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307 lines
9.3 KiB
Markdown
## Supporting Rust by using Rust: An exploration of great tools written in Rust
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I presented at the September [Melbourne Rust Meetup][rust-melbourne]. My talk
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was about some of the great tools that are being built in Rust, the benefits
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that brings and how using and promoting these tools can help
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with the wider adoption of Rust in the development community. I demonstrated
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a selection of such tools.
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A [video of the talk is on YouTube](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-H6Hn_i4PQ).
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The [slides are available online][slides]. The presenter notes I wrote for
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myself are included below.
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[rust-melbourne]: https://www.meetup.com/Rust-Melbourne/
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[slides]: /technical/2017/09/rust-tools-talk/slides/
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## Slide Notes
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### Promoting Rust
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* Rust is new, most of us here probably think its great. Some of us would even
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like to be able to work on Rust projects in our day jobs.
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* To help cement its future, get more people using it at work and get more jobs
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we need it to be successful.
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* Some ways that we can help are:
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* Use tools that are written in Rust
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* Promote tools that are written in Rust. Someone asks what tool should I
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use search code: Suggest ripgrep
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* We'll be looking at a few that I use tonight.
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* Mostly command line tools. GUI apps in Rust are possible but it's still
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very early days.
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### Why Rust tools are great
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* Performance
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* Fast and efficient with resources
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* Fearless concurrency
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* No runtime
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* Often just a single binary, no need to install ruby, python, node, etc.
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* Cross Platform
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* Linux, macOS, BSD and often Windows
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* Easy to install
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* No need for npm, gem, pip. Just `cargo install` or better yet
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install with system package manager where available
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* Usable
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* cargo makes it easy to pull in crates that do:
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* command line argument parsing with shell completion and built in help
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* generate coloured output
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### Demos
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Some notes on the demos that I'll be performing:
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* Examples will be shell and UNIX focussed as that's the env I use every day.
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I'm demoing on Linux but most of these tools will work on macOS, BSD and many
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on Windows too.
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* I'm going to assume you're familiar with the UNIX shell, cargo,
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and git. If anything is foreign, feel free to ask.
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* Whilst I'll mostly be demoing on the command line, many of these tools can be
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integrated into your editor of choice, for me this is Neovim.
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* For examples intended to operate on file trees I'm using a recent git
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checkout as the sample tree. In the version I checked out there are 11002
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files amounting to 404Mb on disk.
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#### watchexec - Executes commands in response to file modifications
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<https://github.com/mattgreen/watchexec>
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* Epitomises many of the features touted previously.
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Example:
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Watch rust dir, echo changed files on touch
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watchexec -w src 'echo $WATCHEXEC_UPDATED_PATH'
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Other terminal:
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touch src/libstd/collections/hash/map.rs
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touch src/libstd/collections/hash/set.rs
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#### fd - A simple, fast and user-friendly alternative to find.
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<https://github.com/sharkdp/fd>
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You might be familiar with `find`, for finding files by name:
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find . -name '*option*'
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It's pretty quick but there's a bunch of typing for the common case of just
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wanting a partial match on filename.
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`fd` does the same thing with a simple interface for that common case, while
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honoring `.gitignore`, coloured output and smart case for matching (no need for
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`iname`/`name`.
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fd option
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The pattern is a regular expression instead of a glob. The current directory is
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the implied path to search if not specified.
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#### fe - A super-fast and easy to use fuzzy file searcher
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<https://github.com/btipling/fe>
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`fe` is similar to `fd` except that it's a fuzzy matcher. It uses a smart fuzzy
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search algorithm similar to that used in IDEs and editors for finding files.
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> Searches start matching at word start, and on match failure stop matching
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> until the next word
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Example:
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fe lopt
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You can see we got fewer results with a shorter pattern.
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#### exa - a modern replacement for ls
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<https://the.exa.website/>
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`exa` is a replacement for `ls` with helpful defaults like human readable
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files sizes, colourized output for permissions, file type, and a tree view.
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Example:
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exa -lh
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Here we see exas table output (-l). (-h) adds headers. You can see that
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colour is used to help group similar concepts.
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Tree view:
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exa --tree src/etc/installer
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Colour scale for file sizes:
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exa -l --colour-scale ~/Downloads
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The larger the file the more intense the colour, shifting from green to yellow.
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It also has git integration and can show the status of files tracked in git.
