readable-stream
SSVM
readable-stream | SSVM | |
---|---|---|
37 | 50 | |
1,015 | 7,952 | |
0.1% | 1.7% | |
5.9 | 9.7 | |
4 months ago | 3 days ago | |
JavaScript | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
readable-stream
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How to convert Node.js stream callback functions into an Async Iterator
If it's a readable stream, you can just directly consume it with an async iterator: https://nodejs.org/api/stream.html#streams-compatibility-wit...
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Buffered vs Streaming Data Transfer
Node.js Stream
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What's New in Node.js 21
Note that the older Node.js streams API hasn't been deprecated or removed. It will co-exist with the new API, and it even provides a way to convert from a web stream and vice versa using the .fromWeb() and .toWeb() methods (both added in Node 17, although both methods still retain their experimental status).
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pipesAreFun
Nodejs has piepes with its stream https://nodejs.org/api/stream.html
- Also keep in mind that a one line module always is more than one line of code
- Also keep in mind that a one line module always is more than one line of code. It's documentation, tests, and history in the repo.
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[AskJS] Has anybody implemented and compiled ServiceWorker specification to a standalone executable?
You then want what's invoked by that event to be consumed as a Response. NodeJS has something to replicate this with stream consumers where you can do all the response.text() you normally do.
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The Case for Frameworks
[3] - https://github.com/nodejs/readable-stream/
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Running Go code inside a NodeJS app with WASM (Part 1/2, 2023)
First, we create a NodeJS ReadStream using fs.createWriteStream to open the test.log file in "append" mode. Then we start recursively looping using setTimeout. This simulates an application that logs text in the file at a variable rate. At each iteration:
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Go-like channels in 10 lines of JavaScript
This needs a comparison with streams, which is the standard way to achieve this in Node.js land.
https://nodejs.org/api/stream.html
SSVM
- A WASM runtime for running LLMs locally
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Time-series data ingestion from Rust WebAssembly application, leveraging GreptimeDB and WasmEdge
WasmEdge GitHub address: https://github.com/WasmEdge/WasmEdge.
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Orca-2-13B Runs Directly on Rust+WASM – No Python/C++ Hassles
I see that they recently changed the intro of WasmEdge on Github [1] to " WasmEdge is the easiest and fastest way to run LLMs on your own devices. "
Since it's a wasm runtime capable of many things I find bizarre that they now start describing it with a ultra-specific use case
- [1] https://github.com/WasmEdge/WasmEdge
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Run LLMs on my own Mac fast and efficient Only 2 MBs
Mmm…
The wasm-nn that this relies on (https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-nn) is a proposal that relies of arbitrary plugin backends sending arbitrarily chunks to some vendor implementation. The api is literally like set input, compute, set output.
…and that is totally non portable.
The reason this works, is because it’s relying on the abstraction already implemented in llama.cpp that allows it to take a gguf model and map it to multiple hardware targets,which you can see has been lifted here: https://github.com/WasmEdge/WasmEdge/tree/master/plugins/was...
So..
> Developers can refer to this project to write their machine learning application in a high-level language using the bindings, compile it to WebAssembly, and run it with a WebAssembly runtime that supports the wasi-nn proposal, such as WasmEdge.
Is total rubbish; no, you can’t.
This isn’t portable.
It’s not sandboxed.
If you have a wasm binary you might be able to run it if the version of the runtime you’re using happens to implement the specific ggml backend you need, which it probably doesn’t… because there’s literally no requirement for it to do so.
There’s a lot of “so portable” talk in this article which really seems misplaced.
- Security Slam 2023: Contribute to WasmEdge and Elevate Open Source Security
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Requiem for a Stringref
WasmEdge isn't there yet: https://github.com/WasmEdge/WasmEdge/issues/1122#issuecommen...
- Should You Be Scared of Unix Signals?
- WasmEdge 0.13.0: Unified CLI, ARM Support and Migrating Extensions to Plugins
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ChatGPT-powered code review bot to boost your PR merge. Deploy in 5 mins
Example 1: Analyze the content and risks of each commit in the PR. Then make a summary. https://github.com/WasmEdge/WasmEdge/pull/2394#issuecomment-...
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Cloud, Why So Difficult?
There has also been a few "cloud-native" runtimes based on WASM, like WasmEdge but there's a few others (can't remember their names!)...
What are some alternatives?
ffmpeg.wasm - FFmpeg for browser, powered by WebAssembly
wasmer - 🚀 The leading Wasm Runtime supporting WASIX, WASI and Emscripten
node-ytdl-core - YouTube video downloader in javascript.
wasmtime - A fast and secure runtime for WebAssembly
through2-concurrent - Simple Node.JS stream (streams2) Transform that runs the transform functions concurrently (with a set max concurrency)
aws-lambda-wasm-runtime - A template project for building high-performance, portable, and safe serverless functions in AWS Lambda.
Highland - High-level streams library for Node.js and the browser
WAVM - WebAssembly Virtual Machine
peek-stream - Transform stream that lets you peek the first line before deciding how to parse it
dapr-wasm - A template project to demonstrate how to run WebAssembly functions as sidecar microservices in dapr
through2 - Tiny wrapper around Node streams2 Transform to avoid explicit subclassing noise
WasmEdge-go - The GO language SDK and API for WasmEdge