webrtc-echoes
tungstenite-rs
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webrtc-echoes | tungstenite-rs | |
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6 | 15 | |
159 | 1,713 | |
- | 3.1% | |
0.0 | 7.1 | |
10 months ago | 3 days ago | |
C++ | 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.
webrtc-echoes
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Pure C WebRTC
I am really excited about https://github.com/sepfy/libpeer. It has examples ready for ESP32 etc....
When working on KVS I wasn't familiar with the embedded space at all. I saw 'heavyweight' embedded where you were running on Linux. Then you had RTOS/No OS at all. I wasn't prepared for these devices at all. If we can make WebRTC work in the embedded space I think it will really accelerate what developers are able to build!
Remotely driven cars, security cameras, robots in hospitals that bring iPads to infectious patients etc... Creative people are building amazing things. The WebRTC/video space needs to work harder and support them :)
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I love how diverse the WebRTC space is now. Outside of this implementation you have plenty of other options!
* https://github.com/shinyoshiaki/werift-webrtc (Typescript)
* https://github.com/pion/webrtc (Golang)
* https://github.com/webrtc-rs/webrtc (Rust)
* https://github.com/algesten/str0m (Rust)
* hhttps://github.com/sepfy/libpeer (C/Embedded)
* https://webrtc.googlesource.com/src/ (C++)
* https://github.com/sipsorcery-org/sipsorcery (C#)
* https://github.com/paullouisageneau/libdatachannel (C++)
* https://github.com/elixir-webrtc (Elixir)
* https://github.com/aiortc/aiortc (Python)
* GStreamer’s webrtcbin (C)
See https://github.com/sipsorcery/webrtc-echoes for examples of some running against each other.
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WebRTC support being added to FFmpeg
Lots of other WebRTC implementation exist (in many languages). Happy to help if you have any questions
See https://github.com/sipsorcery/webrtc-echoes for examples of all of them running against each other.
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WebTorrent
Lots of great WebRTC implementations exist. Do you want to stick with node.js?
I am a big fan of https://github.com/shinyoshiaki/werift-webrtc it is pure Typescript.
Check out https://github.com/sipsorcery/webrtc-echoes for all the other implementations.
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GStreamer 1.20: Embedded and WebRTC lead the way
WebRTC has so many great implementations now! The author of the C# implementation started a really great project webrtc-echoes[0] that shows them all working together.
The next big challenge in the space seems to be getting widely available congestion control. The hard part is making sure it is understandable and customizable for everyones use cases.
[0] https://github.com/sipsorcery/webrtc-echoes
- WebRTC-Echoes: Interop for C#, C++, Python, TypeScript, Go and Servers
- Show HN: WebRTC-Echoes: Interop for C#, C++, Python, TypeScript, Go and Servers
tungstenite-rs
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Help with Minimal Websocket Connection
You can start by following tungstenite-rs client example. And since you are connecting to an tls enabled endpoint you should enable tls features. And according to your API's doc it requires you to send serialized json string for requesting message response and you can use serde ande serde_json for serialization. This is a complete example where a hardcode string request:
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[I made this] – staticPi – websocket forwarder
staticpi, is a websocket forwarding service. Basically, it enables one to keep a Raspberry pi, or any computer, “connected”, in order to send and receive messages to and from any client, without having to deal with a static IP address, open ports on your router, or similar. Built in Rust, using axum, which in turn uses tungestine-rs for the websocket connections, tokio, sqlx, redis-rs and others.
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What crate to use to make a WebSocket client
There is a client module and client examples. If using tokio, there is tokio-tungstenite on top, which has various client functions.
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The most creative, funny, clever, ridiculous, ... library names!
tungstenite: "Lightweight stream-based WebSocket implementation. It's formerly WS2, the 2nd implementation of WS. WS2 is the chemical formula of tungsten disulfide, the tungstenite mineral."
- WebTorrent
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What's the best production-grade websocket library in Rust?
tungstenite-rs
- Surprising Things You Didn't Know About HTTP
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Secure Websocket Client
If you just want to connect to an existing api, async-tungstenite has a connect function. It should work with wss. See some discussion of this issue here.
- The hack that improves your tungstunite-rs performance by 160x
- Is there a proper websockets server framework in Rust?
What are some alternatives?
SIPSorcery - A WebRTC, SIP and VoIP library for C# and .NET. Designed for real-time communications apps.
rust-websocket - A WebSocket (RFC6455) library written in Rust
janus-gateway - Janus WebRTC Server
ws-rs - Lightweight, event-driven WebSockets for Rust.
libdatachannel - C/C++ WebRTC network library featuring Data Channels, Media Transport, and WebSockets
Rocket - A web framework for Rust.
werift-webrtc - WebRTC Implementation for TypeScript (Node.js), includes ICE/DTLS/SCTP/RTP/SRTP/WEBM/MP4
Warp - Warp is a modern, Rust-based terminal with AI built in so you and your team can build great software, faster.
aiortc - WebRTC and ORTC implementation for Python using asyncio
sockjs
Pion WebRTC - Pure Go implementation of the WebRTC API
warp - A super-easy, composable, web server framework for warp speeds.