go-lua
wazero
go-lua | wazero | |
---|---|---|
4 | 52 | |
2,934 | 4,564 | |
1.4% | 1.9% | |
2.8 | 9.8 | |
about 1 month ago | 7 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | 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.
go-lua
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Jacobin: Minimal JVM written in Go and capable of running Java 17 classes
https://github.com/Shopify/go-lua
Unless you specifically need a JVM either of these will be a much more practical and mature choice for embedded scripting.
Alternatively if you prefer JS then Otto is a good choice:
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Are there any Golang Lua VMs that support snapshotting/serializationi?
Do you know about go-lua? There's a good discussion of various go lua implementations here, including this choice quote:
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Change go code behaviour at runtime
There are lua and Go-script options. My impression is that a few are well accepted but perhaps just a little less widely used than the first two. I cannot speak from personal experience on them. Shopify has a Lua 5.2 port: https://github.com/Shopify/go-lua and I know https://github.com/bitfield/script is one of the Go-like scripting languages, but I think it's more for a shell script replacement than embedding.
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Show HN: LadyLua, batteries-included static Lua 5.1 interpreter
GopherLua [0] is a Lua implementation written in Go, not just a wrapper around the C implementation.
The main alternative seems to be Shopify’s go-lua [1], given that Microsoft’s golua [2] is no longer being developed. The main difference between these three implementations seems to be the supported Lua version - 5.1, 5.2 and 5.3 respectively.
[0] https://github.com/yuin/gopher-lua
[1] https://github.com/Shopify/go-lua
[2] https://github.com/Azure/golua
wazero
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Wazero: The zero dependency WebAssembly runtime
https://github.com/tetratelabs/wazero/releases/tag/v1.7.0
This includes the final release of the new optimizing compiler, which is a big improvement over the previous one.
The new version also adds experimental support for threads and snapshot/restore (setjmp/longjmp).
This is already being used by go-pgquery, all will mean that sqlc won't need to ship to almost copies of wazero (these features had been implemented on a friendly fork, and have now been up-streamed).
- Wazero v1.6.0
- Show HN: My Go SQLite driver did poorly on a benchmark, so I fixed it
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Making Games in Go for Absolute Beginners
> Go actually has one of the best WASM runtimes https://github.com/tetratelabs/wazero
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WASM by Example
Wazero looks super cool. I saw somewhere that programs can be run with a timeout, which sounds great for sandboxing. The program input is just a slice of bytes [1], so an interesting use case would be to use something like Nats [2] to distribute programs to different servers. Super simple distributed computing!
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1: https://github.com/tetratelabs/wazero/blob/main/examples/bas...
2: https://natsbyexample.com/examples/messaging/pub-sub/go
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Show HN: Sqinn-Go is a Golang library for accessing SQLite databases in pure Go
It is slower.
The WASM runtime wazero [1] uses a compiler on amd64 and arm64 (on Linux, macOS, Windows, and FreeBSD), but the current compiler is very fast (at compiling), but very naive (generates less than optimal code).
An optimizing compiler is currently being developed, and should be released in the coming months. I'm optimistic that this compiler will cover the performance gap between WASM and modernc.
[1]: https://wazero.io
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Jacobin: Minimal JVM written in Go and capable of running Java 17 classes
I am a fan of the Jacobin project! For your uses, you may also want to consider wazero [1], a pure-go WebAssembly runtime. Full disclosure: I am on the team :)
[1]: https://wazero.io/
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Val, a high-level systems programming language
No longer does Wasm/WASI need JS host! There are many spec-compliant runtimes built for environments from tiny embedded systems up to beefy arm/x86 racks:
- https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-micro-runtime
- https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime
- https://github.com/wasmerio/wasmer
- https://github.com/tetratelabs/wazero
- https://github.com/extism/extism (disclaimer, my company's project - makes wasm easily embeddable into 16+ programming languages!)
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WebAssembly and Replayable Functions
full disclosure: I don't work on it, but the devs are committers/contributors to https://wazero.io (I am a wazero committer) :)
- Wazero: Zero dependency WebAssembly runtime written in Go
What are some alternatives?
gopher-lua - GopherLua: VM and compiler for Lua in Go
wasmer - 🚀 The leading Wasm Runtime supporting WASIX, WASI and Emscripten
go-php - PHP bindings for the Go programming language (Golang)
wasmtime - A fast and secure runtime for WebAssembly
goja - ECMAScript/JavaScript engine in pure Go
wasmer-go - 🐹🕸️ WebAssembly runtime for Go
otto - A JavaScript interpreter in Go (golang)
grule-rule-engine - Rule engine implementation in Golang
go-python - naive go bindings to the CPython2 C-API
yaegi - Yaegi is Another Elegant Go Interpreter
golua - Go bindings for Lua C API - in progress
gc - Branch of the spec repo scoped to discussion of GC integration in WebAssembly