« BackAutomerge 3.0automerge.orgSubmitted by surprisetalk 4 days ago
  • dang 13 hours ago

    Related. Others?

    Show HN: Pg_CRDT – CRDTs in Postgres Using Automerge - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43655920 - April 2025 (4 comments)

    Automerge: A library of data structures for building collaborative applications - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40976731 - July 2024 (58 comments)

    Automerge-Repo: A "batteries-included" toolkit for local-first applications - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38193640 - Nov 2023 (43 comments)

    Automerge 2.0 - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34586433 - Jan 2023 (89 comments)

    Automerge CRDT – Build local-first software - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30881016 - April 2022 (8 comments)

    Automerge: A JSON-like data structure (a CRDT) that can be modified concurrently - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30412550 - Feb 2022 (69 comments)

    Automerge: a new foundation for collaboration software [video] - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29501465 - Dec 2021 (29 comments)

    Automerge: A library [..] for building collaborative applications in JavaScript - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=24791713 - Oct 2020 (1 comment)

    Automerge: JSON-like data structure for building collaborative apps - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=16309533 - Feb 2018 (98 comments)

    • jjangkke 18 hours ago

      Surprised how little comment this post has, this is an insane improvement.

      I've been using Electric SQL but Automerge 3.0 seems to be the holy grail combining local first approach to CRDT?

      Wondering if I should ditch Electric SQL and switch to this instead. I'm just not sure what kind of hardware I need to run a sync server for Automerge and how many users reads/writes it can support.

      ElectricSQL is pretty good too but its still not quite there and implementing local first means some features related to rollback are harder to apply.

      I'm still very new to this overall but that 10x memory boost is welcome as I find with very large documents the lag used to be very noticeable.

      • netghost 13 hours ago

        It really depends on your use case. If you want people collaborating on a rich text document, Automerge or yjs are probably great.

        If you want to have local first application data where a server is the authority, ElectricSQL is probably going to serve you best.

        That said there are so many approaches out there right now, and they're all promising, but tricky.

        • dotancohen 5 hours ago

            > there are so many approaches out there right now
          
          I'm almost to the point where I'll need one of these solutions. I'm fleshing out the corner cases now. I'd appreciate if you mention some of the solutions I should be looking at, and the trade offs. I'd also appreciate if you could mention non-obvious pitfalls.

          The use case is a voice note aggregation system, the notes are stored on S3 and cached locally to desktops and mobile applications. There are transcriptions, AI summaries, user annotations, and structured metadata associated with each voice note. The application will be used by a single human, but he might not always remember to sync or even have an internet connection when he wants to.

          Thank you!

        • siva7 an hour ago

          Probably because i still don't understand what this thing exactly does (and i'm not doing tech since yesterday)

          • mikehotel 15 hours ago

            The performance improvements are impressive:

            > In Automerge 3.0, we've rearchitected the library so that it also uses the compressed representation at runtime. This has achieved huge memory savings. For example, pasting Moby Dick into an Automerge 2 document consumes 700Mb of memory, in Automerge 3 it only consumes 1.3Mb!

            > Finally, for documents with large histories load times can be much much faster (we recently had an example of a document which hadn't loaded after 17 hours loading in 9 seconds!).

            • steve_adams_86 12 hours ago

              I wonder if this is accomplished using controlled buffers in AsyncIterators. I recently built a tool for processing massive CSV files and was able to get the memory usage remarkably low, and control/scale it almost linearly because of how the workers (async iterators) are spawned and their workloads are managed. It kind of blew me away that I could get such fine-tuned control that I'd normally expect from Go or Rust (I'm using Deno for this project).

              I'm well above 1.3mb, and although I could get it down there, performance would suffer. I'm curious how fast they sync this data with such tiny memory usage. If the resources were available before, despite using 700mb of memory, was it still faster?

