Warp
axum
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Warp | axum | |
---|---|---|
57 | 149 | |
18,317 | 15,646 | |
7.5% | 6.2% | |
7.6 | 9.3 | |
9 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Rust | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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.
Warp
- Fig Is Sunsetting
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Linux version of Warp terminal is here
Hi! I’m Aloke, an engineer at Warp.
I’m really excited to share that Warp is now available on Linux! If you’re interested in trying it out, you can download Warp: https://warp.dev/
Building Warp on Linux was quite an undertaking. Warp uses a custom Rust-based UI framework that we built in house and renders natively on the GPU. To get Warp running on Linux, we built a version of our UI framework that supports winit [1] as a windowing backend. We also built a version of our renderer that uses wgpu [2]. Reducing complexity by using these well-supported, cross platform, frameworks let us bootstrap a version of Linux quicker than expected and should make it easier to build Warp for other platforms (like Windows).
Please let me know what you think! Happy to answer any questions, either about the product or about technical challenges.
I'm trying out Warp for the first time, and an immediate accessibility issue for me is that the text is simply too small to read for a lot of the UI elements (context menu, side bar, tab bar…). The size should be configurable for all of the elements, not just the terminal view. I think I would also be fine with a setting that just scales the whole UI.
I did notice there is an issue for it already: https://github.com/warpdotdev/Warp/issues/1443
- The New Terminal (Beta) Is Now in JetBrains IDEs
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How To Change Your Zoom Background With Code
Warp is a Rust-based terminal with AI built in. I like it because it has things like autocompletions, history search, click-to-edit, and theming out-of-the-box. Feels super modern. And if you do want to try it out, use my referral link & get a free theme!)
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OpenAI Whisper: Transcribe in the Terminal for free
Unless you want to type this every day, I’d recommend creating an alias. In my case, I’m using Warp, so I’ll right-click the command and choose Save as Workflow to save my script as a workflow. Warp AI will even help me autofill the title and description and detect variables.
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Keystroke timing obfuscation added to SSH(1)
This makes me wonder about newer terminal emulators on maccOS like Warp[1], and if they're for example taking all input locally, and then sending it over the remote host in a single blob or not? I imagine doing so would possibly break any sort of raw-mode input being done on remote host but I'd also imagine that is a detectable situation in which you could switch into a raw keystroke feed as well.
[1]: https://warp.dev
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Does anyone try the new terminal emulator Warp with Neovim?
Did you mean this issue? Thanks for trying and sharing the experience btw.
You're right, I just found the discussion there (and it's the longest one currently). For now, I just run tmux inside the emulator.
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Terminal replacement for someone who’s terrible at scripting?
Hey, developer advocate from Warp (warp.dev) here! I think our terminal app has been mentioned a few times already in the comments, but I wanted to hop on here as well to give some context.
axum
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Prodzilla: From Zero to Prod with Rust and Shuttle
Moreover, I especially like where Rust is right now in the web space. It really feels like there’s a lot of smart people working on the next generation of web development tools - it feels like the place to be. There are a range of great open-source web dev tools that are just reaching critical levels of maturity. Axum, which I used to build Prodzilla, feels ready for out of the box web dev, and is crazy-performant, as I write about later. More recently available is Loco, a Rails-like framework for building web applications in Rust that's picking up steam. And in dev-tooling and hosting there’s Shuttle, a 1-line hosting solution for Rust backends.
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CryptoFlow: Building a secure and scalable system with Axum and SvelteKit - Part 1
CryptoFlow is a full-stack web application built with Axum and SvelteKit. It's a Q&A system tailored towards the world of cryptocurrency!
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Cryptoflow: Building a secure and scalable system with Axum and SvelteKit - Part 0
You also get to specify the accepted HTTP method of the URL via axum::routing. To answer its name, modularity, Axum also supports nested routes as we'll see later in this series. Next is the layer, a method used to apply tower::Layer to all routes before it. This means that routes added after the layer method will not have such a layer applied to their requests. In our case, we used the layer to add tracing to all HTTP requests and responses to our routes. This is needed for proper logging. The tower_http::trace::TraceLayer can even be really customised.
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My first project with rust
I build simple rust axum api server with Prisma client rust. This is my something done with rust and I really enjoyed rust!
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Getting Started with Axum - Rust's Most Popular Framework
In this article we'll take a comprehensive look at how to use Axum to write a web service. This will also include the 0.7 changes.
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Trying out Leptos: Fine-grained Reactive Framework for Rust
You have a couple of options for the underlying web framework to pair with Leptos: Axum or Actix. Axum seems to carry more favour currently, so we start with that. Assuming you already have Rust set up on your system:
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Help required: Port kellnr from rocket.rs to axum
I’m the author of https://kellnr.io. When I started working on Kellnr three years ago, https://rocket.rs was “the web framework” to use. Unfortunately, the project seems dead. Before adding more functionality using an unmaintained framework, I want to port Kellnr to https://github.com/tokio-rs/axum.
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Grimoire - A recipe management application.
Web Framework : axum.
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Proper type for axum SSE stream
I am trying to stream a response from the OpenAI API as an SSE with axum. I have combined the following examples from the async-openai and axum repos to produce the below code I've used iterators in Rust but have not used streams, I have no idea how to reconcile the types here and don't know where to start to solve the problem. A solution or any pointers would be greatly appreciated. https://github.com/tokio-rs/axum/tree/axum-v0.6.20/examples/sse https://github.com/64bit/async-openai/tree/main/examples/chat-stream ``rust async fn sse_handler( TypedHeader(user_agent): TypedHeader, ) -> Sse>> { println!("{}` connected", user_agent.as_str());
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Introduction to the Tower library
-- axum README
What are some alternatives?
actix-web - Actix Web is a powerful, pragmatic, and extremely fast web framework for Rust.
Rocket - A web framework for Rust.
alacritty - A cross-platform, OpenGL terminal emulator.
poem - A full-featured and easy-to-use web framework with the Rust programming language.
zsh-autocomplete - 🤖 Real-time type-ahead completion for Zsh. Asynchronous find-as-you-type autocompletion.
hyperterm - A terminal built on web technologies
warp - A super-easy, composable, web server framework for warp speeds.
hyper - An HTTP library for Rust
rust-web-framework-comparison - A comparison of some web frameworks and libs written in Rust
rust-web-benchmarks - Benchmarking web frameworks written in rust with rewrk tool.
kitty - Cross-platform, fast, feature-rich, GPU based terminal
ntex - framework for composable networking services