go-server-core
HVM
go-server-core | HVM | |
---|---|---|
7 | 107 | |
0 | 7,168 | |
- | 2.6% | |
0.0 | 6.7 | |
about 2 years ago | 2 months ago | |
Go | Rust | |
The Unlicense | MIT License |
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go-server-core
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Carbon Language: An experimental successor to C++
What language would you use to build a server? I've been using go for a while and have enjoyed using the different emerging frameworks and even just the standard packages.
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Is there an issue with hosting multiple applications on 1 port through a gateway application?
That's true - there are totally unrelated projects all running under this 1 system. I suppose I could launch a series of these servers that only include pieces they need. That's easy enough here.
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Go shoutout in the Rust Programming Book.
Oh cool, that is the case, yes. There are a lot of other issues with what I'm doing, but at least that isn't one of them. You can look at it here if you're curious but honestly I don't know how much longer I'm going to build it up before that joke from ~2018 is put down and I adopt whatever go server framework is popular now.
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Web gateway utilizing golang plugins
Here is the main server, here is the router I made with some project specifics in mind, and here is a monster repository that is holding several sub projects that are all reachable from the gateway. Files contains various files served by the sub applications, src contains the go code that gets compiled into plugins.
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Our policy at work - are we wrong, though?
Y-yea, me too... it's totally obvious that tomato is a restful router, right?
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Big yikes
Well, we are on reddit. I'll take validation where I can get it. Want to criticize my shitty golang router?
HVM
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SaberVM
Reminds me of HVM[0]
[0]https://github.com/HigherOrderCO/HVM
Really interesting to see how new lang concepts and refinements keep popping up this last decade, between Vale, Gleam, Hylo, Austral...
Linear types really opened up lots of ways to improve memory management and compilation improvements.
- GPU Survival Toolkit for the AI age: The bare minimum every developer must know
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A new F# compiler feature: graph-based type-checking
I have a tangential question that is related to this cool new feature.
Warning: the question I ask comes from a part of my brain that is currently melted due to heavy thinking.
Context: I write a fair amount of Clojure, and in Lisps the code itself is a tree. Just like this F# parallel graph type-checker. In Lisps, one would use Macros to perform compile-time computation to accomplish something like this, I think.
More context: Idris2 allows for first class type-driven development, where the types are passed around and used to formally specify program behavior, even down to the value of a particular definition.
Given that this F# feature enables parallel analysis, wouldn't it make sense to do all of our development in a Lisp-like Trie structure where the types are simply part of the program itself, like in Idris2?
Also related, is this similar to how HVM works with their "Interaction nets"?
https://github.com/HigherOrderCO/HVM
https://www.idris-lang.org/
https://clojure.org/
I'm afraid I don't even understand what the difference between code, data, and types are anymore... it used to make sense, but these new languages have dissolved those boundaries in my mind, and I am not sure how to build it back up again.
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A History of Functional Hardware
Impressive presentation but I find two things missing in particular:
* GRIN [1] - arguably a breakthrough in FP compilation; there are several implementation based on this
* HVM [2] - parallel optimal reduction. The results are very impressive.
[1] https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/3-540-63237-9_19
[2] https://github.com/HigherOrderCO/HVM
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Is the abstraction of lazy-functional-purity doomed to leak?
Purity has nothing to do with memoization. Haskell's semantics never "rewrite under a lambda" (unlike, e.g. HVM). Calling (\_ -> e) () twice will (modulo optimizations) always perform the computation in e twice.
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Can one use lambda calculus as an IR?
The most recent exploration of this, that I'm aware of is HVM (another intermediate language / runtime), although this one is not actually based on the lambda calculus, but on the interaction calculus.
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The Rust I Wanted Had No Future
Then, actually unrelated but worth mentioning: HVM. Finally, something new on the functional front that isn't dependent types!
- The Halting Problem Is Decidable on a Set of Asymptotic Probability One (2006)
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Bachelor Thesis Topic
If you are into functional PL, how about https://github.com/HigherOrderCO/HVM? You could experiment if you could schedule that on a GPU?
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For those of you self taught,how did you cope with distractions while using a computer ?
In the interest of seeking ways of optimizing my code, I stumbled upon http://www.rntz.net/datafun/ as a means to do incremental computations of fixpoints while avoiding redundant work. And also the idea of automatic parallelism achieved by using Interaction Nets as a model of computation https://github.com/HigherOrderCO/HVM.
What are some alternatives?
hylo - The Hylo programming language
Kind - A next-gen functional language [Moved to: https://github.com/Kindelia/Kind2]
crubit
rust-gpu - 🐉 Making Rust a first-class language and ecosystem for GPU shaders 🚧
go-sumtype - A simple utility for running exhaustiveness checks on Go "sum types."
SICL - A fresh implementation of Common Lisp
val - A small library to bring NaNboxing to C
Sharp-Bilinear-Shaders - sharp bilinear shaders for RetroPie, Recalbox and Libretro for sharp pixels without pixel wobble and minimal blurring
hack-game - it reminds me of .hack
fslang-suggestions - The place to make suggestions, discuss and vote on F# language and core library features
Vale - Compiler for the Vale programming language - http://vale.dev/
atom - A DSL for embedded hard realtime applications.