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Elixir Software Development Software

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  • 1
    Commanded

    Commanded

    Use Commanded to build Elixir CQRS/ES applications

    Commanded is an Elixir framework for implementing CQRS (Command Query Responsibility Segregation) and Event Sourcing patterns. It provides domain-driven design tools—aggregates, commands, events, and projections—backed by an event store (e.g. PostgreSQL).
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 2
    Phoenix LiveView

    Phoenix LiveView

    Rich, real-time user experiences with server-rendered HTML

    Phoenix LiveView is an Elixir library that enables rich, real-time user experiences by using server-rendered HTML over WebSockets, providing seamless dynamic interactivity without needing front-end JavaScript frameworks. It integrates deeply with Phoenix and ships by default in new Phoenix applications. LiveView brings a unified experience to building web applications. You no longer have to split work between client and server, across different toolings, layers, and abstractions. Instead, LiveView enriches the server with a declarative and powerful model while keeping your code closer to your data (and ultimately your source of truth).
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 3
    gRPC Elixir

    gRPC Elixir

    An Elixir implementation of gRPC

    The Gun library doesn't have a full 2.0 release yet, so we depend on :grcp_gun 2.0.1 for now. This is the same as :gun 2.0.0-rc.2, but Hex doesn't let us depend on RC versions for releases. Generate Elixir code from the proto file as protobuf-elixir shows(especially the gRPC Support section). Implement the server-side code and remember to return the expected message types. You can start the gRPC server as a supervised process. First, add GRPC.Server.Supervisor to your supervision tree.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • 4
    Überauth

    Überauth

    An Elixir Authentication System for Plug-based Web Applications

    Ueberauth is a two-phase authentication framework that provides a clear API, allowing for many strategies to be created and shared within the community. It is heavily inspired by Omniauth. You could call it a port but it is significantly different in operation, but almost the same concept. Huge hat tip to Intridea. Ueberauth provides only the initial authentication challenge, (initial OAuth flow, collecting the information from a login form, etc). It does not authenticate each request, that's up to your application. You could issue a token or put the result into a session for the needs of your application. Libraries like Guardian can help you with that aspect of authentication. Strategies implement the two phases and then may allow the request to flow through to your downstream plugs. Implementing the request and callback phases is optional depending on the strategies requirements. If a strategy does not redirect, the request will be decorated with Ueberauth information.
    Downloads: 5 This Week
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  • Iris Powered By Generali - Iris puts your customer in control of their identity. Icon
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  • 5
    Elixir Code Smells

    Elixir Code Smells

    Catalog of Elixir-specific code smells

    Elixir-Code-Smells is a research-driven catalog of code smells specific to the Elixir programming language. Unlike generic code smell lists, this project identifies issues emerging from Elixir’s functional, concurrent, and process-based nature. Initially compiled via grey literature (blogs, talks, forums), the catalog now includes 23 Elixir-specific smells plus 12 traditional smells adapted to Elixir. Each entry documents the name, category, problem, example, refactoring strategy, and step-by-step treatments. The smells are grouped into two categories: design-related (coarse-grained, harder to detect, affecting architecture/processes) and low-level concerns (fine-grained, often readability and maintainability issues). The catalog evolves with community feedback and contributions, aiming to help developers recognize harmful patterns and apply disciplined refactoring to improve maintainability, testability, and performance in Elixir systems.
    Downloads: 4 This Week
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  • 6
    Oban

    Oban

    Robust job processing in Elixir, backed by modern PostgreSQL

    Oban is a robust and flexible background job processing library for Elixir, built on top of PostgreSQL and Ecto; it focuses on delivering reliability, consistency, observability, and historical insight into job execution, making it well-suited for fault-tolerant, production-grade workloads. Oban is a powerful and flexible library that can handle a wide range of background job use cases, and it is well-suited for systems of any size. It provides a simple and consistent API for scheduling and performing jobs, and it is built to be fault-tolerant and easy to monitor. Oban is fundamentally different from other background job processing tools because it retains job data for historic metrics and inspection. You can leave your application running indefinitely without worrying about jobs being lost or orphaned due to crashes.
    Downloads: 4 This Week
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  • 7
    Elchemy

    Elchemy

    Write Elixir code using statically-typed Elm-like syntax

    Elchemy lets you write simple, fast, and quality-type safe code while leveraging both the Elm's safety and Elixir's ecosystem. Elchemy is a set of tools and frameworks, designed to provide a language and an environment as close to Elm programming language as possible, to build server applications in a DSL-like manner for Erlang VM platform, with a readable and efficient Elixir code as an output. ML-like syntax maximizes expressiveness with additional readability and simplicity constraints. Tagged union types and type aliases with type parameters (aka generic types). Powerful type inference means you rarely have to annotate types. Everything gets checked for you by the compiler. The produced code is idiomatic, performant and can be easily read and analyzed without taking a single look at the original source. Elchemy's type system eliminates almost all runtime errors. .
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 8
    Elixir Companies

