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Gleam with Louis Pilfold
Allen Wyma talks with Louis Pilfold, the creator and lead designer of Gleam. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Timestamps [@00:55] - Louis’s Bio [@02:15] - Erlang [@09:03] - Rust Project Manager, Cargo [@12:15] - Reason of using Rust to implement the compiler [@19:01] - Why Erlang? [@23:07] - Erlang programming model [@27:45] - How does Gleam work? [@31:07] - Problems with TypeScript [@33:38] - What is Erlang Dialyzer? [@38:06] - Changes to Gleam compiler [@44:47] - Gleam v0.17 [@49:45] - Pros and Cons of using Rust as a compiler [@52:30] - Tips and Tricks for beginners Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: Plangora Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Plangora Hosts: Allen Wyma
Rust for Rustaceans by Jon Gjengset
Allen Wyma talks with Jon Gjengset, a software engineer at AWS, about his book Rust for Rustaceans. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Timestamps [@11:24] - Noria [@13:00] - Jon’s Youtube Channel [@21:53] - Crust of Rust [@25:13] - What does it mean to be a Rustacean? Niko Matsakis’ Rustacean Principles [@27:23] - What does intermediate content mean? [@30:03] - Chapter on memory in Rust [@41:21] - Does Rust prevent bugs? [@58:20] - The Linux kernel and memory allocation failures [@1:05:43] - Feature flag discoverability [@1:10:14] - Tips for beginners Other Resources Jon’s Fosstodon Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: Plangora Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Plangora Hosts: Allen Wyma
Rust Code Coverage with Daniel McKenna
Allen Wyma talks with Daniel McKenna, a software enginner, about his code coverage tool for Rust projects, Tarpaulin. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Timestamps [@01:35] - LLVM [@05:50] - Vectorcast [@07:00] - Cargo-kcov [@07:38] - Gdb [@07:47] - ptrace.2 [@14:40] - Arduino [@15:47] - Probe-rs [@22:42] - Tarpaulin Crater (tater) [@23:34] - Tarpaulin-viewer [@27:51] - ImGui [@31:00] - Ndarray [@32:09] - Is rust a competitor of Julia and Python in terms of machine learning? [@36:10] - When did Daniel get into programming? [@49:20] - Tips for beginners [@53:53] - FiraCode Other Resources Writing a Debugger Writing a Linux Debugger Setup Awesome Rust Mentors Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: Plangora Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Plangora Hosts: Allen Wyma
From Zero to Production with Luca Palmieri
Allen Wyma talks with Luca Palmieri, a principal engineer at TrueLayer, about his book called “Zero To Production in Rust”. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Timestamps [@02:30] - Book ideas [@13:20] - Reasons for using Rust in production [@10:34] - Asynchronous Programming in Rust [@16:45] - Actix Web [@32:21] - Challenges in using Rust as backend language [@36:30] - What is krustlet? [@46:35] - How is the process of writing the book [@54:50] - Rust edition 2021 [@57:40] - Rust’s community [@59:37] - Rust for Rustaceans [@1:00:26] - Rust in Action [@1:01:34] - Tips for beginners Other Resources Luca’s blog Hexagonal Architecture Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: Plangora Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Plangora Hosts: Allen Wyma
Rust in cURL
First time guest host, Allen Wyma talks with Daniel, the original author of cURL, about using Rust in cURL. cURL is a command line tool and library for transferring data with URLs. cURL, and its data transfer core, libcurl are both written in C, which is known to be not memory safe. While it is almost impossibe to rewrite it into another language, offering a third-party library written in Rust could take a further step forward. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Highlights Architecture of cURL & libcurl What brought Daniel to Rust? How long has he been using Rust? What language was Daniel working in before that? Third party libraries written in Rust? What benefits does Rust bring to cURL? Resources Curl Daniel’s Blog Project Gemini Timestamps [@05:10] - cURL 7.78.0 [@07:44] - Implementing Protocol [@09:25] - HTTP/3 [@13:30] - Architecture of cURL & libcurl [@17:40] - cURL as a hybrid library [@19:40] - Replacing C with Rust [@34:00] - Experience of using Rust [@35:40] - async/.await in rust [@40:45] - Anything dislike about Rust? [@42:35] - Challenge of integrating with Rust [@48:00] - Can Rust help curl survive? [@49:10] - Tips for beginners? Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: Plangora Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Plangora Hosts: Allen Wyma
