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I have integrate SuiteCrm with node JS using REST API but there is so many performance relates issue and for customisation need to add more custom endpoints so I have decided to integrate SuiteCRM with Graphql I have spent more times but still not getting proper documentation to integrate with Graphql.
Anyone please suggest helper library to integrate Graphql with Suitecrm ?
We had the same issues with the REST endpoint and we heavily rely (and like) graphql so we decided to create a helper library.
https://github.com/lionixevolve/GraphQLSuiteCRM
So far we have been using this in 5 not-so-small projects (5M record tables with 100s of users).
There are almost no custom queries everything works using SuiteCRM beans which respects logic-hooks and workflows and speed is similar to native SuiteCRM nevertheless, custom resolve methods can be created for specific scenarios (like reports or adding a large set of contacts to a target list)
Currently, its using the slim framework which allows you to write your own custom functions.
I am active on the github repo, open an issue if you have any trouble.
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I have a server with Symfony RESTful, I want to access from another server with Symfony.
I have seen some examples of php that are accessed with curl or file_get_contents, but I can't find a document for Symfony where it explains the configuration, class organization, bundle to use. There is a lot of documentation on the RESTful API, but not from the querying party.
I need to know how the query is made and how the response is handled, without reinventing the wheel.
Can you recommend a document that explains a standard organization or which bundle is usually used?
I am using Symfony 4.4
The documentation on how to access a RESTful API is written by the creator of said API. If that's you then only you know what requests to send to what route and what data to expect. You can use the API for your back end and you can have multiple front end applications that connect to it. They would all connect the same way - the way you determine. You can start of by setting up a standard RESTful API. From there it all depends on your needs. That's why you cannot find documentation for this.
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Is there test environment (URL) which is available on the internet to practice my load tests?
I need to test my JMeter test simulating x2000 virtual users, is there a portal online which would enable me to test my newly created load test?
No. Running load tests against public URLs is considered a Denial-of-Service attack. Don't do it.
You should instead run tests against localhost or some other server you own, as long as this is just for "practicing" your tests.
In case you need to mock a specific response, it may be easiest to use a http mock server like wiremock, though simple request mocking can also easily be achieved with nodejs or similar.
There are some sites which are designed for practicing load testing, i.e.
http://blazedemo.com
According to the description
The is a sample site you can test with BlazeMeter!
There is also http://newtours.demoaut.com/ which is designed for practicing QTP and/or LoadRunner however I didn't find any explicit permission to test it with other tools.
In general it is better to use web application you own for exercises as this way you will be able to see the impact of your load using i.e. PerfMon plugin so you will be able to analyse your results having way more information from the application under test infrastructure.
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I'm making a back-end for my app using Golang the app is for android,ios and windows and i'm trying to find a way to accept payments.
Is there a package that I can use with examples?
Like some of the comments have mentioned, I also suggest choosing a preferred payment system and then using a Go client library which interfaces with that payment system's REST API.
Here are a few payment libraries: https://golanglibs.com/top?q=payment
Most of these include example files or examples in the readme. Many Go packages also use GoDoc for documentation.
The most popular one on the list there is PayPal-Go-SDK which is a Go client for the PayPal REST API.
It includes an example file: https://github.com/logpacker/PayPal-Go-SDK/blob/master/example_test.go
It has GoDoc documentation: https://godoc.org/github.com/logpacker/PayPal-Go-SDK
If you prefer to use a different payment service like Stripe, they have a similar client: https://github.com/stripe/stripe-go
They also have usage examples: https://github.com/stripe/stripe-go#usage
They also have documentation: https://godoc.org/github.com/stripe/stripe-go
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Does a simple & working "Hello World!" GraphQL server code in Go exist?
There is a deficiency in tutorials concerning that topic, especially because graphql-go/graphql is currently a work-in-progress.
I've actually spent a bit of time this weekend creating a golang graphql server for a presentation upcoming this week, that has nothing to do with golang graphql. I don't know any golang, and never put together a server, I also threw in Neo4j, it's been an adventure, the hello world example is the following;
https://github.com/graphql-go/graphql/blob/master/examples/hello-world/main.go
In addition I used graphql-go/handler to create an endpoint;
https://github.com/graphql-go/handler
Finally added graphiql in order to check out my queries;
https://github.com/mnmtanish/go-graphiql
I started with getting the hello world example to be visible in go-graphiql, but using the handler to expose the schema.
The most stared project is https://github.com/graphql-go/graphql but it seems to be not actively developed.
I've been keeping an eye to this implementation that looks promising:https://github.com/neelance/graphql-go
a new repo that I still need to check: https://github.com/playlyfe/go-graphql
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I know you can go to http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:http://example.com/ to view Google's cache of any URL, but do they provide an API to hit thousands of these and pay for access?
I don't want to just make HTTP GETs to these URLs too fast and get my IP addresses banned or upset Google.
Just wondering if they offer a way to pay and do this through official channels like they do with their search API.
Google doesn't seem to have an API to access the cached results:
There are some attempts to scrape it and wrap it in APIs, such as this perl module
Other than that the Wayback Machine has an API, of cached versions of sites. Perhaps that will do?
Currently there's no tool that I've found that does it. You'd have to create your own script to individually cache a certain number of pages. To avoid Google blocking you, I suggest capping the number of urls scraped. Not ideal, but running a script 10 times is better than looking at 1000 cached urls individually. :/
If you want to see if anything you edit on your site would effect your potential rankings in Google, I'd check out SEORadar.com, they'll do that for you.