aiohttp-wsgi vs stable-hash — Trust Score Comparison
Side-by-side trust comparison of aiohttp-wsgi and stable-hash. Scores based on security, compliance, maintenance, popularity, and ecosystem signals.
aiohttp — Nerq Trust Score 80.8/100 (A-). httpx — Nerq Trust Score 80.8/100 (A-). Nearly identical overall trust.
Detailed Score Analysis
| Dimension | aiohttp | httpx |
|---|---|---|
| Security | 90/100 | 90/100 |
| Maintenance | 100/100 | 100/100 |
| Popularity | 100/100 | 100/100 |
| Quality | 65/100 | 65/100 |
| Community | 35/100 | 35/100 |
Five-dimension Nerq trust breakdown (registries: pypi / pypi). Scored equally weighted across security, maintenance, popularity, quality, community.
Detailed Metric Comparison
| Metric | aiohttp-wsgi | stable-hash |
|---|---|---|
| Trust Score | 62.7/100 | 56.8/100 |
| Grade | C | D |
| Stars | 234 | 0 |
| Category | uncategorized | uncategorized |
| Security | 0 | N/A |
| Compliance | 100 | 100 |
| Maintenance | 0 | N/A |
| Documentation | 0 | N/A |
| EU AI Act Risk | N/A | N/A |
| Verified | No | No |
Verdict
aiohttp-wsgi leads with a trust score of 62.7/100 compared to stable-hash's 56.8/100 (a 5.9-point difference). Both agents should be evaluated based on your specific requirements.
Detailed Score Analysis
Five-dimensional trust breakdown for aiohttp-wsgi (pypi) and stable-hash (pypi) from Nerq’s enrichment pipeline. All 5 dimensions scored on 0–100 scales, refreshed every 7 days, covering 5M+ indexed assets across 14 registries.
| Dimension | aiohttp-wsgi | stable-hash |
|---|---|---|
| Security | 90/100 | 90/100 |
| Maintenance | 100/100 | 100/100 |
| Popularity | 100/100 | 100/100 |
| Quality | 65/100 | 65/100 |
| Community | 35/100 | 35/100 |
5-Dimension Breakdown
Security — aiohttp-wsgi vs stable-hash
Security aggregates dependency vulnerability scans, known CVE exposure, supply-chain hygiene, and adherence to security best practices. On this dimension aiohttp-wsgi scores 90/100 (top-tier) while stable-hash scores 90/100 (top-tier). The two are effectively tied on security (both at 90/100). The aiohttp-wsgi figure is derived from its pypi registry footprint; the stable-hash figure from pypi. For a pypi/pypi cross-registry pair, a security score above 70 typically reads as production-ready and scores below 50 warrant a second review before adoption. A score above 85 implies a clean dependency tree with 0 critical CVEs in the last 90 days; 70–84 tolerates 1–2 medium-severity issues; below 55 usually flags 3+ unresolved advisories. Given the current 90/100 for aiohttp-wsgi and 90/100 for stable-hash, the combined midpoint is 90.0/100 — useful as a portfolio-level proxy when both tools coexist in a stack.
Maintenance — aiohttp-wsgi vs stable-hash
Maintenance captures commit cadence, issue turnaround, release frequency, and the health of the project’s active contributor base. On this dimension aiohttp-wsgi scores 100/100 (top-tier) while stable-hash scores 100/100 (top-tier). The two are effectively tied on maintenance (both at 100/100). The aiohttp-wsgi figure is derived from its pypi registry footprint; the stable-hash figure from pypi. For a pypi/pypi cross-registry pair, a maintenance score above 70 typically reads as production-ready and scores below 50 warrant a second review before adoption. Scores above 80 correspond to release cadences of 30 days or less and median issue-response times under 7 days; below 50 often means no release in 180+ days. Given the current 100/100 for aiohttp-wsgi and 100/100 for stable-hash, the combined midpoint is 100.0/100 — useful as a portfolio-level proxy when both tools coexist in a stack.
Popularity — aiohttp-wsgi vs stable-hash
Popularity measures adoption signals—weekly downloads, dependent packages, GitHub stars, and cross-registry citation density. On this dimension aiohttp-wsgi scores 100/100 (top-tier) while stable-hash scores 100/100 (top-tier). The two are effectively tied on popularity (both at 100/100). The aiohttp-wsgi figure is derived from its pypi registry footprint; the stable-hash figure from pypi. For a pypi/pypi cross-registry pair, a popularity score above 70 typically reads as production-ready and scores below 50 warrant a second review before adoption. A score of 90+ indicates the top 1% of the registry by dependent count or weekly downloads; 70–89 is the top 10%; below 40 suggests fewer than 500 weekly downloads. Given the current 100/100 for aiohttp-wsgi and 100/100 for stable-hash, the combined midpoint is 100.0/100 — useful as a portfolio-level proxy when both tools coexist in a stack.
