bytecount
Rouille, Rust web server middleware
bytecount | Rouille, Rust web server middleware | |
---|---|---|
4 | 15 | |
210 | 1,076 | |
- | - | |
5.3 | 1.0 | |
14 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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bytecount
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When counting lines in Ruby randomly failed our deployments
I noted the bytecount Rust crate uses an SSE4.1 intrinsic in SSE2 code and submitted a fix
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Interview Question: Select a Random Line from a File (in Rust)
The article also mentions u/logiq's bytecount. We didn't use, but we mention it as an extension that could make the program faster. - Carl
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Learning SIMD by creating a char counter, but it's slower than `.chars().count()`?
What's going on here? At one point I even directly copy + pasted everything from https://github.com/llogiq/bytecount/blob/master/src/simd/x86_avx2.rs , but got similar results. `bytecount` wasn't compiled with SIMD enabled either, if it was it would be ~40 GiB/s.
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What's everyone working on this week (23/2021)?
Also TWiR and perhaps some clippy work. And at some point I want to revisit bytecount to add ARM/NEON and WASM optimizations.
Rouille, Rust web server middleware
- Rouille, a Rust web micro-framework
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Async rust – are we doing it all wrong?
Your CRUD web application server almost certainly doesn't need async Rust. Using a blocking HTTP server is not "might be a good idea", it simply is a good idea.
I recommend Rouille for this: https://github.com/tomaka/rouille. In case you are worried about performance, check the benchmark. Blocking Rouille is faster than builtin async server in Node.js.
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Best backend web frameworks with blocking io (i.e. not async)?
As you say, the majority of the web ecosystem in Rust has moved to async - but if you’re happy to stray a bit from the beaten path then rouille might do the trick.
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An Express-inspired web framework for Rust
In strongly typed languages like Rust, composing smaller libraries is usually quite painless, so you don't need a large framework.
Personally for backend Rust I use rouille[0] for the server (it's very simple and async-free), askama[1] for compile-time HTML templates and (if a SPA is unavoidable, as that is of course always to be avoided if at all possible) yew[2] for client-side WASM.
Now this stack is what I like personally, but there are many options that you can combine, some more full-featured than others. Check out https://www.arewewebyet.org/ for a partial overview.
[0]: https://github.com/tomaka/rouille
[1]: https://github.com/djc/askama
[2]: https://yew.rs/
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Which Rust web framework to choose in 2022 (with code examples)
rouille
I'd like to put in a word for a simple, sync framework such as rouille. The compile times are much, much better, the number of dependencies is much smaller, the stuff it's built on (the standard library) is extensively tested and extremely reliable. Kernel context switches are slower than userspace thread scheduling, but not much slower, and as long as your services aren't just shoving bytes from one place to another (i.e. actually doing some computation) the time taken for a context switch vanishes into noise. A lot of benchmarks test how quickly a web service can move bytes, which (if your business logic is non-trivial) actually isn't the most critical factor.
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Hey rustaceans, which web framework you guys suggest for a small application?
I don't have any Rust-relevant experience here, but if I wanted to build a web server in Rust and was okay with "reasonable" performance, I'd probably give rouille a try first.
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The Rustacean way to build a complete web app?
Rouille is fairly solid in my experience. Save the pain of async and spend it building software that works. Honestly with Rust's lack of GC you get predictable response times already.
- Des avis sur mon cadeau?
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vial: a really tiny web framework
How would you differentiate it from let's say Rouille ?
What are some alternatives?
koto - A simple, expressive, embeddable programming language, made with Rust
actix-web - Actix Web is a powerful, pragmatic, and extremely fast web framework for Rust.
tiny-tokio-actor - A simple tiny actor library on top of Tokio
tiny-http - Low level HTTP server library in Rust
gdbstub - An ergonomic, featureful, and easy-to-integrate implementation of the GDB Remote Serial Protocol in Rust (with no-compromises #![no_std] support)
Rocket - A web framework for Rust.
retina - High-level RTSP multimedia streaming library, in Rust
Nickel - An expressjs inspired web framework for Rust
artillery - Fire-forged cluster management & Distributed data protocol
Rustless - REST-like API micro-framework for Rust. Works with Iron.
ruby - the Ruby programming language, unofficial mirror (see the wiki for details)
handlebars-iron - Handlebars middleware for Iron web framework