loco
StorX
loco | StorX | |
---|---|---|
9 | 5 | |
3,404 | 14 | |
11.8% | - | |
9.8 | 10.0 | |
3 days ago | about 2 years ago | |
Rust | PHP | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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.
loco
-
PHP in 2024
Well, no, that's not really a fair assessment. Someone is quite literally doing "rails but for Rust" with loco: https://loco.rs
As far as I know, the bulk of this effort has been one developer pushing it along. I wouldn't personally use it but it _does_ exist.
It's also worth noting that these older frameworks all come from a different era of development - nowadays most newer devs seem to want to build microservice-after-microservice, where these don't quite fit into the picture.
-
Prodzilla: From Zero to Prod with Rust and Shuttle
Moreover, I especially like where Rust is right now in the web space. It really feels like there’s a lot of smart people working on the next generation of web development tools - it feels like the place to be. There are a range of great open-source web dev tools that are just reaching critical levels of maturity. Axum, which I used to build Prodzilla, feels ready for out of the box web dev, and is crazy-performant, as I write about later. More recently available is Loco, a Rails-like framework for building web applications in Rust that's picking up steam. And in dev-tooling and hosting there’s Shuttle, a 1-line hosting solution for Rust backends.
-
Introducing Loco: The Rails of Rust
Interested in more? Check out the full tour of Loco here. Check out their discussions here.
-
New Rust Framework: With JavaScript Server-Side Rendering for the UI
Try https://loco.rs/ or maybe tell us what to add?
- Loco: The one-person Rust framework for side-projects and startups
- Loco: the one-person framework for Rust for side-projects and startups
- Loco. The one-person framework for Rust for side-projects and startups
- Loco-rs: releasing a framework inspired by Rails on Rust
StorX
-
PHP in 2024
Apparently it is still common practice to have such "if bla is set, when do blub" everywhere in ones code? No functions with decorators or a similar or alternative concept? I would think there should be some kind of easy to use mechanism in place, that tends to avoid forgetting these ifs.
There are ... 60 lines of global logic, that is not encapsulated in any function or so?
Some of the functions are quite long. But I think mostly because they render out HTML.
At line 107 with the procedure printHeader starting, what I call PHP nightmare starts:
Switching back and forth between PHP, HTML and HTML with integrated JS (!!!) and CSS. All of course without syntax highlighting, but that is a minor issue. The major issue is treating HTML and JS and CSS as mere strings, instead of structured data, and the very bad readability of having procedures suddenly "end" and spit out some wild HTML, then suddenly continuing again, because some server side logic/decision is required at some place in that stream of unstructured data, whether some part is to be included or not, then the stream continues and then at some point one needs to actually check, that one did not forget to truly end the procedure. This has some of the worst readability. Maybe C code with bit magic is worse.
One can find this kind of approach in many, if not most, Wordpress plugins. What's more is, that this is also terrible for writing tests. The procedures do not return a value to check against. All is a side effect. Perhaps there is some PHP library that manipulates the PHP system, so that one can at least do string comparisons on the side effects. Like mocking, basically. But still terrible for testing.
For a comparison of how it should be done instead, check any templating engine, that at least separates template files from PHP code. Better, checkout SXML libraries, that treat HTML as structured data, a tree that can be traversed and pattern matched against, without pulling out arcane string manipulations or regular expressions. And then consider how one could write tests based on such structured data.
If this "HTML is a string, even on the server side before sending it" kind of approach is how a language treats HTML, then the language is not suitable to be directly used for HTML templating, without any additional library. This alone has caused uncountable security issues in so many projects.
I realize, that this is probably kind of a "one off script" and may not reflect other kinds of PHP code.
I did all of those things myself, years ago. And when I already had moved away from such an approach, I had to maintain a project, that was written this way. It had no tests of course. No fun. It has not that much to do with you personally being a good dev or not. I think it has to do with the ecosystem encouraging you to do these things. Outputting HTML like that should be declared illegal and should be impossible.
https://github.com/aaviator42/StorX/blob/main/StorX.php in comparison looks much better. It seems it does not output things directly. Everything seems wrapped nicely into methods. One obvious footgun seems to be another global state thing, that I really hope is not a thing in PHP itself:
const THROW_EXCEPTIONS = TRUE;
-
Why you should probably be using SQLite
I'm a huge fan of SQLite! My org's apps use it heavily, often via this simple key-value interface built on sqlite: https://github.com/aaviator42/StorX
Handles tens of thousands of requests a day very smoothly! :)
-
Show HN: My Single-File Python Script I Used to Replace Splunk in My Startup
My org's apps heavily use this simple key-value interface built on sqlite: https://github.com/aaviator42/StorX
There's also a bunch of other purpose-built tiny utilities on that GitHub account.
-
SQLite-based databases on the Postgres protocol? Yes we can
I wrote a small PHP library that gives you a key-value storage interface to SQlite files: https://github.com/aaviator42/StorX
I've been dogfooding for a while by using it in my side projects.
And there's a basic API too, to use it over a network: https://github.com/aaviator42/StorX-API
-
Soul – A SQLite RESTful Server
This is probably ready to be used in production by others, but I wrote a library that gives you a key-value storage interface to SQlite files: https://github.com/aaviator42/StorX
And there's an API too, to use it over a network: https://github.com/aaviator42/StorX-API
What are some alternatives?
axum - Ergonomic and modular web framework built with Tokio, Tower, and Hyper
StorX-API - A REST API for StorX
Rocket - A web framework for Rust.
sqld - LibSQL with extended capabilities like HTTP protocol, replication, and more.
Ackpine - Android package installer library
libsql - libSQL is a fork of SQLite that is both Open Source, and Open Contributions.
The FastCGI Rust implementation. - Native Rust library for FastCGI
configinator
kubernetes-rust - Rust client for Kubernetes
zfs-autosnap - Minimal viable ZFS autosnapshot tool
eww - ElKowars wacky widgets
roapi - Create full-fledged APIs for slowly moving datasets without writing a single line of code.