Showing 2 open source projects for "databases"

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  • Stop Storing Third-Party Tokens in Your Database Icon
    Stop Storing Third-Party Tokens in Your Database

    Auth0 Token Vault handles secure token storage, exchange, and refresh for external providers so you don't have to build it yourself.

    Rolling your own OAuth token storage can be a security liability. Token Vault securely stores access and refresh tokens from federated providers and handles exchange and renewal automatically. Connected accounts, refresh exchange, and privileged worker flows included.
    Try Auth0 for Free
  • $300 Free Credits to Build on Google Cloud Icon
    $300 Free Credits to Build on Google Cloud

    New to Google Cloud? Get $300 in credits to explore Compute Engine, BigQuery, Cloud Run, Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform, and more.

    Start your next project with $300 in free Google Cloud credit. Spin up VMs, run containers, query petabytes in BigQuery, or build agents with Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform. Once your credits are used, keep building with 20+ always-free tier products including Compute Engine, Cloud Storage, GKE, and Cloud Run functions. No commitment required—just sign up and start building.
    Claim $300 Free
  • 1
    Beam

    Beam

    A type-safe, non-TH Haskell SQL library and ORM

    Beam is a Haskell interface to relational databases. Beam uses the Haskell type system to verify that queries are type-safe before sending them to the database server. Queries are written in a straightforward, natural monadic syntax. Combinators are provided for all standard SQL92 features, and a significant subset of SQL99, SQL2003, and SQL2008 features. Beam is standards-compliant but not naive.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
    Last Update:
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  • 2
    Haxl

    Haxl

    Haskell library that simplifies access to remote data

    Haxl is a Haskell library that simplifies access to remote data, such as databases or web-based services. Haxl can automatically batch multiple requests to the same data source, request data from multiple data sources concurrently, cache previous requests, and memoize computations. Having all this handled for you behind the scenes means that your data-fetching code can be much cleaner and clearer than it would otherwise be if it had to worry about optimizing data-fetching.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
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