botnet
botnet | raylib-5k | |
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5 | 5 | |
69 | 22 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
about 1 year ago | over 1 year ago | |
Rust | Go | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | - |
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.
botnet
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Out of the loop: WASM for non-web projects
I was/am working on a project (https://github.com/JMS55/botnet), where users upload scripts compiled to WASM to control entities on a game server, so that they can write custom behavior.
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Sandboxing DLL Code
Never heard of extism before, but second using WASM for plugins/scripting/extensions. I'm using it for botnet(1). Each player uploads a WASM program to control their bots. Both the server and the bot SDK are written in Rust, and can share some code.
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Why Am I Excited About WebAssembly?
4. Speed
I'm hoping to write my thesis for my master's degree on this topic this year. I'm also in the process of writing a game like screeps, where users provide a WASM script to control units for an RTS-style game (without combat though) https://github.com/JMS55/botnet.
It's amazing how simple it is to constrain memory usage, runtime duration, and secure exported functions to a WASM VM. Performance is also great - currently about ~6 microseconds per tick per unit, up to ~200 microseconds when doing expensive pathfinding. All that, while letting you program your units in Rust - the same language as the server is written in, while being able to share code with the server, and not having to use something more script-y like lua.
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easy to use Plugin API in rust?
The boilerplate sucks, but it works well when you don't need a ton of different functions. I use wasm as a scripting language for running isolated untrusted scripts in a game I'm developing, and it works really well https://github.com/JMS55/botnet.
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Ask HN: Who needs help with side projects?
I'm working on a Screeps-like game using WebAssembly. You compile a script to WebAssembly, and for each robot you control on the server, it runs the script in an isolated environment to choose an action for that robot. The goal is to write a program to coordinate your robots to gather resources and expand your control of the server.
Here's an example bot script: https://github.com/JMS55/botnet/blob/master/example_bot/src/...
The basic infrastructure of the project is more or less in place, besides a visual replay viewer which I'm working on right now. What's needed is a bunch of work in designing game mechanics and APIs. I don't actually have any plans beyond bots running around and harvesting randomly generated resources at the moment. Feel free to open a discussion on the github page if you're interested in Rust, WebAssembly, and video games.
https://github.com/JMS55/botnet
raylib-5k
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Making Games in Go for Absolute Beginners
A game made with it for raylib game jam along with the raylib bindings and other engine stuff: https://github.com/nikki93/raylib-5k
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Show HN: I made a 2D shoot 'em up game with Go, using Entity Component System
I do also really like Go for various reasons, and have been working on a Go -> C++ transpiler and associated ECS libs to make a personal game project with. I used it to make a game for Raylib game jam earlier this year too: https://github.com/nikki93/raylib-5k You can see what the development workflow looks like in this video (the ECS stuff also has an editor): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8He97Sl9iy0
I'm trying to decide how much time I should devote to making this easier to set up / use by other people in the medium term, since it's just a side project for me. Might make a codespaces template so it's quick to get started.
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Why Am I Excited About WebAssembly?
For the client I use a simple go -> c++ compiler I wrote and compile to wasm from that actually. It had zero overhead interfacing to / calls to C/C++ (including generics<->templates) since it's just generating that. Example web game made with that: https://github.com/nikki93/raylib-5k
I think I've seen wasmtime before. If I needed to interface to any C/C++ things on the server I would probably just write in C/C++ (or Gx) yeah.
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Generics can make your Go code slower
Sweet! I've been using it for the same. Example game project (did it for a game jam): https://github.com/nikki93/raylib-5k -- in this case the Go gets transpiled to C++ and runs as WebAssembly too. Readme includes a link to play the game in the browser. game.gx.go and behaviors.gx.go kind of show the ECS style.
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Packet Lost: A game (playable in browser!) made for Raylib jam using a Go->C++ transpiler and WebAssembly. GitHub repo link in comments!
GitHub repo: https://github.com/nikki93/raylib-5k
What are some alternatives?
memory64 - Memory with 64-bit indexes
donburi - Just another ECS library for Go/Ebitengine
micropolis-rs - The classic Micropolis (Sim City 1) game rewritten in Rust and React, with WebAssembly support.
goloader - load and run golang code at runtime.
homebridge-lutron-caseta-leap - Homebridge support for Lutron Caseta Smart Bridge 2
usbarmory - USB armory - The open source compact secure computer
baghchal.net - Online Baghchal Issue Tracker
temporal-polyfill - A lightweight polyfill for Temporal, successor to the JavaScript Date object
airplanes - A 2D shoot 'em up game made with Go, Ebitengine, and donburi. Featuring ECS (Entity Component System).
Rhai - Rhai - An embedded scripting language for Rust.
proposal - Go Project Design Documents