Our Journey
SeaQL.org was founded back in 2020. In the past two years, we published and maintained several popular Rust libraries: SeaORM, SeaQuery, and Seaography. Each library is designed to fill a niche in the Rust ecosystem, and they are made to play well with other Rust libraries.
We're thrilled with the adoption by the Rust community. At the end of 2022, we have accumulated 4,300 GitHub stars across our projects and accumulated 1 million total downloads on crates.io. 7 startups and many open source projects were built upon SeaQL libraries.
Our Mission
We help developers in building data intensive applications in Rust, whether they are web services (GraphQL, gRPC, REST), command line tools or apps.
Our Vision
In the long term, we want to support all open source SQL, NewSQL and NoSQL databases, providing a uniform developer experience to data analytics, transaction processing and other data engineering work.
Our Values
Community driven. Embrace the async Rust ecosystem. Welcome developers from other languages.
Our Commitment
We are committed to nurturing the next generation of open source developers. We provide internship experience tailored for university students - Seaography and StarfishQL are both excellent projects developed by interns under SeaQL.
Your Support
If you enjoy using SeaQL libraries or your project depends on them and you want us to sustain, please become a sponsor today. As a courtesy, we listen to our sponsors for their needs and use cases, and we also communicate our organizational development from time-to-time.
Meet the team
Featured work
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SeaQL/sea-orm
🐚 An async & dynamic ORM for RustRust 3,740 -
SeaQL/sea-query
🔱 A dynamic SQL query builder for MySQL, Postgres and SQLiteRust 694 -
SeaQL/seaography
🧭 GraphQL framework for SeaORMRust 151 -
SeaQL/sea-schema
🌿 SQL schema management suiteRust 103 -
SeaQL/starfish-ql
✴️ An experimental graph databaseRust 103 -
SeaQL/summer-of-code
Internship experience tailored for university students