get notifications about openQA job status

I got bored of ‘waiting’ for an OpenQA openSUSE job to complete, so I wrote this quick and dirty script… For the same purpose there’s also the excellent and full-fledged openqa-mon, but I took the chance to learn something by implementing a simpler version myself. ...

October 5, 2022 · Andrea Manzini

web components with Nim and Karax

Inspired by a tweet from a fellow developer, I decided to take a look at Karax, a nifty framework for developing single page applications in Nim. After following the basic tutorials and examples, I searched for something more complex and found very sparse documentation, so I’ll write my findings here. As usual, the complete source code is on my github repo, where you can find also a working live demo. In this example I wanted to experiment with the component pattern, and create a stateful module that can be reused. So I modeled a nim clock object, here the source: ...

July 7, 2022 · Andrea Manzini

integration between Python and Rust - Part 2

In this post we are going to write a new module for python: a very simple function exported from Rust that we can consume in the Python interpreter. We’ll leverage the PyO3 Rust bindings for the Python interpreter. Let’s start with a new Cargo project: $ cargo init --lib demo_rust_lib and insert the required settings in Cargo.toml: [package] name = "rusty" version = "0.1.0" edition = "2021" [lib] name="rusty" crate-type = ["cdylib"] [dependencies.pyo3] version = "*" [features] extension-module = ["pyo3/extension-module"] default = ["extension-module"] now it’s a matter to write our library; luckily the PyO3 library exposes a lot of useful types for python interop; the only thing we need to add is an extra fn named as our module that “exports” the functions we want to make available in the Python layer: ...

January 7, 2022 · Andrea Manzini

integration between Python and Rust - Part 1

Let’s get our feet wet; in this first part I’ll write about a very simple way to interface Rust and Python. First of all let’s build a Rust dynamic library with some basic functions. // this file is: src/lib.rs #[no_mangle] pub extern "C" fn hello() { println!("Hello from the library!"); } #[no_mangle] pub extern "C" fn sum(a: i32, b: i32) -> i32 { a + b } your Cargo.toml should look like this: [package] name = "pyrust" version = "0.1.0" edition = "2018" [dependencies] [lib] crate-type = ["cdylib"] compile the library with cargo build ...

August 18, 2021 · Andrea Manzini