loco
shuttle
loco | shuttle | |
---|---|---|
9 | 57 | |
3,404 | 5,613 | |
11.8% | 2.6% | |
9.8 | 9.7 | |
3 days ago | 1 day ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
loco
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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.
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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.
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Introducing Loco: The Rails of Rust
Interested in more? Check out the full tour of Loco here. Check out their discussions here.
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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
shuttle
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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.
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Getting Started with CLI tools in Rust using Clap
cargo-shuttle is Shuttle's own CLI for interacting with the Shuttle platform. Within the src folder, you will be able to get a better sense of how you can organise your folders/files for a larger CLI project for a live service. There is also use of async here with tokio, so if you're interested in learning how to get started with using clap with async services (for example setting up an async client for a database service), this would be a perfect opportunity to learn to do so!
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A guide to getting started with Axum - 0.7 changes included
https://github.com/shuttle-hq/shuttle/tree/main/services/shuttle-axum https://docs.rs/shuttle-axum/0.34.1/src/shuttle_axum/lib.rs.html#1-78
- Show HN: Shuttle – Build and ship backends without writing infrastructure files
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Show HN: Shuttle – Build Back Ends Fast
It would be great if there are some kind of code snippet on the README that really demonstrate the "ship backends without writing infra" feature that I think is one of the unique feature of shuttle. I remember seeing one on the official website (https://shuttle.rs) that left me impressed.
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Get your project featured at EuroRust
Shuttle is currently accepting entries for a competition, with the best projects being featured at our booth at the [EuroRust](eurorust.eu/) conference this year.
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Best way to deploy a Rust backend?
Reading here https://shuttle.rs may be nice to try for the future.
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Rust for Javascript Developers: Building apps that utilize LLMs
At Shuttle, we've teamed up again with Stefan Baumgartner, the organizer of Rust Linz and author of 'Typescript in 50 lessons', to host a free workshop titled "Rust for Javascript Developers: Building apps that utilize LLMs".
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Contributing to Open Source
The community being built at https://shuttle.rs is extremely open and welcoming. I’ve yet to do anything on the main code base, but I’ve helped with the docs.
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Shuttle Launchpad - learn Rust by building real-world applications, in bite-sized chunks
At Shuttle we’ve teamed up with Stefan Baumgartner, the organizer of Rust Linz, to create a newsletter series that takes a slightly different approach towards learning Rust.
What are some alternatives?
axum - Ergonomic and modular web framework built with Tokio, Tower, and Hyper
axum-aws-lambda - Seamlessly use Axum on AWS Lambda
Rocket - A web framework for Rust.
Hentoid - Doujinshi Android App
Ackpine - Android package installer library
pocketbase - Open Source realtime backend in 1 file
The FastCGI Rust implementation. - Native Rust library for FastCGI
wasmCloud - wasmCloud allows for simple, secure, distributed application development using WebAssembly components and capability providers.
kubernetes-rust - Rust client for Kubernetes
n8n - Free and source-available fair-code licensed workflow automation tool. Easily automate tasks across different services.
eww - ElKowars wacky widgets
pack - CLI for building apps using Cloud Native Buildpacks