rebop
shadow
rebop | shadow | |
---|---|---|
1 | 11 | |
42 | 1,349 | |
- | 0.7% | |
7.6 | 9.8 | |
3 months ago | 7 days 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.
rebop
shadow
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Turmoil, a framework for developing and testing distributed systems
Cool, will be interested to see how this develops! tokio's loom framework has been a big help in testing some tricky concurrency code I've worked on.
Folks interested in this space might also be interested in the system I spend most of my time working on: Shadow. It also performs deterministic simulation of a network of hosts, but it intercepts network and system interactions at the syscall level via seccomp. As such it can work with binaries compiled from ~any language, usually without any code modification or special compilation. https://shadow.github.io/
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I reinvented another wheel, linux threads.
Nice writeup! I've also had to dig a bit into this area in my work on shadow.
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Shadow Simulation Developer
It is no longer active. If you are asking about Shadow, check out https://shadow.github.io
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How to avoid bounds checks in Rust (without unsafe!)
I do share this hesitation. I think for simple cases iterators are usually fine, but I've definitely run into cases where an iterator adapter caused unexpected performance problems. e.g. https://github.com/shadow/shadow/pull/2543
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Sending signals to Unix process groups
Yes. Though I'm not sure I see the connection to the OP...?
The example I'm most familiar with, because I work on it, is Shadow. We used ptrace for a bit but now use seccomp.
https://github.com/shadow/shadow/
- Shadow Simulator – run real applications over a simulated Internet topology
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Shadow Simlulator – run real applications over a simulated Internet topology
For anyone interested in following current development on Shadow, we've been publishing a series of updates. Most recent: https://github.com/shadow/shadow/discussions/1274
The previous update has links back to the whole series; I stopped including it in the most-recent update since it was getting a bit cumbersome: https://github.com/shadow/shadow/discussions/1060
What are some alternatives?
lapack - LAPACK development repository
mininet - Emulator for rapid prototyping of Software Defined Networks