: http://github.com/starling/starling/tree/master I first became aware of Kestrel when it was posted to reddit: http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/80ip6/kestrel_twitters_new_message_queue_written_in/ The reddit thread links to this post by Robey Pointer, the author of Kestrel: http://robey.lag.net/2008/11/27/scarling-to-kestrel.html Motivation ========== Between the posts and the README in github for Kestrel there seemed to be a divide between people that were impressed with the throughput and/or power-to-weight ratio of the code and those that were thoroughly unimpressed. I don't know much about this type of software, having never written it before but my gut told me that better performance should be easy to acheive and that the lines of code seemed very high. This project is an attempt to confirm my suspicions while getting more familiar with Erlang. Notes/TBContinued.. =================== mqueue - Memory queues. pqueue - Persistent queues.
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My attempt to implement a starling/kestrel clone in erlang.
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