wg-allocators VS cligen

Compare wg-allocators vs cligen and see what are their differences.

wg-allocators

Home of the Allocators working group: Paving a path for a standard set of allocator traits to be used in collections! (by rust-lang)

cligen

Nim library to infer/generate command-line-interfaces / option / argument parsing; Docs at (by c-blake)
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wg-allocators cligen
18 32
199 489
0.0% -
0.0 8.4
about 3 years ago 28 days ago
Nim
- ISC License
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.

wg-allocators

Posts with mentions or reviews of wg-allocators. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-06-03.
  • Anouncing `stabby` 1.0!
    6 projects | /r/rust | 3 Jun 2023
    Tracking issue for Storages, and a TLDR on what it is
  • What backwards-incompatible changes would you make in a hypothetical Rust 2.0?
    10 projects | /r/rust | 19 Apr 2023
  • Custom allocators in Rust
    4 projects | /r/rust | 6 Apr 2023
    I must have gotten confused, since from your brief discussion with CAD97 it seemed like there was a way for the concepts to live separately and that Storage could complicate things in comparison. But if implementing Allocator in terms of Storage is basically equivalent and Storage is flexible enough that I could write one to pass memory out to unsafe code, that works just as well.
  • Zig and Rust
    6 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 27 Mar 2023
    https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/1974-global-allocators.html was the original RFC.

    My vague understanding is that there's a working group https://github.com/rust-lang/wg-allocators

    The further I get from working on Rust day to day, the less I know about these things, so that's all I've got for you.

  • Rust went from side project to world’s fastest growing language
    7 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 14 Feb 2023
    If you self-reference using pointers and guarantee the struct will never move, you don't even need unsafe. If you self-reference using offsets from the struct's base pointer, you need a splash of unsafe but your struct can be freely moved without invalidating its self-referential "pointers".

    Per-struct allocators are a work in progress (see https://github.com/rust-lang/wg-allocators/issues/48).

    Not sure what "non thread local addresses" means, but in my experience Rust is pretty good at sending data between threads (without moving it).

  • Rust is coming to the Linux kernel
    7 projects | /r/programming | 20 Sep 2022
  • FunDSP 0.1.0, an audio processing and synthesis library
    3 projects | /r/rust | 31 Jan 2022
    Besides that allocation is not really a problem for no_std. It's resolved by using alloc crate directly, so anything usable with custom allocators is supported. Example in dasp sources - https://github.com/RustAudio/dasp/blob/master/dasp_slice/src/boxed.rs#L14-L19 . Also worth looking at this issue to check what is usable already - https://github.com/rust-lang/wg-allocators/issues/7
  • Andrew Kelley claims Zig is faster than Rust in perfomance
    1 project | /r/rust | 16 Jan 2022
    But that's on track for rust as well: https://github.com/rust-lang/wg-allocators/issues/7
  • Which important features from C/C++ are missing in Rust
    9 projects | /r/rust | 18 Dec 2021
    Here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/1398. there is also a working group for this: https://github.com/rust-lang/wg-allocators.
  • Box<T> allocator override?
    1 project | /r/rust | 19 Aug 2021
    It's unstable. wg-allocators contains discussions about design and a tracking issue for collections that need an allocator https://github.com/rust-lang/wg-allocators/issues/7

cligen

Posts with mentions or reviews of cligen. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2024-01-12.
  • CLI user experience case study
    12 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 12 Jan 2024
    There is also generating the whole thing from a function signature (e.g. https://github.com/c-blake/cligen ) since then CLauthors need not learn a new spec language, but then CLauthors must add back in helpful usage metadata/semantics and still need to learn a library API (but I like how those two things can be "gradual"). It's a hard space in which to find perfection, but I wish you luck in your attempt!
  • Things I've learned about building CLI tools in Python
    16 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 24 Oct 2023
    cligen also allows End-CL-users to adjust colorization of --help output like https://github.com/c-blake/cligen/blob/master/screenshots/di... using something like https://github.com/c-blake/cligen/wiki/Dark-BG-Config-File

    Last I knew, the argparse backing most Py CLI solutions did not support such easier (for many) to read help text, but the PyUniverse is too vast to be sure without much related work searching.

  • Removing Garbage Collection from the Rust Language (2013)
    9 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 11 Sep 2023
    20 milliseconds? On my 7 year old Linux box, this little Nim program https://github.com/c-blake/bu/blob/main/wsz.nim runs to completion in 275 microseconds when fully statically linked with musl libc on Linux. That's with a stripped environment (with `env -i`). It takes more like 318 microseconds with my usual 54 environment variables. The program only does about 17 system calls, though.

    Additionally, https://github.com/c-blake/cligen makes decent CLI tools a real breeze. If you like some of Go's qualities but the language seems too limited, you might like Nim: https://nim-lang.org. I generally find getting good performance much less of a challenge with Nim, but Nim is undeniably less well known with a smaller ecosystem and less corporate backing.

  • Writing Small CLI Programs in Common Lisp (2021)
    5 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 5 Sep 2023
    If you find this article interesting and are curious about Nim then you would probably also be curious about https://github.com/c-blake/cligen

    That allows adding just 1-line to a module to add a pretty complete CLI and then a string per parameter to properly document options (assuming an existing API using keyword arguments).

    It's also not hard to compile & link a static ELF binary with Nim.. I do it with MUSL libc on Linux all the time. I just toss into my ~/.config/nim/nim.cfg:

        @if musl:  # make nim c -d:musl .. foo static-link `foo` with musl
  • GNU Parallel, where have you been all my life?
    19 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 21 Aug 2023
    Sure. No problem.

