easy_rust
tokio
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easy_rust | tokio | |
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21 | 196 | |
7,815 | 24,677 | |
- | 2.5% | |
0.0 | 9.5 | |
over 1 year ago | about 9 hours ago | |
Shell | Rust | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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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.
easy_rust
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Stuck at 4.3 of the rust book. It's so hard for me.
There's also Easy Rust, an effort in translating the Rust Book into Simple English (limited vocabulary, limited use of idioms), which has now become a Book.
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Easy Rust has been reborn on Manning as Learn Rust in a Month of Lunches
Up on Manning starting this week is a book I wrote / am writing called Learn Rust in a Month of Lunches, whose origins date back to Easy Rust that people here might be familiar with and which I wrote 2 years ago. The first six chapters are now up on MEAP which is pretty exciting. (The code mlmacleod gives 45% off until February 2 btw)
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Anything C can do Rust can do Better
Easy Rust - David MacLeod
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I have returned
Along with the Book, I wrote a book after learning Rust that's for absolute beginners, and doesn't even require installing Rust. It's almost entirely done in the Playground so you can just open up a tab in your browser and follow along. As far as paid books are concerned, my favourite is Programming Rust.
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So you want to learn Rust?
Easy Rust OR GH Page
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What is the best course to start learning?
I made a book for absolute complete beginners, after which the Book should be easy to understand. After that I'd recommend Programming Rust (my favourite book on Rust).
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Newbie here. Just finished reading the book. What now?
https://github.com/Dhghomon/easy_rust The book
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Rust course
Depends on what language you come from. I found this a decent enough intro for most languages: https://github.com/Dhghomon/easy_rust
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I have to admit. The free code camp course is a bit more sparing than I would have preferred. How did everyone learn Rust?
This is my favorite: https://github.com/Dhghomon/easy_rust
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It's been 20 days since I started learning rust as my first language. Terrible experience. Should I move forward?
I put together a book that goes over most of the same content found in The Book but written with easy / straightforward English (partially for English L2 speakers but also for English speakers that just want the info in as straightforward a package as possible).
tokio
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On Implementation of Distributed Protocols
Being able to control nondeterminism is particularly useful for testing and debugging. This allows creating reproducible test environments, as well as discrete-event simulation for faster-than-real-time simulation of time delays. For example, Cardano uses a simulation environment for the IO monad that closely follows core Haskell packages; Sui has a simulator based on madsim that provides an API-compatible replacement for the Tokio runtime and intercepts various POSIX API calls in order to enforce determinism. Both allow running the same code in production as in the simulator for testing.
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I pre-released my project "json-responder" written in Rust
tokio / hyper / toml / serde / serde_json / json5 / console
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Cryptoflow: Building a secure and scalable system with Axum and SvelteKit - Part 0
tokio - An asynchronous runtime for Rust
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Top 10 Rusty Repositories for you to start your Open Source Journey
3. Tokio
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API Gateway, Lambda, DynamoDB and Rust
The AWS SDK makes use of the async capabilities in the Tokio library. So when you see async in front of a fn that function is capable of executing asynchronously.
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The More You Gno: Gno.land Monthly Updates - 6
Petar is also looking at implementing concurrency the way it is in Go to have a fully functional virtual machine as it is in the spec. This would likely attract more external contributors to developing the VM. One advantage of Rust is that, with the concurrency model, there is already an extensive library called Tokio which he can use. Petar stresses that this isn’t easy, but he believes it’s achievable, at least as a research topic around determinism and concurrency.
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Consuming an SQS Event with Lambda and Rust
Another thing to point out is that async is a thing in Rust. I'm not going to begin to dive into this paradigm in this article, but know it's handled by the awesome Tokio framework.
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netcrab: a networking tool
So I started by using Tokio, a popular async runtime. The docs and samples helped me get a simple outbound TCP connection working. The Rust async book also had a lot of good explanations, both practical and digging into the details of what a runtime does.
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Thread-per-Core
Regarding the quote:
> The Original Sin of Rust async programming is making it multi-threaded by default. If premature optimization is the root of all evil, this is the mother of all premature optimizations, and it curses all your code with the unholy Send + 'static, or worse yet Send + Sync + 'static, which just kills all the joy of actually writing Rust.
Agree about the melodramatic tone. I also don't think removing the Send + Sync really makes that big a difference. It's the 'static that bothers me the most. I want scoped concurrency. Something like <https://github.com/tokio-rs/tokio/issues/2596>.
Another thing I really hate about Rust async right now is the poor instrumentation. I'm having a production problem at work right now in which some tasks just get stuck. I wish I could do the equivalent of `gdb; thread apply all bt`. Looking forward to <https://github.com/tokio-rs/tokio/issues/5638> landing at least. It exists right now but is experimental and in my experience sometimes panics. I'm actually writing a PR today to at least use the experimental version on SIGTERM to see what's going on, on the theory that if it crashes oh well, we're shutting down anyway.
Neither of these complaints would be addressed by taking away work stealing. In fact, I could keep doing down my list, and taking away work stealing wouldn't really help with much of anything.
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PHP-Tokio – Use any async Rust library from PHP
The PHP <-> Rust bindings are provided by https://github.com/Nicelocal/ext-php-rs/ (our fork of https://github.com/davidcole1340/ext-php-rs with a bunch of UX improvements :).
php-tokio's integrates the https://revolt.run event loop with the https://tokio.rs event loop; async functionality is provided by the two event loops, in combination with PHP fibers through revolt's suspension API (I could've directly used the PHP Fiber API to provide coroutine suspension, but it was a tad easier with revolt's suspension API (https://revolt.run/fibers), since it also handles the base case of suspension in the main fiber).
What are some alternatives?
too-many-lists - Learn Rust by writing Entirely Too Many linked lists
async-std - Async version of the Rust standard library
rust-by-example - Learn Rust with examples (Live code editor included)
Rocket - A web framework for Rust.
Rustlings - :crab: Small exercises to get you used to reading and writing Rust code!
hyper - An HTTP library for Rust
Rust-Full-Stack - Rust projects here are easy to use. There are blog posts for them also.
futures-rs - Zero-cost asynchronous programming in Rust
Exercism - website - The codebase for Exercism's website.
smol - A small and fast async runtime for Rust
tour_of_rust - A tour of rust's language features
rayon - Rayon: A data parallelism library for Rust