lwan
Pistache
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lwan | Pistache | |
---|---|---|
7 | 4 | |
5,898 | 3,083 | |
- | 0.6% | |
9.0 | 6.9 | |
5 days ago | 4 days ago | |
C | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
lwan
- Show HN: Nano-web, a low latency one binary webserver designed for serving SPAs
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Show HN: Host a Website in the URL
Absolutely useless fun tech demos are the best kind of demos
https://github.com/lpereira/lwan - presume this is the web server library you're referring to? Very cool.
- Ask HN: Those making $0/month or less on side projects – Show and tell
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Idea for a long-term advanced C project
I think a web-application based on https://github.com/lpereira/lwan and https://github.com/SanderMertens/flecs would be interesting. It would probably be faster than any other web-application out there. https://www.techempower.com/benchmarks/#section=data-r10&hw=ph&test=json.
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Performance of coroutine-style lexers in Go
You don't have to use a channel for coordination. Here is a lexer implementation (in C!) that very closely follows Rob Pike's talk and uses a ring buffer for coordination and is plenty fast.
https://github.com/lpereira/lwan/blob/master/src/lib/lwan-te...
If you watch the talk carefully, Rob Pike himself mentions this near the end of the talk.
- Good C Source Code
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C Deep
lwan - Experimental, scalable, high-performance HTTP server. GPL-2.0-only
Pistache
- REST APIs using C++. (Is this even done much?)
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C++ backend with React.js frontend
A coworker at my last job used pistache.io as a web back-end framework for C++ to good effect. I have no idea if it's the best, or even good, but I know that he made a project with it that I was calling into (I was building the front-end) and it worked.
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I'm not sure what to study now ):
There are some C++ API frameworks like Pistache or Restbed (full list here) to get started. If I should be 100% honest, I don't think C++ is worth for APIs as we have easier solutions with the same performance nowadays (like Go and Rust), but I think we should try everything, right?
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cpprestsdk in maintenance mode
If you need an embedded C++ HTTP server then there are plenty of libraries/frameworks (in random order): Crow, RESTinio, Boost.Beast, cpp-httplib, http_backend, Pistache, RestBed, served, proxygen, Simple-Web-Server, drogon, oat++.
What are some alternatives?
Crow - Crow is very fast and easy to use C++ micro web framework (inspired by Python Flask)
Oat++ - 🌱Light and powerful C++ web framework for highly scalable and resource-efficient web application. It's zero-dependency and easy-portable.
Civetweb - Embedded C/C++ web server
Restbed - Corvusoft's Restbed framework brings asynchronous RESTful functionality to C++14 applications.
drogon - Drogon: A C++14/17 based HTTP web application framework running on Linux/macOS/Unix/Windows [Moved to: https://github.com/drogonframework/drogon]
Kore - An easy to use, scalable and secure web application framework for writing web APIs in C or Python. || This is a read-only mirror, please see https://kore.io/mail and https://kore.io/source for information on how to contribute via the mailing lists.
C++ REST SDK - The C++ REST SDK is a Microsoft project for cloud-based client-server communication in native code using a modern asynchronous C++ API design. This project aims to help C++ developers connect to and interact with services.
Wt - Wt, C++ Web Toolkit