Original author(s) | Laurent Ribardière |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Wakanda SAS |
Initial release | March 15, 2012 |
Written in | C++, JavaScript |
Operating system | BSD, Linux, macOS and Windows |
Available in | English |
Type | NoSQL, Object database, Web framework, Server-Side JavaScript, Mobile application development |
License | Community / Enterprise / Cloud |
Website | {{{1}}} |
Wakanda is a JavaScript platform[1] to develop and run web or mobile apps.
It is based on open standards technologies including AngularJS, Ionic, Node.js, and TypeScript, and is supported on Linux (deployment only), Microsoft Windows, and macOS (Studio development).
Wakanda consists of a stack of tools and technologies:
Starting in 2008 with the server, Wakanda was first presented at The Ajax Experience in 2009[2] and then the same year at JSConf.eu.[3] A private Developer Preview was made accessible in 2010 with a first version of the Wakanda Studio including a Model Designer and a GUI Designer. Wakanda came to public attention in June 2011 with a new Developer Preview, with a second public Developer Preview announced during the "Wakanday - JS.everywhere(Boston, October, 2011)" conference,[4] and the first Beta on December, 15th.[5] Wakanda is available as a Live Release version since March 15, 2012.
On June 28, 2012, the first version of Wakanda was officially launched.[6] On October 26, 2012 it was demonstrated at the JS.everywhere() conference, in the US[7] and France.[8]
First involved in the CommonJS working group since 2009, the team created the "Client and Server JavaScript APIs" W3C Community Group[9] in April 2012, before joining the W3C in October 2012.
The company Wakanda SAS was created in December 2014.[10] On the December 7, 2015 the Wakanda Digital App Factory was officially launched.[11]
In 2016, Wakanda was named Cool Vendor by Gartner.[12]
Wakanda Server supports CommonJS modules, Web Workers, Web Storage, XMLHttpRequest, HTML5 File API, Blobs, Timers. It implements the Firebug Crossfire Debugger protocol, as well as the WebKit remote debugging protocol.
The WakandaDB NoSQL engine is accessed via HTTP, inspired by the OData REST API, integrates connectors to interact with tiers databases: MySQL, Microsoft SQL Server and ODBC.
Wakanda supports some of the Node.js modules including EventEmitter, Socket, and TLS. Wakanda includes other open source projects as part of its default packages. Wakanda Server is built with JavaScriptCore, ICU, OpenSSL, and Zlib.Note: This topic belongs to "Free and open-source software" portal