BSDCoreUtils
shake
BSDCoreUtils | shake | |
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4 | 11 | |
42 | 756 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 6.7 | |
over 1 year ago | 4 months ago | |
C | Haskell | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
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BSDCoreUtils
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GitHub - dcantrell/bsdutils: Alternative to GNU coreutils using software from FreeBSD
https://github.com/DiegoMagdaleno/BSDCoreUtils/blob/master/src/cat/cat.c (not upstream but a port)
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Debian Running on Rust Coreutils
The Rust implementation that we are discussing is MIT licensed and as far as I know not part of GNU.
I do not believe that "Coreutils" is trademarked by GNU.
There are other projects that use the name "Coreutils" that are not part of GNU:
https://github.com/DiegoMagdaleno/BSDCoreUtils
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Have you heard of posh: Policy-compliant Ordinary SHell?
Unsure. Would BSD CoreUtils help?
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Writing Bash Scripts that are not only Bash: Checking for Bashisms and testing with Dash
This makes me want to build a container for testing scripts that contains: posh, BSD coretools, shellcheck, checkbashisms.
shake
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Ninja is enough build system
Another interesting implementation is Shake: https://shakebuild.com/
It is technically a Haskell DSL, but supports Ninja files, time estimates and has tools for linting and profiling.
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Buck2: Our open source build system
They explicitly refer to Shake build system and Build Systems a la Carte paper.
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Straightforward Makefile Tutorial that bring together best practices once and for all.
The one paper that gave me hope about build systems was Build systems à la carte: Theory and practice, by Andrey Mokhov, Neil Mitchell, and Simon Peyton Jones. Among other things, it describes the theoretical underpinnings of the Shake build system. To be honest I believe any build system that ignores the maths described in this paper can safely be ignored. (You may however ignore the paper itself if the maths checks out. See Daniel J. Bernstein's redo, which matches Shake very closely.)
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Worst language you ever used? Really used not just looked at the manual.
Yeah, they don't have to be terrible. I haven't used it, but people in my circles tend to really like Shake, which uses a Haskell embedded DSL to describe builds.
- Shake Build System
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Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats facing the GNU Autotools
You could try Shake. It's a sane build system written by a former co-worker of mine. https://shakebuild.com/
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Overview of the CMake controversy, and break down the pros and cons of the critical C++ tool.
Shake does require compilation as it's essentially just a Haskell library providing a DSL and it works just fine, I guess in gradle's case it's a thing about Java-typical overengineering and complete blindness to resource usage. Shake's underlying engine can actually go head-to-head with ninja itself when building ninja files.
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Need recommendations for a dependency-tracking system
Did you look at shake: https://shakebuild.com/ ?
- The Shake Build System
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Trouble Linking Dynamic Library for Package
For reasons I don't want to get into, I am building my own GHC package without cabal. The documentation is a little sketchy, but I've succeeded in build and installing it in my own user database (I'm on linux x86_64, using GHC 8.6.5). I am using shake to do all of this, and I've been pretty pleased with how it works.
What are some alternatives?
fancy-regex - Rust library for regular expressions using "fancy" features like look-around and backreferences
gitHUD - command-line HUD for your git repo
build2 - build2 build system
marvin - The paranoid bot (framework)
bsdutils - Alternative to GNU coreutils using software from FreeBSD
leksah - Haskell IDE
libgnunetworker - Multithreading with GNUnet
shake-language-c - Cross-compilation framework based on the Shake Haskell library.
mbpfan - A simple daemon to control fan speed on all MacBook/MacBook Pros (probably all Apple computers) for Linux Kernel 3 and newer
bumper - Haskell tool to automatically bump package versions transitively.
regex - An implementation of regular expressions for Rust. This implementation uses finite automata and guarantees linear time matching on all inputs.
clone-all - clone all the github repositories of a particular user.