this-week-in-rust
diesel
this-week-in-rust | diesel | |
---|---|---|
44 | 82 | |
2,026 | 11,930 | |
1.1% | 1.3% | |
9.9 | 9.5 | |
6 days ago | 6 days ago | |
HTML | Rust | |
- | 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.
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.
diesel
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Top 10 Rusty Repositories for you to start your Open Source Journey
7. Diesel
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People who use rust and postgres in production along with RDS proxy, what do you do?
Both seem nice. However, both of them rely very heavily on prepared statements. Unfortunately, using prepared statements is a no-go when you use connection poolers like pgbouncer, or in my case AWS RDS proxy. A discussion in Diesel indicates that disel is not going to provide any support for disabling prepared stements (https://github.com/diesel-rs/diesel/discussions/3575), and a discussion on sqlx hints that disabling prepared statements is possible, but I haven't found any documentation or examples for it.
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The diesel project is looking for help
In addition we are experimenting with prebuild versions of diesel-cli that can be installed directly. We have a set of prebuilt binaries here. We are interested in feedback about how the provided binaries work on your platform.
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cargo-dist pre-release looking for feedback!
First of all thanks for making this great tool. As it happens I currently toy around with using it for diesel-cli releases. See the WIP PR here. I think diesel-cli is a good example of a tool that depends on system libraries as it needs to link native database drivers, so this new release is welcome. Defining the dependencies seems to allow easily building things on x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu and x86_64-apple-darwin. It seems to pick up everything in the right way there.
- Diesel Is a Safe, Extensible ORM and Query Builder for Rust
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Rust & MySQL: connect, execute SQL statements and stored procs using crate sqlx.
I did look at mysql initially. Then I started checking other crates. Diesel is an Object Relation Model (ORM), I'm not yet keen on taking on the complication of learning ORM, I give this crate a pass in the meantime.
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Queryx: An Open-Source Go ORM with Automatic Schema Management
I would recommend people look at diesel from Rust for how nice it could be. https://diesel.rs/ Look at the complex queries example. So much more readable and easier to understand.
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Diesel polls about upcoming features and guide topics
Most wanted missing features in diesel
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Ask HN: Anyone Using Rust for Web Development?
There are two problems with using Rust for web servers:
1. The only production-ready Rust web servers require writing async request handlers. Async Rust is not fun.
2. The only good Postgres client library is async: https://crates.io/crates/sqlx
I'm trying to remedy the first problem with https://crates.io/crates/servlin .
Solving the second problem will be another project. I hope someone else does it. There is https://crates.io/crates/diesel but it has the same problem as async Rust: incomprehensible compiler errors.
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/r/startrek/ migrates to lemmy
Lemmy is written in Rust using Actix Web and Diesel.rs.
https://actix.rs/
https://diesel.rs/
What are some alternatives?
hugo-PaperMod - A fast, clean, responsive Hugo theme.
sea-orm - 🐚 An async & dynamic ORM for Rust
beautiful-jekyll - ✨ Build a beautiful and simple website in literally minutes. Demo at https://beautifuljekyll.com
sqlx - 🧰 The Rust SQL Toolkit. An async, pure Rust SQL crate featuring compile-time checked queries without a DSL. Supports PostgreSQL, MySQL, and SQLite.
Cerberus - A few simple, but solid patterns for responsive HTML email templates and newsletters. Even in Outlook and Gmail.
rustorm - an orm 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.
rbatis - Rust Compile Time ORM robustness,async, pure Rust Dynamic SQL
stc - Speedy TypeScript type checker
r2d2 - A generic connection pool for Rust
Poetry - Python packaging and dependency management made easy
rusqlite-model - Model trait and derive implementation for rusqlite