tokay
busybox
tokay | busybox | |
---|---|---|
4 | 14 | |
231 | 375 | |
0.9% | 2.1% | |
8.7 | 7.7 | |
about 1 month ago | 6 days ago | |
Rust | Dockerfile | |
MIT License | - |
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tokay
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The Awk Programming Language, Second Edition
[0]: https://github.com/tokay-lang/tokay
- GitHub - tokay-lang/tokay: Tokay is a programming language designed for ad-hoc parsing, inspired by awk.
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Hacker News top posts: May 13, 2022
Tokay Programming Language\ (21 comments)
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Tokay Programming Language
I am very interested in this project as a "better awk" is something I have often fantasized about.
I read all of the documentation that's available on https://tokay.dev/tokay-docs/, but unfortunately it never really... describes itself? Many sections, including the section on "parselets" are just unwritten. "Consumable" values are mentioned but never described (there is a "stub" section that doesn't really explain what the term means).
It begins with a pretty detailed description of value "severity" but doesn't really motivate why the concept exists. (I think that it's (basically) a way to very concisely discard certain matches? When there are "more important" matches around them?)
There are no examples of how I could use Tokay to "parse" something -- there are lots of examples dotted through the docs, but none of them demonstrate working with structured file formats, and they feel a little bit contrived.
I'm not complaining here: this project is not making any false claims about its status, the docs are clearly and explicitly unfinished, it is very clear that Tokay is still under active development.
But I want to learn more about it! I came away from that with a sense that, this has the potential to be really useful to me, but without any concrete evidence to support that. I guess the next step is to download the source and start reading through the tests.
All this to say: please highlight some examples showcasing situations where Tokay shines! (Parsing CSVs containing quoted strings was making the rounds recently, right? What does that look like in Tokay?)
Oh, actually, the GitHub readme has an example that is more involved than any in the documentation: https://github.com/tokay-lang/tokay
_ : [ \t]+ # redefine whitespace to just tab and space
busybox
- The Awk Programming Language, Second Edition
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This would have made my life so much easier in the beginning....
A majority of routers are already based on the Linux kernel. Many are just BusyBox. The most common Linux firewalls are iptables and nftables. With the latter being the most popular one due to being around longer. They are really fine grained and powerful.
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kubectl run --command vs -- arguments
As Busybox DockerFile does not contain any EntryPoint(https://github.com/docker-library/busybox/blob/master/musl/Dockerfile), so arguments specified in the kubectl command will only be used, so the command will look like:
- Emacs standing alone on a Linux Kernel
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So Im working on making my own OS from scratch. Im using a linux based os for reverse engineering but I need help in understanding how to use the tools that are in rar/zip files. If anyone can direct me to some tutorials or resources to read that would be a big help.
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/arm64/booting.rst This was my guiding light for a project a while back. It describes what Linux expects "time zero" looks like for the system; whatever operating system is going to boot needs that kind of contract between the boot environment and its own entry point. You can develop a lightweight linux-based OS with that document and a package like https://busybox.net/
- The amount of times I have accidentally done this...
- BusyBox 1.36.0
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MIT
UUTILS, musl libc, BusyBox , etc.
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Do you think Linux will become more supported and eventually be able to play every game that windows can? If so, how far in the future?
For libc, we have musl as an alternate implementation. For most coreutils, we have busybox and the BSD coreutils. For desktop environments, you can use something like xfce.
What are some alternatives?
sparklines - Text-based sparklines for the command line mimicking those of Edward Tufte.
hush - Hush is a unix shell based on the Lua programming language
butter - A tasty language for building efficient software. WIP
u-boot - "Das U-Boot" Source Tree
mech - 🦾 Main repository for the Mech programming language. Start here!
toybox - toybox
react-snippets - A sample of useful snippets in React
buildroot - Buildroot, making embedded Linux easy. Note that this is not the official repository, but only a mirror. The official Git repository is at http://git.buildroot.net/buildroot/. Do not open issues or file pull requests here.
textimg - Command to convert from color text (ANSI or 256) to image.
cage - A Wayland kiosk
erg - A statically typed language compatible with Python
barebox - The barebox bootloader - Mirror of ssh://[email protected]/barebox