conan-center-index
crater
Our great sponsors
conan-center-index | crater | |
---|---|---|
41 | 23 | |
892 | 610 | |
2.7% | 2.8% | |
10.0 | 7.8 | |
6 days ago | 26 days ago | |
Python | Rust | |
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.
conan-center-index
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The xz attack shell script
Conan is a package manager for C/C++. See: https://conan.io/.
The way it works is that you can provide "recipes", which are Python scripts, that automate the process of collecting source code (usually from a remote Git repository, or a remote source tarball), patching it, making its dependencies and transitive dependencies available, building for specific platform and architecture (via any number of build systems), then packaging up and serving binaries. There's a lot of complexity involved.
Here are the two recipes I mentioned:
libcurl: https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/blob/master/r...
OpenSSL v3: https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/blob/master/r...
Now, for the sake of this thread I want to highlight three things here:
- Conan recipes are usually made by people unaffiliated with the libraries they're packaging;
- The recipes are fully Turing-complete, do a lot of work, have their own bugs - therefore they should really be treated as software comonents themselves, for the purpose of OSS clearing/supply chain verification, except as far as I know, nobody does it;
- The recipes can, and do, patch source code and build scripts. There's supporting infrastruture for this built into Conan, and of course one can also do it by brute-force search and replace. See e.g. ZLib recipe that does it both at the same time:
https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/blob/7b0ac710... -- `_patch_sources` does both direct search-and-replace in source files, and applies the patches from https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/tree/master/r....
Now, good luck keeping track of what's going on there.
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Mokara.io Open Beta (Pre-Built C++ Third-Party Libraries)
Just checkout ConanCenter https://conan.io/center it's free.
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Looking for projects to contribute to
https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index there's 200+ PR that need reviewing :) we add community reviewers fairly often
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Conan package manager completely broken after 2.0 release
As for ffmpeg it was last updated 10 days ago https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/commits/master/recipes/ffmpeg/all :)
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PcapPlusPlus in Conan 2.0
This is a more complicated recipe https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/blob/master/recipes/pcapplusplus/all/conanfile.py
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OpenSSL 3.1 Released
You can use the Conan package manager with prebuilt binaries/libraries
https://conan.io/center
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Compiling CrowCPP on Windows and about to kms
It's available in Conan too https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/tree/master/recipes/crowcpp-crow though it's not well maintained so no promises if it's working
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Is there a way to make sure that my friend on windows can compile my c++ project that i made on linux?
You need something like https://conan.io/center/ to install the dependencies. You're lucky because it works well with CMake.
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Conan 2.0, the new version of the open-source C and C++ package manager
This post on github contains a list of packages supported by conan 2.0, its also kept up to date https://github.com/conan-io/conan-center-index/discussions/16196
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First piece of complex CMake code. Need good roasting to help improeve.
Use a package manager: https://vcpkg.link/ https://conan.io/center/
crater
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Semver violations are common, better tooling is the answer
yup, they reference it as an inspiration: https://github.com/rust-lang/crater
it's probably impossible to automate an entire ecosystem, and there is value to enabling a tighter integration within a project ecosystem (a subset of the language ecosystem).
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Trip Summer ISO C++ standards meeting (Varna, Bulgaria)
Rather than hypothesising about an imagined tool you could look at the actual tool which of course is in Rust's source code repo: https://github.com/rust-lang/crater
> new proposed C++ changes - are checked against only easily and "well-known" accessible package.
Now that I have, so to say, shown you mine, lets see yours. Where is the tool to perform these checks in C++?
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GCC 13 and the state of gccrs
The "break things" part of "move fast" is not essential, Rust cares so much about breakage they literally compile and run the tests for every crate on crates.io and github using a tool called Crater. They do this just to test changes, even for stuff thats documented to be unstable, because thats just courtesy. And tooling makes it trivial to switch between Rust versions.
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Do one thing, and do it well, or not.
The bot's named Crater if you want to look into it more.
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Improving Rust compile times to enable adoption of memory safety
See https://github.com/rust-lang/crater
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Discussion about the state of neovim's plugin ecosystem
Rust compiler developers use a tool called Crater to test potentially breaking compiler changes on all crates (Rust's name for libraries) uploaded to the official repository. If plugin stability is the issue, maybe a solution along these lines would be better than merging these plugins to Neovim's core?
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Experienced C++ users: what do you like about Rust? How would you sell it to other C++ users?
https://github.com/rust-lang/crater is the bot they use to test proposed compiler/stdlib changes against slices of the crates.io library up to and including "all of it".
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Data-driven performance optimization with Rust and Miri
The tool you're referring to is called Crater: https://github.com/rust-lang/crater.
- GHC 9.4.2 regresses being able to do math on aarch64
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Rust for Linux officially merged
I'm pretty certain this isn't actually true. You should look at the editions, etc. Rust also has an insane guarantee which I am certain C/C++ don't offer: It rebuilds its entire library ecosystem each time it ships to make sure nothing breaks (https://crater.rust-lang.org). I've never seen an instance were old code didn't compile on a new compiler. Rust isn't forwards compatible (new code compiles on an old compiler) of course, but what is?
What are some alternatives?
Vcpkg - C++ Library Manager for Windows, Linux, and MacOS
FluentValidation - A popular .NET validation library for building strongly-typed validation rules.
libpq - build2 package for PostgreSQL C client library
actix-net - A collection of lower-level libraries for composable network services.
VulkanExamples - Examples and demos for the Vulkan C++ API
AutoMapper - A convention-based object-object mapper in .NET.
cmake-init-vcpkg-example - cmake-init generated executable project with vcpkg integration
rust-prehistory - historical archive of rust pre-publication development
C++ REST SDK - The C++ REST SDK is a Microsoft project for cloud-based client-server communication in native code using a modern asynchronous C++ API design. This project aims to help C++ developers connect to and interact with services.
Dapper - Dapper - a simple object mapper for .Net [Moved to: https://github.com/DapperLib/Dapper]
neuronika - Tensors and dynamic neural networks in pure Rust.
NUnit - NUnit Framework