flurry
dnsguide
flurry | dnsguide | |
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4 | 12 | |
486 | 3,746 | |
- | - | |
7.2 | 0.0 | |
12 days ago | 10 months ago | |
Rust | ||
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
flurry
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As part of the stdlib mutex overhaul, std::sync::Mutex on Linux now has competitive performance with parking_lot
Recently I learned about the hyaline reclamation scheme that seize uses. Mentioning since it may interest you:flurry, a concurrent HashMap, recently switched from crossbeam-epoch (based on epoch GC) to seize.
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Seize: Fast, efficient, and robust memory reclamation
Here's the PR that ported the concurrent hash table flurryfrom crossbeam-epoch to seize https://github.com/jonhoo/flurry/pull/102
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Hey Rustaceans! Got an easy question? Ask here (12/2021)!
Can any data structure be concurrent? I'd like to practice concurrency but I'm lacking off of ideas. I'm very inspired by Jon Gjenset's concurrent hashmap. Any suggestion would be deeply appreciated!
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Which are the best Rust repositories to read to learn the language?
If you're the type of person who enjoys watching programming videos, /u/Jonhoo has a handful of repos that are the result of live coding streams. Flurry is a port of Java's ConcurrentHashMap, inferno is a Rust port of flamegraph and tokio-zookeeper is a client for Apache Zookeeper. If you enjoy following along while someone creates a piece of software, I heartily recommend Jon's streams.
dnsguide
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Learning network programming in Rust?
Check out Building a DNS server in Rust
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Anything C can do Rust can do Better
Building a DNS server in Rust - Emil Hernvall
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What I learned from making a DNS client in Rust
I made one too https://github.com/ccouzens/dns-packet
The differences:
I followed this guide rather than the RFCs https://github.com/EmilHernvall/dnsguide/blob/master/chapter...
Mine isn't as polished. The command line parsing and output is more thrown together.
I hardcoded the packet identifier (it's not production code, and I'm only looking up one at a time).
I didn't use any bit manipulation libraries. I can see they would help because DNS packets don't line up their information with the byte boundaries.
- EmilHernvall/dnsguide: A guide to writing a DNS Server from scratch in Rust
- Building a DNS server in Rust
- dnsguide: A guide to writing a DNS Server from scratch in Rust
- A guide to building a DNS server from scratch in Rust
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5 Systems Programming Project Ideas
I highly recommend the Building a DNS server in Rust guide by Emil Hernvall on GitHub. This guide will walk you through how to implement the DNS server and recursive resolve.
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In-depth software programming
Rust: Building a DNS server in Rust
What are some alternatives?
mini-redis - Incomplete Redis client and server implementation using Tokio - for learning purposes only
talent-plan - open source training courses about distributed database and distributed systems
librseq - Library for Restartable Sequences
learn-to-code-rust-baseball - Learn to Code with Rust and Baseball
httparse - A push parser for the HTTP 1.x protocol in Rust.
os-tutorial - How to create an OS from scratch
ripgrep - ripgrep recursively searches directories for a regex pattern while respecting your gitignore
seize - Fast, efficient, and robust memory reclamation for Rust.
didact - A DIY guide to build your own React
advent-of-code-2020 - :christmas_tree: My Advent of Code solutions in Rust. http://adventofcode.com/2020
naivecoin - A cryptocurrency implementation in less than 1500 lines of code