ractor | crates.io | |
---|---|---|
10 | 662 | |
1,252 | 2,811 | |
- | 1.5% | |
7.7 | 10.0 | |
11 days ago | 4 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.
ractor
-
Write Elixir NIFs in Rust
This project also appears interesting, but it seems that its clustering features have yet to be tested in large scale distributed systems.
https://github.com/slawlor/ractor/discussions/131
-
A LiveView Is a Process
If you look at my comment history, you'll see I'm well familiar with the BEAM.
I'm in full agreement with you, but I'm not sure you need full robust process supervision trees to mimic what the BEAM does in the context of LiveView on a single machine.
I do want to say, I 100000% times prefer Elixir, it's tooling, ecosystem, web frameworks, easy of scaling vertically and horizontally, etc over Go or any other lang that probably do something analogous to LiveView via what ever concurrency primitives that language/runtime champions; Go with it's Communicating sequential processes(CSP) and Rust with the Ractor lib (https://github.com/slawlor/ractor).
-
Preferred way to receive events?
Also consider an actor framework like ractor. You can have actors listening to sockets, who will then message subscribed actor or actors with the data.
- Show HN: Ractor β a Rust-based actor framework with clusters and supervisors
- GitHub - slawlor/ractor: Rust actor framework
-
Ractor: not just another actor framework
github
crates.io
-
Create a Custom GitHub Action in Rust
Rust has a rich ecosystem of frameworks and libraries that let you read, parse, and manipulate text files, interact with cloud services and databases, and perform any other job that your project's development workflow may require. And because of its strong typing and tight memory management, you are much less likely to write programs that behave unexpectedly in production.
-
Rust Keyword Extraction: Creating the YAKE! algorithm from scratch
All the code discussed in this article can be accessed through this repository. For integration with existing projects consider using keyword_extraction crate available on crates.io.
-
Migrating a JavaScript frontend to Leptos, a Rust framework
So, be sure to double-check your critical libraries and be sure their alternatives exist in the Rust ecosystem. Thereβs a good chance the crates you need are available in Rust's crates.io repository.
-
Learning Rust: A clean start
The previous section was very simple, this section is also very simple but introduces us to cargo which is Rust's package manager, as a JS dev my mind goes straight to NPM.
-
#2 Rust - Cargo Package Manager
Now, there has to be a place where all these packages come from. Similar to npmjs registry, where all node packages are registered, stored and retrieved, Rust also has something called crates.io where many helpful packages and dependencies are registered.
-
Rust π¦ Installation + Hello World
Before proceeding, let's check https://crates.io/, the official Rust package registry.
-
Underestimating rust for my Project.
The most thrilling aspect has been the joy of writing the backend. It's like every struct, enum, and method in Rust forms this interconnected Multiverse of code , which you can see in crates.io which is best Documentation experience I Ever Had.
-
Top 10 Rusty Repositories for you to start your Open Source Journey
5. Crates.io
-
Project Structure Clarification Coming From Python - With Example
When using crates from eg. crates.io, and also things like std and core
-
Cargo has never frustrated me like npm or pip has. Does Cargo ever get frustrating? Does anyone ever find themselves in dependency hell?
Vendoring your packages was very tedious to even remotely get to work with Cargo. I spent a very long time getting Cargo to work together with cargo-local-registry. We vendor crates from crates.io and a custom internal registry.
What are some alternatives?
zigler - zig nifs in elixir
docs.rs - crates.io documentation generator
lunatic - Lunatic is an Erlang-inspired runtime for WebAssembly
plotters - A rust drawing library for high quality data plotting for both WASM and native, statically and realtimely π¦ ππ
neural - NIF based erlang shared term storage
Cargo - The Rust package manager
bastion - Highly-available Distributed Fault-tolerant Runtime
trunk - Build, bundle & ship your Rust WASM application to the web.
golive - LiveView for Go
gtk4-rs - Rust bindings of GTK 4
nx - Multi-dimensional arrays (tensors) and numerical definitions for Elixir
Rocket - A web framework for Rust.