lumen
krustlet
lumen | krustlet | |
---|---|---|
28 | 21 | |
3,585 | 3,533 | |
0.6% | 0.3% | |
5.4 | 3.1 | |
7 months ago | 7 months ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
lumen
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Firefly – A new compiler and runtime for BEAM languages
There are details on this also: https://github.com/GetFirefly/firefly#runtime
Generally it should be assumed that actors and their concurrency model is fully supported as that is a part of the core semantics for BEAM languages.
- Firefly – an MLIR-based compiler and runtime for BEAM languages
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DockYard R&D: FireFly Optimizes Your Elixir Compilation
I think this project used to be called Lumen until pretty recently - https://github.com/GetFirefly/firefly
- Elixir – Phoenix LiveView Native
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Is there a way to create client-side interactivity like Vue or React with only Elixir?
Probably not a practical solution for what you are building now, but it's worth pointing out Lumen, an Erlang VM implementation that compiles to WebAssembly, and could one day enable Elixir on the frontend.
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You had a head start, Gopher, but you can't outrun this crab.
Another vector could be some tooling that makes it easy to run Go programs compiled to Wasm run inside of Wasmtime environment hosted in Rust. If we run the go tooling in the same system, one could point this tool at a Go repo and be running that Go in a matter of milliseconds. A fun feature would be running channels across separate Wasm envs. Or maybe use Lumen.
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If you were in charge of a startup tech stack, how would you use elixir to actually scale and make every work seamlessly?
Wish the Elixir WASM project -- Lumen -- were active. It seems like nothing much is happening on it.
krustlet
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WASM Instructions
Oh it’s certainly looking like that IMO.
You can run wasm in k8s: https://krustlet.dev/
Docker itself can run wasm: https://wasmlabs.dev/articles/docker-without-containers/
There are a few serverless runtimes based on wasm: https://wasmcloud.com/
A lot of those are powered by wasmtime or WasmEdge.
If you’re wanting to be able to just pull down a random app and run it as wasm, that’s inherently harder with wasm, because you have to recompile, and amazing compiling stuff is always harder than it should be. For example I compiled jq to wasm to other day, so you dont have to worry (as much) about the CVEs that was issued recently. https://github.com/rockwotj/jq-wasi
- The advantage of WASM compared with container runtimes
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Crafting container images without Dockerfiles
It can, kubevirt is a project for running VMs https://kubevirt.io/ and there have been more esoteric things like WASM (https://github.com/krustlet/krustlet).
- The Python Paradox
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I Don’t wanna use Docker or kubernetes
Or you can run Krustlet instead of Kubelet. That makes it so you can only run WebAssembly on the cluster - so no Go, no Python, only Rust!
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Why did the Krustlet project die?
But the project seems to have died: https://github.com/krustlet/krustlet/graphs/contributors
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Does anybody have a use-case for Scala WASM compilation target?
There are some cloud providers that are starting to offer wasm support. Docker is currently working on wasm https://docs.docker.com/desktop/wasm/ There is also krustlet https://krustlet.dev/ which lets you run wasm in kubernetes
- How I got involved in the Rust community
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Are V8 isolates the future of computing?
> If one writes Go or Rust, there are much better ways to run them than targeting WASM
wasm has its place, especially for contained workloads that can be wrapped in its strict capability boundaries (think, file-encoding jobs that shouldn't access anything else but said files: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29112713).
> Containers are still the defacto standard.
wasmedge [0], atmo [1], krustlet [2], blueboat [3] and numerous other projects are turning up the heat [4]!
[0] https://github.com/WasmEdge/WasmEdge
[1] https://github.com/suborbital/atmo
[2] https://github.com/krustlet/krustlet
[3] https://github.com/losfair/blueboat
[4] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30155295
- Krustlet: Kubernetes Kubelet in Rust for Running WASM
What are some alternatives?
wasmex - Execute WebAssembly from Elixir
miniflare - 🔥 Fully-local simulator for Cloudflare Workers. For the latest version, see https://github.com/cloudflare/workers-sdk/tree/main/packages/miniflare.
lunatic - Lunatic is an Erlang-inspired runtime for WebAssembly
youki - A container runtime written in Rust
gleam - ⭐️ A friendly language for building type-safe, scalable systems!
yew - Rust / Wasm framework for creating reliable and efficient web applications
purerl - Erlang backend for the PureScript compiler
brython - Brython (Browser Python) is an implementation of Python 3 running in the browser
Gradualizer - A Gradual type system for Erlang
Transcrypt - Python 3.9 to JavaScript compiler - Lean, fast, open! -
lumen - A private Lumina server for IDA Pro
awesome-paas - A curated list of PaaS, developer platforms, Self hosted PaaS, Cloud IDEs and ADNs.