23.10.2015: Several updates in all sections to cover recent questions and developments.
The following is an attempt to describe the similarities and differences between Akka Persistence and Eventuate. Both are Akka-based event-sourcing and...
23.10.2015: Several updates in all sections to cover recent questions and developments.
The following is an attempt to describe the similarities and differences between Akka Persistence and Eventuate. Both are Akka-based event-sourcing and...
We, the Eventuate committers, are pleased to announce the availability of Eventuate 0.1. This is the first release of Eventuate and an early-access release. Eventuate is a toolkit for building distributed, highly-available and partition-tolerant event-sourced applications. It is written...
All of our projects are continuously built on our continuous integration servers, like most of us do. Beside publishing the regular artifacts into our maven repository, the documentation artifacts get published as well. Our goal was to give all our...
We recently started to explore several options how to globally distribute an application that is based on event sourcing. The main driver behind this initiative is the requirement that geographically distinct locations (called sites) shall have low-latency access to...
Welcome to the new RBMH Open Source blog. This blog will give you insights and detailed information about all our Open Source projects.
The goal is to make more and more useful projects public available. We are also planning to...