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Meteor (web framework)

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Meteor
Developer(s)Meteor Software
Initial releaseJanuary 20, 2012; 12 years ago (2012-01-20)[1]
Stable release
2.13[2] Edit this on Wikidata / 2 August 2023; 10 months ago (2 August 2023)
RepositoryMeteor Repository
Written inJavaScript
Operating systemCross-platform
TypeJavaScript framework
LicenseMIT License
Websitewww.meteor.com Edit this at Wikidata

Meteor, or MeteorJS, is a free and open-source isomorphic JavaScript web framework[3] written using Node.js. Meteor allows for rapid prototyping and produces cross-platform (Android, iOS, Web) code. It integrates with MongoDB and uses the Distributed Data Protocol and a publish–subscribe pattern to automatically propagate data changes to clients without requiring the developer to write any synchronization code. On the client, Meteor can be used with any popular front-end JS framework, Vue, React, Svelte, Angular, or Blaze.

Meteor is developed by Meteor Software. The startup was incubated by Y Combinator[4] and received $11.2M in funding from Andreessen Horowitz in July 2012.[5] Meteor raised an additional $20M in Series B funding from Matrix Partners, Andreessen Horowitz and Trinity Ventures.[6] It intends to become profitable by offering Galaxy, an enterprise-grade hosting environment for Meteor applications.[7]

History

Having been in development for about 8 months, Meteor was initially released in December 2011 under the name Skybreak.[8] By April 2012, the framework was renamed Meteor and officially launched.[9] During the next few months, and with the help of large investments from Andreessen Horowitz and endorsements from high-profile figures in the startup world,[9] Meteor steadily increased its user base and became more commonly used in production apps and websites.

Particularly after receiving large amounts of venture capital in its Series B funding round, Meteor acquired and integrated several other startups into its core product. Acquisitions have included FathomDB, a cloud database startup,[10] Galaxy, a cloud platform for operating and managing Meteor applications,[11] and Kadira, a performance monitoring solution.[12] Meteor has successfully monetized its userbase: In 2016, Meteor beat its own revenue goals by 30% by offering web hosting for Meteor apps through Galaxy.[13]

From 2016 the Meteor Development Group (the open source organisation powering Meteor) started working on a new backend layer based on GraphQL to gradually replace their pub/sub system, largely isolated in the whole node.js ecosystem: the Apollo framework.

In 2019, the Meteor framework and Galaxy Hosting Products were purchased by Tiny Capital. and renamed Meteor Software.

Distributed Data Protocol

Distributed Data Protocol (or DDP) is a client-server protocol for querying and updating a server-side database and for synchronizing such updates among clients. It uses the publish-subscribe messaging pattern. It was created for use by the Meteor JavaScript framework.[14] The DDP Specification is located on GitHub.[15]

Books

  • Coleman, Tom; Greif, Sacha - Discover Meteor (2014)[16]
  • Hochhaus, Stephan; Schoebel, Manuel - Meteor in Action (2014)[17]
  • Müns, Philipp - Auditing Meteor Applications (2016)
  • Strack, Isaac - Getting started with Meteor.js JavaScript framework (2012)[18]
  • Susiripala, Arunoda - Bulletproof Meteor (2014)[19]
  • Titarenco, David; Robinson, Josh; Gray, Aaron - Introducing Meteor (2015)[20]
  • Susiripala, Arunoda - Meteor Explained - A Journey Into Meteor's Reactivity (2014)[21]
  • Turnbull, David - Your First Meteor Application: A Complete Beginner's Guide to the Meteor JavaScript Framework (2014)[22]

Packages and Tools

  • Meteor Toys - in-app development tools [23]
  • Meteor Candy - in-app admin panel [24]
  • InjectDetect - database injection attack detection [25]
  • Vulcan.js - React/GraphQL stack built on top of Meteor [26]
  • Apollo - GraphQL server with support for Meteor

References

  1. ^ "Bump to version 0.1.1 · meteor/meteor@4e4358e". GitHub.
  2. ^ https://medium.com/official-meteor-blog/new-meteor-js-2-13-node-js-14-21-4-security-patch-and-blaze-2-7-1-release-60134947e4c. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. ^ Vanian, Jonathan (27 December 2014). "Meteor wants to be the warp drive for building real-time apps". Gigaom.
  4. ^ Tan, Garry. "Meteor (YC S11) raises $11.2M from Andreessen Horowitz and Matrix Partners to create the next Ruby on Rails". Y Combinator.
  5. ^ Finley, Klint (2012-07-25). "Andreessen Horowitz Keeps Eating The Software World With $11.2 Million Investment In JavaScript Framework Company Meteor". TechCrunch.
  6. ^ "Announcing our $20m Series B Funding – Meteor Blog". Meteor Blog. 2015-05-19. Retrieved 2017-09-29.
  7. ^ "Meteor's new $11.2 million development budget – Meteor Blog". meteor.com. 25 July 2012.
  8. ^ "Skybreak is now Meteor – Meteor Blog". meteor.com. 20 January 2012.
  9. ^ a b "Meteor: Etherpad Founder & Other Rockstars Team Up To Make Web App Development A Breeze – TechCrunch". techcrunch.com.
  10. ^ Lardinois, Frederic (2014-10-07). "Meteor Acquires YC Alum FathomDB For Its Development Platform". TechCrunch.
  11. ^ DeBergalis, Matt (2015-10-05). "Announcing Meteor Galaxy". Meteor Blog. Retrieved 2017-02-03.
  12. ^ "MDG acquires Kadira APM – Meteor Blog". Meteor Blog. 2017-03-24. Retrieved 2017-09-29.
  13. ^ "Meteor in 2017 – Meteor Blog". Meteor Blog. 2017-01-26. Retrieved 2017-11-20.
  14. ^ "Introducing DDP". Retrieved 2013-05-29.
  15. ^ "DDP Specification". Retrieved 2014-04-24.
  16. ^ Coleman, Tom; Grief, Sacha. Discover Meteor. Archived from the original on 2016-04-20. Retrieved 2015-02-02.
  17. ^ Hochhaus, Stephan; Schoebel, Manuel (2014). Meteor in Action. Manning. ISBN 9781617292477.
  18. ^ Strack, Isaac (2012). Getting started with Meteor.js JavaScript framework (New ed.). Birmingham, UK: Packt Pub. ISBN 978-1782160823.
  19. ^ Susiripala, Arunoda. "Bulletproof Meteor". Meteorhacks.
  20. ^ Robinson, Josh (2015-12-30). Introducing Meteor. Gray, Aaron,, Titarenco, David. [Berkeley, CA]. ISBN 9781430268352. OCLC 934083393.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  21. ^ Susiripala, Arunoda. "Meteor Explained - A Journey Into Meteor's Reactivity". Meteorhacks.
  22. ^ Turnbull, David (30 July 2014). Your First Meteor Application.
  23. ^ "Meteor Toys". meteor.toys. Retrieved 2017-09-29.
  24. ^ "Meteor Candy, the Admin Panel for Your Meteor.js App". www.meteorcandy.com. Retrieved 2017-09-29.
  25. ^ "Inject Detect". www.injectdetect.com. Retrieved 2017-09-29.
  26. ^ "VulcanJS: The full-stack React+GraphQL framework". vulcanjs.org. Retrieved 2017-09-29.

External links