redis-py
zig-okredis
redis-py | zig-okredis | |
---|---|---|
19 | 2 | |
12,269 | 191 | |
0.7% | - | |
8.9 | 0.0 | |
3 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
Python | Zig | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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redis-py
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Solving a critical bug in the default Rails caching library
My jaw dropped when I saw the postmortem — it was exactly the same bug concept, just in a different library! A reminder that hard things often transcend particular languages and libraries. And boy, is this a hard bug. It sits at the intersection of caching, shared resource management, and state corruption — infamously tricky problem spaces.
- ChatGPT banned with immediate effect in Italy.
- NGL, they had me in the first half!
- OpenAI CEO 'feels awful' after ChatGPT leaks conversations, payment info
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OpenAI leaks Credit card info
Oof https://github.com/redis/redis-py/issues/2665 It seems it’s not fully patched.
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March 20 ChatGPT outage: Here’s what happened
There is a 1 year old open bug which is almost very similar to OpenAI's issue, which was autclosed: https://github.com/redis/redis-py/issues/2028
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Konohagakure Search
redis
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How to implement server push in Flask framework?
I used Juggernaut, but it seems to be not working with redis-py in current version, and Juggernaut has been deprecated recently.
- Websockets and streaming data
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What do you guys think about Zig's approach to async?
https://github.com/andymccurdy/redis-py https://github.com/aio-libs/aioredis
zig-okredis
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Zig Is Self-Hosted Now, What's Next?
> I don't really understand your crusade.
Accuracy is important in the marketplace of ideas, and especially in programming. Software is too buggy already, and it would only add more bugs to have programmers not understand the languages they use.
> I made this same observation in the past, it never satisfied you.
Yes, you made that same observation, and I appreciate that. But as @kbd so unintentionally demonstrated, people still believe that Zig is colorless. I want to dispel that notion completely.
I think you are not adding to the problem, and that is great. But the notion is still there.
> Your blog post is full of wrong information. I tried to explain to you what was wrong when you first posted it (so you can refer to those comments, if you want), but you keep seeing this as some kind of philosophical debate, and I have no interest in having this debate.
Here is all of the comments you made on Hacker News on the comments [1] about my blog post.
> That's exactly it. It just enables code reuse. You still have to think about how your application will behave, but you won't have to use an async-flavored reimplementaion of another library. Case in point: zig-okredis works in both sync and async applicatons, and I don't have to maintain two codebases.
> https://github.com/kristoff-it/zig-okredis
> I thought using "colorblind" in the title of my original blogpost would be a clear enough hint to the reader that the colors still exist, but I guess you can never be too explicit.
and
> That's how it works in Zig. Calling an async function like this will also await it.
The closest thing to "explain[ing] to [me] what was wrong when [I] first posted it" is probably that first comment, which was in reply to
> I may be totally wrong with this assumption, but the way I understoo[d] Zig's color-less async support is that the compiler either creates a "red" or "blue" function body from the same source code based on how the function is called (so on the language level, function coloring doesn't matter, but it does in compiler output).
> The compiler still needs to stamp out colored function bodies because the generated code for a function with async support needs to look different - the compiler needs to turn the code into a state machine instead of a simple sequence).
> It's a bit unfortunate that red and blue functions appear to have a different "ABI signature", but I guess that's needed to pass an additional context pointer into a function with async support (which would otherwise be the implicit stack pointer).
(Original comment at [2] by flohofwoe.)
So if anybody explained anything, it's flohofwoe.
But flohofwoe's comment goes directly against the the language reference, so it's hard for me to believe.
The language reference says that sync functions are turned async if they call async functions. This implies virality of async on functions, which implies that many functions are definitely async-only.
If the compiler does something different, which it would have to if it actually makes two different versions of each function, then the language reference is wrong. Like I said, accuracy matters, so I would also like to see changes in the Zig language reference about this if that's the case.
> As I said to you already in the past, I just write software with Zig async and it works.
Yes, you write working software in Zig async, but you understand it better than most. People who go to the language reference and write based on that may not be able to write working software with Zig async as easily as you.
[1]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30965805
[2]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30967070
- What do you guys think about Zig's approach to async?
What are some alternatives?
kafka-python - Python client for Apache Kafka
kernel-zig - :floppy_disk: hobby x86 kernel zig
PyMongo - MongoDB Ecosystem Documentation
redis-rope - 🪢 A fast native data type for manipulating large strings in Redis
django-redis - Full featured redis cache backend for Django.
zls - A Zig language server supporting Zig developers with features like autocomplete and goto definition
py2neo - Py2neo is a comprehensive toolkit for working with Neo4j from within Python applications or from the command line.
zig - General-purpose programming language and toolchain for maintaining robust, optimal, and reusable software.
asyncpg - A fast PostgreSQL Database Client Library for Python/asyncio.
Plyvel - Plyvel, a fast and feature-rich Python interface to LevelDB
cassandra-python-driver - DataStax Python Driver for Apache Cassandra
txRedis - A Redis client library for Twisted Python