macro_railroad_ext
rustig
macro_railroad_ext | rustig | |
---|---|---|
2 | 9 | |
181 | 216 | |
- | 0.5% | |
2.2 | 0.0 | |
about 1 year ago | almost 3 years ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
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macro_railroad_ext
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are there any Firefox extensions written in rust??
One I use often is macro_railroad's WebExtension.
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Things I hate about Rust, redux
macro_railroad creates syntax ("railroad") diagrams from macro_rules!, which helps understanding the flow of many macros. It can be helpful when debugging the input syntax. There are also extensions for firefox, chrome, and edge that automatically renders syntax diagrams inline while viewing docs.rs, which is helpful for users of macros in general.
rustig
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Is there something like "super-safe" rust?
There is also rustig though it seems quite dead.
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Is Rust really safe? How to identify functions that can potentially cause panic
There’s the rustig tool (https://github.com/Technolution/rustig) that looks for code paths leading to the panic handler. Not sure if it still works though.
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My thoughts on Rust and C++
That's fair. I think I may just be a bit sore that Rustig was allowed to bit-rot and findpanics hasn't seen a commit since 2020.
- What improvements would you like to see in Rust or what design choices do you wish were reconsidered?
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Things I hate about Rust, redux
There's Rustig which does it for panics, though it seems unmaintained and uses inspection of the final binary rather than source code/AST inspection.
You might be interested in this: https://github.com/Technolution/rustig
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Three Things Go Needs More Than Generics
> Doesnt Rust have implicit panics on indexing out of bounds?
It does yes. A fair number of other constructs can panic as well.
> I wonder if any codebases lint those away.
Clippy has a lint for indexing so probably.
For the general case, it's almost impossible unless you're working on very low-level software (embedded, probably kernel-rust eventually) e.g. `std` assumes allocations can't fail, so any allocation will show up as a panic path.
https://github.com/Technolution/rustig can actually uncover panic paths, but because of the above the results are quite noisy, and while it's possible to uncover bugs thanks to rustig it requires pretty ridiculous amounts of filtering.
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Linus Torvalds on Rust support in kernel
This comment is strongly confused.
> [1] https://github.com/Technolution/rustig
That's a binary analysis tool. It is only approximate, and does not claim to be an accurate analysis like unsafe-checking and typechecking are:
https://github.com/Technolution/rustig#limitations
> All paths leading to panic! from one of those functions (whether actually used or not) will be reported.
It also only works on x86_64 binaries.
Panics are an ugly leftover from the bad old days before Rust had nice monad-like syntax for Result error-handling (the "?" syntax). It's time for panic to sunset.
What are some alternatives?
kani - Kani Rust Verifier
Rust-for-Linux - Adding support for the Rust language to the Linux kernel.
prusti-dev - A static verifier for Rust, based on the Viper verification infrastructure.
bastion - Highly-available Distributed Fault-tolerant Runtime
MIRAI - Rust mid-level IR Abstract Interpreter
go101 - An up-to-date (unofficial) knowledge base for Go programming self learning
gdbstub - An ergonomic, featureful, and easy-to-integrate implementation of the GDB Remote Serial Protocol in Rust (with no-compromises #![no_std] support)
pwninit - pwninit - automate starting binary exploit challenges
watt - Runtime for executing procedural macros as WebAssembly
go - The Go programming language