MVProc FastCGI is a Model-View-Controller platform that uses MySQL stored procedures as the Controller element. It's based on the stable Apache module MVProc, and all functionality has been tested (and load tested), so it may be "Production Ready" even though it hasn't been implemented in a production environment as yet. Benchmarking indicates it's "nearly as fast" on lighttpd as the MVProc Apache module, though a truly thorough benchmarking with a variety of servers and web applications...
Discuz! X2 - Основное назначение движка - упрощение интеграции различных сервисов на одном сайте. По сути это технологически новое, программное решение, выполненное на PHP и MySQL для создания высокопроизводительного и многофункционального ресурса с элементами социальной сети. Грубо говоря - это симбиоз социальной сети и форума в одном флаконе.
Yet another C CGI framework. Includes CGI library, template parser library and helper libraries (mysql helper, hash support). Works with FastCGI (must be compiled with libfcgi). Documentation available at http://www.pavluk.org/projects/libcgic/libcgic/.
The HyperJournal is a free web application which enables on-line as well as printed publishing in an innovative and significantly cost-cutting way. The HyperJournal can be easily installed and managed without any out-of-the-ordinary IT-competence.
Deploy in 115+ regions with the modern database for every enterprise.
MongoDB Atlas gives you the freedom to build and run modern applications anywhere—across AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud. With global availability in over 115 regions, Atlas lets you deploy close to your users, meet compliance needs, and scale with confidence across any geography.
The Simple RSS Service generates and serves RSS feeds through a common interface via CGI-enabled Web servers. It uses modules to extract items for feeds from various sources, and has a virtual filesystem where feeds can be read by CGI clients. It contain
A mod_perl-based RPC API designed for ease of setup, ease of extension, and rapid development.
Using Presto, you can develop a robust, fully "web-2.0" web application in a day or two.
Oh and it scales.
Take that, Ruby on Rails.