Tokamak
cargo-crev
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Tokamak | cargo-crev | |
---|---|---|
22 | 55 | |
2,446 | 2,030 | |
2.0% | 2.2% | |
0.0 | 7.9 | |
about 1 month ago | 20 days ago | |
Swift | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
Tokamak
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Writing Gnome Apps with Swift
https://github.com/TokamakUI/Tokamak
I’m also working (slowly) on native Flutter channels:
https://github.com/PADL/FlutterSwift
But this is really targeted at embedded use cases.
- Show HN: Tokamak – A Dependency Injection-Centric Server-Side Framework for Zig
- Tokamak: SwiftUI-compatible framework for building browser apps with WebAssembly
- Mousetrap.jl: a GUI library for Julia and C++ that fully wrap GTK4
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Swift UIKit web frontend?
There is Tokamak but I don't know how usable it is just yet.
- Swift Achieved Dynamic Linking Where Rust Couldn't
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I would like to get a job as a iOS developer. Should I begin by learning UIKit or SwiftUI first?
TokamakUI runs via SwiftUI on WASM for web. Apple just hired the creator of the framework.
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Apple overtakes Android to pass 50% share of smartphones used in US; dominates global premium sales
You can even make web apps by creating web components in swift with Tokamak.
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JavaScriptKit help
I am playing around with Tokamak just for a bit of fun and learning, and it's been pretty solid so far! Though I want to branch out and play with some dynamic data from a random API, instead of just using mocked/pre-populated data.
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Beginner - is it complicated to make a web app from an app written with SwiftUI for iOS?
There is SwiftWasm that compiles swift into WebAssembly so you can run it in the browser, but swift can't directly manipulate the DOM so you'd still need JavaScript or something like TokamakUI so you can design the front-end portion of your app.
cargo-crev
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Hard disk LEDs and noisy machines
In other cases it may be more documented, such as Golangs baked-in telemetry.
There should be better ways to check these problems. The best I have found so far is Crev https://github.com/crev-dev/crev/. It's most used implementation is Cargo-crev https://github.com/crev-dev/cargo-crev, but hopefully it will become more required to use these types of tools. Certainty and metrics about how many eyes have been on a particular script, and what expertise they have would be a huge win for software.
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Rust Without Crates.io
The main problem the author is talking about is actually about version updates, which in Maven as well as crates.io is up to each lib's author, and is not curated in any way.
There's no technical solution to that, really. Do you think Nexus Firewall can pick up every exploit, or even most? How confident of that are you, and what data do you have to back that up? I don't have any myself, but would not be surprised at all if "hackers" can easily work around their scanning.
However, I don't have a better approach than using scanning tools like Nexus, or as the author proposes, use a curated library repository like Debian is doing (which hopefully gets enough eyeballs to remain secure) or the https://github.com/crev-dev/cargo-crev project (manually reviewed code) also mentioned. It's interesting that they mention C/C++ just rely on distros providing dynamic libs instead which means you don't even control your dependencies versions, some distro does (how reliable is the distro?)... I wonder if that could work for other languages or if it's just as painful as it looks in the C world.
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I don't care about cookies” extension bought by Avast, users jump ship
For instance, the worst company imaginable may be in charge of software that was once FOSS, and they may change absolutely nothing about it, so it should be fine. However, if a small update is added that does something bad, you should know about it immediately.
The solution seems to be much more clearly in the realm of things like crev: https://github.com/crev-dev/cargo-crev/
Wherein users can get a clear picture of what dependencies are used in the full chain, and how they have been independently reviewed for security and privacy. That's the real solution for the future. A quick score that is available upon display everytime you upgrade, with large warnings for anything above a certain threshold.
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I think there should be some type of crates vertification especially the popular ones?
The metrics on crates.io are a useful sniff test, but ultimately you need to review things yourself, or trust some contributors and reviewers. Some projects, like cargo crev or cargo vet can help with the process.
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[Discussion] What crates would you like to see?
You can use cargo-geiger or cargo-crev to check for whether people you trusted (e.g. u/jonhoo ) trust this crate.
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Pip and cargo are not the same
There is a similar idea being explored with https://github.com/crev-dev/cargo-crev - you trust a reviewer who reviews crates for trustworthiness, as well as other reviewers.
- greater supply chain attack risk due to large dependency trees?
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Why so many basic features are not part of the standard library?
[cargo-crev](https://github.com/crev-dev/cargo-crev) looks like a good step in the right direction but not really commonly used.
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“You meant to install ripgrep”
'cargo crev' makes this kind of workflow possible: https://github.com/crev-dev/cargo-crev
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Difference between cargo-vet and cargo-crev?
The crev folks themselves are no fans of PGP but need a way to security identify that you are in fact the review author, so that's where the id generation comes in. Ultimately crev is just a bunch of repos with text files you sign with IDs. The nice property is that you can chain these together into a web of trust and it's unfortunate that vet doesn't just use the same signed files on repos model as a foundation because even if they don't trust anyone else, we could turn around and trust them.
What are some alternatives?
SwiftWebUI - SwiftUI with support for WebAssembly
crates.io - The Rust package registry
Vapor - 💧 A server-side Swift HTTP web framework.
stackage - Stable Haskell package sets: vetted consistent packages from Hackage
Mongrel - Build declarative HTML in Swift.
crates.io-index - Registry index for crates.io
The-SwiftUI-Tutorials - Swift, GO (Golang) , SwiftUI, UIKit Tutorials.📲💻🖥
serde - Serialization framework for Rust
tornadofx - Lightweight JavaFX Framework for Kotlin
cargo-msrv - 🦀 Find the minimum supported Rust version (MSRV) for your project
jupyterlite - Wasm powered Jupyter running in the browser 💡
Rustup - The Rust toolchain installer