rustypwneddownloader
tpr
rustypwneddownloader | tpr | |
---|---|---|
4 | 11 | |
6 | 7 | |
- | - | |
5.5 | 10.0 | |
24 days ago | over 1 year ago | |
Rust | ||
MIT License | Mozilla Public 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.
rustypwneddownloader
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The Windows installer of ImageMagick will no longer be signed
Just throwing in that the dollar value isn't the only cost. I've been using an automated release workflow tomanage signing, eg
https://github.com/technion/rustypwneddownloader/blob/main/....
This worfklow isn't usable with these new rules, and I'm having a hard time with the assertion that moving builds to my desktop to use a hardware signing key and uploading them in a non automated, non transparent fashion is an improvement on security.
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Google open-sources Rust crate audits
I just grabbed my (very basic app)[https://github.com/technion/rustypwneddownloader] and ran a cargo vet init. Out of the box there were 145 dependencies found (ouch.. that already feels like a bad trajectory).
- Show HN: Rust Port of Pwnpasswordsdownloader
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What's everyone working on this week (21/2023)?
I've written and released a Rust port of the pwnedpasswordsdownloader: https://github.com/technion/rustypwneddownloader
tpr
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AMA: Ian Clarke creator of Freenet 2023 - a drop-in decentralized replacement for the web
Hey, this might interest you, as a similar thing could be implemented as bridge between freenet and the clearnet. I've been working on this for a while now. https://github.com/Alonely0/tpr
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What's everyone working on this week (21/2023)?
I'm throwing away all the code I had written and implementing my TPR protocol from scratch, I'll be using tower this time, lesson learned...
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Its all about onion
I'm more of a pomegranate guy
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What's everyone working on this week (10/2023)?
I'm implementing tpr, so I'll definitely take a look at this
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Lariv: Linked Atomic Random Insert Vector
Lariv is a thread-safe, self-memory-managed vector with no guaranteed sequential insert. It internally uses a linked ring buffer, that unlike traditional ring buffers, is growable, and very importantly, it doesn't reallocate the whole buffer as part of the process. It has been born inside the TPR project, and it is designed for storing client connections on TPR servers, which usually are short-lived data that have to be accessed via 128-bits integers. This is basically the dashmap for vectors.
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Using Vec instead of HashMap?
In my case I use IDs for pairing multiplexed connections to encryption keys. I'm implementing The Pomegranate Router.
- IEEE Spectrum: "An IBM Quantum Computer Will Soon Pass the 1,000-Qubit Mark"
- The Pomegranate Router: An anonymous and decentralized routing protocol.
What are some alternatives?
journals-web-server - Backend server for the TUI-Journal app
tui-journal - Your journal app if you live in a terminal
promise_out - promiseOut version for rust
KeenWrite
parsing-sandbox
syno-photo-frame - Build a digital photo frame for Synology Photos with Raspberry Pi
minidb - A simple database for learning purposes
launchthing - 🏵️ Minimalist application launcher for linux
AzureSignTool - SignTool Library and Azure Key Vault Support
simdutf - Unicode routines (UTF8, UTF16, UTF32) and Base64: billions of characters per second using SSE2, AVX2, NEON, AVX-512, RISC-V Vector Extension. Part of Node.js and Bun.