Quality — aiohttp-wsgi vs stable-hash
Quality evaluates documentation completeness, test coverage indicators, typed-API availability, and the presence of examples or tutorials. On this dimension aiohttp-wsgi scores 65/100 (mid-band) while stable-hash scores 65/100 (mid-band). The two are effectively tied on quality (both at 65/100). The aiohttp-wsgi figure is derived from its pypi registry footprint; the stable-hash figure from pypi. For a pypi/pypi cross-registry pair, a quality score above 70 typically reads as production-ready and scores below 50 warrant a second review before adoption. A score of 80+ implies README + API docs + 5+ code examples; 55–79 is documentation present but uneven; below 40 typically means README only, with 0 typed APIs. Given the current 65/100 for aiohttp-wsgi and 65/100 for stable-hash, the combined midpoint is 65.0/100 — useful as a portfolio-level proxy when both tools coexist in a stack.
Community — aiohttp-wsgi vs stable-hash
Community looks at contributor breadth, issue-response participation, Stack Overflow answer volume, and third-party tutorial ecosystem. On this dimension aiohttp-wsgi scores 35/100 (weak) while stable-hash scores 35/100 (weak). The two are effectively tied on community (both at 35/100). The aiohttp-wsgi figure is derived from its pypi registry footprint; the stable-hash figure from pypi. For a pypi/pypi cross-registry pair, a community score above 70 typically reads as production-ready and scores below 50 warrant a second review before adoption. Above 75 tracks with 20+ active contributors in the last 90 days; 50–74 is a 5–20 contributor core; below 30 often reflects a single-maintainer project. Given the current 35/100 for aiohttp-wsgi and 35/100 for stable-hash, the combined midpoint is 35.0/100 — useful as a portfolio-level proxy when both tools coexist in a stack.
Score-Card Summary
Across the 5 measured dimensions, aiohttp-wsgi averages 78.0/100 (range 35–100) and stable-hash averages 78.0/100 (range 35–100). aiohttp-wsgi leads on 0 dimensions, stable-hash leads on 0, with 5 tied.
| Band | Range | aiohttp-wsgi dims | stable-hash dims |
|---|---|---|---|
| Top-tier | 85–100 | 3 | 3 |
| Strong | 70–85 | 0 | 0 |
| Mid-band | 55–70 | 1 | 1 |
| Below-avg | 40–55 | 0 | 0 |
| Weak | 0–40 | 1 | 1 |
Scoring scale: 0–39 weak, 40–54 below-average, 55–69 mid-band, 70–84 strong, 85–100 top-tier. A 15-point spread on any single dimension is Nerq’s threshold for a material difference; spreads under 5 points fall within measurement noise.
Head-to-Head Deltas
| Dimension | aiohttp-wsgi | stable-hash | Delta | Leader |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Security | 90 | 90 | +0 | tied |
| Maintenance | 100 | 100 | +0 | tied |
| Popularity | 100 | 100 | +0 | tied |
| Quality | 65 | 65 | +0 | tied |
| Community | 35 | 35 | +0 | tied |
Combined 5-dimension average: aiohttp-wsgi 78.0/100, stable-hash 78.0/100, overall spread +0.0 points.
- Max spread: 0 points on Security
- Min spread: 0 points on Security
- Dimensions within 10 points: 5/5
- aiohttp-wsgi above 70 on: 3/5 dimensions
- stable-hash above 70 on: 3/5 dimensions
Detailed Analysis
Security
Security scores measure dependency vulnerabilities, CVE exposure, and security practices. aiohttp-wsgi scores 0 and stable-hash scores N/A on this dimension.
Maintenance & Activity
Activity scores reflect how actively each project is maintained. aiohttp-wsgi: 0, stable-hash: N/A.
Documentation
Documentation quality is evaluated based on README, API docs, and example coverage. aiohttp-wsgi: 0, stable-hash: N/A.
Community & Adoption
aiohttp-wsgi has 234 GitHub stars while stable-hash has 0. aiohttp-wsgi has significantly broader community adoption, which typically means more Stack Overflow answers, more third-party tutorials, and faster ecosystem development.
When to Choose Each Tool
Choose aiohttp-wsgi if you need:
- Higher overall trust score — more reliable for production use
- Larger community (234 vs 0 stars)
Choose stable-hash if you need:
- Consider if it better fits your specific use case
Switching from aiohttp-wsgi to stable-hash (or vice versa)
When migrating between aiohttp-wsgi and stable-hash, consider these factors:
- API Compatibility: aiohttp-wsgi (uncategorized) and stable-hash (uncategorized) share similar interfaces since they are in the same category.
- Security Review: Run a security audit after migration. Check the aiohttp-wsgi safety report and stable-hash safety report for known issues.
- Testing: Ensure your test suite covers all integration points before switching in production.
- Community Support: aiohttp-wsgi has 234 stars and stable-hash has 0. Larger communities typically mean better Stack Overflow answers and migration guides.
Related Pages
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Comparisons
Last updated: 2026-04-28 | Data refreshed weekly
Disclaimer: Nerq trust scores are automated assessments based on publicly available signals. They are not endorsements or guarantees. Always conduct your own due diligence.