pueue
tantivy
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pueue | tantivy | |
---|---|---|
37 | 48 | |
4,553 | 9,839 | |
- | 2.9% | |
8.7 | 9.1 | |
9 days ago | about 17 hours ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
MIT License | 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.
pueue
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Sequential and parallel execution of long-running shell commands
You can probably do a good subset it in bash, it's just a nicer interface with a lot of configurability and several convenience features.
I'm generally a big fan of showing alternatives: https://github.com/Nukesor/pueue/?tab=readme-ov-file#similar...
Would you be willing to write a proper guide on how to do all of these things in bash? It would be great to have this as guide an alternative inside the Pueue wiki and link to it. It'll help people to make a more informed decision on whether they need this tool or not.
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Looking for a pueue debian maintainer
there is a command line manager for long running tasks called Pueue. It is released into Nix, Arch, Alpine, Void, etc, but not for Debian based distros. I know that releasing into Debian is a bit more challenging, but I just wanted to ask if anybody here might be interested in packaging it. Just as a disclaimer, I am not the author of this project, just a regular user.
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Can't find the name of a tool...
This one? https://github.com/Nukesor/pueue
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Systemd timer having service running one after the other at a set time.
How about this: https://github.com/Nukesor/pueue/? I have it bookmarked from a thread here from few years back and never got to test it eventually, but maybe it will serve your purposes?
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How can I run commands in parallel and write the output of each command to different linux terminals, one linux terminal for each command running in parallel.
Multiplexing is great for your multiple outputs, but I would highly recommend using pueue & pueued for job control. Lets you organize your background jobs into groups which can be paused, resumed, etc. Also lets you act on jobs from different terminals w/the pueue interface.
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What "nice-to-have" CLI tools do you know?
pueue -- a queue for tasks, running in background
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Why is Tmux better than neovim's built-in terminal?
For the command that takes a long time to complete, I always use pueue to run. This thing let you run multiple commands in order and can schedule the execution later which is really helpful to my workflow.
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Should I use async or multiprocessing in my project and which library to use?
That said, you're basically building pueue. https://github.com/Nukesor/pueue/blob/main/ARCHITECTURE.md might give you some pointers. From reading it, there seems to be a mishmash of tokio stuff, and then everything gets serialised onto an MPSC channel (that's serviced by TaskHandler, on a single thread that's also responsible for polling for finished processes etc, every 200ms).
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What do you use to copy large files from one HDD to another?
exchange for pueue and you can even queue them up.
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What are some popular background job processing frameworks in the Rust ecosystem?
This is the only one I know of: https://github.com/Nukesor/pueue
tantivy
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SeekStorm VS tantivy - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 22 Mar 2024
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What is Hybrid Search?
Tantivy - a full-text indexing library written in Rust. Has a great performance and featureset.
- Tantivy – Fast, OSS full-text search library in Rust
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RAG Using Unstructured Data and Role of Knowledge Graphs
By this I presume you mean build a search index that can retrieve results based on keywords? I know certain databases use Lucene to build a keyword-based index on top of unstructured blobs of data. Another alternative is to use Tantivy (https://github.com/quickwit-oss/tantivy), a Rust version of Lucene, if building search indices via Java isn't your cup of tea :)
Both libraries offer multilingual support for keywords, I believe, so that's a benefit to vector search where multilingual embedding models are rather expensive.
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Show HN: Quickwit – OSS Alternative to Elasticsearch, Splunk, Datadog
We also implemented our schemaless columnar storage optimized for object storage.
The inverted index and columnar storage are part of tantivy [0], which is the fastest search library out there. We maintain it and we decided to build the distributed engine on top of it.
[0] tantivy github repo: https://github.com/quickwit-oss/tantivy
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Pg_bm25: Elastic-Quality Full Text Search Inside Postgres
The issue for geo search is here: https://github.com/quickwit-oss/tantivy/issues/44
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Grimoire - A recipe management application.
Search index : Custom-built using tantivy.
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A Compressed Indexable Bitset
The roaring bitmap variant is used only for the optional index (1 docid => 0 or 1 value) in the columnar storage (DocValues), not for the inverted index. Since this is used for aggregation, some queries may be a full scan.
The inverted index in tantivy uses bitpacked values of 128 elements with a skip index on top.
> I didn't follow the rest of your comment, select is what EF is good at, every other data structure needs a lot more scanning once you land on the right chunk. With BMI2 you can also use the PDEP instruction to accelerate the final select on a 64-bit block
The select for the sparse codec is a [simple array index access](https://github.com/quickwit-oss/tantivy/blob/main/columnar/s...), that is hard to beat. Compression is not good near the 5k threshold though.
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Job: Rust + Retrieval Systems at Etsy
Hi /r/rust, I’m a SWE on Etsy’s Retrieval Systems team where we’re building a platform based on rust and tantivy (https://github.com/quickwit-oss/tantivy). We’re looking to bring two new engineers onto the team.
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Announcing Velo - Your Rust-Powered Brainstorming and Note-Taking Tool
Quick Search: Easily find specific notes with Velo's fuzzy-search feature, powered by tantivy. tantivy might have been a little overkill, but it was really easy to integrate.
What are some alternatives?
tantivy - Tantivy is a full-text search engine library inspired by Apache Lucene and written in Rust [Moved to: https://github.com/quickwit-oss/tantivy]
sonic - 🦔 Fast, lightweight & schema-less search backend. An alternative to Elasticsearch that runs on a few MBs of RAM.
tab-rs - The intuitive, config-driven terminal multiplexer designed for software & systems engineers
surrealdb - A scalable, distributed, collaborative, document-graph database, for the realtime web
awesome-rewrite-it-in-rust - A curated list of replacements for existing software written in Rust [Moved to: https://github.com/TaKO8Ki/awesome-alternatives-in-rust]
milli - Search engine library for Meilisearch ⚡️
breeze - An experimental, kakoune-inspired CLI-centric text/code editor with |-shaped cursor (in Rust)
MeiliSearch - A lightning-fast search API that fits effortlessly into your apps, websites, and workflow
nq - Unix command line queue utility
quickwit - Cloud-native search engine for observability. An open-source alternative to Datadog, Elasticsearch, Loki, and Tempo.
starfetch - Display constellations in your terminal
fselect - Find files with SQL-like queries