pulldown-cmark
redis-rs
pulldown-cmark | redis-rs | |
---|---|---|
8 | 14 | |
1,930 | 3,429 | |
1.6% | 1.4% | |
9.0 | 9.3 | |
9 days ago | about 16 hours ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
pulldown-cmark
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CryptoFlow: Building a secure and scalable system with Axum and SvelteKit - Part 3
As a platform that allows expressiveness, we want our users to be bold enough to ask and answer questions with either plain text or some markdowns. Compiling markdown to HTML in Rust can be done via the pulldown-cmark crate. We used it in this utility function:
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Building a high performance JSON parser
I also really like this paradigm. It’s just that in old crusty null-terminated C style this is really awkward because the input data must be copied or modified. But it’s not an issue when using slices (length and pointer). Unfortunately most of the C standard library and many operating system APIs expect that.
I’ve seen this referred to as a pull parser in a Rust library? (https://github.com/raphlinus/pulldown-cmark)
- Let Rust detect changes in the Markdown file and generate HTML.
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Show HN: A Graphviz Implementation in Rust
Really glad to see this! Really want an easy way to render graphs in Rust without resorting to the graphiz binary.
What is the current status? Not seeing it listed anywhere, like if there are features that are not supported or if it uses certain layout algorithms but others are desired.
Would you be willing to make a `[lib]` available? I see you have a `lib.rs` but it'd be great if using it didn't require pulling in `[[bin]]` dependencies (you can mark them as optional and mark `required-features` on your bin like pulldown-cmark does [0] or split it into a separate crate in a workspace). It'd also be good to find an available name for the lib and get it published (looks like someone might be squatting on `layout`).
[0] https://github.com/raphlinus/pulldown-cmark/blob/master/Carg...
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Using Rust with Elixir for code reuse and performance
Author here. I actually was not aware of cmark.ex - thanks for pointing it out.
In this case the code reuse was more important than pure native speed. We already had a Rust library that used pulldown-cmark [1] with some custom tweaks that we wanted to duplicate. Maybe this behavior could have been copied using cmark.ex too (we thought about doing this in pure Elixir, as mentioned in the post), but given how straightforward Rustler made integrating our existing code, this seems like the better choice.
[1] https://github.com/raphlinus/pulldown-cmark
It turned out that making the most popular Elixir Markdown processor, Earmark (originally written by Dave Thomas) and pulldown-cmark, a Rust Markdown processor, produce the same output was going to be difficult. We also required some customization that was not available in both libraries.
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What are some examples of particularly well written crates?
The crate that's closest to production quality code is pulldown-cmark, but I don't hold it up as an example of well-written code, because it's not particularly easy to understand and there's a lot of very low level code to consume the CommonMark syntax - that helps with code bloat and compile time, but not clarity.
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What are the Markdown features/extensions enabled in mdbook?
The Markdown processor is pulldown-cmark, which supports these extensions:
redis-rs
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Meet Fred: The most awesome Redis client for Rust.
The goto Redis client for Rust is called redis-rs. It has over 3k stars on Github. but I found it very annoying to use because I quickly found out that if you want to set any value you had to get a mutable reference to the underlying client. Which meant great pain to store Redis client in the global scope. People who do not know what a mutable reference is consider the let keyword in JavaScript. you can mutate or change a variable that is initiated with let.
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[I made this] – staticPi – websocket forwarder
staticpi, is a websocket forwarding service. Basically, it enables one to keep a Raspberry pi, or any computer, “connected”, in order to send and receive messages to and from any client, without having to deal with a static IP address, open ports on your router, or similar. Built in Rust, using axum, which in turn uses tungestine-rs for the websocket connections, tokio, sqlx, redis-rs and others.
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A Rust client library for interacting with Microsoft Airsim https://github.com/Sollimann/airsim-client
redis (use streams and pubsub)
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Redust: a new Redis client
Are you addressing the long-standing issue that the redis client has related to dropped connections?
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Chumsky, a parser combinator crate that makes writing error-tolerant parsers with recovery easy and fun!
I switched to LALRPOP for gluon but I still use combine in https://github.com/mitsuhiko/redis-rs and some other projects which need to parse "protocols" (less need for good error messages/error recovery and more need for speed).
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Getting started with MongoDB and Redis in Rust
The project is implemented with MongoDB Rust driver and redis-rs crate.
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Redis Streams in Action - Part 2 (Rust app to consume from the Twitter Streaming API)
redis-rs, a Rust library for Redis with both high and low-level APIs
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What are some examples of particularly well written crates?
I think the redis crate was a well-organized API library. It's still sometimes hard to know the right things to make public and I think they nailed it.
- Trying to utilize sqlx with postgresql and expecting performance on par with jdbc 😀. How do you guys do prepared statement, arg/param setting, batch insertions etc? The documentation doesn’t take me anywhere near that.
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https://np.reddit.com/r/rust/comments/m1m742/klaxitredisstreamrs_consuming_highthroughput/grxjrki/
We have been using it before it got merged in redis-rs (we upvoted the PR here https://github.com/mitsuhiko/redis-rs/pull/319 a while back ;-))
What are some alternatives?
mdBook - Create book from markdown files. Like Gitbook but implemented in Rust
tikv - Distributed transactional key-value database, originally created to complement TiDB
nimler - Erlang/Elixir NIFs in Nim
r2d2 - A generic connection pool for Rust
doctave - A batteries-included developer documentation site generator
PickleDB - PickleDB-rs is a lightweight and simple key-value store. It is a Rust version for Python's PickleDB
cmark - CommonMark parsing and rendering library and program in C
sled - the champagne of beta embedded databases
rust - Empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software.
MeiliSearch - A lightning-fast search API that fits effortlessly into your apps, websites, and workflow
cmark - 💧 Elixir NIF for cmark (C), a parser library following the CommonMark spec, a compatible implementation of Markdown.
rust-embed - Rust Macro which loads files into the rust binary at compile time during release and loads the file from the fs during dev.