    Elixir Companies

    A list of companies currently using Elixir in production

    elixir-companies is a community-maintained directory of organizations that use Elixir in production. It serves both as a discovery tool for developers curious about who is adopting the language and as a hiring signal for companies wishing to reach the Elixir community. The site categorizes entries by region, industry, and hiring status, making it easy to browse or filter by interests and location. Contributions are handled publicly via pull requests, with maintainers reviewing updates to ensure accuracy and consistency. Beyond simple listings, the project highlights the breadth of Elixir usage—from startups to large enterprises—and helps newcomers see real-world adoption. The codebase itself is an example Phoenix application, offering a transparent, collaborative model for community content. Over time, the directory has become a reference point frequently cited when assessing Elixir’s ecosystem health and job market.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 9
    Exq

    Exq

    Job processing library for Elixir - compatible with Resque / Sidekiq

    Exq is a job processing library compatible with Resque / Sidekiq for the Elixir language. Exq uses Redis as a store for background processing jobs. Exq handles concurrency, job persistence, job retries, reliable queueing and tracking so you don't have to. Jobs are persistent so they would survive across node restarts. You can use multiple Erlang nodes to process from the same pool of jobs. Exq uses a format that is Resque/Sidekiq compatible. This means you can use it to integrate with existing Rails / Django projects that also use a background job that's Resque compatible - typically with little or no changes needed to your existing apps. However, you can also use Exq standalone. You can also use the Sidekiq UI to view job statuses, as Exq is compatible with the Sidekiq stats format. You can run both Exq and Toniq in the same app for different workers. Exq supports uncapped amount of jobs running, or also allows a max limit per queue.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 10
    GraphQL Elixir

    GraphQL Elixir

    GraphQL Elixir

    An Elixir implementation of Facebook's GraphQL. This is the core GraphQL query parsing and execution engine whose goal is to be transport, server and datastore agnostic. In order to setup an HTTP server (ie Phoenix) to handle GraphQL queries you will need plug_graphql. Examples for Phoenix can be found at hello_graphql_phoenix, so look here for a starting point for writing your own schemas. Other ways of handling queries will be added in due course. Tokenization is done with leex and parsing with yecc. Both very useful Erlang tools for parsing. Yecc in particular is used by Elixir itself.
    Downloads: 3 This Week
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  • 11
    ExMachina

    ExMachina

    Create test data for Elixir applications

    ExMachina is part of the thoughtbot Elixir family of projects. ExMachina makes it easy to create test data and associations. It works great with Ecto, but is configurable to work with any persistence library. And start the ExMachina application. For most projects (such as Phoenix apps) this will mean adding :ex_machina to the list of applications in mix.exs. You can skip this step if you are using Elixir 1.4 or later. Add your factory module inside test/support so that it is only compiled in the test environment. build/2 is a function call. As such, it gets evaluated immediately. By default, ExMachina will merge the attributes you pass into build/insert into your factory. But if you want full control of your attributes, you can define your factory as accepting one argument, the attributes being passed into your factory.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 12
    Horde

    Horde

    Horde is a distributed Supervisor and Registry

    Horde provides a distributed, fault-tolerant Registry and DynamicSupervisor for Elixir applications, letting you run and manage processes across clustered nodes as if they lived on a single machine. It relies on conflict-free replicated data types (CRDTs) to converge membership and process ownership without a central leader, so cluster topology can change freely as nodes join or leave. With Horde.Registry you register processes globally and look them up anywhere, while Horde.DynamicSupervisor starts and migrates children across nodes, rebalancing as capacity or health changes. Because everything runs under OTP supervision, failures are isolated and recoveries are automatic, even during network partitions or rolling deploys. It integrates naturally with common clustering tools and plays well with PubSub, job systems, and presence tracking. The result is predictable, configuration-driven distribution that removes a lot of custom glue typically needed for multi-node Elixir systems.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 13
    Kaffy

    Kaffy

    Powerfully simple admin package for phoenix applications

    Kaffy is an Elixir/Phoenix library that provides a powerful, customizable admin interface with minimal setup. Inspired by Django’s built-in admin and Rails’ ActiveAdmin, it allows developers to manage data models, forms, dashboards, and navigation without altering their existing codebase. Kaffy auto-generates CRUD interfaces for your Ecto schemas, supports advanced customizations, and integrates seamlessly with Phoenix projects. It’s designed to be both simple for quick setup and flexible enough for complex admin needs.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 14
    Phoenix Framework

