language-ext
centos-stream | language-ext | |
---|---|---|
44 | 41 | |
- | 6,176 | |
- | - | |
- | 6.9 | |
- | 15 days ago | |
C# | ||
- | 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.
centos-stream
- OpenELA releases redhat source code for everyone
- Curl/libcurl HIGH CVE-2023-38545 leaked early?
- Fixes CVE-2023-38403 – Resolves: rhbz#2223729
- Can any Red Hat Employee comment on this? Why it's not accepted as CVE bug fix that sent by community?
-
Tell HN: Red Hat refuse AlmaLinux CVE patch to CentOS Stream: no customer demand
In an unexpected and surprising move, contrary to what Red Hat has been saying lately to the community about CentOS Stream collaboration and rebuilders, Red Hat will refuse patches to CVE issues, developed by downstream contributors, in CentOS Stream citing "no customer demand".
Link to CentOS Stream Gitlab of the AlmaLinux CVE patch commit: https://gitlab.com/redhat/centos-stream/rpms/iperf3/-/merge_requests/5
Discussion going on Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/AlmaLinux/comments/1544w8b/red_hat_refuses_almas_cve_patches_to_centos/
-
Question to mods: dealing with trolls
The source RHEL is built from can be found here with absolutely no restrictions: https://gitlab.com/redhat/centos-stream
-
SUSE Preserves Choice in Enterprise Linux by Forking RHEL
https://gitlab.com/redhat/centos-stream/src/kernel/centos-st...
Fedora and many other distros do a lot of valued work, too.
FWICS there are FIPS kernel variants for Ubuntu <= 20.04 LTS (2020) but not 22.04 LTS (2022), and Debian and Ubuntu don't have the selinux policy set that Fedora and RHEL+EPEL have. https://ubuntu.com/kernel
From https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36480033 :
> Would it be feasible to sed-replace the RHEL and/or Fedora selinux and container-selinux rulesets for use with other Linux distros?
> "AFAIU only SUSE can run both AppArmor and SELinux?*
> And browsers are running as unconfined in selinux with like all major distros; even on ChromiumOS
Act like you added `systemd-nspawn respawn` to every SysV-init script and correctly formatted the epoch time in the correct column of each of the log files to merge and then logship again.
-
Stuff to think about for RHers.
There is nothing stopping any of the rebuilders from using gitlab.com/redhat/centos-stream to continue rebuilding.
-
My thoughts on the recent Red Hat source code availability changes.
Is "284.18 1" the commit that gets you the kernel version 5.14.0-284.18.1 ?
language-ext
-
The Monad Invasion - Part 2: Monads in Action!
You probably noticed that .SetName() returns a Either. You may have come across Unit in libraries like MediatR or Language-Ext. It's a simple construct representing a type with only one possible value. We use it as a placeholder for operations that do not return a value but may return another state. In our example, .SetName() is a Command that does not return a value but may fail. Therefore, the monad Either carries two possible states: Right (without value) or Left (with an Error).
-
The Monad Invasion - Part 1: What's a Monad?
Language-Ext is my personal favourite, but it can be a bit overwhelming for beginners due to its extensive feature set
- Why don't you just use F#?
-
The combined power of F# and C#
> but I just want something closer to Scala, but for .Net
That's what I'm working toward with my language-ext library [1]. Obviously more support for expression based programming would be welcome (and higher kinds), but you can do a lot with LINQ and a good integrated library surface.
[1] https://github.com/louthy/language-ext
-
Option<T> monad for Unity/UniTask
Definitely a fan of option types, I wonder this library has anything over the C# library language-ext which also has an Option type?
-
Result pattern: language-ext vs FunctionalExtensions?
Hey, I am considering adopting the Result pattern in my codebase. Wanted to get some opinions from someone who has experience with it: should I start with language-ext or FunctionalExtensions?
-
John Carmack on Functional Programming in C++ (2018)
> [1] https://github.com/louthy/language-ext
Cool library. I've had a few of these patterns in my Sasa library for years, but you've taken it to the Haskell extreme! Probably further than most C# developers could stomach. ;-)
You might be interested in checking out the hash array mapped trie from Sasa [1]. It cleverly exploits the CLR's reified generics to unbox the trie at various levels which ends up saving quite a bit of space and indirections, so it performs almost on par with the mutable dictionary.
I had an earlier version that used an outer struct to ensure it's never null, similar to how your collections seem to work, but switched to classes to make it more idiomatic in C#.
I recently started sketching out a Haskell-like generic "Deriving" source generator, contrasted with your domain-specific piecemeal approach, ie. [Record], [Reader], etc. Did you ever try that approach?
[1] https://sourceforge.net/p/sasa/code/ci/default/tree/Sasa.Col...
[2] https://sourceforge.net/p/sasa/code/ci/57417faec5ed442224a0f...
-
Don't sleep on Linq query syntax if you regularly iterate through large/complex data sources
languageext supports linq for its monads and I kinda love it. The challenge is convincing my colleagues. 😅
-
What C# feature blew your mind when you learned it?
language-ext supports it and it's pretty dang cool.
-
It's actually not that bad...
I can only recommend c# language extensions library https://github.com/louthy/language-ext
What are some alternatives?
zfs - OpenZFS on Linux and FreeBSD
OneOf - Easy to use F#-like ~discriminated~ unions for C# with exhaustive compile time matching
centos2ol - Script and documentation to switch CentOS/Rocky Linux to Oracle Linux
CSharpFunctionalExtensions - Functional extensions for C#
LetsShip - Let's learn devops by shipping a final product in .NET 5
Optional - A robust option type for C#
CoreCLR - CoreCLR is the runtime for .NET Core. It includes the garbage collector, JIT compiler, primitive data types and low-level classes.
MoreLINQ - Extensions to LINQ to Objects
bflat - C# as you know it but with Go-inspired tooling (small, selfcontained, and native executables)
Curryfy - Provides strongly typed extensions methods for C# delegates to take advantages of functional programming techniques, like currying and partial application.
.NET Runtime - .NET is a cross-platform runtime for cloud, mobile, desktop, and IoT apps.
VisualFSharp - The F# compiler, F# core library, F# language service, and F# tooling integration for Visual Studio