pomsky
mirrord
pomsky | mirrord | |
---|---|---|
19 | 78 | |
1,259 | 3,393 | |
0.2% | 1.2% | |
8.4 | 9.6 | |
3 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT 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.
pomsky
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How to call from Rust into JS, Java, C#, Ruby and Python?
I started with JS, and my first step was to write a simple script that checks if a regex is valid. I can call this script from Rust, but there's a problem: Starting a nodejs process takes about 100ms, which is not acceptable, especially for fuzzing.
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How do you guard against stack overflows
I noticed this when a test case of a parser I wrote failed in CI on Windows. I then learned that the default stack size on Windows is only 1 MiB whereas its 8 MiB on Linux if I remember correctly. The parser has a hard-coded recursion limit to prevent stack overflows, which is currently set to 128. However, this limit is lower than necessary on Linux, and might still be too high for some platforms (embedded?)
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I have to rename Rulex
I was informed that Rulex is a registered trademark and I'm not allowed to use the name for my project. A lawyer contacted me and gave me a week to rename the project, so I have to come up with a different name :(
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Melody 0.18 (a sane alternative to regular expressions)
In the other discussion, there's also a link to Rulex, which has similar goals but is more concise. Also claims to compile to multiple regex dialects.
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Fuzzing rust-minidump at Mozilla for Embarrassment and Crashes – Part 2
Something similar happened to me a week ago. Someone emailed me that they found panics in rulex, and then created a PR to fix them. They even explained to me how to create a security advisory on GitHub because the panics could be used to DoS someone. It was very helpful.
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Where would you put Error enums?
Sorry for not being more specific. Since this is a parser, the span points into the text file that is being parsed, so it's not that relevant for most libraries. Here is the parser, it uses nom parser combinators. Unfortunately, and adding the spans to the errors involves some boilerplate.
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rulex VS melody - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 19 Jun 2022
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Any active open source repos built using Rust that need development ?
I welcome contributions for rulex. It's a medium-sized project that should be fairly easy to understand, and has some "good first issues" :)
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Hacker News top posts: Jun 10, 2022
Rulex – A new, portable, regular expression language\ (102 comments)
- Rulex – A new, portable, regular expression language
mirrord
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The Traffic Police 🚨 - Controlling outgoing traffic with mirrord
So, you've been using mirrord to simplify your development process (if you haven’t, go here!). Naturally, you want the traffic from the app you're debugging to go through the cluster environment, so your app can communicate with its clustery pals. There is a problem though: your latest change adds some new columns to the database, and you don’t want to modify the database in the cluster and affect everyone else working on it. You do have a local instance of the database that you can modify, so your app can use that, but you still want it to talk to all the other components in the cluster. So what now? The new outgoing traffic filter feature is here to solve exactly this type of problem!
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Mirrord trick to get on hackernews
I had the pleasure of talking to Eyal @ CTO at Metalbear and the maintainer of Mirrord. I got some crazy insights.
- mirrord | Develop Locally with Your Kubernetes Environment
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mirrord VS gefyra - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 3 Oct 2023
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mirrord as an alternative to Telepresence
If you want to take mirrord for a spin, check out the quick start guide. We’d love to hear about your experience or just general thoughts - chat us up on our Discord or open an issue or discussion on GitHub.
We're building an open-source tool called mirrord which lets you run a local process in the context of a pod in your cloud environment. We often get asked how mirrord is different from Telepresence and so we decided to write a short blog post about it, which we hope would be valuable to those interested in local Kubernetes development:
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Hands-on Tutorial of mirrord - Rawkode Academy
Hands-on tutorial of mirrord.dev with the creators and Rawkode!
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Projects to contribute to?
if you are interested in k8s, iptables, hooking libc, asm etc https://github.com/metalbear-co/mirrord
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Weekly: Share your victories thread
I gave my first CNCF talk in Toronto yesterday, talking about https://github.com/metalbear-co/mirrord , how all the features work, and how it's engineered!
What are some alternatives?
melody - Melody is a language that compiles to regular expressions and aims to be more readable and maintainable
telepresence - Local development against a remote Kubernetes or OpenShift cluster
grex - A command-line tool and Rust library with Python bindings for generating regular expressions from user-provided test cases
Furiko - Kubernetes cron and batch job platform
regex-automata - A low level regular expression library that uses deterministic finite automata.
diesel_async - Diesel async connection implementation
kleenexp - modern regular expression syntax everywhere with a painless upgrade path
validator - Simple validation for Rust structs
taffy - A high performance rust-powered UI layout library
regex - An implementation of regular expressions for Rust. This implementation uses finite automata and guarantees linear time matching on all inputs.
Cargo - The Rust package manager