What's New in Rust 1.52 and 1.53
Jon and Ben discuss the highlights of the 1.52 and 1.53 releases of Rust. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Timestamps & referenced resources [@01:31] - Rust 1.52 [@01:31] - Stabilized APIs [@04:28] - All integer division and remainder APIs made const [@07:45] - Rust 1.52.1 and incremental compilation [@11:30] - LLVM 12 Disable “mutable noalias” Bringing Stack Clash Protection to Clang/x86, the Open Source Way [@16:15] - unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn lint [@23:03] - Rust 1.53 [@23:03] - IntoIterator for arrays [@26:45] - Unicode identifiers [@29:37] - Or patterns [@31:05] - Stabilized APIs BITS associated const on numeric primitives [@36:36] - {f32, f64}::from_str now parse and print special values (NaN, -0) according to IEEE RFC 754. [@38:05] - {f32, f64}::is_subnormal [@41:11] - Cargo changes RFC: Make the authors field optional [@43:52] - Rust 2021 Edition Preview [@43:52] - What is an edition? [@47:33] - Additions to the prelude [@50:54] - Default Cargo feature resolver [@51:49] - IntoIterator for arrays [@53:09] - Disjoint capture in closures [@54:35] - Panic macro consistency [@56:00] - Reserving syntax [@1:01:38] - Or patterns in macro_rules [@1:03:16] - Promoting two warnings to hard errors Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: Jeremy Jung Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Ben Striegel Hosts: Jon Gjengset and Ben Striegel Transcript: Eric Seppanen
What's New in Rust 1.50 and 1.51
Jon and Ben take a look at the features of the Rust 1.50 and 1.51 releases. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Timestamps & referenced resources [@01:47] - Rust 1.50 [@03:02] - Const Generic Array Indexing [@04:30] - Const Value Repetition for Arrays Accidental Stabilization [@07:15] - Safe Assignment to ManuallyDrop in Unions [@09:40] - Niche for File on UNIX Niches for Non-Empty Variants Using Padding for Niches [@14:39] - Library Changes Mara Bos on the journey to bool::then bool::then PR The Clamp RFC [@20:27] - Changelog Deep-Dive Rust Changelog Cargo Changelog compare_and_swap deprecation Deterministic .crate files [@25:11] - Rust 1.51 [@25:24] - Const Generics MVP What Was and Wasn’t Stabilized [@30:00] - array::IntoIter stabilization Implementing IntoIterator for [T; N] [@37:53] - Cargo’s New Feature Resolver Resolver v2 RFC Resolver v2 in Cargo Book Issues Solved by New Resolver [@45:26] - Splitting Debug Information Why This Was Complicated split-debuginfo option [@51:34] - Stabilized APIs offset_of! is (was) Unsound ptr::addr_of! Raw pointer creation RFC Ergonomic string interpolation Unifying panic! Manual vTable for Wakers [@1:10:30] - Changelog Deep-Dive Rust Changelog Cargo Changelog Documenting Nested Derefs Smarter target-cpu=native [@1:14:45] - Rust Async Vision Doc Async Foundations Working Group Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: Aerocity Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Jon Gjengset Hosts: Jon Gjengset and Ben Striegel Transcript: Eric Seppanen
What's New in Rust 1.48 and 1.49
Jon and Ben take a look at the features of the Rust 1.48 and 1.49 releases. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Timestamps & referenced resources [@01:10] - Rust 1.48 [@01:10] - Easier linking in Rustdoc [@03:57] - Adding search aliases in Rustdoc [@07:03] - Implement TryFrom<Vec<T>> for fixed-length arrays slice::as_chunks [@10:51] - future::ready and future::pending [@15:21] - More stdlib APIs made const [@18:05] - mem::uninitialized will now panic if any inner types inside a struct or enum disallow zero-initialization [@20:18] - When trait bounds on associated types or opaque types are ambiguous, the compiler no longer makes an arbitrary choice on which bound to use [@24:20] - Rust 1.49 [@24:20] - 64-bit ARM Linux reaches Tier 1 [@30:20] - Test framework captures output in threads [@33:36] - Library changes poll::is_ready and poll::is_pending made const [@34:36] - You can now bind by reference and by move in patterns [@38:09] - Unions can now implement Drop, and you can now have a field in a union with ManuallyDrop<T> [@42:00] - Rust Survey 2020 Results Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: T.J. Telan Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Ben Striegel Hosts: Jon Gjengset and Ben Striegel
