A curated list of awesome RethinkDB resources, libraries, tools, and applications.
Awesome RethinkDB is a curated collection of resources, libraries, tools, and applications for the RethinkDB database ecosystem. It helps developers discover everything they need to work with RethinkDB, from official drivers and ORMs to deployment tools and learning materials. The list solves the problem of fragmented information by providing a single, organized reference for the RethinkDB community.
Developers and engineers building real-time applications with RethinkDB who need to find libraries, tools, and learning resources. Database administrators looking for deployment and management tools for RethinkDB environments.
It saves developers time by aggregating high-quality RethinkDB resources in one place, following the trusted "awesome list" format. The community-maintained approach ensures the content stays current and relevant as the ecosystem evolves.
A curated list of awesome RethinkDB resources, libraries, tools and applications
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Curates drivers, ORMs, tools, and learning materials across multiple languages, saving developers time by centralizing scattered RethinkDB information.
Includes officially supported drivers for JavaScript, Python, Ruby, Java, and community-supported languages like Go and Elixir, as detailed in the libraries sections.
Provides specific integrations with popular frameworks like Express, Flask, and Hapi, along with tools such as Chateau for data exploration.
Encourages contributions to keep the list evolving, though this depends on volunteer effort to maintain relevance.
As a community-maintained list, some resources may become outdated or broken over time, especially given RethinkDB's reduced active development since its company shutdown.
Includes community-supported drivers and tools without vetting for maintenance status or compatibility, risking integration issues in production environments.
Deployment tools listed, such as Docker and Vagrant, might not cover recent advancements like Kubernetes or serverless setups, limiting utility for cloud-native projects.