async-std
rayon
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async-std | rayon | |
---|---|---|
19 | 67 | |
3,833 | 10,242 | |
0.9% | 2.9% | |
5.3 | 9.0 | |
2 months ago | about 16 hours ago | |
Rust | 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.
async-std
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Stabilizing async fn in traits in 2023 | Inside Rust Blog
But maybe check out the discussion here https://github.com/async-rs/async-std/pull/631 or something (the blog post was linked on the end of it)
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Anyone using io_uring?
Have a look at these: https://github.com/async-rs/async-std/tree/main/examples
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Any plans for built-in support of Vec2/Vec3/Vec4 in Rust?
In fact, there are a lot of crates in Rust where in other programming languages, it would be included in the standard library. Examples are regex, random number generators, additional iterator methods, macros for other collections, num traits, loggers, HTTP libraries, error handling, async runtimes, serialization and deserialization, date and time, and many more.
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18 factors powering the Rust revolution, Part 2 of 3
Two major projects (non std lib but extremely commonly used) stand out in the area of async programming: Async std and Tokio - no doubt familiar to anyone that has turned an eye towards Rust for a second too long. Async architecture in general is likely very familiar to JavaScript programmers but in Rust there are some extra considerations (like ownership of the data that is thrown into an async function). Tokio is fast becoming a heavily supported and road tested async framework, with a thread scheduling runtime "baked in" that has learned from the history of Go, Erlang, and Java thread schedulers.
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What are the side-effects of using different runtimes in the same codebase?
Ah... https://github.com/tokio-rs/tokio and https://github.com/async-rs/async-std ?
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Hey Rustaceans! Got an easy question? Ask here (51/2021)!
async-std: Basically a Tokio alternative with a few different design decisions.
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Why asynchronous Rust doesn't work
Go's solution is for the scheduler to notice after a while when a goroutine has blocked execution and to shift goroutines waiting their turn to another thread. async-std pondered a similar approach with tasks, but it proved controversial and was never merged.
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Building static Rust binaries for Linux
This indicates curl, zlib, openssl, and libnghttp2 as well as a bunch of WASM-related things are being dynamically linked into my executable. To resolve this, I looked at the build features exposed by surf and found that it selects the "curl_client" feature by default, which can be turned off and replaced with "h1-client-rustls" which uses an HTTP client backed by rustls and async-std and no dynamically linked libraries. Enabling this build feature removed all -sys dependencies from androidx-release-watcher, allowing me to build static executables of it.
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Rust async is colored, and that’s not a big deal
And also, the actual PR never got merged.
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Rust's async isn't f#@king colored!
Async in rust needs a runtime (aka executor) to run. You can maybe get a better description from the rust docs. As an example, Tokio attempts to provide an interface for a developer that is minimal change to the more common blocking code. So you'd end up putting #[tokio::main] above your main function to spin up the executor and most of the rest of the code is similar to a non-async version with a few sprinkles of .await, which you can see in the hello world for tokio. In contrast, async-std provides a more hands-on/low-level approach. If you are unlucky enough to have libraries that choose different stacks to work on, you'll possibly (probably?) have to handle both.
rayon
- Rayon: Data-race free parallelization of sequential computations in Rust
- Too Dangerous for C++
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Which application/problem would you choose for presenting Rust to newcomers in 1h30min?
Do some operations with .iter() then later use rayon to parallelize. So you can show how easy is to add a dependency and how easy is to parallelize.
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What Are The Rust Crates You Use In Almost Every Project That They Are Practically An Extension of The Standard Library?
rayon: Async CPU runtime for parallelism.
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Moving from Typescript and Langchain to Rust and Loops
In the quest for more efficient solutions, the ONNX runtime emerged as a beacon of performance. The decision to transition from Typescript to Rust was an unconventional yet pivotal one. Driven by Rust's robust parallel processing capabilities using Rayon and seamless integration with ONNX through the ort crate, Repo-Query unlocked a realm of unparalleled efficiency. The result? A transformation from sluggish processing to, I have to say it, blazing-fast performance.
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AreWeMegafactoryYet? I just breached simulating 1M buildings @ 60 fps (If I'm not recording, Ryzen 7 1700X 8 Core)
With a lot of rayon, blood, sweat and tears I finally managed to simulate a million buildings at 60fps :) Feel free to AMA, game is Combine And Conquer
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The Rust I Wanted Had No Future
(see https://github.com/rayon-rs/rayon/tree/master/src/iter/plumbing)
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Parallel event iterator?
I did some very basic testing with this crate : https://crates.io/crates/rayon and it seems to work :
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General Recommendations: Should I Use Tree-sitter as the AST for the LSP I am developing?
Sequentially, generating tree-sitter AST for each file and querying for the links of each file takes around 2.3 seconds. However, I randomly remembered this crate rayon, and I decided to test it. It ended up improving the performance (just by changing 2 lines of code) to 200-300ms by parallelizing the iterators and tree-sitter queries. MAJOR.
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python to rust migration
Now if you really want to use Rust, you can rewrite only the part that are slowing down your consumer. It's easy by using Py03 and maturin. Maybe also rayon to parallelize.
What are some alternatives?
tokio - A runtime for writing reliable asynchronous applications with Rust. Provides I/O, networking, scheduling, timers, ...
crossbeam - Tools for concurrent programming in Rust
actix-web - Actix Web is a powerful, pragmatic, and extremely fast web framework for Rust.
smol - A small and fast async runtime for Rust
RxRust - The Reactive Extensions for the Rust Programming Language
futures-rs - Zero-cost asynchronous programming in Rust
rust-numpy - PyO3-based Rust bindings of the NumPy C-API
reqwest - An easy and powerful Rust HTTP Client
tokio-rayon - Mix async code with CPU-heavy thread pools using Tokio + Rayon
embassy - Modern embedded framework, using Rust and async.
sqlx - 🧰 The Rust SQL Toolkit. An async, pure Rust SQL crate featuring compile-time checked queries without a DSL. Supports PostgreSQL, MySQL, and SQLite.