argparse-rosetta-rs
libgit2
argparse-rosetta-rs | libgit2 | |
---|---|---|
10 | 30 | |
116 | 9,431 | |
0.9% | 0.3% | |
6.4 | 9.6 | |
5 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Python | C | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
argparse-rosetta-rs
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Build a CLI with RUST | Live coding
It's clap and bpaf nowdays from fully featured ones. https://github.com/rosetta-rs/argparse-rosetta-rs
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improvement suggestions on minigrep
"not enough arguments" is nice, but what arguments do you need to pass? Use cli option parser such as bpaf or clap to deal with that kind of stuff - they will generate --help for you for example. https://github.com/rosetta-rs/argparse-rosetta-rs
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Crate List - Blessed.rs
We link to https://github.com/rosetta-rs/argparse-rosetta-rs for a full list. In such a competitive category, I don't think I can really recommend anything that doesn't handle non-utf8 arguments. I am considering adding bpaf to the recommendations in the "full" category, as they recently added this support.
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clap 4.0.0, a Rust argument parser, is released!
Latest benchmark results Diff of clap v3 to clap v4
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Yet another command line argument parser: bpaf 0.6.0
There's a nice overview made by /u/epage https://github.com/rosetta-rs/argparse-rosetta-rs/blob/main/docs/tradeoffs.md
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(pre-announcing) clap 4.0, a Rust CLI argument parser
We collaborated on the trade-offs document though that doesn't reflect the upcoming release which expands on the parser flexibility.
- Design comparison of clap and bpaf (arg parsers)
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[Media] gitnu: git status enumerated
For parsing people tend to use a parser, some are listed here: https://github.com/rosetta-rs/argparse-rosetta-rs
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Yet another command line argument parser: bpaf 0.5.5
I've updated argparse-rosetta-rs (formerly argparse-benchmarks-rs).
libgit2
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Radicle: Open-Source, Peer-to-Peer, GitHub Alternative
Everything that is replicated on the network is stored as a Git object, using the libgit2[0] library. This library uses hardened SHA-1 internally, which is called sha1dc (for "detect collision").
[0]: https://github.com/libgit2/libgit2/blob/ac0f2245510f6c75db1b...
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Speedbump – a TCP proxy to simulate variable network latency
This is delightful and I can't wait to try it out. Right now, the libgit2 project (https://github.com/libgit2/libgit2) has a custom HTTP git server wrapper that will throttle the responses down to a very slow rate. It's fun watching a `git clone` running over 2400 baud modem speeds, but it's actually been incredibly helpful for testing timeouts, odd buffering problems, and other things that crop up in weird network environments.
I'd love to jettison our hacky custom code and use something off-the-shelf instead.
- Things I just don't like about Git
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GitKraken Client Is Migrating from Libgit2 to the Git Executable
I've built a UI on top of libgit2 and I wish that this blog post expanded on which new features are missing (sparse checkout?).
To quote: "The migration to Git Executable will allow us to resolve long-standing issues with GitKraken Client, such as poor LFS performance, SSH configuration support and many other features/performance improvements."
I agree on LFS performance on Windows. SSH config support is a pain due to libssh2 but openssh support is on the way (https://github.com/libgit2/libgit2/pull/6617).
There are many cons to using the Git executable itself (parsing output, error reporting, version handling). Seems to me that there's more to this?
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Mold 2.0.0
I'm curious about the license change? This is an executable is it not? Invoking it as a separate process does not require you make the software calling it GPL so switching to MIT should have no affect in the common case.
If the authors really wanted a more permissive license, then instead of relicensing from AGPL to MIT they should have gone AGPL with linking exception. An example of a project that does this is libgit2 [1]. This licensing is more permissive but still permits the author to sell commercial licenses to those making closed-source code changes.
[1] https://github.com/libgit2/libgit2#license
- Shadow cloning support landed in libgit2
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I'm feeling lazy today but want a better excuse than "working on documention" for the morning standup.
Using libxlsxwriter and libgit, it's straightforward -- just putting the equivalent of git shortlog and lines added and removed into a line of cells.
- libgit2 fails to verify SSH keys by default
What are some alternatives?
argfile - Load additional CLI args from file
pygit2 - Python bindings for libgit2
bpaf - Command line parser with applicative interface
elfshaker - elfshaker stores binary objects efficiently
clap-port-flag - Easily add address & port flags to CLIs using Clap
git-branchless - High-velocity, monorepo-scale workflow for Git
clap-permission-flag - Easily add permission flags to CLIs using Clap
horde - Horde is a distributed Supervisor and Registry backed by DeltaCrdt
themes - Custom themes repository for Warp, a blazingly fast modern terminal built in Rust.
git-date - Bindings onto the date parsing code from Git
rustc-dev-guide - A guide to how rustc works and how to contribute to it.
pygooglenews - If Google News had a Python library