    Phoenix Framework

    Peace of mind from prototype to production

    Phoenix is a high-performance, productive web development framework written in Elixir. It runs on the Erlang VM (BEAM). It is designed to support both traditional request/response web applications. It also supports real-time, soft-real-time applications via WebSockets, channels, PubSub, and presence features. Phoenix emphasizes fault tolerance, scalability, and developer productivity. It provides tools like code generators, LiveView integration, templating, routing, and a flexible plug pipeline. Phoenix runs on the Erlang VM with the ability to handle millions of WebSocket connections alongside Elixir's tooling for building robust systems. Know who is connected right now, across one or dozens of nodes, by using our built-in Presence. No dependency required.
    Downloads: 2 This Week
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  • 15
    Poxa

    Poxa

    Pusher server implementation compatible with Pusher client libraries

    Pusher server implementation is compatible with Pusher client libraries. Open Pusher implementation compatible with Pusher libraries. It's designed to be used as a single registered app with id, secret, and key defined on start. Poxa is a standalone elixir server implementation of the Pusher protocol. Docker images are automatically built by Docker Hub. They are available at Docker Hub. One can generate it using: docker build -t local/poxa. Poxa uses gproc extensively to register websocket connections as channels. So, when a client subscribes for channel 'example-channel', the websocket connection (which is a elixir process) is "tagged" as {pusher, example-channel}. When a pusher event is triggered on the 'example-channel', every websocket matching the tag receives the event.
    Downloads: 1 This Week
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  • 16
    Broadway

    Broadway

    Concurrent and multi-stage data ingestion and data processing

    Broadway is a data processing library for Elixir designed to handle high-throughput, concurrent workloads with ease. It provides an abstraction for defining pipelines that consume data from sources like RabbitMQ, Kafka, Amazon SQS, or custom producers. Each pipeline is fault-tolerant and backpressure-aware, ensuring stable throughput even under load. The library integrates seamlessly with GenStage and OTP supervision trees, making it highly resilient in production. Developers can enrich pipelines with batching, concurrency control, and metrics reporting, simplifying the management of complex data ingestion and processing systems. Broadway is often used for event processing, stream handling, and background jobs, offering both performance and clarity in Elixir’s functional style.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 17
    Changelog.com

    Changelog.com

    Changelog makes world-class developer pods

    This is the open-source codebase for Changelog, a popular podcast and media site for software developers. Built with Elixir and the Phoenix framework, it serves as a real-world example of a production-grade Phoenix application. The app powers the site’s content publishing, episode distribution, and user interactions, including subscriptions and comments. It emphasizes maintainability and transparency, with clear code structure, tests, and CI/CD workflows. Because the repository is open, developers can study its architecture to learn how Phoenix is used in practice for a high-traffic, media-centric website. It also showcases integration with external services for things like audio hosting, search, and analytics, making it an instructive case study for full-stack Elixir development.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 18
    Cog

    Cog

    Bringing the power of the command line to chat

    Cog brings the power of the command line to the place you collaborate with your team all the time, your chat window. Powerful access control means you can collaborate around even the most sensitive tasks with confidence. A focus on extensibility and adaptability means that you can respond quickly to the unexpected, without your team losing visibility. Use Cog to manage your infrastructure, support peer learning, and conduct collaborative research at the same time, right from chat. Cog is easy to install and simple to operate while remaining powerful enough to handle complex enterprise workflows. Cog brings the power of the command line to the place you collaborate with your team all the time, your chat window. Powerful access control means you can collaborate around even the most sensitive tasks with confidence. A focus on extensibility and adaptability means that you can respond quickly to the unexpected, without your team losing visibility.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 19
    Desktop

    Desktop

    Building Local-First apps for Windows, MacOS, Linux, iOS and Android

    desktop enables building cross-platform desktop applications with Elixir by pairing a Phoenix/LiveView UI with a native webview shell. The approach keeps application logic on the BEAM—supervised, fault-tolerant, and hot-reload-friendly—while rendering an HTML/CSS/JS interface inside the system’s embedded browser engine. It offers conveniences for packaging and distribution on Windows, macOS, and Linux, including app metadata, icons, and startup integration. The library exposes desktop-specific affordances such as system tray menus, window management, and notifications, so applications feel native rather than like generic web wrappers. Because LiveView drives the UI, state lives on the server process, enabling real-time updates without heavy client frameworks. The result is a productive stack for tools, dashboards, and utilities where Elixir’s concurrency and resilience shine on the desktop. Teams get to reuse their Phoenix skills and still ship a polished native app experience.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 20
    Distillery

