public-roadmap
neon
public-roadmap | neon | |
---|---|---|
5 | 19 | |
37 | 7,778 | |
- | 0.4% | |
0.0 | 6.3 | |
11 months ago | 17 days ago | |
Rust | ||
- | 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.
public-roadmap
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Another free CA as an alternative to Let's Encrypt
We use Caddy for serving our free dashboards and status pages on your own domain at https://checklyhq.com
It was not super easy to set up. I think the whole config is 20 lines or so, but the docs, naming and functionality of how Caddy actually interfaces with LE was tricky to find out. Basically had to scrape together answers from various GitHub issues etc.
I should write a blog post…
- Node.js 16 Available Now
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Web based testing environments for the Puppeteer
Have you given checklyhq.com a look? Sounds like it could be a great fit. (Disclaimer: I work there).
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Polling an API or MYSQL query to do alerting and monitoring?
Have a look at https://checklyhq.com. We do exactly that, API monitoring. You can set up a check that parses your API response and validates a specific field. We also have a free plan. Disclaimer: I’m the CTO.
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Monitoring with Playwright on Checkly made easy
We're looking forward to how Checkly will make their monitoring solution even more accessible for developers with e.g. versioned code, an integrated Monaco editor with better auto-completion, support for custom NPM modules, or a better debugging experience. We would recommend giving it a try and have not to worry about where to run your status checks or end-to-end tests and benefit from their simplicity. For a more detailed outlook, they provide an official public roadmap on GitHub.
neon
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We Have to Start Over: From Atom to Zed
Great interview!
Love how much thought is being put into what you “gold-plate”. I’ve always felt that my best work comes around on round two (or three or four…).
Curious what you are planning for the ability to script the configuration? I haven’t played with zed much yet; is it possible today? Would something like Neon [1] help bridge the gap from VSCode and old Atom users?
[1]: https://github.com/neon-bindings/neon
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Electrons Are Fast, So Can Be Electron – How to Optimize Electron App Performance
Neon
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Hey Rustaceans! Got a question? Ask here (27/2023)!
Is there a third option? Surely node has a way to directly call native code, similar to Python's C extensions? Some Node equivalent of PyO3? For example, I found neon which promises "safe and fast native Node.js modules".
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Is converting typescript backend to Rust worth it?
Have a look at https://crates.io/crates/napi and https://crates.io/crates/neon which allow you to call rust from node. We went with napi but they're both pretty good.
- Interaction between a Node.js module and a Rust program
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Underrated Node Knowledge
Just to add: N-API is incredibly underrated. Then again, maybe the lack of a strong native modules ecosystem is an indicator that the pure JS ecosystem is just so good. But man, got something computationally intensive? Just offload it to Rust with Neon or something. Got some proprietary bit of code in your product? Build a native module.
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Zig, the Small Language
> rust is not well-suited for interfacing with FFI
How so? Packages like neon [1] and rustler [2] suggest otherwise. I'm using both of those in a real product (I'm using neon directly, to write native modules for an Electron app; on the back-end, I depend on an Elixir package that uses rustler).
[1]: https://github.com/neon-bindings/neon
[2]: https://github.com/rusterlium/rustler
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SurrealDB: A new scalable document-graph database written in Rust
You can use https://github.com/infinyon/node-bindgen, https://github.com/neon-bindings/neon, or https://github.com/napi-rs/napi-rs for Node.js libraries, https://github.com/PyO3/pyo3 for Python libraries, https://rustwasm.github.io/wasm-bindgen/ for WebAssembly, and https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-bindgen for C libraries!
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Javascript senior developer here. Why I need to learn Rust?
They can use Rust to speed up Nodejs through https://crates.io/crates/neon for example
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1Password for SSH changed the way I work
I’m not prompted again while actively using my laptop. When it’s time to switch to an open source project, I’m seamlessly prompted for my GitHub key.
What are some alternatives?
acme-tiny - A tiny script to issue and renew TLS certs from Let's Encrypt
rst - The open source design documentation tool for everybody [Moved to: https://github.com/vitiral/artifact]
acme-dns-server - Simple DNS server for serving TXT records written in Python
tauri - Build smaller, faster, and more secure desktop applications with a web frontend.
proposal-regexp-match-indices - ECMAScript RegExp Match Indices
surrealdb - A scalable, distributed, collaborative, document-graph database, for the realtime web
acme-dns - Limited DNS server with RESTful HTTP API to handle ACME DNS challenges easily and securely.
iswasmfast - Performance comparison of WebAssembly, C++ Addon, and native implementations of various algorithms in Node.js.
dehydrated - letsencrypt/acme client implemented as a shell-script – just add water
rFmt
letsencrypt - Certbot is EFF's tool to obtain certs from Let's Encrypt and (optionally) auto-enable HTTPS on your server. It can also act as a client for any other CA that uses the ACME protocol.
Clippy - A bunch of lints to catch common mistakes and improve your Rust code. Book: https://doc.rust-lang.org/clippy/