magic-wormhole.rs
filedrop
magic-wormhole.rs | filedrop | |
---|---|---|
9 | 10 | |
879 | 831 | |
3.3% | 1.4% | |
8.3 | 3.6 | |
4 days ago | 3 months ago | |
Rust | TypeScript | |
European Union Public License 1.2 | BSD 3-clause Clear 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.
magic-wormhole.rs
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Magic Wormhole Source Code Analysis
Rust: https://github.com/magic-wormhole/magic-wormhole.rs (official)
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My negative views on Rust (2023)
I saw some time back that a productionalized attempt came out: https://github.com/magic-wormhole/magic-wormhole.rs
The one I mentioned was much more primitive, meant as a demo (you can look at the branches for different approaches): https://github.com/estebank/rusticwormhole
- Magic Wormhole: get things from one computer to another, safely
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The Linux Kernel Prepares for Rust 1.77 Upgrade
> Downloading 3GB of dependencies is not a thing that happens in the Rust ecosystem. Reality is orders of magnitude smaller than that.
Assuming they're talking about the built size of dependencies that are left lying around after cargo builds a binary, they're really not exaggerating by much. I have no difficulty of believing that there are Rust projects that leave 3GB+ of dependency bloat on your file system after you build them.
To take the last Rust project I built, magic-wormhole.rs [1], the source code I downloaded from Github was 1.6 MB. After running `cargo build --release`, the build directory is now 618 MB and there's another 179 MB in ~/.cargo, for a total of 800 MB used.
All this to build a little command line program that sends and receives files over the network over a simple protocol (build size 14 MB). God forbid I build something actually complicated written in Rust, like a text editor.
[1] https://github.com/magic-wormhole/magic-wormhole.rs
- Efficient way of sharing files with someone without having to push
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qft: A tool to quickly transfer files over a holepunched P2P connection
This is cool but it really should be using TCP. (You can do holepunching with TCP, check out https://github.com/magic-wormhole/magic-wormhole.rs/blob/master/src/transit.rs)
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What’s everyone working on this week (8/2021)?
I'm contributing for some magic-wormhole issues, the book of rust-clippy , and exercism rust track ... Thank Almighty Allah.
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What's everyone working on this week (7/2021)?
I'm working on some issues in magic-wormhole.rs and still looking around for other projects.
filedrop
- Magic Wormhole: get things from one computer to another, safely
- LocalSend: Open-source, cross-platform file sharing to nearby devices
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Localsend: Open-Source Airdrop Alternative
Could you add https://drop.lol to the list (also open source)?
Disclaimer: I'm the author of drop.lol.
- Croc: Easily and securely send things from one computer to another
- Show HN: A web service for E2E P2P file transfers with chat
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What’s an extremely useful website most people probably don’t know about?
i also use drop.lol, pretty much the same thing
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Does Anyone Know Of A Selfhosted Chat File
However I found something that comes the closest, here's the link if anyone ever searches for something similar again: https://github.com/mat-sz/filedrop-web
What are some alternatives?
CalcuLaTeX - A pretty printing calculator language with support for units. Makes calculations easier and more presentable with real time LaTeX output, along with support for units, variables, and mathematical functions.
pingvin-share - A self-hosted file sharing platform.
denv - Dotenv (.env) loader written in rust 🦀
protocol - The LocalSend REST API
syncbuf - A small library of append-only, thread-safe, lock-free data structures.
wormhole - an environment for scalable, parallel execution of python scripts in Docker containers