    Distillery

    Simplify deployments in Elixir with OTP releases

    Distillery is a release manager for Elixir applications, designed to package apps into self-contained, deployable artifacts. It automates the process of building OTP releases, handling steps like compilation, dependency bundling, and generating start/stop scripts. Releases built with Distillery include everything needed to run an Elixir app in production, even on machines without Elixir or Erlang installed. It also supports features like configuration providers, hot upgrades, and customizable release pipelines. By managing environment-specific settings, it simplifies deploying the same app to different systems without manual reconfiguration. Distillery has historically been a key tool for production Elixir deployments before Elixir added built-in release functionality, and it remains valuable for teams seeking flexibility in their deployment workflows.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 21
    Elixir Language Server

    Elixir Language Server

    A frontend-independent IDE "smartness" server for Elixir

    Implementing features such as auto-complete or go-to-definition for a programming language is not trivial. Traditionally, this work had to be repeated for each development tool and it required a mix of expertise in both the targeted programming language and the programming language internally used by the development tool of choice. The Elixir Language Server (ElixirLS) provides a server that runs in the background, providing IDEs, editors, and other tools with information about Elixir Mix projects. It adheres to the LSP, a standard for frontend-independent IDE support. Debugger integration is accomplished through a similar VS Code Debug Protocol. These pages contain all the information needed to configure your favorite text editor or IDE and to work with the ElixirLS. You will also find instructions on how to configure the server to recognize the structure of your projects and to troubleshoot your installation when things do not work as expected.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 22
    ElixirScript

    ElixirScript

    Converts Elixir to JavaScript

    The goal is to convert a subset (or full set) of Elixir code to JavaScript, providing the ability to write JavaScript in Elixir. This is done by taking the Elixir AST and converting it into JavaScript AST and then to JavaScript code. This is done using the Elixir-ESTree library. This release includes one major addition and a number of important changes. ElixirScript.Test ElixirScript.Test is a framework for testing Elixir modules that interact with JavaScript via the FFI. For all other modules, ExUnit is still recommended. ElixirScript.Test’s API is similar to ExUnit’s API. ElixirScript.Test files must be placed in a folder named test_elixir_script. Tests are compiled and then are executed using node.js. ElixirScript can now take a path to compile. This is to support the compilation of modules defined in .exs files For more information regarding changes, please check the changelog.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 23
    ExAdmin

    ExAdmin

    ExAdmin is an auto administration package for Elixir

    ExAdmin is an auto-administration package for Elixir and the Phoenix Framework. This version has been updated to support both Ecto 1.1 and Ecto 2.0. ExAdmin is an auto-administration package for Elixir and the Phoenix Framework, a port/inspiration of ActiveAdmin for Ruby on Rails. Checkout the Live Demo. The source code can be found at ExAdmin Demo. Checkout this Additional Live Demo for examples of many-to-many relationships, nested attributes, and authentication. ExAdmin is an add on for an application using the Phoenix Framework to create a CRUD administration tool with little or no code. By running a few mix tasks to define which Ecto Models you want to administer, you will have something that works with no additional code. ExAdmin will use your schema's changesets. By default we call the changeset function on your schema, although you can configure the changeset we use for update and create separately.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 24
    IElixir

    IElixir

    Jupyter's kernel for Elixir programming language

    Jupyter's kernel for Elixir. You can manage your packages in runtime with Boyle. Name of the package honours remarkable chemist, Robert Boyle. This package allows you to manage your Elixir virtual enviromnent without need of restarting erlang virtual machine. Boyle installs environment into ./envs/you_new_environment directory and creates new mix project there with requested dependencies. It keeps takes care of fetching, compiling and loading/unloading modules from dependencies list of that environment.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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  • 25
    Kitto

    Kitto

    Kitto is a framework for interactive dashboards written in Elixir

    Kitto is a framework for interactive dashboards written in Elixir. The source for the demo dashboards can be found at: kittoframework/demo. Jobs are supervised processes running concurrently. Widgets are coded in the popular React library. Uses a modern asset tool-chain, Webpack. Allows streaming SSE to numerous clients concurrently with low memory/CPU footprint. Easy to deploy using the provided Docker images, Heroku (guide) or Distillery (guide). Can serve assets in production. Keeps stats about defined jobs and comes with a dashboard to monitor them (demo). Can apply exponential back-offs to failing jobs. Reloads code upon change in development. Kitto is a framework to help you create dashboards, written in Elixir / React. Widgets live in widgets/ are compiled using Webpack and are automatically loaded in the dashboards. Assets are rebuilt upon a change in development but have to be compiled for production.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
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