colors.js
uvloop
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colors.js | uvloop | |
---|---|---|
52 | 14 | |
5,153 | 10,006 | |
- | 1.5% | |
0.0 | 5.5 | |
11 months ago | about 2 months ago | |
JavaScript | Cython | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
colors.js
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Mitigate the hidden security risks of open source software libraries
However, it's unlikely that the majority of users actually visit GitHub at https://github.com/Marak/colors.js to review the code, even at a high level. Most developers tend to rely on the assurance that open source software is generally safe to use.
- when u finally found that ONE repo which fits your needs and is not outdated but you have issues to raise
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Marak: The reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated
> A new feature was added to the colors.js project for generating cool ASCII Art American Flags. Unfortunately, this feature was not bug-free and some test code slipped into the release causing issues downstream. Nobody is perfect. Everyone makes mistakes from time to time.
https://github.com/Marak/colors.js/commits/master shows 4 commits and 2 releases. Does not seem like a simple mistake
> As per our internal open-source development process, I opened an Issue in colors to track the bug as soon as it was confirmed. It happened to be a weekend [...] I tagged some other open-source developers I've worked with in the past to see if they had time to assist and closed the browser tab.
- Recognize that there are many reasons that people create open source work...its a form of their self expression like Michelangelo or Salvador Dali, and nobody should complain if a metaphoric Jackson Pollock, decides to make their work resemble paint splatter instead of an architectural masterpiece.
- this thread will forever be living proof that the entire node ecosystem is a fucking dumpster fire.
- CVE-2021-23567
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JavaScript News and Updates of January 2022
Early this month, the malicious attack on free-to-use libraries, namely color.js and faker.js, created a real uproar in the development community. These tools are used in thousands of projects and their downloading rate from npm is estimated in millions per week. To everyone’s surprise, it turned out to be an inside job. Marak Squires, the creator of these libraries, intentionally committed malicious code to his projects and published updated codebases on GitHub and npm. It is said that this sabotage was caused by unsuccessful attempts of Mr. Squires to monetize his projects. Fortunately, malicious packages were quickly removed and the attacker’s account was suspended. The story sparked a new wave of discussion in the development community on possible steps to make the development and maintenance of open-source projects more sustainable.
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colors.js VS ansis - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 24 Jan 2022
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Marak, the guy behind the recent breaking of faker.js, colors.js, etc., claims that it was a "programming mistake" and wants Github to unban him.
See: https://github.com/Marak/colors.js/issues/285
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Colors.js in dart.
Ever used colors.js? How about the same in dart?
uvloop
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APIs in Go with Huma 2.0
I wound up on a different team with pre-existing Python code so temporarily shelved my use of Go for a bit, and we used Sanic (an async Python framework built on top of the excellent uvloop & libuv that also powers Node.js) to build some APIs for live channel management & operations. We hand-wrote our OpenAPI and used it to generate documentation and a CLI, which was an improvement over what was there (or not) before. Other teams used the OpenAPI document to generate SDKs to interact with our service.
- Python Is Easy. Go Is Simple. Simple = Easy
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will requests-html library work as selenium
If you're looking for maximum requests per second you can change the asyncio event loop with one like UVLoop.
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Benchmark asyncio vs gevent vs native epoll
An optional package uvloop can also be install if working on Linux:
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A Look on Python Web Performance at the end of 2022
The source code from the project resides in the github, with more than 8.6k stars and 596 forks is a very popular github, but no new releases are made since 2018, looks pure much not maintained anymore, no PR's are accepted no Issues are closed, still without windows or macOS Silicon, or PyPy3 support. Japronto it self uses uvloop with more than 9k stars and 521 forks and different from japronto is seems to be well maintained.
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Modern Python Performance Considerations
If you are building server-side applications using Python 3 and async API and if you didn't use https://github.com/MagicStack/uvloop, you are missing out on performance big time.
Also, if you happen to build microservices, don't forget to try PyPy, that's another easy performance booster (if it's compatible to your app).
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So it begins.
Not that bad actually, with a different event loop implementation (such as https://github.com/MagicStack/uvloop). Not sure how well it will perform in a browser though
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SearX On Windows: A Short(ish) Tech Journey
And so I did some searching, and found that SearX isn't officially supported on Windows. Not to be deterred, I did another quick search and found that with pip and/or docker, you should be able to install SearX straightforwardly on Windows. After trying this for a bit, I realized that uvloop, a (questionably optional dependency of SearX) is not supported on Windows. I tried a couple things to get it to work, but they didn't end up working for me either through user error, ignorance, or plain old not working.
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EdgeDB 1.0
they also wrote uvloop [0] which is fantastic and advances the cutting edge of what can be done with modern asyncio-based Python. I saw a ~3x improvement in the throughput of a microservice I wrote when I first tried it out years ago. currently at $dayjob we just use it by default in every Python service, whether or not we expect that service to be performance-critical.
0: https://github.com/MagicStack/uvloop
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How does asynchronous code work in programming languages?
If you manage to grok how uvloop works as well as Python's default asyncio loop scheduler, you'll understand this style. It is not by itself a parallelism enabler, but network I/O the coroutines triggered would run in parallel nevertheless, though CPU bound computations would not by default.
What are some alternatives?
chalk - 🖍 Terminal string styling done right
asyncio
GHSA-5rqg-jm4f-cqx7
trio - Trio – a friendly Python library for async concurrency and I/O
aws-cdk - The AWS Cloud Development Kit is a framework for defining cloud infrastructure in code
Twisted - Event-driven networking engine written in Python.
SES-shim - Endo is a distributed secure JavaScript sandbox, based on SES
uvicorn - An ASGI web server, for Python. 🦄
wasi-libc - WASI libc implementation for WebAssembly
asyncio - asyncio is a c++20 library to write concurrent code using the async/await syntax.
proposal-built-in-modules
pyzmq - PyZMQ: Python bindings for zeromq