What's New in Rust 1.46 and 1.47
Jon and Ben take a look at the features of Rust 1.46 and 1.47. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Timestamps & referenced resources [@01:55] - Rust 1.46 [@01:55] - const fn improvements [@08:38] - The track_caller attribute [@11:51] - Minor changes 1.46 pre-release testing [@21:46] - Rust 1.47 [@21:46] - Traits on larger arrays Tracking Issue for min_const_generics [@29:14] - Shorter backtraces [@30:26] - LLVM 11 [@32:07] - Control Flow Guard on Windows [@34:28] - Library changes The Tau Manifesto [@40:04] - Minor changes SemVer Compatibility Guide Announcing the Error Handling Project Group Announcing the Portable SIMD Project Group Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: Cole Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Ben Striegel Hosts: Jon Gjengset and Ben Striegel
WebAssembly on the Server with Krustlet
Taylor Thomas explains how Krustlet runs WebAssembly modules in Kubernetes and why it’s a promising option for the future of server side applications. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to be interviewed, propose a topic for an episode, or help create the podcast itself! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Timestamps [@00:55] - Kubernetes [@07:37] - WebAssembly [@12:06] - WebAssembly Runtimes and WASI Specification [@15:42] - WebAssembly vs Containers vs Native Binaries [@25:11] - Krustlet and the case for writing it in Rust [@30:52] - Missing APIs in WASI [@33:38] - Wascc vs Wasmtime runtimes [@38:15] - Rust ecosystem for Kubernetes and WebAssembly [@40:23] - Comparing other languages to Rust [@45:09] - Rust learning curve, experiences as a beginner [@53:16] - Next steps for Krustlet and WebAssembly Referenced Resources Krustlet Kubernetes Open Container Initiative WebAssembly WASI Wasmtime waSCC WebAssembly meets Kubernetes with Krustlet Introducing Krustlet, the WebAssembly Kubelet Kubernetes: A Rusty Friendship The Safety Boat: Kubernetes and Rust A Heaping Helping of Stacks Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: Jeremy Jung Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Jeremy Jung Hosts: Jeremy Jung Guests: Taylor Thomas
RedisJSON
Jeremy talks with Christoph Zimmermann about Redislabs’ new JSON module, which is written in Rust. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to be interviewed, propose a topic for an episode, or help create the podcast itself! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Timestamps [@15:12] - Why Rust [@18:57] - Mentioning Microsoft Presentation On Rust [@19:25] - Jeremy - Clarifying The Benefits Of Rust On Developer Productivity Compared To C++ [@20:23] - Response To Productivity 00:21:12: Checking At Compile Time Helps [@23:29] - How have you found Rust as a Language For Interacting With Other Languages? [@24:28] - Were Most Bugs Around Unsafe Blocks? [@25:42] - Do You Think Rust Had Future With Redis Server? [@26:45] - Redis Labs Is Looking To Implement Further Modules In Rust Because Of Redis SDK [@27:39] - Overcoming Rust Learning Curve [@28:25] - Coming From 20 Years Of C To Rust [@28:52] - Jeremy - Rust As First Language [@31:30] - Comparing Languages [@32:24] - What Might An Application Look Like That Uses Redis-Json? [@33:45] - Performance Differences With Redis JSON 2 [@35:14] - How Would You Overcome Rust’s Overhead Compared To C? [@36:32] - Do You Think (Concurrency Will Present Itself More Often In Future Redis Modules)? [@37:54] - Could Redis Move Towards A More Concurrent Multi-threaded Database? [@40:05] - What The Redis Community Does Do With Multicore To Increase Throughput [@43:27] - How Did Redis-JSON 2 Leverage Rust’s Type System? [@44:53] - Time Check [@45:10] - End Question: Distro & Editors Of Choice [@46:40] - ARM & Apple Chips [@48:17] - More Redis Resources And Community Referenced Resources Christoph’s Podcast Christoph’s FOSDEM Talk RedisJSON on GitHub Redislabs Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: Cole Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Cole and Jeremy Webb Hosts: Jeremy Webb Guests: Chrisoph Zimmermann
