- Before nginx was a thing, I worked with a guy who forked apache httpd and wrote this blog in C, like, literally embedded html and css inside the server, so when he made a tpyo or was adding another post he had to recompile the source code. The performance was out of this world. - There are a lot of solutions like that in rust. You basically compile the template into your code. - yeah, templates can be parsed at compile time but these frameworks are not embeeding whole fucking prerendered static pages/assets - They are nowadays. Compiling assets and static data into rust and deliver virtual DOM via websocket to the browser is the new cool kid in the corner. - Have a look at dioxus 
 
 
- This reminds me of one of my older projects. I wanted to learn more about network communications, so I started working on a simple P2P chat app. It wasn’t anything fancy, but I really enjoyed working on it. One challenge I faced was that, at the time, I didn’t know how to listen for user input while handling network communication simultaneously. So, after I had managed to get multiple TCP sockets working on one thread, I thought, why not open another socket for HTTP communication? That way, I could incorporate a fancy web UI instead of just a CLI interface. - So, I wrote a simple HTTP server, which, in hindsight, might not have been necessary. 
 
- my website’s backend is made with bash, it calls make for every request and it probably has hundreds of remote arbitrary code execution bugs that will get me pwned someday, it’s great - edit: to clarify, it uses a rust program i made to expose the bash scripts as http endpoints, i’m not crazy enough to implement http in bash - it behaves like a static file server, but if a file has the others-execute permission bit set it executes the file instead of reading it - it’s surprisingly nice for prototyping since you can just write a cli program and it’s automatically available over http too - who hurt you? - i thought it was neat how php lets you write your website’s logic with the same directory tree pattern that clients consume it from, but i didn’t want to learn php so i made my own, worse version 
 
- I designed a chip architecture that runs bash code on silicon. - I reimplemented x86 assembly in purely bash script. 
- Set -e, please for the love of god, set -e 
 
- This is false, you also need vim and tmux 
- Just don’t call it with - . Because that’s POSIX shell, not bash.- but effectively it’s bash, I think - /bin/shis a symlink to bash on every system I know of…- Edit: I feel corrected, thanks for the information, all the systems I used, had a symlink to bash. Also it was not intended to recommend using bash functionality when having a shebang - !#/bin/sh. As someone other pointed out, recommendation would be- , or- !#/bin/shif you know that you’re not using bash specific functionality.- Still don’t do this. If you use bash specific syntax with this head, that’s a bashism and causes issues with people using zsh for example. Or with Debian/*buntu, who use dash as init shell. - Just use - or- if you’re funny.- doesn’t work on NixOS since bash is in the nix store somewhere,- resolves the correct location regardless of where bash is- Are there any distos with - /usr/bin/envin a different spot? I still believe that’s the best approach for getting bash.- All posix-compliant distros need /usr/bin/env - I do think a simple symlink is superior to a tool parsing stuff. A shame POSIX choose this approach. - Still the issue that a posix shell can be on a non-posix system and vice versa. And certificates versus used practice. Btw, isn’t there only one posix certified Linux distro? Was it Suse? 
 
 
 
 
 
 









