drogon
cppcoro
drogon | cppcoro | |
---|---|---|
18 | 24 | |
10,761 | 3,235 | |
1.2% | - | |
8.9 | 0.0 | |
4 days ago | 4 months ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
MIT License | 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.
drogon
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Experience using crow as web server
I looked at oatpp and drogon, which are both great, but feel too high-level for my purposes. I tried drogon and got something working, but it feels like too much for my requirements, as in particular I'd like to slot in my choice of Json and message-body handling. C.f. the simple approach in Crow, which I easily understand and build on.
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Dobri projekti na Githubu za ucenje
drogonframework/drogon i drogonframework/trantor
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Ask HN: Easiest and cheapest full-stack frameworks that you love?
talking about C++, there are drogon framework: https://github.com/drogonframework/drogon
not bells and whistles like on Wt as there are no integrated widgets. But have c++ based template (for HTML) engine and other integrated parts what you expect from framework (routing, controllers, db, authentication handling and so on).
and boasts high performance design
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Lies we tell ourselves to keep using Golang
C++ - my favorite language, and, with modern revisions, extremely expressive and readable. There isn't a web server in the standard library, but there are a number of solid open-source choices (e.g., Drogon).
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Cppfront, Herb Sutter's proposal for a new C++ syntax
> * Let’s not pretend all conceivable applications are, or should be, written in C++.*
This is a discussion on C++.
> People mostly stopped using C++ to develop web servers which handle web requests, because they moved to Java, C#, PHP, Ruby, Python, etc.
I'm not sure you understood what I said, or thought things through.
By the way, the top performing web framework in the Tech Empower benchmark is a C++ framework which uses C++'s standard smart pointers.
https://github.com/drogonframework/drogon
Also, one of the most popular web frameworks for Python started off as an April Fools joke. I'm not sure what's your point.
Lastly, the main reason why C++ ceased to be the most popular choice in some domains was because it was during a very long time the most popular choice in some domains, and still remains one of the most popular choices. Some of the reasons why C++ dropped in popularity is the fact that some vendors decided to roll their own alternatives while removing support for C++. Take for instance Microsoft, which was once responsible for making C++ the only tool in town for professional software development. Since it started pushing C# for all sorts of web applications, multi-platform applications, and even desktop applications, and also pushing the adoption of those technologies as a basic requirement to distribute apps in its app store, developers can only use technologies that exist. But does that say anything about the merits of C++?
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What library/framework to use for writing a Web server?
https://github.com/drogonframework/drogon has the best performance afaik
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Hmm
Drogon is a framework for doing web backend in c++ but it is nowhere near on the level of something like Django in terms of ergonomics. In terms of Rust, Rocket is trying to be the easy to use framework with low boilerplate.
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Programming languages endorsed for server-side use at Meta
> How would one go about building a rest service in C++?
I'd use https://github.com/drogonframework/drogon if the app needs to be pure C++ or Cutelyst (https://cutelyst.org/) if it's a Qt app which needs to expose an http server
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Built my first project with rust!
About the project - I was trying to find the perfect reliable and performant rust's web framework to use for one of my personal project, and since I've been using Drogon/uWebSockets previously, I wanted to choose the best one to replace it. So I decided to create a benchmark system that is fully automated.
- Which library canI use for rendering html??
cppcoro
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Struggle with C++ 20 Coroutines
PS: Take a look at cppcoro; this might help as well, especially generator<>, if you're looking to generate numbers, and stuff;
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Does C++23 have a coroutine task promise type?
This is the only viable implementation.
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Stop Comparing Rust to Old C++
Kind of sounds like whatever library you were using provided leaky abstractions. Something like cppcoro provides really good abstractions for coroutines, the user really doesn't need to understand why any of it works.
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Sane coroutine imitation with macros; copyable, serializable, and with reflection
Is there a usecase for copying/serializing such coroutines? If not, I would use the normal C++20 coroutines (cppcoro?).
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Is Tokio::sync::Mutex lock-free?
C++ has the popular CppCoro library. Async_mutex is its equivalent of Tokio::sync::Mutex, providing exclusive access to data shared between tasks.
- My experience with C++ 20 coroutines
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My thoughts and dreams about a standard user-space I/O scheduler
Because the whole application is running under a single thread there is no need for atomic operations in synchronization primitives(which most of the time requires seq_cst memory order and CMPXCHG which is an expensive instruction in CPU). for example what async_mutex would look like if it knows it's running in a single-threaded scheduler (a non-atomic state variable and waiters queue).
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[Discussion] What are some old C++ open source projects you wish were still active?
Maybe not old, but I wish cppcoro was still updated. It was such a nice start!
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A high-level coroutine explanation
You can get generator<> from https://github.com/lewissbaker/cppcoro
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C++ Coroutines Do Not Spark Joy
It is possible to compose them more easily than described in the article; Lewis Baker's cppcoro library for example provides a recursive_generator<> type[0] that allows this without using any macros. It's up to the library part of coroutines to make things easy, end users are not expected to write low-level coroutine code themselves.
I wonder about the allocation elision. Return value optimization became mandatory, and some compilers can already elide calls to new/delete and malloc()/free() in normal code, so perhaps it will be possible to guarantee allocation elision in the future in the most used cases.
[0]: https://github.com/lewissbaker/cppcoro#recursive_generatort
What are some alternatives?
Boost.Beast - HTTP and WebSocket built on Boost.Asio in C++11
libunifex - Unified Executors
Oat++ - 🌱Light and powerful C++ web framework for highly scalable and resource-efficient web application. It's zero-dependency and easy-portable.
Folly - An open-source C++ library developed and used at Facebook.
POCO - The POCO C++ Libraries are powerful cross-platform C++ libraries for building network- and internet-based applications that run on desktop, server, mobile, IoT, and embedded systems.
C-Coroutines - Coroutines for C.
trantor - a non-blocking I/O tcp network lib based on c++14/17
Flow - Flow is a software framework focused on ease of use while maximizing performance in closed closed loop systems (e.g. robots). Flow is built on top of C++ 20 coroutines and utilizes modern C++ techniques.
restclient-cpp - C++ client for making HTTP/REST requests
coproto - A protocol framework based on coroutines
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.
uvloop - Ultra fast asyncio event loop.