this-week-in-rust
actix
this-week-in-rust | actix | |
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44 | 15 | |
2,026 | 8,389 | |
1.1% | 0.4% | |
9.9 | 8.1 | |
7 days ago | 10 days ago | |
HTML | Rust | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
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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.
this-week-in-rust
- Resources I wish I knew when I started my career
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Top 10 Rusty Repositories for you to start your Open Source Journey
In addition to these repositories, there's a valuable resource that no Rust enthusiast should overlook— This Week in Rust. This community-driven initiative aggregates Rust-related news, updates, and most importantly, a curated list of issues across various Rust projects. If you're on the lookout for a tailored contribution or seeking the perfect project to kickstart your open-source journey, This Week in Rust is your go-to source.
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Rust Meetup and user groups
If you'd like to know the upcoming meetings - there are quite a few online meetings that you can attend regardless of your location - then check out This week in Rust
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Projects to contribute to?
The This Week In Rust newsletter has a Call for Participation section where projects post requests for contribution.
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Ask HN: What tech newsletters are you currently subscribing?
“This week” train!
I’ll go next
This week in Rust
https://this-week-in-rust.org/
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Articles and News Sources for Rust
Currently I have This Week in Rust and lime's
- Ask HN: What other news feeds do you read besides Hacker News?
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Hey Rustaceans! Got a question? Ask here (22/2023)!
There's some latency involved, but we have this week in rust for this exact reason. Also feel free to discuss the news on the comments page.
- Recommend rust blogs
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Any new Opensource projects in (rust) looking for contributors. I want to start my journey as an OSS contributor.
https://this-week-in-rust.org has a Call for Participation section.
actix
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Top 10 Rusty Repositories for you to start your Open Source Journey
9. Actix
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Keyword Generics Progress Report: February 2023 | Inside Rust Blog
I think it's fairer to say the language got so much more powerful that there wasn't any point making actors a language feature when they can be built from existing orthogonal language features. You're probably looking for actix (not actix-web, just actix). There's also Lunatic built in Rust but supporting any actors compiled to WebAssembly.
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An Open Source Rust SNMP Simulator
Actix is an actor framework for developing concurrent applications built on top of the Tokio asynchronous runtime. It allows multiple actors to run on a single thread, but also allows actors to run on multiple threads via Arbiters. Actors can communicate with each other by sequentially exchanging typed messages.
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Modern JVM Multithreading • Paweł Jurczenko • Devoxx Poland 2021
I’ve seen frameworks for c++ (https://seastar.io/) and rust (https://github.com/actix/actix) which support what you’re describing out of the box.
- Scala isn't fun anymore
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Anyone using Actix?
The actix repository on github doesn't seem to be very active, and everyone seems to be focused on actix-web instead, is anyone out there using plain actix or any other actor-model implementation in Rust?
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What programming languages are most used for creating advanced math-related software/simulations?
Rust is also another possibility: it's basically C++ but more modern with added features and safety. It can be tricky to write mathematical stuff in it, because you may not care too much about all the safety concerns Rust forces you to handle, but it can be useful to catch bugs ahead of times. Sadly, Rust seems to have no library for running programs on clusters of PCs, except maybe this one, which takes the Actor model implemented by Actix and runs it on a cluster. I don't know how tricky it is to use the Actor model for a scientific simulation, tho.
- Actix - Actor framework for Rust.
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How should I structure an async/await/futures program with multiple event sources and mutable state?
I'd just use Actix for that. Make your state an actor and make it a StreamHandler for each of these sources, and that's it - now you just implement the business logic for handling each message in the StreamHandler::handle methods.
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18 factors powering the Rust revolution, Part 2 of 3
However, this isn't even 50% of what's out there: Need raw parallel power (and maybe don't need an async runtime)? Checkout Rayon. Need simple Actors for concurrent processing? Checkout Actix. Need a larger Actor system for fault tolerance/CQRS messaging? Checkout Riker. Damn, I sound like a youtube advert 🤦 - For real though, this is the tip of the concurrency iceberg. There is so much more - and it's growing.
What are some alternatives?
hugo-PaperMod - A fast, clean, responsive Hugo theme.
tokio
beautiful-jekyll - ✨ Build a beautiful and simple website in literally minutes. Demo at https://beautifuljekyll.com
bastion - Highly-available Distributed Fault-tolerant Runtime
Cerberus - A few simple, but solid patterns for responsive HTML email templates and newsletters. Even in Outlook and Gmail.
Rocket - A web framework for Rust.
iRead - iRead is an open platform where readers find dynamic thinking, and where expert and undiscovered voices can share their writing on any topic.
MIO - Metal I/O library for Rust.
stc - Speedy TypeScript type checker
RuMqtt
Poetry - Python packaging and dependency management made easy
riker - Easily build efficient, highly concurrent and resilient applications. An Actor Framework for Rust.