              These people are definitely smarter than I am so maybe their solution is a lot more clever than what I'm doing

              edit: Oh, they did this part with Rust. I thought it was written in JS. I still wonder: how'd they get memory usage this low, and did it impact speed much? I'll have to dig into it

              • skirmish 12 hours ago

                They say: "In Automerge 3.0, we've rearchitected the library so that it also uses the compressed representation at runtime. This has achieved huge memory savings."

                • steve_adams_86 12 hours ago

                  Right, this didn't click at first but now I understand. I can actually gain similar benefits with my project by switching to storing the data as parquet/duckdb files; I had no idea the potential gains from compressed representations are so significant, so I'd been holding off on testing that out. Thanks for the nudge on that detail!

                • leeoniya 7 hours ago

                  > I recently built a tool for processing massive CSV files and was able to get the memory usage remarkably low

                  is it OSS? i'd like to benchmark it against my csv parser :)

              • andrewflnr 7 hours ago

                High upvote/comment ratio is a sign of a quality post, honestly. Sometimes all you can do is upvote.

              • ChadNauseam 3 hours ago

                I have a question about Automerge that maybe someone here can answer. I have a lot of code written for some custom CRDTs I've made. (This handles syncing them with my server and between devices and so on.) My data model is that each device gets a unique ID, and then can share "events" which must be sequential for a given ID. The events from all the different devices are then collected and replayed. I'm curious if it would be possible to fit automerge to this framework? All I would need is an `apply` function that takes an event and a document and produces a new document. (I assume I would miss out on the super-efficient compressed representation described in this article, but I'm curious)

                • metaketa an hour ago

                  I am in somewhat of the same boat for https://parture.org. Have a quite large CRDT system with unique ID's that is also type-safe, does not rely on serde_json::Value juggling, every CRDT is structurally valid and it knows what CRDT's cannot be applied to a Rust struct based on some business logic. I am wondering whether such checks (type-safety, business logic) can be worked into the CRDT application process. Automerge seems mostly meant for text editing, but they do have Autosurgeon though it hasn't been updated in a while

                • andrewingram 21 hours ago

                  A few questions:

                  1. I can see there's an example of using it with React and Prosemirror, what's the gap to using it with Tiptap (for those who don't know, it's an abstraction on top of Prosemirror that aims to streamline the task of building editors)?

                  2. Is there any prior art or room in the design for supporting permissioned blocks of content _within_ a document? i.e things which some users aren't allowed to view (or edit)

                  • bhl 16 hours ago

                    1. You can use TipTap with it: just have to wrap your existing schema with automerge attributes. Undo redo would also swap out.

                  • n_u 6 hours ago

                    Is there info anywhere on the structure of the semi-lattice they are using for their CRDT?

                    Is the map based on a multi-value register or a last-writer-wins register?

                  • DiddlyWinks 12 hours ago

                    What sort of applications is this used for? I'm a technical writer, and my team is facing versioning challenges for sections of documents. I'm wondering if this could be useful.

                    • samuelstros 11 hours ago

                      can you elaborate on what versioning issues you are facing?

                    • nextaccountic 14 hours ago

                      Is this Javascript only?

                      • mkl 12 hours ago

                        It's written in Rust, but JavaScript is the primary friendly interface. https://github.com/automerge/automerge

                        • michelpp 9 hours ago

                          There is also a C api wrapper, not sure the state of it wrt this latest release.

                        • cyanydeez 21 hours ago

                          Needs benchmarks with yjs

                          • hugodan 21 hours ago

                            If you are after performance see jsonjoy.

                            • josephg an hour ago

                              The new automerge is apparently much faster than it was before. (I haven't run benchmarks though, just been told that by the core developers.)

                              I'd love some performance benchmarks.

                          • netown 8 hours ago

                            a number of these sync engines have been growing popular, most notably convex and zero (altho both of course are very different from automerge)--this one's rust/c api makes it more interesting, i wonder if an implementation for terminals uis could be possible?

                            • alexejb 17 hours ago

                              are move operations for trees implemented now?

                              • bhl 16 hours ago

                                IIRC, Kleppmann built a prototype for it but it’s not included in Automerge yet.