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pushgen | youki | |
---|---|---|
3 | 36 | |
27 | 5,731 | |
- | 2.2% | |
2.0 | 9.8 | |
12 months ago | 6 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
pushgen
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Why is it so hard to get traction learning rust?
Here're a few projects I considered interesting (including my own project) and relatively easy to participate: - pushgen Push-style design pattern for processing of ranges and data-streams. - compact_str A memory efficient immutable string type that can store up to 24* bytes on the stack - openssh-rs Scriptable SSH through OpenSSH in Rust - pegasus A multi-node parametrized command runner with a focus on simplicity - concurrent_arena Container that can have elements insert/removed concurrently and uses a 'u32' as key.
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Ruby vs. Python comes down to the for loop
For me, its the explicitness in Python that is killer. I can see a name and match that to an import and match that to a package. Grabbing a function pointer works exactly as I would expect.
Stealing from Krister Stendahl's laws for religious discourse, Ruby's composable iteration is one area I have holy envy, particularly after I got used to it in Rust. I've used Python's generators many times just to have to switch to an explicit for loop. Things are generally better with a composable iteration model but occasionally I find myself switching to loops in Rust.
Unlike Ruby, Rust does pull-iteration, like Python, though there are experiments with Ruby-style push-iteration [0] [1].
[0] https://github.com/AndWass/pushgen
[1] https://epage.github.io/blog/2021/07/pushgen-experiment/
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What's everyone working on this week (33/2021)?
Continue my work with pushgen but also started doing some experimentation on a sender/receiver concept based on a the P2300 std::execution paper, and how that could work in Rust: txrx
youki
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Kubernetes for Developers
There are ton of optimizations that could be applied to kubernetes itself, including some custom CRI's (youki cri etc), read-only fs handling (erofs etc), and stacked CNI's on top of SR-IOV and Multus. Gluing it all together can be a real pain.
- Youki v0.1.0, a container runtime in Rust that can be used with K8s is available
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Crun: Fast and lightweight OCI runtime and C library for running containers
I went looking for an answer to the obvious question, and there is indeed a Rust version. https://github.com/containers/youki#motivation has a nice comparison with both runc and crun.
Looks like there is youki [1] for that.
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Discord and the JVM
Somebody at Oracle was at one point writing an implementation of the oci-runtime in rust https://github.com/oracle/railcar/, an active successor of that project appears to be https://github.com/containers/youki
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[Rust] Is anyone working on any interesting (side-)projects in Rust? (preferably open-source)
I'd look at youki: https://github.com/containers/youki
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Would docker be faster if it were written in rust?
Yes, and it has. At least the runc equivalent part of it (which is the part that runs the containers). But the performance difference does not really matter that much - it is mostly start up time which is not normally a big overhead of the application. At least for long running services.
- Hello, youki! Faster container runtime is written in Rust
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Youki – OCI container runtime with support for cgroup2 written in Rust
furthermore, this is a fantastic design doc sequence diagram, showing intimately how containers get made: https://github.com/containers/youki#design-and-implementatio...
What are some alternatives?
crun - A fast and lightweight fully featured OCI runtime and C library for running containers
runc - CLI tool for spawning and running containers according to the OCI specification
krustlet - Kubernetes Rust Kubelet
runtime-spec - OCI Runtime Specification
docuum - Docuum performs least recently used (LRU) eviction of Docker images. 🗑️
hackernews-sauron - A fast, resilient, isomorphic hacker news clone in ~1k lines of rust.
tealsql - a sqlx wrapper for teal and lua
cntr - A container debugging tool based on FUSE
feel
knast - [discontinued] Experimental OCI & CRI-compatible container runtimes for FreeBSD
FoxDot - Python driven environment for Live Coding
dockerfile-plus - New commands for Dockerfile