JSONFeed VS glibc

Compare JSONFeed vs glibc and see what are their differences.

JSONFeed

Swift parser for JSON Feed — a new format similar to RSS and Atom but in JSON. (by totocaster)

glibc

Unofficial mirror of sourceware glibc repository. Updated daily. (by bminor)
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JSONFeed glibc
7 45
31 1,203
- 4.6%
0.0 9.8
almost 7 years ago 6 days ago
Swift C
MIT License GNU General Public License v3.0 or later
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.

JSONFeed

Posts with mentions or reviews of JSONFeed. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-03-20.
  • Make your web feed easy to find, autodiscoverable even
    1 project | dev.to | 4 Feb 2024
    If you have a web feed, be it RSS or Atom or JSON Feed, help others discover it!
  • How to Parse RSS Feed in Javascript
    2 projects | dev.to | 20 Mar 2023
    Imagine you have an RSS feed similar to this. The objective is to obtain that RSS feed, analyze the data it contains, and take action with it. RSS is an XML format, whereas JSON is arguably easier to work with than XML. While many APIs provide JSON results, RSS is less likely to receive them, despite their existence.
  • Is Astro ready for your blog?
    20 projects | dev.to | 24 Apr 2022
    At least for now, Astro clearly falls short in this category. Its built-in ability to provide RSS feeds is rather limited, and it doesn’t yet enable JSON feeds at all.5 In the meantime, some users, including Yours Truly, have gotten around this by using the third-party feed package, which supports RSS and JSON feeds.6
  • reader 2.0 released – a Python feed reader library
    3 projects | /r/Python | 19 Jul 2021
    want to also support JSON Feed?
  • Natural language search for blog posts using TensorflowJS
    5 projects | dev.to | 22 Apr 2021
    -------- # Metadata comes from _data/metadata.json permalink: "{{ metadata.jsonfeed.path | url }}" eleventyExcludeFromCollections: true -------- { "version": "https://jsonfeed.org/version/1", "title": "{{ metadata.title }}", "home_page_url": "{{ metadata.url }}", "feed_url": "{{ metadata.jsonfeed.url }}", "description": "{{ metadata.description }}", "author": { "name": "{{ metadata.author.name }}", "url": "{{ metadata.author.url }}" }, "items": [ {%- for post in collections.posts | reverse %} {%- set absolutePostUrl %}{{ post.url | url | absoluteUrl(metadata.url) }}{% endset -%} { "id": "{{ absolutePostUrl }}", "url": "{{ absolutePostUrl }}", "title": "{{ post.data.title }}", "tags": [ {%- for tag in helpers.removeCollectionTags(post.data.tags) -%} "{{tag}}" {%- if not loop.last %}, {%- endif %} {%- endfor %}], "summary": "{{ post.data.description }}", "content_html": {% if post.templateContent %}{{ post.templateContent | dump | safe }}{% else %}""{% endif %}, "date_published": "{{ post.date | rssDate }}" } {%- if not loop.last -%} , {%- endif -%} {%- endfor %} ] }
  • Two undocumented Intel x86 instructions discovered that can be used to modify microcode
    4 projects | /r/programming | 22 Mar 2021
    Your wish is my command.
  • Kill the Newsletter Convert Newsletters into Atom Feeds
    2 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 17 Feb 2021

glibc

Posts with mentions or reviews of glibc. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2024-01-09.
  • I cut GTA Online loading times by 70% (2021)
    3 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 9 Jan 2024
  • Cray-1 performance vs. modern CPUs
    4 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 25 Dec 2023
    I wonder if you’re using a different definition of ‘vectorized’ from the one I would use. For example glibc provides a vectorized strlen. Here is the sse version: https://github.com/bminor/glibc/blob/master/sysdeps/x86_64/m...

    It’s pretty simple to imagine how to write an unoptimized version: read a vector from the start of the string, compare it to 0, convert that to a bitvector, test for equal to zero, then loop or clz and finish.

    I would call this vectorized because it operates on 16 bytes (sse) at a time.

    There are a few issues:

    1. You’re still spending a lot of time in the scalar code checking loop conditions.

    2. You’re doing unaligned reads which are slower on old processors

    3. You may read across a cache line forcing you to pull a second line into cache even if the string ends before then.

    4. You may read across a page boundary which could cause a segfault if the next page is not accessible

    So the fixes are to do 64-byte (ie cache line) aligned accesses which also means page-aligned (so you won’t read from a page until you know the string doesn’t end in the previous page). That deals with alignment problems. You read four vector registers at a time but this doesn’t really cost much more if the string is shorter as it all comes from one cache line. Another trick in the linked code is that it first finds the cache line by reading the first 16 bytes then merging in the next 3 groups with unsigned-min, so it only requires one test against a zero vector instead of 4. Then it finds the zero in the cache line. You need to do a bit of work in the first iteration to become aligned. With AVX, you can use mask registers on reads to handle that first step instead.