    Even Windows has popen these days. There are some tiny popenr/popenw wrappers in https://github.com/c-blake/cligen/blob/master/cligen/osUt.ni...

    Depending upon how balanced work is on either side of the pipe, you usually can even get parallel speed-up on multicore with almost no work. For example, there is no need to use quote-escaped CSV parsing libraries when you just read from a popen()d translator program producing an easier format: https://github.com/c-blake/nio/blob/main/utils/c2tsv.nim

  • The Bipolar Lisp Programmer
    3 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 11 Aug 2023
    Nim is terse yet general and can be made even more so with effort. E.g., You can gin up a little framework that is even more terse than awk yet statically typed and trivially convertible to run much faster like https://github.com/c-blake/bu/blob/main/doc/rp.md

    You can statically introspect code to then generate related/translated ASTs to create nearly frictionless helper facilities like https://github.com/c-blake/cligen .

    You can do all of this without any real run-time speed sacrifices, depending upon the level of effort you put in / your expertise. Since it generates C/C++ or Javascript you get all the abilities of backend compilers almost out of the box, like profile-guided-optimization or for JS JIT compilation.

  • Ask HN: Why did Nim not catch-on like wild fire as Rust did?
    16 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 25 Jun 2023
    It's more that those tools were what come to mind when I specifically think of my exposure to the existence of rust. Its perhaps not that the tools were there, but that they were well known (and known for being written in rust).

    Anecdatapoint - I've never heard of literally a single one of the utilities listed on the bu page.

    Regarding cligen, right from the start clap wins on producing idiomatic output. Compare: https://github.com/c-blake/cligen#cligen-a-native-api-inferr...

        Usage:
  • Newbie looking at nim
    1 project | /r/nim | 10 Apr 2023
    cool example would be this which is a CLI generation library. It lets you describe command line interfacs simply using function signatures
  • Zig and Rust
    6 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 27 Mar 2023
    >Does nim have anything as polished and performant as clap and serde?

    "Polished" and "high quality" are more subjective/implicitly about adoption, IMO. "Performant" has many dimensions. I just tested the Nim https://github.com/c-blake/cligen vs clap: cligen used 5X less object file space (with all size optimization tweaks enabled in both), 20% less run-time memory for large argument lists, and the same run-time per argument (with march=native equivalents on both, within statistical noise). cligen has many features - "did you mean?/suggestions", color generated help and all that - I do not see obvious feature in clap docs missing in cligen. The Nim binary serde showing is unlikely as good but there are like 10 JSON packages and that seems maybe your primary concern.

    More to add color your point than disagree (and follow up on my "adoption") - your ideas about polish, quality, docs, etc. are part of feedback loop(s) you mentioned. More users => Users complain (What is confusing? What is missing? etc.) => things get fixed/cleaned up/improved => More users. Besides "performant" being multi-dimensional, the feedback loop is more of a "cyclic graph". :-) While I probably prefer Nim as much or more as @netbioserror, I am not too shocked by the mindshare capture. It seems to happen every 5..10 years or so in prog.langs.

    While many of your points are not invalid, tech is also a highly hype-driven & fad-driven realm. In my experience, the more experience with this meta-feature that someone has, the more skeptical they are of the latest thing (more rounds of regret, etc.). Also, that feedback graph is not a pure good. Things can get too popular too quickly with near permanent consequences. ipv4 got popular so quickly that we are still mostly stuck on it 40 years later as ipv6 struggles for penetration. Whatever your favorite PL is, it may also grow features too fast.

  • Self Hosted SaaS Alternatives
    17 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 5 Mar 2023
    You are welcome. Thanks are too rarely offered. :-)

    You may also be interested in word stemming ( such as used by snowball stemmer in https://github.com/c-blake/nimsearch ) or other NLP techniques, but I don't know how internationalized/multi-lingual that stuff is, but conceptually you might want "series of stemmed words" to be the content fragments of interest.

    Similarity scores have many applications. Weights on graph of cancelled downloads ranked by size might be one. :)

    Of course, for your specific "truncation" problem, you might also be able to just do an edit distance against the much smaller filenames and compare data prefixes in files or use a SHA256 of a content-based first slice. ( There are edit distance algos in Nim in https://github.com/c-blake/cligen/blob/master/cligen/textUt.... as well as in https://github.com/c-blake/suggest ).

    Or, you could do a little program like ndup/sh/ndup to create a "mirrored file tree" of such content-based slices then you could use any true duplicate-file finder (like https://github.com/c-blake/bu/blob/main/dups.nim) on the little signature system to identify duplicates and go from path suffixes in those clusters back to the main filesystem. Of course, a single KV store within one or two files would be more efficient than thousands of tiny files. There are many possibilities.

What are some alternatives?

When comparing wg-allocators and cligen you can also consider the following projects:

www.ziglang.org

httpbeast - A highly performant, multi-threaded HTTP 1.1 server written in Nim.

serde-plain - A serde serializer that serializes a subset of types into plain strings

bioawk - BWK awk modified for biological data

enum-map

nimforum - Lightweight alternative to Discourse written in Nim

rules_rust - Rust rules for Bazel

loggedfs - LoggedFS - Filesystem monitoring with Fuse

cryptography - cryptography is a package designed to expose cryptographic primitives and recipes to Python developers.

lobster - The Lobster Programming Language

dpp - Directly include C headers in D source code

walkdir - Rust library for walking directories recursively.