tantivy
neon
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tantivy | neon | |
---|---|---|
18 | 19 | |
5,829 | 7,770 | |
- | 0.7% | |
9.3 | 6.3 | |
about 2 years ago | 9 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
MIT License | 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.
tantivy
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Hey y'all back again w/ the personal, self-hosted search engine
Backend uses tantivy to index the web pages, sqlite3 to hold metadata / crawl queue
- Ask HN: What are some good rust code to read to learn the language?
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Looking for recommendations of well maintained open source rust codebases that I can look through/contribute to
Tantivy is a very well made library and also follows alot of the best practices if you like search you'll like this: https://github.com/quickwit-inc/tantivy
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self hosted elasticsearch alternative
tantivy - More of a search engine library than out of the box solution
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Whats your favourite open source Rust project that needs more recognition?
Tantivy search engine.
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Is there a library for instant arbitrary text searching?
You could try the Tantivy crate, with an n-gram tokenizer, which would split and index your text in sliding groups of n characters.
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Zest: a CLI tool for zettelkasten-like note management
I had to look up the "tantivy" that README mentions. https://github.com/tantivy-search/tantivy. Might want to add a link to the project in your README.
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Are you using Rust at work? If yes, for what?
We're using Rust for a domain-specific search engine. When I first learned Rust some years ago my first thought was that this language is perfect for heavy text processing. IMO, &str is that single killer feature that got me sold :) The search engine that we're building is based on https://github.com/tantivy-search/tantivy.
- Tantivy, a full-text search engine library in Rust inspired by Apache Lucene
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Tantivy v0.15 released! Now backed by Quickwit Inc.!
Well spotted. Like IPFS, there's a comment about that here: https://github.com/tantivy-search/tantivy/pull/1067#issuecomment-853139923 that points to the distributed wikipedia mirror project https://github.com/ipfs/distributed-wikipedia-mirror/issues/76
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?
sonic - 🦔 Fast, lightweight & schema-less search backend. An alternative to Elasticsearch that runs on a few MBs of RAM.
rst - The open source design documentation tool for everybody [Moved to: https://github.com/vitiral/artifact]
tantivy-wasm
tauri - Build smaller, faster, and more secure desktop applications with a web frontend.
pueue - :stars: Manage your shell commands.
surrealdb - A scalable, distributed, collaborative, document-graph database, for the realtime web
neuron - Future-proof note-taking and publishing based on Zettelkasten (superseded by Emanote: https://github.com/srid/emanote)
iswasmfast - Performance comparison of WebAssembly, C++ Addon, and native implementations of various algorithms in Node.js.
zk - A plain text note-taking assistant
rFmt
tss - Go port of moreutils/ts
Clippy - A bunch of lints to catch common mistakes and improve your Rust code. Book: https://doc.rust-lang.org/clippy/