![]() Many have adopted GraphQL to get this kind of flexibility, but with this technique you don't need any new layer. No REST or GraphQL necessary - Instead of maintaining a typical assortment of GET endpoints to query data, you're using direct SQLite queries, which can be updated without any changes to the server (unless a schema change is needed).You never need to think about sharding, load balancing, or caching. Scalability - Suddenly your database is as scalable as S3, Wasabi, or whatever object store you choose.This is a completely new way to make database-driven software. Most people just thought of it as just a neat hack, but for me it was groundbreaking. ![]() The idea was simple: compile SQLite to web assembly, and add a little layer that redirects all of its disk read attempts to instead go over HTTP range requests. ![]() Last spring, a project took over HN's front page in which a SQLite database was hosted on a static file host and successfully queried - entirely from the frontend.
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