iroh
Theseus
iroh | Theseus | |
---|---|---|
7 | 32 | |
1,575 | 2,744 | |
4.4% | 1.0% | |
9.8 | 8.8 | |
2 days ago | 4 months ago | |
Rust | 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.
iroh
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SeaweedFS fast distributed storage system for blobs, objects, files and datalake
If you're talking about this https://github.com/n0-computer/iroh ... Iroh is a p2p file syncing protocol. That's not even close to the same wheelhouse as SeaweedFS?
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I Moved My Blog from IPFS to a Server
Totally biased founder here, but I work on https://github.com/n0-computer/iroh, a thing that started off as an IPFS implementation in rust, but we broke out & ended up doing our own thing. We're not at the point where the iroh implements "the full IPFS experience" (some parts border on impossible to do while keeping a decentralized promise), but we're getting closer to the "p2p website hosting" use case each week.
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Willow Protocol
if you are looking for something similar to ipfs but a bit more minimalistic and performance oriented, check out iroh https://github.com/n0-computer/iroh .
It is a set of open source libraries for peer to peer networking and content-addressed storage. It is written in rust, but we have bindings to many languages.
One part of iroh is a work in progress implementation of the willow spec. The lower layers include a networking library similar to libp2p and a library for content-addressed storage and replication based on blake3 verified streaming.
Most iroh developers have been active in the ipfs community for many years and have shared similar frustrations... See this talk from me in 2019 :-) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qzu0xtCT-R0
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Planning to make a video on cool Rust apps focused on the end user. Make recommendations!
IPFS Protocol Stack: Iroh
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Iroh: A New Implementation of IPFS in Rust
We have an initial release out since earlier today: https://github.com/n0-computer/iroh/releases/tag/v0.1.0 but we are still very early, so be gentle :)
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ACM SIGCOMM'22: Design and Evaluation of IPFS
(Disclosure: I work for the Filecoin Foundation/Filecoin Foundation for the Decentralized Web).
I do actually agree that the privacy and anonymity aspects of IPFS are not well- conveyed. I think people get hooked on the "censorship-resistant" nature of decentralized systems, without understanding that even if you have multiple sources, for instance in a content-addressable network like IPFS, aggressive censorship systems have other strategies to dissuade dissemination or punish readers. You always have to be thinking a few steps ahead. Services like Tor and, I hope, the IPFS network both try to convey what threat models they are useful for, and which they are not, but it's really hard to stop overenthusiastic re-statements that give them super-powers they do not, in fact, possess.
That said, there's a bunch of careful thinking right now going on about how IPFS's privacy story could be improved: https://blog.ipfs.tech/ipfs-ping-2022-recap/ has a couple of sessions on this, and is a great summary of some other recent developments in the space.
One of those improvements is in the point about nodes being high CPU, RAM, etc. (I actually find this to be more of a challenge when running the full IPFS Go node locally on my desktop, rather than on a VPS; it requires some tweaking.)
The strategy right now is to encourage more implementations of IPFS to cover more use-cases; the original go-ipfs had to do everything, including maintaining some legacy decisions. Nowadays, there's a lot of effort on alternative IPFS implementations that can be slimmer, or optimised for particular scenarios, e.g. on an embedded device, serving a high-load web gateway, or providing millions of files. Protocol Labs recently renamed their canonical go-ipfs to kubo (https://github.com/ipfs/kubo ) to make it more of a peer with other implementations.
Of course, I love all these new generation implementations EQUALLY, but if you pushed me, I've enjoyed playing around with https://github.com/n0-computer/iroh , a modular rust implementation building off the increasingly robust rust libp2p etc libraries. There's some more to pick from here: https://docs.ipfs.tech/basics/ipfs-implementations/
Theseus
- Theseus OS
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Fomos: Experimental OS, Built with Rust
Theseus OS (https://www.theseus-os.com/) is also an OS written in Rust. It's a safe-language OS and I believe it's the future of the OSes due to its unique features.
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Asynchronous Rust on Cortex-M Microcontrollers
I believe that Tock (tockos.org) and Theseus (https://github.com/theseus-os/Theseus) are in this area a bit as well, just from an actual OS perspective.
I don't know much about this area, but it would be wonderful if these could work with the Libre compute boards, like the AM Logic S905X (Lepotato) or the Rock chip, since they're so much cheaper than a Pi.
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I am looking for a troubled/bad open source codebase
We could use some help here: https://github.com/theseus-os/Theseus
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Making a RISC-V Operating System Using Rust
Relevant, also an OS written in and made possible by Rust: https://www.theseus-os.com/
I think Theseus is to conventional OSes what Rust is to JavaScript.
- Linux kernel use-after-free in Netfilter, local privilege escalation
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Microsoft is busy rewriting core Windows library code in memory-safe Rust
I wonder if somehow someday Microsoft Windows can be rerooted as something like wine running in user space of a rust os like https://github.com/theseus-os/Theseus
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Need help for porting my kernel to different architectures.
We've been working on porting Theseus OS to aarch64 over the past few months, feel free to browse our code if you need help understanding anything. Theseus is written from scratch entirely in Rust, so it's likely quite relevant to your work. You can probably find all of the aarch64-related commits and issues just by searching "aarch64" on the repo.
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Exploiting null-dereferences in the Linux kernel
I mean, there are several rust kernel/os projects in progress.
One project that's pushing on the boundary of safety and composability is Thesus, which takes language safety to new ground by shifting traditionally OS-level responsibilities like resource management all the way down to typechecks in the language, and also explores a way of updating any core OS component on a live running system. https://github.com/theseus-os/Theseus
There's also KataOS which google just recently announced: https://opensource.googleblog.com/2022/10/announcing-kataos-...
As you note, these things take time, I agree with sibling that none of them are likely to be "enterprise-grade" or "production ready" this decade.
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[concept] Modular kernel
Not to rain on your parade, but you've essentially just described Theseus OS.
What are some alternatives?
kubo - An IPFS implementation in Go
rust-raspberrypi-OS-tutorials - :books: Learn to write an embedded OS in Rust :crab:
bevy - A refreshingly simple data-driven game engine built in Rust
nomicon - The Dark Arts of Advanced and Unsafe Rust Programming
dragit - Application for intuitive file sharing between devices.
tock - A secure embedded operating system for microcontrollers
oku - Oku is a hive browser written in Rust.
svix-webhooks - The enterprise-ready webhooks service 🦀
rust-libp2p - The Rust Implementation of the libp2p networking stack.
win32metadata - Tooling to generate metadata for Win32 APIs in the Windows SDK.
iced - A cross-platform GUI library for Rust, inspired by Elm
interface-types