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Browse free open source Scala Messaging Platforms and projects below. Use the toggles on the left to filter open source Scala Messaging Platforms by OS, license, language, programming language, and project status.

  • Gen AI apps are built with MongoDB Atlas Icon
    Gen AI apps are built with MongoDB Atlas

    The database for AI-powered applications.

    MongoDB Atlas is the developer-friendly database used to build, scale, and run gen AI and LLM-powered apps—without needing a separate vector database. Atlas offers built-in vector search, global availability across 115+ regions, and flexible document modeling. Start building AI apps faster, all in one place.
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  • Taking the Paper Out of Work Icon
    Taking the Paper Out of Work

    For organizations that need powerful ECM and document automation software

    The Square 9 AI-powered intelligent document processing platform takes the paper out of work and makes it easier to get things done with digital workflows.
    Learn More
  • 1
    ElasticMQ

    ElasticMQ

    In-memory message queue with an Amazon SQS-compatible interface

    ElasticMQ is a lightweight, fully asynchronous, in-memory message queue implementation written in Scala / Akka. It provides a feature-compatible Amazon SQS REST API interface for testing, local development, or embedded usage. It can persist queues or run purely in-memory and also supports Docker deployment and a web UI.
    Downloads: 17 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    Kestrel

    Kestrel

    Simple, distributed message queue system (inactive)

    Kestrel is a simple, distributed message queue system built originally by Twitter. Its design is relatively lightweight and is engineered for speed and simplicity. Kestrel supports queuing patterns such as enqueue, dequeue, and delayed re-enqueue (for example, when a consumer fails to process a message). It stores messages persistently on disk with a memory-backed cache, allowing recovery in case of failures. Because it is intended for relatively simple use cases, it does not provide the full feature set of some enterprise messaging systems, but is often sufficient for many asynchronous or buffered workloads. Over time, the project became inactive and is now archived. Its minimalism and ease of integration made it appealing for smaller or more controlled message-queueing needs.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
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