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`exa` calls itself a replacement for `ls`, which I think is accurate. I have `ls`
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aliased to it in my shell:
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which ls
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#### rg - the usability of The Silver Searcher with the raw speed of [GNU] grep.
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<https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep/>
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You may have heard of `ack`, or the silver searcher. They are tools to rapidly
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search the content of files in a directory tree, often code. A faster version
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of `grep -r` that ignores binary files, files ignored by git ignore file
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ripgrep is a similar tool: Fast code
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search (regex) honoring git ignore without optional filtering by language.
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Great blog post by the author (Andrew Gallant) that compared ripgreps performance and
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correctness to similar tools.
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Example 1:
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rg Option
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If you blinked you may have missed that but about 11,000 were checked.
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Example 2:
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rg è
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`rg` has complete support for Unicode
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Example 3:
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ripgrep knows about file types and regexes so if we want all function that contain into
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and return a String (on one line):
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rg -t rust 'fn.+into.+-> String'
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#### alt - Command line tool to find alternate files
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<https://github.com/uptech/alt>
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`alt` prints the alternate for a file. Has editor integration so you can do it
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in you favourite editor (Neovim). Works well for languages that have file
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pairs. In my case I work on Ruby apps, which have spec files in a tree
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mirroring the app tree. For example in pkb, which is a Rails app I wrote:
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Example:
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alt app/models/page.rb
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Ignore the trailing %, that's my shell telling me the output didn't end in a
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new line. This one is super helpful in your editor to switch to the "alternate file".
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#### tac
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<https://neosmart.net/blog/2017/a-high-performance-cross-platform-tac-rewrite/>
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`tac` is a Rust implementation of the tool with the same name commonly only found on
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Linux systems. It prints the lines of a files in reverse. This can come in handy
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when dealing with large log files.
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Example:
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We have a 3.8Gb log file. We want to see the last request in the log that was
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made by a visitor using the Opera web browser with the Presto rendering engine:
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grep Presto ~/Documents/webserver.log | tail -n1
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That's great but it took a little while, we can do better with `tac`:
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tac ~/Documents/webserver.log | grep Presto | head -n1
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Yay quick!
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#### dot - Yet another management tool for dotfiles
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<https://github.com/ubnt-intrepid/dot>
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Dot is a dot file manager. It can automatically clone a git repo then
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symlink the files according to a mappings file. You can have mappings
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that are OS specific. It's a single binary so downloading and bootstrapping
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a new system is easy.
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Hard to demo but my dotfiles are managed with it:
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<https://github.com/wezm/dotfiles>
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#### titlecase - Capitalise text according to a style guide
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<https://github.com/wezm/titlecase>
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* Shameless self promotion. A rust implementation of John Gruber's title case
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style. There are several implementations around (Perl, JavaScript, Python)
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I wanted a nice single binary version.
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Example:
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In vim filter some text through it:
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Before:
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The iPhone X: "a detailed guide to designing for a notch"
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After:
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The iPhone X: "A Detailed Guide to Designing for a Notch"
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vim demos/titlecase.md
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# duplicate the line so you can see before and after
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:'<,'>!titlecase
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Notes:
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* It left iPhone alone
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* It capitalised the initial A inside the quotes by not _to_, _for_ and the _a_ inside the quotes.
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#### ion shell - A shell written in Rust for Redox and Linux
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<https://github.com/redox-os/ion>
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Lastly if you feel like living on the edge... There is a project called
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Redox to build an operating system in Rust. They've made a stack of progress
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so far and one of the components they've build is a shell called ion, which
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also runs on Linux. It has some neat features reminiscent of the `fish` shell.
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Example:
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ls
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ls -lh
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which ls
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As you can see it works, it's not full of features yet so probably not ready for
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full time use. Maybe try it out to hep test it, report any issues you find.
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#### wesers - Single file webserver
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<https://github.com/wdv4758h/wesers>
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Depending on time:
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* The slides were served by a little web server called `wesers`.
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* Single file download
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* Run in a directory to serve that directory
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### Are you the next great tool author
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* We've just looked at a bunch of handy tools.
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* Each of these was prompted by someone that wanted a better, faster, easier to
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install, or wider platform option to existing tools and built it.
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* You can also build these tools
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* If you use a tool that is frustrating to install due to runtime
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requirements or dependency issues, perhaps its a candidate for a Rust
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version.
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* Use a tool that is error prone or could benefit from fearless
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concurrency.
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### Conclusion
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* Talked about some great tools
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* Try them out
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* Recommend them if they work well for you
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* Improve them, submit PRs
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