  • Setenv Is Not Thread Safe and C Doesn't Want to Fix It
    6 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 19 Nov 2023
    That was also my thought. To my knowledge `/etc/localtime` is the creation of Arthur David Olson, the founder of the tz database (now maintained by IANA), but his code never read `/etc/localtime` multiple times unless `TZ` environment variable was changed. Tzcode made into glibc but Ulrich Drepper changed it to not cache `/etc/localtime` when `TZ` is unset [1]; I wasn't able to locate the exact rationale, given that the commit was very ancient (1996-12) and no mailing list archive is available for this time period.

    [1] https://github.com/bminor/glibc/commit/68dbb3a69e78e24a778c6...

  • CTF Writeup: Abusing select() to factor RSA
    2 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 11 Nov 2023
    That's not really what the problem is. The actual code is fine.

    The issue is that the definition of `fd_set` has a constant size [1]. If you allocate the memory yourself, the select() system call will work with as many file descriptors as you care to pass to it. You can see that both glibc [2] and the kernel [3] support arbitrarily large arrays.

    [1] https://github.com/bminor/glibc/blob/master/misc/sys/select....

    [2] https://github.com/bminor/glibc/blob/master/sysdeps/unix/sys...

    [3] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/lin...

  • How are threads created in Linux x86_64
    3 projects | dev.to | 22 Sep 2023
    The source code for that is here.
  • Using Uninitialized Memory for Fun and Profit (2008)
    3 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 3 Sep 2023
    Expanding macro gives three GCC function attributes [2]: `__attribute__ ((malloc))`, `__attribute__ ((alloc_size(1)))` and `__attribute__ ((warn_unused_result))`. They are required for GCC (and others recognizing them) to actually ensure that they behave as the standard dictates. Your own malloc-like functions won't be treated same unless you give similar attributes.

    [1] https://github.com/bminor/glibc/blob/807690610916df8aef17cd1...

    [2] https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Common-Function-Attribute...

  • “csinc”, the AArch64 instruction you didn’t know you wanted
    2 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 7 Jun 2023
    IFunc relocations is what enables glibc to dynamically choose the best memcpy routine to use at runtime based on the CPU.

    see https://github.com/bminor/glibc/blob/glibc-2.31/sysdeps/x86_...

  • memmove() implementation in strictly conforming C -- possible?
    2 projects | /r/C_Programming | 27 Apr 2023
    memmove can be very well implemented in pure C, libc implementations usually have a "generic" (meaning, architecture independent) fallback. Here is musl generic implementation and its x86-64 assembly implementation. For glibc, implementation is a bit more complex, having multiple architectures implemented, but you could find a generic implementation with these two files: memmove.c and generic/memcopy.h.
  • Fedora 38 LLVM vs. Team Fortress 2
    6 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 24 Apr 2023
    Yeah, looks like the Q_strcat(pszContentPath, "/"); is invalid, as glibc has only allocated exactly enough to fit the path in the buffer returned by realpath().

    Interestingly, the open group spec says that a null argument to realpath is "Implementation defined" [0]

    And the linux (glibc) man pages say it allocates a buffer "Up to PATH_MAX" [1]

    I guess "strlen(path)" is "Up to PATH_MAX", but the man page seems unclear - you could read that as implying the buffer is always allocated to PATH_MAX size, but that's not what seems to be happening, just effectively calling strdup() [2]. I have no idea how to feed back to the linux man pages, but might be worth clarifying there.

    [0] https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009696799/functions/re...

    [1] https://linux.die.net/man/3/realpath

    [2] https://github.com/bminor/glibc/blob/0b9d2d4a76508fdcbd9f421...

  • Method implementations
    2 projects | /r/cpp_questions | 15 Feb 2023
    For the actual sources you will have to look at one of the mirrors of the C standard library, such as https://github.com/bminor/glibc/tree/master/sysdeps/ieee754/dbl-64

What are some alternatives?

When comparing JSONFeed and glibc you can also consider the following projects:

FeedKit - An RSS, Atom and JSON Feed parser written in Swift

musl - Unofficial mirror of etalabs musl repository. Updated daily.

Erik - Erik is an headless browser based on WebKit. An headless browser allow to run functional tests, to access and manipulate webpages using javascript.

cosmopolitan - build-once run-anywhere c library

SwiftyConfiguration - Modern Swift API for Plist.

dns - DNS library in Go

SwiftCssParser - A Powerful , Extensible CSS Parser written in pure Swift.

0.30000000000000004 - Floating Point Math Examples

CoreXLSX - Excel spreadsheet (XLSX) format parser written in pure Swift

json-c - https://github.com/json-c/json-c is the official code repository for json-c. See the wiki for release tarballs for download. API docs at http://json-c.github.io/json-c/

AcknowledgementsPlist - AcknowledgementsPlist manages the licenses of libraries that depend on your iOS app.

degasolv - Democratize dependency management.