What's New in Rust 1.44 and 1.45
Jon and Ben examine the features of Rust 1.44 and Rust 1.45. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Timestamps & referenced resources [@01:21] - Rust 1.44 (Detailed Release Notes) [@01:50] - cargo tree subcommand [@04:52] - async/await in #[no_std] contexts [@12:16] - Unicode 13 is now supported [@17:16] - rustc now respects the -C codegen-units flag in incremental mode [@18:47] - Special cased vec![] to map directly to Vec::new() [@28:51] - Rust 1.45 [@29:14] - Fixing an unsoundness in float to integer casts [@39:16] - Stabilizing function-like procedural macros in expressions, patterns, and statements [@43:29] - str::strip_prefix and str::strip_suffix Bonus: Opening up the Rust Core Team agenda See also: The Inside Rust Blog Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: Jeremy Jung Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Ben Striegel Hosts: Jon Gjengset and Ben Striegel
This Week in Rust - Issue 352
Nell Shamrell-Harrington — lead editor of This Week in Rust — takes you through highlights from TWiR 352, published on August 18, 2020, as well as short interviews with upcoming RustConf speakers Harrison Bachrach, Esteban Kuber, and Jam. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Referenced resources Laying the foundation for Rust’s future Learning Rust: The Compiler is your Friend Why Rust is a great fit for embedded software Why Rust’s Unsafe Works I am a Java, C#, C or C++ developer, time to do some Rust Async Unicorns love Rust Linux Packages For Rust (2/3) - Building with GitHub Actions using Custom Actions and Docker Container Images Rust RFCs Repo RustConf This Week in Rust GitHub Repo Credits Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Nell Shamrell-Harrington Hosts: Nell Shamrell-Harrington
This Week in Rust - Issue 351
Nell Shamrell-Harrington — lead editor of This Week in Rust — takes you through highlights from TWiR 351, published on August 11, 2020, as well as short interviews with upcoming RustConf speakers Micah Tigley, Rebecca Turner, and Samuel Lim. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Referenced resources Announcing Rust 1.45.1 Announcing Rust 1.45.2 Headcrab: July 2020 progress report This Month in Rust OSDev (July 2020) Learning Rust: Mindsets and Expectations Blue Team Rust: What is “Memory Safety”, really? Creating Linux Packages for Rust Projects (1/2) Reverse Engineering a USB Device with Rust Some Learnings from Implementing a Normalizing Rust Representer [video]Learning Rust by Working Through the Rustlings Exercises Rust Language Cheat Sheet 2019 -> 2020 [audio]The State of Rust 2 with Alex Chrichton [audio]The State of Rust with Steve Klabnik RFC: ‘C unwind’ ABI Procedural vtables and wide ptr metadata Edition 2021 and beyond Credits Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Nell Shamrell-Harrington Hosts: Nell Shamrell-Harrington
RustFest 2019 Interview Series: Burnout in Open Source Software; The Rust Roadmap
Two more long-awaited interviews from RustFest 2019: Katharina Fey on the phenomenon of burnout in software and in open source communities and Florian Gilcher on Rust’s annual roadmaps. Contributing to Rustacean Station Rustacean Station is a community project; get in touch with us if you’d like to suggest an idea for an episode or offer your services as a host or audio editor! Twitter: @rustaceanfm Discord: Rustacean Station Github: @rustacean-station Email: hello@rustacean-station.org Timestamps & referenced resources [@00:50] Part 1: Burnout w/ Katharina Fey [@01:54] - How common is burnout in software? [@03:24] - How does burnout manifest in volunteer endeavors like open source software? [@08:10] - How does rotation of responsibilities alleviate burnout? [@13:41] - What communities succeed at combating burnout? [@16:44] - Final thoughts on burnout and governance [@19:50] Part 2: The Rust Roadmap w/ Florian Gilcher Rust 2019 roadmap Rust 2020 roadmap Credits Intro Theme: Aerocity Audio Editing: Eddy Petrisor Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset Show Notes: Ben Striegel